summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--37523-8.txt16349
-rw-r--r--37523-8.zipbin0 -> 385233 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h.zipbin0 -> 2890528 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/37523-h.htm17931
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img752.jpgbin0 -> 288643 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img752a.jpgbin0 -> 480115 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img762.jpgbin0 -> 49025 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img771.jpgbin0 -> 198407 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img807.jpgbin0 -> 69087 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img808a.jpgbin0 -> 121578 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img808b.jpgbin0 -> 106219 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img808c.jpgbin0 -> 575164 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523-h/images/img808d.jpgbin0 -> 603051 bytes
-rw-r--r--37523.txt16354
-rw-r--r--37523.zipbin0 -> 384492 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
18 files changed, 50650 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/37523-8.txt b/37523-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c1a3a06
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,16349 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition,
+Volume 11, Slice 7, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 7
+ "Geoponici" to "Germany"
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 24, 2011 [EBook #37523]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENCYC. BRITANNICA, VOL 11 SL 7 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marius Masi, Don Kretz and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's notes:
+
+(1) Numbers following letters (without space) like C2 were originally
+ printed in subscript. Letter subscripts are preceded by an
+ underscore, like C_n.
+
+(2) Characters following a carat (^) were printed in superscript.
+
+(3) Side-notes were relocated to function as titles of their respective
+ paragraphs.
+
+(4) Macrons and breves above letters and dots below letters were not
+ inserted.
+
+(5) [root] stands for the root symbol; [alpha], [beta], etc. for greek
+ letters.
+
+(6) The following typographical errors have been corrected:
+
+ ARTICLE GEORGE III.: "George III. therefore waited his time."
+ 'George' amended from 'Goerge'.
+
+ ARTICLE GEORGE THE SYNCELLUS: "He was the syncellus (cell-mate, the
+ confidential companion assigned to the patriarchs ..." 'companion'
+ amended from 'campanion'.
+
+ ARTICLE GEORGIA: "The governor's power of veto extends to separate
+ items in appropriation bills, but in every case his veto may be
+ overridden by a two-thirds vote of the legislature." 'overridden'
+ amended from 'overriden'.
+
+ ARTICLE GERMAN LITERATURE: "But it had no vitality of its own; it
+ virtually sprang into existence at the command of Charlemagne ..."
+ 'existence' amended from 'existance'.
+
+ ARTICLE GERMAN LITERATURE: "The unkempt literature of the
+ Reformation age admittedly stood in need of guidance and
+ discipline, but the 17th century made the fatal mistake of trying
+ to impose the laws and rules of Romance literatures on a people of
+ a purely Germanic stock." 'guidance' amended from 'guidauce'.
+
+ ARTICLE GERMANY: "The sandstone range of the Elbe unites in the
+ east with the low Lusatian group, along the east of which runs the
+ best road from northern Germany to Bohemia." 'sandstone' amended
+ from 'standstone'.
+
+ ARTICLE GERMANY: "... farther inland, and especially east of the
+ Elbe, coniferous trees are the most prevalent, particularly the
+ Scotch fir; birches are also abundant." 'particularly' amended from
+ 'praticularly'.
+
+
+
+
+ ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA
+
+ A DICTIONARY OF ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE
+ AND GENERAL INFORMATION
+
+ ELEVENTH EDITION
+
+
+ VOLUME XI, SLICE VII
+
+ Geoponici to Germany
+
+
+
+
+ARTICLES IN THIS SLICE:
+
+
+ GEOPONICI GÉRARD, ÉTIENNE MAURICE
+ GEORGE, SAINT GÉRARD, FRANÇOIS
+ GEORGE I. GÉRARD, JEAN IGNACE ISIDORE
+ GEORGE II. GERARD, JOHN
+ GEORGE III. GÉRARDMER
+ GEORGE IV. GERASA
+ GEORGE V. (of Great Britain) GÉRAULT-RICHARD, ALFRED LÉON
+ GEORGE V. (of Hanover) GERBER, ERNST LUDWIG
+ GEORGE I. (of the Hellenes) GERBERON, GABRIEL
+ GEORGE (of Saxony) GERBERT, MARTIN
+ GEORGE OF LAODICEA GERBIL
+ GEORGE OF TREBIZOND GERENUK
+ GEORGE THE MONK GERGOVIA
+ GEORGE THE SYNCELLUS GERHARD, FRIEDRICH WILHELM EDUARD
+ GEORGE, HENRY GERHARD, JOHANN
+ GEORGE PISIDA GERHARDT, CHARLES FRÉDÉRIC
+ GEORGE, LAKE GERHARDT, PAUL
+ GEORGE JUNIOR REPUBLIC GÉRICAULT, JEAN LOUIS ANDRÉ THÉODORE
+ GEORGETOWN (British Guiana) GERIZIM
+ GEORGETOWN (Washington, U.S.A.) GERLACHE, ÉTIENNE CONSTANTIN
+ GEORGETOWN (Kentucky, U.S.A.) GERLE, CHRISTOPHE ANTOINE
+ GEORGETOWN (South Car., U.S.A.) GERMAN BAPTIST BRETHREN
+ GEORGETOWN (Texas, U.S.A.) GERMAN CATHOLICS
+ GEORGIA (U.S.A.) GERMAN EAST AFRICA
+ GEORGIA (Transcaucasia) GERMAN EVANGELICAL SYNOD OF N. AMERICA
+ GEORGIAN BAY GERMANIC LAWS, EARLY
+ GEORGSWALDE GERMANICUS CAESAR
+ GEPHYREA GERMANIUM
+ GERA GERMAN LANGUAGE
+ GERALDTON GERMAN LITERATURE
+ GÉRANDO, MARIE JOSEPH DE GERMAN REED ENTERTAINMENT
+ GERANIACEAE GERMAN SILVER
+ GERANIUM GERMAN SOUTH-WEST AFRICA
+ GERARD (archbishop of York) GERMANTOWN
+ GERARD (Tum, Tunc, Tenque) GERMANY (part)
+ GERARD OF CREMONA
+
+
+
+
+GEOPONICI,[1] or _Scriptores rei rusticae_, the Greek and Roman writers
+on husbandry and agriculture. On the whole the Greeks paid less
+attention than the Romans to the scientific study of these subjects,
+which in classical times they regarded as a branch of economics. Thus
+Xenophon's _Oeconomicus_ (see also _Memorabilia_, ii. 4) contains a
+eulogy of agriculture and its beneficial ethical effects, and much
+information is to be found in the writings of Aristotle and his pupil
+Theophrastus. About the same time as Xenophon, the philosopher
+Democritus of Abdera wrote a treatise [Greek: Peri Geôrgias], frequently
+quoted and much used by the later compilers of _Geoponica_ (agricultural
+treatises). Greater attention was given to the subject in the
+Alexandrian period; a long list of names is given by Varro and
+Columella, amongst them Hiero II. and Attalus III. Philometor. Later,
+Cassius Dionysius of Utica translated and abridged the great work of the
+Carthaginian Mago, which was still further condensed by Diophanes of
+Nicaea in Bithynia for the use of King Deďotarus. From these and similar
+works Cassianus Bassus (q.v.) compiled his _Geoponica_. Mention may also
+be made of a little work [Greek: Peri Geôrgikôn] by Michael Psellus
+(printed in Boissonade, _Anecdota Graeca_, i.).
+
+The Romans, aware of the necessity of maintaining a numerous and
+thriving order of agriculturists, from very early times endeavoured to
+instil into their countrymen both a theoretical and a practical
+knowledge of the subject. The occupation of the farmer was regarded as
+next in importance to that of the soldier, and distinguished Romans did
+not disdain to practise it. In furtherance of this object, the great
+work of Mago was translated into Latin by order of the senate, and the
+elder Cato wrote his _De agri cultura_ (extant in a very corrupt state),
+a simple record in homely language of the rules observed by the old
+Roman landed proprietors rather than a theoretical treatise. He was
+followed by the two Sasernae (father and son) and Gnaeus Tremellius
+Scrofa, whose works are lost. The learned Marcus Terentius Varro of
+Reate, when eighty years of age, composed his _Rerum rusticarum, libri
+tres_, dealing with agriculture, the rearing of cattle, and the
+breeding of fishes. He was the first to systematize what had been
+written on the subject, and supplemented the labours of others by
+practical experience gained during his travels. In the Augustan age
+Julius Hyginus wrote on farming and bee-keeping, Sabinus Tiro on
+horticulture, and during the early empire Julius Graecinus and Julius
+Atticus on the culture of vines, and Cornelius Celsus (best known for
+his _De medicina_) on farming. The chief work of the kind, however, is
+that of Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella (q.v.). About the middle of
+the 2nd century the two Quintilii, natives of Troja, wrote on the
+subject in Greek. It is remarkable that Columella's work exercised less
+influence in Rome and Italy than in southern Gaul and Spain, where
+agriculture became one of the principal subjects of instruction in the
+superior educational establishments that were springing up in those
+countries. One result of this was the preparation of manuals of a
+popular kind for use in the schools. In the 3rd century Gargilius
+Martialis of Mauretania compiled a _Geoponica_ in which medical botany
+and the veterinary art were included. The _De re rustica_ of Palladius
+(4th century), in fourteen books, which is almost entirely borrowed from
+Columella, is greatly inferior in style and knowledge of the subject. It
+is a kind of farmer's calendar, in which the different rural occupations
+are arranged in order of the months. The fourteenth book (on forestry)
+is written in elegiacs (85 distichs). The whole of Palladius and
+considerable fragments of Martialis are extant.
+
+ The best edition of the _Scriptores rei rusticae_ is by J.G. Schneider
+ (1794-1797), and the whole subject is exhaustively treated by A.
+ Magerstedt, _Bilder aus der römischen Landwirtschaft_ (1858-1863); see
+ also Teuffel-Schwabe, _Hist. of Roman Literature_, 54; C.F. Bähr in
+ Ersch and Gruber's _Allgemeine Encyklopädie_.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] The latinized form of a non-existent [Greek: Geôponikoi], used
+ for convenience.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE, SAINT (d. 303), the patron saint of England, Aragon and
+Portugal. According to the legend given by Metaphrastes the Byzantine
+hagiologist, and substantially repeated in the Roman _Acta sanctorum_
+and in the Spanish breviary, he was born in Cappadocia of noble
+Christian parents, from whom he received a careful religious training.
+Other accounts place his birth at Lydda, but preserve his Cappadocian
+parentage. Having embraced the profession of a soldier, he rapidly rose
+under Diocletian to high military rank. In Persian Armenia he organized
+and energized the Christian community at Urmi (Urumiah), and even
+visited Britain on an imperial expedition. When Diocletian had begun to
+manifest a pronounced hostility towards Christianity, George sought a
+personal interview with him, in which he made deliberate profession of
+his faith, and, earnestly remonstrating against the persecution which
+had begun, resigned his commission. He was immediately laid under
+arrest, and after various tortures, finally put to death at Nicomedia
+(his body being afterwards taken to Lydda) on the 23rd of April 303. His
+festival is observed on that anniversary by the entire Roman Catholic
+Church as a semi-duplex, and by the Spanish Catholics as a duplex of the
+first class with an octave. The day is also celebrated as a principal
+feast in the Orthodox Eastern Church, where the saint is distinguished
+by the titles [Greek: megalomartyr] and [Greek: tropaiophoros].
+
+The historical basis of the tradition is particularly unsound, there
+being two claimants to the name and honour. Eusebius, _Hist. eccl._
+viii. 5, writes: "Immediately on the promulgation of the edict (of
+Diocletian) a certain man of no mean origin, but highly esteemed for his
+temporal dignities, as soon as the decree was published against the
+churches in Nicomedia, stimulated by a divine zeal and excited by an
+ardent faith, took it as it was openly placed and posted up for public
+inspection, and tore it to shreds as a most profane and wicked act.
+This, too, was done when the two Caesars were in the city, the first of
+whom was the eldest and chief of all and the other held fourth grade of
+the imperial dignity after him. But this man, as the first that was
+distinguished there in this manner, after enduring what was likely to
+follow an act so daring, preserved his mind, calm and serene, until the
+moment when his spirit fled." Rivalling this anonymous martyr, who is
+often supposed to have been St George, is an earlier martyr briefly
+mentioned in the _Chronicon Pascale_: "In the year 225 of the Ascension
+of our Lord a persecution of the Christians took place, and many
+suffered martyrdom, among whom also the Holy George was martyred."
+
+Two Syrian church inscriptions bearing the name, one at Ezr'a and the
+other at Shaka, found by Burckhardt and Porter, and discussed by J. Hogg
+in the _Transactions of the Royal Literary Society_, may with some
+probability be assigned to the middle of the 4th century. Calvin
+impugned the saint's existence altogether, and Edward Reynolds
+(1599-1676), bishop of Norwich, like Edward Gibbon a century later, made
+him one with George of Laodicea, called "the Cappadocian," the Arian
+bishop of Alexandria (see GEORGE OF LAODICEA).
+
+Modern criticism, while rejecting this identification, is not unwilling
+to accept the main fact that an officer named Georgios, of high rank in
+the army, suffered martyrdom probably under Diocletian. In the canon of
+Pope Gelasius (494) George is mentioned in a list of those "whose names
+are justly reverenced among men, but whose acts are known only to God,"
+a statement which implies that legends had already grown up around his
+name. The caution of Gelasius was not long preserved; Gregory of Tours,
+for example, asserts that the saint's relics actually existed in the
+French village of Le Maine, where many miracles were wrought by means of
+them; and Bede, while still explaining that the _Gesta Georgii_ are
+reckoned apocryphal, commits himself to the statement that the martyr
+was beheaded under Dacian, king of Persia, whose wife Alexandra,
+however, adhered to the Christian faith. The great fame of George, who
+is reverenced alike by Eastern and Western Christendom and by
+Mahommedans, is due to many causes. He was martyred on the eve of the
+triumph of Christianity, his shrine was reared near the scene of a great
+Greek legend (Perseus and Andromeda), and his relics when removed from
+Lydda, where many pilgrims had visited them, to Zorava in the Hauran
+served to impress his fame not only on the Syrian population, but on
+their Moslem conquerors, and again on the Crusaders, who in grateful
+memory of the saint's intervention on their behalf at Antioch built a
+new cathedral at Lydda to take the place of the church destroyed by the
+Saracens. This cathedral was in turn destroyed by Saladin.
+
+The connexion of St George with a dragon, familiar since the _Golden
+Legend_ of Jacobus de Voragine, can be traced to the close of the 6th
+century. At Arsuf or Joppa--neither of them far from Lydda--Perseus had
+slain the sea-monster that threatened the virgin Andromeda, and George,
+like many another Christian saint, entered into the inheritance of
+veneration previously enjoyed by a pagan hero.[1] The exploit thus
+attaches itself to the very common Aryan myth of the sun-god as the
+conqueror of the powers of darkness.
+
+The popularity of St George in England has never reached the height
+attained by St Andrew in Scotland, St David in Wales or St Patrick in
+Ireland. The council of Oxford in 1222 ordered that his feast should be
+kept as a national festival; but it was not until the time of Edward
+III. that he was made patron of the kingdom. The republics of Genoa and
+Venice were also under his protection.
+
+ See P. Heylin, _The History of ... S. George of Cappadocia_ (1631); S.
+ Baring-Gould, Curious _Myths of the Middle Ages_; Fr. Görres, "Der
+ Ritter St Georg in der Geschichte, Legende und Kunst" (_Zeitschrift
+ für wissenschaftliche Theologie_, xxx., 1887, Heft i.); E.A.W. Budge,
+ _The Martyrdom and Miracles of St George of Cappadocia_: the Coptic
+ texts edited with an English translation (1888); Bolland, _Acta
+ Sancti_, iii. 101; E.O. Gordon, _Saint George_ (1907); M.H. Bulley,
+ _St George for Merrie England_ (1908).
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] G.A. Smith (_Hist. Geog. of Holy Land_, p. 164) points out
+ another coincidence. "The Mahommedans who usually identify St George
+ with the prophet Elijah, at Lydda confound his legend with one about
+ Christ himself. Their name for Antichrist is Dajjal, and they have a
+ tradition that Jesus will slay Antichrist by the gate of Lydda. The
+ notion sprang from an ancient bas-relief of George and the Dragon on
+ the Lydda church. But Dajjal may be derived, by a very common
+ confusion between _n_ and _l_, from Dagon, whose name two
+ neighbouring villages bear to this day, while one of the gates of
+ Lydda used to be called the Gate of Dagon." It is a curious process
+ by which the monster that symbolized heathenism conquered by
+ Christianity has been evolved out of the first great rival of the God
+ of Israel.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE I. [George Louis] (1660-1727), king of Great Britain and Ireland,
+born in 1660, was heir through his father Ernest Augustus to the
+hereditary lay bishopric of Osnabrück, and to the duchy of Calenberg,
+which formed one portion of the Hanoverian possessions of the house of
+Brunswick, whilst he secured the reversion of the other portion, the
+duchy of Celle or Zell, by his marriage (1682) with the heiress, his
+cousin Sophia Dorothea. The marriage was not a happy one. The morals of
+German courts in the end of the 17th century took their tone from the
+splendid profligacy of Versailles. It became the fashion for a prince to
+amuse himself with a mistress or more frequently with many mistresses
+simultaneously, and he was often content that the mistresses whom he
+favoured should be neither beautiful nor witty. George Louis followed
+the usual course. Count Königsmark--a handsome adventurer--seized the
+opportunity of paying court to the deserted wife. Conjugal infidelity
+was held at Hanover to be a privilege of the male sex. Count Königsmark
+was assassinated. Sophia Dorothea was divorced in 1694, and remained in
+seclusion till her death in 1726. When George IV., her descendant in the
+fourth generation, attempted in England to call his wife to account for
+sins of which he was himself notoriously guilty, free-spoken public
+opinion reprobated the offence in no measured terms. But in the Germany
+of the 17th century all free-spoken public opinion had been crushed out
+by the misery of the Thirty Years' War, and it was understood that
+princes were to arrange their domestic life according to their own
+pleasure.
+
+The prince's father did much to raise the dignity of his family. By
+sending help to the emperor when he was struggling against the French
+and the Turks, he obtained the grant of a ninth electorate in 1692. His
+marriage with Sophia, the youngest daughter of Elizabeth the daughter of
+James I. of England, was not one which at first seemed likely to confer
+any prospect of advancement to his family. But though there were many
+persons whose birth gave them better claims than she had to the English
+crown, she found herself, upon the death of the duke of Gloucester, the
+next Protestant heir after Anne. The Act of Settlement in 1701 secured
+the inheritance to herself and her descendants. Being old and
+unambitious she rather permitted herself to be burthened with the honour
+than thrust herself forward to meet it. Her son George took a deeper
+interest in the matter. In his youth he had fought with determined
+courage in the wars of William III. Succeeding to the electorate on his
+father's death in 1698, he had sent a welcome reinforcement of
+Hanoverians to fight under Marlborough at Blenheim. With prudent
+persistence he attached himself closely to the Whigs and to Marlborough,
+refusing Tory offers of an independent command, and receiving in return
+for his fidelity a guarantee by the Dutch of his succession to England
+in the Barrier treaty of 1709. In 1714 when Anne was growing old, and
+Bolingbroke and the more reckless Tories were coquetting with the son of
+James II., the Whigs invited George's eldest son, who was duke of
+Cambridge, to visit England in order to be on the spot in case of need.
+Neither the elector nor his mother approved of a step which was likely
+to alienate the queen, and which was specially distasteful to himself,
+as he was on very bad terms with his son. Yet they did not set
+themselves against the strong wish of the party to which they looked for
+support, and it is possible that troubles would have arisen from any
+attempt to carry out the plan, if the deaths, first of the electress
+(May 28) and then of the queen (August 1, 1714), had not laid open
+George's way to the succession without further effort of his own.
+
+In some respects the position of the new king was not unlike that of
+William III. a quarter of a century before. Both sovereigns were
+foreigners, with little knowledge of English politics and little
+interest in English legislation. Both sovereigns arrived at a time when
+party spirit had been running high, and when the task before the ruler
+was to still the waves of contention. In spite of the difference between
+an intellectually great man and an intellectually small one, in spite
+too of the difference between the king who began by choosing his
+ministers from both parties and the king who persisted in choosing his
+ministers from only one, the work of pacification was accomplished by
+George even more thoroughly than by William.
+
+George I. was fortunate in arriving in England when a great military
+struggle had come to an end. He had therefore no reason to call upon the
+nation to make great sacrifices. All that he wanted was to secure for
+himself and his family a high position which he hardly knew how to
+occupy, to fill the pockets of his German attendants and his German
+mistresses, to get away as often as possible from the uncongenial
+islanders whose language he was unable to speak, and to use the strength
+of England to obtain petty advantages for his German principality. In
+order to do this he attached himself entirely to the Whig party, though
+he refused to place himself at the disposal of its leaders. He gave his
+confidence, not to Somers and Wharton and Marlborough, but to Stanhope
+and Townshend, the statesmen of the second rank. At first he seemed to
+be playing a dangerous game. The Tories, whom he rejected, were
+numerically superior to their adversaries, and were strong in the
+support of the country gentlemen and the country clergy. The strength of
+the Whigs lay in the towns and in the higher aristocracy. Below both
+parties lay the mass of the nation, which cared nothing for politics
+except in special seasons of excitement, and which asked only to be let
+alone. In 1715 a Jacobite insurrection in the north, supported by the
+appearance of the Pretender, the son of James II., in Scotland, was
+suppressed, and its suppression not only gave to the government a
+character of stability, but displayed its adversaries in an unfavourable
+light as the disturbers of the peace.
+
+Even this advantage, however, would have been thrown away if the Whigs
+in power had continued to be animated by violent party spirit. What
+really happened was that the Tory leaders were excluded from office, but
+that the principles and prejudices of the Tories were admitted to their
+full weight in the policy of the government. The natural result
+followed. The leaders to whom no regard was paid continued in
+opposition. The rank and file, who would personally have gained nothing
+by a party victory, were conciliated into quiescence.
+
+This mingling of two policies was conspicuous both in the foreign and
+the domestic actions of the reign. In the days of Queen Anne the Whig
+party had advocated the continuance of war with a view to the complete
+humiliation of the king of France, whom they feared as the protector of
+the Pretender, and in whose family connexion with the king of Spain they
+saw a danger for England. The Tory party, on the other hand, had been
+the authors of the peace of Utrecht, and held that France was
+sufficiently depressed. A fortunate concurrence of circumstances enabled
+George's ministers, by an alliance with the regent of France, the duke
+of Orleans, to pursue at the same time the Whig policy of separating
+France from Spain and from the cause of the Pretender, and the Tory
+policy of the maintenance of a good understanding with their neighbour
+across the Channel. The same eclecticism was discernible in the
+proceedings of the home government. The Whigs were conciliated by the
+repeal of the Schism Act and the Occasional Conformity Act, whilst the
+Tories were conciliated by the maintenance of the Test Act in all its
+vigour. The satisfaction of the masses was increased by the general
+well-being of the nation.
+
+Very little of all that was thus accomplished was directly owing to
+George I. The policy of the reign is the policy of his ministers.
+Stanhope and Townshend from 1714 to 1717 were mainly occupied with the
+defence of the Hanoverian settlement. After the dismissal of the latter
+in 1717, Stanhope in conjunction with Sunderland took up a more decided
+Whig policy. The Occasional Conformity Act and the Schism Act were
+repealed in 1719. But the wish of the liberal Whigs to modify if not to
+repeal the Test Act remained unsatisfied. In the following year the
+bursting of the South Sea bubble, and the subsequent deaths of Stanhope
+in 1721 and of Sunderland in 1722, cleared the way for the accession to
+power of Sir Robert Walpole, to whom and not to the king was due the
+conciliatory policy which quieted Tory opposition by abstaining from
+pushing Whig principles to their legitimate consequences.
+
+Nevertheless something of the honour due to Walpole must be reckoned to
+the king's credit. It is evident that at his accession his decisions
+were by no means unimportant. The royal authority was still able within
+certain limits to make its own terms. This support was so necessary to
+the Whigs that they made no resistance when he threw aside their leaders
+on his arrival in England. When by his personal intervention he
+dismissed Townshend and appointed Sunderland, he had no such social and
+parliamentary combination to fear as that which almost mastered his
+great-grandson in his struggle for power. If such a combination arose
+before the end of his reign it was owing more to his omitting to fulfil
+the duties of his station than from the necessity of the case. As he
+could talk no English, and his ministers could talk no German, he
+absented himself from the meetings of the cabinet, and his frequent
+absences from England and his want of interest in English politics
+strengthened the cabinet in its tendency to assert an independent
+position. Walpole at last by his skill in the management of parliament
+rose as a subject into the almost royal position denoted by the name of
+prime minister. In connexion with Walpole the force of wealth and
+station established the Whig aristocracy in a point of vantage from
+which it was afterwards difficult to dislodge them. Yet, though George
+had allowed the power which had been exercised by William and Anne to
+slip through his hands, it was understood to the last that if he chose
+to exert himself he might cease to be a mere cipher in the conduct of
+affairs. As late as 1727 Bolingbroke gained over one of the king's
+mistresses, the duchess of Kendal; and though her support of the fallen
+Jacobite took no effect, Walpole was not without fear that her
+reiterated entreaties would lead to his dismissal. The king's death in a
+carriage on his way to Hanover, in the night between 10th and 11th June
+in the same year, put an end to these apprehensions.
+
+His only children were his successor George II. and Sophia Dorothea
+(1687-1757), who married in 1706 Frederick William, crown prince
+(afterwards king) of Prussia. She was the mother of Frederick the Great.
+ (S. R. G.)
+
+ See the standard English histories. A recent popular work is L.
+ Melville's _The First George in Hanover and England_ (1908).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE II. [George Augustus] (1683-1760), king of Great Britain and
+Ireland, the only son of George I., was born in 1683. In 1705 he married
+Wilhelmina Caroline of Anspach. In 1706 he was created earl of
+Cambridge. In 1708 he fought bravely at Oudenarde. At his father's
+accession to the English throne he was thirty-one years of age. He was
+already on bad terms with his father. The position of an heir-apparent
+is in no case an easy one to fill with dignity, and the ill-treatment of
+the prince's mother by his father was not likely to strengthen in him a
+reverence for paternal authority. It was most unwillingly that, on his
+first journey to Hanover in 1716, George I. appointed the prince of
+Wales guardian of the realm during his absence. In 1717 the existing
+ill-feeling ripened into an open breach. At the baptism of one of his
+children, the prince selected one godfather whilst the king persisted in
+selecting another. The young man spoke angrily, was ordered into arrest,
+and was subsequently commanded to leave St James's and to be excluded
+from all court ceremonies. The prince took up his residence at Leicester
+House, and did everything in his power to support the opposition against
+his father's ministers.
+
+When therefore George I. died in 1727, it was generally supposed that
+Walpole would be at once dismissed. The first direction of the new king
+was that Sir Spencer Compton would draw up the speech in which he was to
+announce to the privy council his accession. Compton, not knowing how to
+set about his task, applied to Walpole for aid. Queen Caroline took
+advantage of this evidence of incapacity, advocated Walpole's cause with
+her husband and procured his continuance in office. This curious scene
+was indicative of the course likely to be taken by the new sovereign.
+His own mind was incapable of rising above the merest details of
+business. He made war in the spirit of a drill-sergeant, and he
+economized his income with the minute regularity of a clerk. A blunder
+of a master of the ceremonies in marshalling the attendants on a levee
+put him out of temper. He took the greatest pleasure in counting his
+money piece by piece, and he never forgot a date. He was above all
+things methodical and regular. "He seems," said one who knew him well,
+"to think his having done a thing to-day an unanswerable reason for his
+doing it to-morrow."
+
+Most men so utterly immersed in details would be very impracticable to
+deal with. They would obstinately refuse to listen to a wisdom and
+prudence which meant nothing in their ears, and which brought home to
+them a sense of their own inferiority. It was the happy peculiarity of
+George II. that he was exempt from this failing. He seemed to have an
+instinctive understanding that such and such persons were either wiser
+or even stronger than himself, and when he had once discovered that, he
+gave way with scarcely a struggle. Thus it was that, though in his
+domestic relations he was as loose a liver as his father had been, he
+allowed himself to be guided by the wise but unobtrusive counsels of his
+wife until her death in 1737, and that when once he had recognized
+Walpole's superiority he allowed himself to be guided by the political
+sagacity of the great minister. It is difficult to exaggerate the
+importance of such a temper upon the development of the constitution.
+The apathy of the nation in all but the most exciting political
+questions, fostered by the calculated conservatism of Walpole, had
+thrown power into the hands of the great landowners. They maintained
+their authority by supporting a minister who was ready to make use of
+corruption, wherever corruption was likely to be useful, and who could
+veil over the baseness of the means which he employed by his talents in
+debate and in finance. To shake off a combination so strong would not
+have been easy. George II. submitted to it without a struggle.
+
+So strong indeed had the Whig aristocracy grown that it began to lose
+its cohesion. Walpole was determined to monopolize power, and he
+dismissed from office all who ventured to oppose him. An opposition
+formidable in talents was gradually formed. In its composite ranks were
+to be found Tories and discontented Whigs, discarded official hacks who
+were hungry for the emoluments of office, and youthful purists who
+fancied that if Walpole were removed, bribes and pensions would cease to
+be attractive to a corrupt generation. Behind them was Bolingbroke,
+excluded from parliament but suggesting every party move. In 1737 the
+opposition acquired the support of Frederick, prince of Wales. The young
+man, weak and headstrong, rebelled against the strict discipline exacted
+by his father. His marriage in 1736 to Augusta of Saxony brought on an
+open quarrel. In 1737, just as the princess of Wales was about to give
+birth to her first child, she was hurried away by her husband from
+Hampton Court to St James's Palace at the imminent risk of her life,
+simply in order that the prince might show his spite to his father who
+had provided all necessary attendance at the former place. George
+ordered his son to quit St James's, and to absent himself from court.
+Frederick in disgrace gave the support of his name, and he had nothing
+else to give, to the opposition. Later in the year 1737, on the 20th of
+November, Queen Caroline died. In 1742 Walpole, weighed down by the
+unpopularity both of his reluctance to engage in a war with Spain and of
+his supposed remissness in conducting the operations of that war, was
+driven from office. His successors formed a composite ministry in which
+Walpole's old colleagues and Walpole's old opponents were alike to be
+found.
+
+The years which followed settled conclusively, at least for this reign,
+the constitutional question of the power of appointing ministers. The
+war between Spain and England had broken out in 1739. In 1741 the death
+of the emperor Charles VI. brought on the war of the Austrian
+succession. The position of George II. as a Hanoverian prince drew him
+to the side of Maria Theresa through jealousy of the rising Prussian
+monarchy. Jealousy of France led England in the same direction, and in
+1741 a subsidy of Ł300,000 was voted to Maria Theresa. The king himself
+went to Germany and attempted to carry on the war according to his own
+notions. Those notions led him to regard the safety of Hanover as of far
+more importance than the wishes of England. Finding that a French army
+was about to march upon his German states, he concluded with France a
+treaty of neutrality for a year without consulting a single English
+minister. In England the news was received with feelings of disgust. The
+expenditure of English money and troops was to be thrown uselessly away
+as soon as it appeared that Hanover was in the slightest danger. In 1742
+Walpole was no longer in office. Lord Wilmington, the nominal head of
+the ministry, was a mere cipher. The ablest and most energetic of his
+colleagues, Lord Carteret (afterwards Granville), attached himself
+specially to the king, and sought to maintain himself in power by his
+special favour and by brilliant achievements in diplomacy.
+
+In part at least by Carteret's mediation the peace of Breslau was
+signed, by which Maria Theresa ceded Silesia to Frederick (July 28,
+1742). Thus relieved on her northern frontier, she struck out vigorously
+towards the west. Bavaria was overrun by her troops. In the beginning of
+1743 one French army was driven across the Rhine. On June 27th another
+French army was defeated by George II. in person at Dettingen. Victory
+brought elation to Maria Theresa. Her war of defence was turned into a
+war of vengeance. Bavaria was to be annexed. The French frontier was to
+be driven back. George II. and Carteret after some hesitation placed
+themselves on her side. Of the public opinion of the political classes
+in England they took no thought. Hanoverian troops were indeed to be
+employed in the war, but they were to be taken into British pay.
+Collisions between British and Hanoverian officers were frequent. A
+storm arose against the preference shown to Hanoverian interests. After
+a brief struggle Carteret, having become Lord Granville by his mother's
+death, was driven from office in November 1744.
+
+Henry Pelham, who had become prime minister in the preceding year, thus
+saw himself established in power. By the acceptance of this ministry,
+the king acknowledged that the function of choosing a ministry and
+directing a policy had passed from his hands. In 1745 indeed he recalled
+Granville, but a few days were sufficient to convince him of the
+futility of his attempt, and the effort to exclude Pitt at a later time
+proved equally fruitless.
+
+Important as were the events of the remainder of the reign, therefore,
+they can hardly be grouped round the name of George II. The resistance
+to the invasion of the Young Pretender in 1745, the peace of
+Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748, the great war ministry of Pitt at the close of
+the reign, did not receive their impulse from him. He had indeed done
+his best to exclude Pitt from office. He disliked him on account of his
+opposition in former years to the sacrifices demanded by the Hanoverian
+connexion. When in 1756 Pitt became secretary of state in the Devonshire
+administration, the king bore the yoke with difficulty. Early in the
+next year he complained of Pitt's long speeches as being above his
+comprehension, and on April 5, 1757, he dismissed him, only to take him
+back shortly after, when Pitt, coalescing with Newcastle, became master
+of the situation. Before Pitt's dismissal George II. had for once an
+opportunity of placing himself on the popular side, though, as was the
+case of his grandson during the American war, it was when the popular
+side happened to be in the wrong. In the true spirit of a martinet, he
+wished to see Admiral Byng executed. Pitt urged the wish of the House of
+Commons to have him pardoned. "Sir," replied the king, "you have taught
+me to look for the sense of my subjects in another place than in the
+House of Commons." When George II. died in 1760, he left behind him a
+settled understanding that the monarchy was one of the least of the
+forces by which the policy of the country was directed. To this end he
+had contributed much by his disregard of English opinion in 1743; but it
+may fairly be added that, but for his readiness to give way to
+irresistible adversaries, the struggle might have been far more bitter
+and severe than it was.
+
+Of the connexion between Hanover and England in this reign two memorials
+remain more pleasant to contemplate than the records of parliamentary
+and ministerial intrigues. With the support of George II., amidst the
+derision of the English fashionable world, the Hanoverian Handel
+produced in England those masterpieces which have given delight to
+millions, whilst the foundation of the university of Göttingen by the
+same king opened a door through which English political ideas afterwards
+penetrated into Germany.
+
+George II. had three sons,--Frederick Louis (1707-1751); George William
+(1717-1718); and William Augustus, duke of Cumberland (1721-1765); and
+five daughters, Anne (1709-1759), married to William, prince of Orange,
+1734; Amelia Sophia Eleonora (1711-1786); Elizabeth Caroline
+(1713-1757); Mary (1723-1772), married to Frederick, landgrave of
+Hesse-Cassel, 1740; Louisa (1724-1751), married to Frederick V., king of
+Denmark, 1743. (S. R. G.)
+
+ See Lord Hervey, _Memoirs of the Reign of George II._, ed. by J. W,
+ Croker (3 vols., London, 1884); Horace Walpole, _Mem. of the Reign of
+ George II._, with notes by Lord Holland (3 vols., 2nd ed., 1847).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE III. [George William Frederick] (1738-1820), king of Great
+Britain and Ireland, son of Frederick, prince of Wales, and grandson of
+George II., whom he succeeded in 1760, was born on the 4th of June 1738.
+After his father's death in 1751 he had been educated in seclusion from
+the fashionable world under the care of his mother and of her favourite
+counsellor the earl of Bute. He had been taught to revere the maxims of
+Bolingbroke's "Patriot King," and to believe that it was his appointed
+task in life to break the power of the Whig houses resting upon
+extensive property and the influence of patronage and corruption. That
+power had already been gravely shaken. The Whigs from their incompetency
+were obliged when the Seven Years' War broke out to leave its management
+in the hands of William Pitt. The nation learned to applaud the great
+war minister who succeeded where others had failed, and whose immaculate
+purity put to shame the ruck of barterers of votes for places and
+pensions.
+
+In some sort the work of the new king was the continuation of the work
+of Pitt. But his methods were very different. He did not appeal to any
+widely spread feeling or prejudice; nor did he disdain the use of the
+arts which had maintained his opponents in power. The patronage of the
+crown was to be really as well as nominally his own; and he calculated,
+not without reason, that men would feel more flattered in accepting a
+place from a king than from a minister. The new Toryism of which he was
+the founder was no recurrence to the Toryism of the days of Charles II.
+or even of Anne. The question of the amount of toleration to be accorded
+to Dissenters had been entirely laid aside. The point at issue was
+whether the crown should be replaced in the position which George I.
+might have occupied at the beginning of his reign, selecting the
+ministers and influencing the deliberations of the cabinet. For this
+struggle George III. possessed no inconsiderable advantages. With an
+inflexible tenacity of purpose, he was always ready to give way when
+resistance was really hopeless. As the first English-born sovereign of
+his house, speaking from his birth the language of his subjects, he
+found a way to the hearts of many who never regarded his predecessors as
+other than foreign intruders. The contrast, too, between the pure
+domestic life which he led with his wife Charlotte, whom he married in
+1761, and the habits of three generations of his house, told in his
+favour with the vast majority of his subjects. Even his marriage had
+been a sacrifice to duty. Soon after his accession he had fallen in love
+with Lady Sarah Lennox, and had been observed to ride morning by morning
+along the Kensington Road, from which the object of his affections was
+to be seen from the lawn of Holland House making hay, or engaged in some
+other ostensible employment. Before the year was over Lady Sarah
+appeared as one of the queen's bridesmaids, and she was herself married
+to Sir Charles Bunbury in 1762.
+
+At first everything seemed easy to him. Pitt had come to be regarded by
+his own colleagues as a minister who would pursue war at any price, and
+in getting rid of Pitt in 1761 and in carrying on the negotiations which
+led to the peace of Paris in 1762, the king was able to gather round him
+many persons who would not be willing to acquiesce in any permanent
+change in the system of government. With the signature of the peace his
+real difficulties began. The Whig houses, indeed, were divided amongst
+themselves by personal rivalries. But they were none of them inclined to
+let power and the advantages of power slip from their hands without a
+struggle. For some years a contest of influence was carried on without
+dignity and without any worthy aim. The king was not strong enough to
+impose upon parliament a ministry of his own choice. But he gathered
+round himself a body of dependants known as the king's friends, who were
+secure of his favour, and who voted one way or the other according to
+his wishes. Under these circumstances no ministry could possibly be
+stable; and yet every ministry was strong enough to impose some
+conditions on the king. Lord Bute, the king's first choice, resigned
+from a sense of his own incompetency in 1763. George Grenville was in
+office till 1765; the marquis of Rockingham till 1766; Pitt, becoming
+earl of Chatham, till illness compelled him to retire from the conduct
+of affairs in 1767, when he was succeeded by the duke of Grafton. But a
+struggle of interests could gain no real strength for any government,
+and the only chance the king had of effecting a permanent change in the
+balance of power lay in the possibility of his associating himself with
+some phase of strong national feeling, as Pitt had associated himself
+with the war feeling caused by the dissatisfaction spread by the
+weakness and ineptitude of his predecessors.
+
+Such a chance was offered by the question of the right to tax America.
+The notion that England was justified in throwing on America part of the
+expenses caused in the late war was popular in the country, and no one
+adopted it more pertinaciously then George III. At the bottom the
+position which he assumed was as contrary to the principles of
+parliamentary government as the encroachments of Charles I. had been.
+But it was veiled in the eyes of Englishmen by the prominence given to
+the power of the British parliament rather than to the power of the
+British king. In fact the theory of parliamentary government, like most
+theories after their truth has long been universally acknowledged, had
+become a superstition. Parliaments were held to be properly vested with
+authority, not because they adequately represented the national will,
+but simply because they were parliaments. There were thousands of people
+in England to whom it never occurred that there was any good reason why
+a British parliament should be allowed to levy a duty on tea in the
+London docks and should not be allowed to levy a duty on tea at the
+wharves of Boston. Undoubtedly George III. derived great strength from
+his honest participation in this mistake. Contending under parliamentary
+forms, he did not wound the susceptibilities of members of parliament,
+and when at last in 1770 he appointed Lord North--a minister of his own
+selection--prime minister, the object of his ambition was achieved with
+the concurrence of a large body of politicians who had nothing in common
+with the servile band of the king's friends.
+
+As long as the struggle with America was carried on with any hope of
+success they gained that kind of support which is always forthcoming to
+a government which shares in the errors and prejudices of its subjects.
+The expulsion of Wilkes from the House of Commons in 1769, and the
+refusal of the House to accept him as a member after his re-election,
+raised a grave constitutional question in which the king was wholly in
+the wrong; and Wilkes was popular in London and Middlesex. But his case
+roused no national indignation, and when in 1774 those sharp measures
+were taken with Boston which led to the commencement of the American
+rebellion in 1775, the opposition to the course taken by the king made
+little way either in parliament or in the country. Burke might point out
+the folly and inexpedience of the proceedings of the government. Chatham
+might point out that the true spirit of English government was to be
+representative, and that that spirit was being violated at home and
+abroad. George III., who thought that the first duty of the Americans
+was to obey himself, had on his side the mass of unreflecting Englishmen
+who thought that the first duty of all colonists was to be useful and
+submissive to the mother-country. The natural dislike of every country
+engaged in war to see itself defeated was on his side, and when the news
+of Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga arrived in 1777, subscriptions of
+money to raise new regiments poured freely in.
+
+In March 1778 the French ambassador in London announced that a treaty of
+friendship and commerce had been concluded between France and the new
+United States of America. Lord North was anxious to resign power into
+stronger hands, and begged the king to receive Chatham as his prime
+minister. The king would not hear of it. He would have nothing to say to
+"that perfidious man" unless he would humble himself to enter the
+ministry as North's subordinate. Chatham naturally refused to do
+anything of the kind, and his death in the course of the year relieved
+the king of the danger of being again overruled by too overbearing a
+minister. England was now at war with France, and in 1779 she was also
+at war with Spain.
+
+George III. was still able to control the disposition of office. He
+could not control the course of events. His very ministers gave up the
+struggle as hopeless long before he would acknowledge the true state of
+the case. Before the end of 1779, two of the leading members of the
+cabinet, Lords Gower and Weymouth, resigned rather than bear the
+responsibility of so ruinous an enterprise as the attempt to overpower
+America and France together. Lord North retained office, but he
+acknowledged to the king that his own opinion was precisely the same as
+that of his late colleagues.
+
+The year 1780 saw an agitation rising in the country for economical
+reform, an agitation very closely though indirectly connected with the
+war policy of the king. The public meetings held in the country on this
+subject have no unimportant place in the development of the
+constitution. Since the presentation of the Kentish petition in the
+reign of William III. there had been from time to time upheavings of
+popular feeling against the doings of the legislature, which kept up the
+tradition that parliament existed in order to represent the nation. But
+these upheavings had all been so associated with ignorance and violence
+as to make it very difficult for men of sense to look with displeasure
+upon the existing emancipation of the House of Commons from popular
+control. The Sacheverell riots, the violent attacks upon the Excise
+Bill, the no less violent advocacy of the Spanish War, the declamations
+of the supporters of Wilkes at a more recent time, and even in this very
+year the Gordon riots, were not likely to make thoughtful men anxious to
+place real power in the hands of the classes from whom such exhibitions
+of folly proceeded. But the movement for economical reform was of a very
+different kind. It was carried on soberly in manner, and with a definite
+practical object. It asked for no more than the king ought to have been
+willing to concede. It attacked useless expenditure upon sinecures and
+unnecessary offices in the household, the only use of which was to
+spread abroad corruption amongst the upper classes. George III. could
+not bear to be interfered with at all, or to surrender any element of
+power which had served him in his long struggle with the Whigs. He held
+out for more than another year. The news of the capitulation of Yorktown
+reached London on the 25th of November 1781. On the 20th of March 1782
+Lord North resigned.
+
+George III. accepted the consequences of defeat. He called the marquis
+of Rockingham to office at the head of a ministry composed of pure Whigs
+and of the disciples of the late earl of Chatham, and he authorized the
+new ministry to open negotiations for peace. Their hands were greatly
+strengthened by Rodney's victory over the French fleet, and the failure
+of the combined French and Spanish attack upon Gibraltar; and before the
+end of 1782 a provisional treaty was signed with America, preliminaries
+of peace with France and Spain being signed early in the following year.
+On the 3rd of September 1783 the definitive treaties with the three
+countries were simultaneously concluded. "Sir," said the king to John
+Adams, the first minister of the United States of America accredited to
+him, "I wish you to believe, and that it may be understood in America,
+that I have done nothing in the late contest but what I thought myself
+indispensably bound to do by the duty which I owed to my people. I will
+be very frank with you. I was the last to consent to the separation: but
+the separation having been made and having become inevitable, I have
+always said, as I say now, that I would be the first to meet the
+friendship of the United States as an independent power."
+
+Long before the signature of the treaties Rockingham died (July 1,
+1782). The king chose Lord Shelburne, the head of the Chatham section of
+the government, to be prime minister. Fox and the followers of
+Rockingham refused to serve except under the duke of Portland, a
+minister of their own selection, and resigned office. The old
+constitutional struggle of the reign was now to be fought out once more.
+Fox, too weak to obtain a majority alone, coalesced with Lord North, and
+defeated Shelburne in the House of Commons on the 27th of February 1783.
+On the 2nd of April the coalition took office, with Portland as nominal
+prime minister, and Fox and North the secretaries of state as its real
+heads.
+
+This attempt to impose upon him a ministry which he disliked made the
+king very angry. But the new cabinet had a large majority in the House
+of Commons, and the only chance of resisting it lay in an appeal to the
+country against the House of Commons. Such an appeal was not likely to
+be responded to unless the ministers discredited themselves with the
+nation. George III. therefore waited his time. Though a coalition
+between men bitterly opposed to one another in all political principles
+and drawn together by nothing but love of office was in itself
+discreditable, it needed some more positive cause of dissatisfaction to
+arouse the constituencies, which were by no means so ready to interfere
+in political disputes at that time as they are now. Such dissatisfaction
+was given by the India Bill, drawn up by Burke. As soon as it had passed
+through the Commons the king hastened to procure its rejection in the
+House of Lords by his personal intervention with the peers. He
+authorized Lord Temple to declare in his name that he would count any
+peer who voted for the bill as his enemy. On the 17th of December 1783
+the bill was thrown out. The next day ministers were dismissed. William
+Pitt became prime minister. After some weeks' struggle with a constantly
+decreasing majority in the Commons, the king dissolved parliament on the
+25th of March 1784. The country rallied round the crown and the young
+minister, and Pitt was firmly established in office.
+
+There can be no reasonable doubt[1] that Pitt not only took advantage of
+the king's intervention in the Lords, but was cognizant of the intrigue
+before it was actually carried out. It was upon him, too, that the
+weight of reconciling the country to an administration formed under such
+circumstances lay. The general result, so far as George III. was
+concerned, was that to all outward appearance he had won the great
+battle of his life. It was he who was to appoint the prime minister, not
+any clique resting on a parliamentary support. But the circumstances
+under which the victory was won were such as to place the constitution
+in a position very different from that in which it would have been if
+the victory had been gained earlier in the reign. Intrigue there was
+indeed in 1783 and 1784 as there had been twenty years before.
+Parliamentary support was conciliated by Pitt by the grant of royal
+favours as it had been in the days of Bute. The actual blow was struck
+by a most questionable message to individual peers. But the main result
+of the whole political situation was that George III. had gone a long
+way towards disentangling the reality of parliamentary government from
+its accidents. His ministry finally stood because it had appealed to the
+constituencies against their representatives. Since then it has properly
+become a constitutional axiom that no such appeal should be made by the
+crown itself. But it may reasonably be doubted whether any one but the
+king was at that time capable of making the appeal. Lord Shelburne, the
+leader of the ministry expelled by the coalition, was unpopular in the
+country, and the younger Pitt had not had time to make his great
+abilities known beyond a limited circle. The real question for the
+constitutional historian to settle is not whether under ordinary
+circumstances a king is the proper person to place himself really as
+well as nominally at the head of the government; but whether under the
+special circumstances which existed in 1783 it was not better that the
+king should call upon the people to support him, than that government
+should be left in the hands of men who rested their power on close
+boroughs and the dispensation of patronage, without looking beyond the
+walls of the House of Commons for support.
+
+That the king gained credit far beyond his own deserts by the glories of
+Pitt's ministry is beyond a doubt. Nor can there be any reasonable doubt
+that his own example of domestic propriety did much to strengthen the
+position of his minister. It is true that that life was insufferably
+dull. No gleams of literary or artistic taste lightened it up. The
+dependants of the court became inured to dull routine unchequered by
+loving sympathy. The sons of the household were driven by the sheer
+weariness of such an existence into the coarsest profligacy. But all
+this was not visible from a distance. The tide of moral and religious
+improvement which had set in in England since the days of Wesley brought
+popularity to a king who was faithful to his wife, in the same way that
+the tide of manufacturing industry and scientific progress brought
+popularity to the minister who in some measure translated into practice
+the principles of the _Wealth of Nations_.
+
+Nor were there wanting subjects of importance beyond the circle of
+politics in which George III. showed a lively interest. The voyages of
+discovery which made known so large a part of the islands and coasts of
+the Pacific Ocean received from him a warm support. In the early days of
+the Royal Academy, its finances were strengthened by liberal grants from
+the privy purse. His favourite pursuit, however, was farming. When
+Arthur Young was issuing his _Annals of Agriculture_, he was supplied
+with information by the king, under the assumed name of Mr Ralph
+Robinson, relating to a farm at Petersham.
+
+The life of the king was suddenly clouded over. Early in his reign, in
+1765, he had been out of health, and--though the fact was studiously
+concealed at the time--symptoms of mental aberration were even then to
+be perceived. In October 1788 he was again out of health, and in the
+beginning of the following month his insanity was beyond a doubt. Whilst
+Pitt and Fox were contending in the House of Commons over the terms on
+which the regency should be committed to the prince of Wales, the king
+was a helpless victim to the ignorance of physicians and the brutalities
+of his servants. At last Dr Willis, who had made himself a name by
+prescribing gentleness instead of rigour in the treatment of the insane,
+was called in. Under his more humane management the king rapidly
+recovered. Before the end of February 1789 he was able to write to Pitt
+thanking him for his warm support of his interests during his illness.
+On the 23rd of April he went in person to St Paul's to return thanks for
+his recovery.
+
+The popular enthusiasm which burst forth around St Paul's was but a
+foretaste of a popularity far more universal. The French Revolution
+frightened the great Whig landowners till they made their peace with the
+king. Those who thought that the true basis of government was
+aristocratical were now of one mind with those who thought that the true
+basis of government was monarchical; and these two classes were joined
+by a far larger multitude which had no political ideas whatever, but
+which had a moral horror of the guillotine. As Elizabeth had once been
+the symbol of resistance to Spain, George was now the symbol of
+resistance to France. He was not, however, more than the symbol. He
+allowed Pitt to levy taxes and incur debt, to launch armies to defeat,
+and to prosecute the English imitators of French revolutionary courses.
+At last, however, after the Union with Ireland was accomplished, he
+learned that Pitt was planning a scheme to relieve the Catholics from
+the disabilities under which they laboured. The plan was revealed to him
+by the chancellor, Lord Loughborough, a selfish and intriguing
+politician who had served all parties in turn, and who sought to forward
+his own interests by falling in with the king's prejudices. George III.
+at once took up the position from which he never swerved. He declared
+that to grant concessions to the Catholics involved a breach of his
+coronation oath. No one has ever doubted that the king was absolutely
+convinced of the serious nature of the objection. Nor can there be any
+doubt that he had the English people behind him. Both in his peace
+ministry and in his war ministry Pitt had taken his stand on royal
+favour and on popular support. Both failed him alike now, and he
+resigned office at once. The shock to the king's mind was so great that
+it brought on a fresh attack of insanity. This time, however, the
+recovery was rapid. On the 14th of March 1801 Pitt's resignation was
+formally accepted, and the late speaker, Mr Addington, was installed in
+office as prime minister.
+
+The king was well pleased with the change. He was never capable of
+appreciating high merit in any one; and he was unable to perceive that
+the question on which Pitt had resigned was more than an improper
+question, with which he ought never to have meddled. "Tell him," he
+said, in directing his physician to inform Pitt of his restoration to
+health, "I am now quite well, quite recovered from my illness; but what
+has he not to answer for, who has been the cause of my having been ill
+at all?" Addington was a minister after his own mind. Thoroughly honest
+and respectable, with about the same share of abilities as was possessed
+by the king himself, he was certainly not likely to startle the world by
+any flights of genius. But for one circumstance Addington's ministry
+would have lasted long. So strong was the reaction against the
+Revolution that the bulk of the nation was almost as suspicious of
+genius as the king himself. Not only was there no outcry for legislative
+reforms, but the very idea of reform was unpopular. The country
+gentlemen were predominant in parliament, and the country gentlemen as a
+body looked upon Addington with respect and affection. Such a minister
+was therefore admirably suited to preside over affairs at home in the
+existing state of opinion. But those who were content with inaction at
+home would not be content with inaction abroad. In time of peace
+Addington would have been popular for a season. In time of war even his
+warmest admirers could not say that he was the man to direct armies in
+the most terrible struggle which had ever been conducted by an English
+government.
+
+For the moment this difficulty was not felt. On the 1st of October 1801,
+preliminaries of peace were signed between England and France, to be
+converted into the definitive peace of Amiens on the 27th of March 1802.
+The ruler of France was now Napoleon Bonaparte, and few persons in
+England believed that he had any real purpose of bringing his aggressive
+violence to an end. "Do you know what I call this peace?" said the king;
+"an experimental peace, for it is nothing else. But it was unavoidable."
+
+The king was right. On the 18th of May 1803 the declaration of war was
+laid before parliament. The war was accepted by all classes as
+inevitable, and the French preparations for an invasion of England
+roused the whole nation to a glow of enthusiasm only equalled by that
+felt when the Armada threatened its shores. On the 26th of October the
+king reviewed the London volunteers in Hyde Park. He found himself the
+centre of a great national movement with which he heartily sympathized,
+and which heartily sympathized with him.
+
+On the 12th of February 1804 the king's mind was again affected. When he
+recovered, he found himself in the midst of a ministerial crisis. Public
+feeling allowed but one opinion to prevail in the country--that Pitt,
+not Addington, was the proper man to conduct the administration in time
+of war. Pitt was anxious to form an administration on a broad basis,
+including Fox and all prominent leaders of both parties. The king would
+not hear of the admission of Fox. His dislike of him was personal as
+well as political, as he knew that Fox had had a great share in drawing
+the prince of Wales into a life of profligacy. Pitt accepted the king's
+terms, and formed an administration in which he was the only man of real
+ability. Eminent men, such as Lord Grenville, refused to join a ministry
+from which the king had excluded a great statesman on purely personal
+grounds.
+
+The whole question was reopened on Pitt's death on the 23rd of January
+1806. This time the king gave way. The ministry of All the Talents, as
+it was called, included Fox amongst its members. At first the king was
+observed to appear depressed at the necessity of surrender. But Fox's
+charm of manner soon gained upon him. "Mr Fox," said the king, "I
+little thought that you and I should ever meet again in this place; but
+I have no desire to look back upon old grievances, and you may rest
+assured I never shall remind you of them." On the 13th of September Fox
+died, and it was not long before the king and the ministry were openly
+in collision. The ministry proposed a measure enabling all subjects of
+the crown to serve in the army and navy in spite of religious
+disqualifications. The king objected even to so slight a modification of
+the laws against the Catholics and Dissenters, and the ministers
+consented to drop the bill. The king asked more than this. He demanded a
+written and positive engagement that this ministry would never, under
+any circumstances, propose to him "any measure of concession to the
+Catholics, or even connected with the question." The ministers very
+properly refused to bind themselves for the future. They were
+consequently turned out of office, and a new ministry was formed with
+the duke of Portland as first lord of the treasury and Mr Perceval as
+its real leader. The spirit of the new ministry was distinct hostility
+to the Catholic claims. On the 27th of April 1807 a dissolution of
+parliament was announced, and a majority in favour of the king's
+ministry was returned in the elections which speedily followed.
+
+The elections of 1807, like the elections of 1784, gave the king the
+mastery of the situation. In other respects they were the counterpart of
+one another. In 1784 the country declared, though perhaps without any
+clear conception of what it was doing, for a wise and progressive
+policy. In 1807 it declared for an unwise and retrogressive policy, with
+a very clear understanding of what it meant. It is in his reliance upon
+the prejudices and ignorance of the country that the constitutional
+significance of the reign of George III. appears. Every strong
+government derives its power from its representative character. At a
+time when the House of Commons was less really representative than at
+any other, a king was on the throne who represented the country in its
+good and bad qualities alike, in its hatred of revolutionary violence,
+its moral sturdiness, its contempt of foreigners, and its defiance of
+all ideas which were in any way strange. Therefore it was that his
+success was not permanently injurious to the working of the constitution
+as the success of Charles I. would have been. If he were followed by a
+king less English than himself, the strength of representative power
+would pass into other hands than those which held the sceptre.
+
+The overthrow of the ministry of All the Talents was the last political
+act of constitutional importance in which George III. took part. The
+substitution of Perceval for Portland as the nominal head of the
+ministry in 1809 was not an event of any real significance, and in 1811
+the reign practically came to an end. The king's reason finally broke
+down after the death of the princess Amelia, his favourite child; and
+the prince of Wales (see GEORGE IV.) became prince regent. The remaining
+nine years of George III.'s life were passed in insanity and blindness,
+and he died on the 29th of January 1820.
+
+His wife, Charlotte Sophia (1744-1818), was a daughter of Charles Louis
+of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (d. 1816), and was married to the king in London
+on the 8th of September 1761. After a peaceful and happy married life
+the queen died at Kew on the 17th of November 1818.
+
+George III. had nine sons. After his successor came Frederick, duke of
+York and Albany (1763-1827); William Henry, duke of Clarence, afterwards
+King William IV. (1765-1837); Edward Augustus, duke of Kent (1767-1825),
+father of Queen Victoria; Ernest Augustus, duke of Cumberland,
+afterwards king of Hanover (1771-1851); Augustus Frederick, duke of
+Sussex (1773-1843); Adolphus Frederick, duke of Cambridge (1774-1850);
+Octavius (1779-1783); Alfred (1780-1782). He had also six
+daughters--Charlotte Augusta (1766-1828), married in 1797 to Frederick,
+afterwards king of Württemberg; Augusta Sophia (1768-1840); Elizabeth
+(1770-1840), married Frederick, landgrave of Hesse-Homburg, 1818; Mary
+(1776-1857), married to William Frederick, duke of Gloucester, 1816;
+Sophia (1777-1848); Amelia (1783-1810). (S. R. G.)
+
+ The numerous contemporary memoirs and diaries are full of the best
+ material for a picture of George III.'s reign, apart from the standard
+ histories. Thackeray's _Four Georges_ must not be trusted so far as
+ historical judgment is concerned; Jesse's _Memoirs of the Life and
+ Reign of George III._ (2nd ed., 1867) is chiefly concerned with
+ personalities. See also Beckles Willson, _George III., as Man, Monarch
+ and Statesman_ (1907).
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] See Lord Fitzmaurice's _Life of Shelburne_, iii. 393.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE IV. [George Augustus Frederick] (1762-1830), king of Great
+Britain and Ireland, eldest son of George III., was born at St James's
+Palace, London, on the 12th of August 1762. He was naturally gifted, was
+well taught in the classics, learnt to speak French, Italian and German
+fluently, and had considerable taste for music and the arts; and in
+person he was remarkably handsome. His tutor, Bishop Richard Hurd, said
+of him when fifteen years old that he would be "either the most polished
+gentleman or the most accomplished blackguard in Europe--possibly both";
+and the latter prediction was only too fully justified. Reaction from
+the strict and parsimonious style of his parents' domestic life, which
+was quite out of touch with the gaiety and extravagance of London
+"society," had its natural effect in plunging the young prince of Wales,
+flattered and courted as he was, into a whirl of pleasure-seeking. At
+the outset his disposition was brilliant and generous, but it was
+essentially unstable, and he started even before he came of age on a
+career of dissipation which in later years became wholly profligate. He
+had an early amour with the actress Mary ("Perdita") Robinson, and in
+the choice of his friends he opposed and annoyed the king, with whom he
+soon became (and always remained) on the worst of terms, by associating
+himself with Fox and Sheridan and the Whig party. When in 1783 he came
+of age, a compromise between the coalition ministry and the king secured
+him an income of Ł50,000 from the Civil List, and Ł60,000 was voted by
+parliament to pay his debts and start his separate establishment at
+Carlton House. There, under the auspices of C.J. Fox and Georgiana,
+duchess of Devonshire, he posed as a patron of Whig politics and a
+leader in all the licence and luxury of gay society--the "First
+gentleman in Europe," as his flatterers described him as years went on.
+And at this early age he fell seriously in love with the famous Mrs
+Fitzherbert.
+
+His long connexion with this lady may most conveniently be summarized
+here. It was indeed for some time the one redeeming and restraining
+factor in his life, though her devotion and self-sacrificing conduct
+were in marked contrast with his unscrupulousness and selfishness. Mary
+Anne (or as she always called herself, Maria) Fitzherbert (1756-1837)
+was the daughter of Walter Smythe, the second son of Sir John Smythe,
+Bart., of Acton Burnell Park, Shropshire, and came of an old Roman
+Catholic family. Educated at a French convent, she married first in 1775
+Edward Weld, who died within the year, and secondly in 1778 Thomas
+Fitzherbert, who died in 1781, leaving his widow with a comfortable
+fortune. A couple of years later she became a prominent figure in London
+society, and her beauty and charm at once attracted the young prince,
+who wooed her with all the ardour of a violent passion. She herself was
+distracted between her desire to return his love, her refusal to
+contemplate becoming his mistress, and her knowledge that state reasons
+made a regular marriage impossible. The Act of Settlement (1689)
+entailed his forfeiture of the succession if he married a Roman
+Catholic, apart from the fact that the Royal Marriage Act of 1772 made
+any marriage illegal without the king's consent, which was out of the
+question. But after trying for a while to escape his attentions, her
+scruples were overcome. In Mrs Fitzherbert's eyes the state law was,
+after all, not everything. To a Roman Catholic, and equally to any
+member of the Christian church, a formal marriage ceremony would be
+ecclesiastically and sacramentally binding; and after a period of
+passionate importunacy on his part they were secretly married by the
+Rev. R. Burt, a clergyman of the Church of England, on the 15th of
+December 1785.[1] There is no doubt as to Mrs Fitzherbert's belief,
+supported by ecclesiastical considerations, in her correct and binding,
+though admittedly illegal, relationship to the prince as his canonical
+wife; and though that relationship was not, and for political reasons
+could not be, publicly admitted, it was in fact treated by their
+intimates on the footing of a morganatic marriage. The position
+nevertheless was inevitably a false one; Mrs Fitzherbert had promised
+not to publish the evidence of the marriage (which, according to a
+strict interpretation of the Act of Settlement might have barred
+succession to the crown), and the rumours which soon got about led the
+prince to allow it to be disavowed by his political friends. He lived in
+the most extravagant way, became heavily involved in debt, and as the
+king would not assist him, shut up Carlton House, and went to live with
+Mrs Fitzherbert at Brighton. In 1787 a proposal was brought before the
+House of Commons by Alderman Newnham for a grant in relief of his
+embarrassments. It was on this occasion that Fox publicly declared in
+the House of Commons, as on the prince's own authority, in answer to
+allusions to the marriage, that the story was a malicious falsehood. A
+little later Sheridan, in deference to Mrs Fitzherbert's pressure and to
+the prince's own compunction, made a speech guardedly modifying Fox's
+statement; but though in private the denial was understood, it effected
+its object, the House voting a grant of Ł221,000 to the prince and the
+king adding Ł10,000 to his income; and Mrs Fitzherbert, who at first
+thought of severing her connexion with the prince, forgave him. Their
+union--there was no child of the marriage--was brutally broken off in
+June 1794 by the prince, when further pressure of debts (and the
+influence of a new Egeria in Lady Jersey) made him contemplate his
+official marriage with princess Caroline; in 1800, however, it was
+renewed, after urgent pleading on the prince's part, and after Mrs
+Fitzherbert had obtained a formal decision from the pope pronouncing her
+to be his wife, and sanctioning her taking him back; her influence over
+him continued till shortly before the prince became regent, when his
+relations with Lady Hertford brought about a final separation. For the
+best years of his life he had at least had in Mrs Fitzherbert the
+nearest approach to a real wife, and this was fully recognized by the
+royal family.[2] But his dissolute nature was entirely selfish, and his
+various liaisons ended in the dominance of Lady Conyngham, the "Lady
+Steward" of his household, from 1821 till his death.
+
+Notorious as the prince of Wales had become by 1788, it was in that year
+that his father's first attack of insanity made his position in the
+state one of peculiar importance. Fox maintained and Pitt denied that
+the prince of Wales, as the heir-apparent, had a right to assume the
+regency independently of any parliamentary vote. Pitt, with the support
+of both Houses, proposed to confer upon him the regency with certain
+restrictions. The recovery of the king in February 1789 put an end,
+however, to the prince's hopes. In 1794 the prince consented to a
+marriage with a German Protestant princess, because his father would not
+pay his debts on any other terms, and his cousin, Princess Caroline of
+Brunswick, was brought over from Germany and married to him in 1795. Her
+behaviour was light and flippant, and he was brutal and unloving. The
+ill-assorted pair soon parted, and soon after the birth of their only
+child, the princess Charlotte, they were formally separated. With great
+unwillingness the House of Commons voted fresh sums of money to pay the
+prince's debts.
+
+In 1811 he at last became prince regent in consequence of his father's
+definite insanity. No one doubted at that time that it was in his power
+to change the ministry at his pleasure. He had always lived in close
+connexion with the Whig opposition, and he now empowered Lord Grenville
+to form a ministry. There soon arose differences of opinion between them
+on the answer to be returned to the address of the Houses, and the
+prince regent then informed the prime minister, Mr Perceval, that he
+should continue the existing ministry in office. The ground alleged by
+him for this desertion of his friends was the fear lest his father's
+recovery might be rendered impossible if he should come to hear of the
+advent of the opposition to power. Lord Wellesley's resignation in
+February 1812 made the reconstruction of the ministry inevitable. As
+there was no longer any hope of the king's recovery, the former
+objection to a Whig administration no longer existed. Instead of taking
+the course of inviting the Whigs to take office, he asked them to join
+the existing administration. The Whig leaders, however, refused to join,
+on the ground that the question of the Catholic disabilities was too
+important to be shelved, and that their difference of opinion with Mr
+Perceval was too glaring to be ignored. The prince regent was
+excessively angry, and continued Perceval in office till that minister's
+assassination on the 11th of May, when he was succeeded by Lord
+Liverpool, after a negotiation in which the proposition of entering the
+cabinet was again made to the Whigs and rejected by them. In the
+military glories of the following years the prince regent had no share.
+When the allied sovereigns visited England in 1814, he played the part
+of host to perfection. So great was his unpopularity at home that hisses
+were heard in the streets as he accompanied his guests into the city.
+The disgust which his profligate and luxurious life caused amongst a
+people suffering from almost universal distress after the conclusion of
+the war rapidly increased. In 1817 the windows of the prince regent's
+carriage were broken as he was on his way to open parliament.
+
+The death of George III. on the 29th of January 1820, gave to his son
+the title of king without in any way altering the position which he had
+now held for nine years. Indirectly, however, this change brought out a
+manifestation of popular feeling such as his father had never been
+subjected to even in the early days of his reign, when mobs were burning
+jack-boots and petticoats. The relations between the new king and his
+wife unavoidably became the subject of public discussion. In 1806 a
+charge against the princess of having given birth to an illegitimate
+child had been conclusively disproved, and the old king had consequently
+refused to withdraw her daughter, the princess Charlotte, from her
+custody. When in the regency the prince was able to interfere, and
+prohibited his wife from seeing her daughter more than once a fortnight.
+On this, in 1813, the princess addressed to her husband a letter setting
+forth her complaints, and receiving no answer published it in the
+_Morning Chronicle_. The prince regent then referred the letter,
+together with all papers relating to the inquiry of 1806, to a body of
+twenty-three privy councillors for an opinion whether it was fit that
+the restrictions on the intercourse between the princess Charlotte and
+her mother should continue in force. All except two answered as the
+regent wished them to answer. But if the official leaning was towards
+the husband, the leaning of the general public was towards the wife of a
+man whose own life had not been such as to justify him in complaining of
+her whom he had thrust from him without a charge of any kind. Addresses
+of sympathy were sent up to the princess from the city of London and
+other public bodies. The discord again broke out in 1814 in consequence
+of the exclusion of the princess from court during the visit of the
+allied sovereigns. In August in that year she left England, and after a
+little time took up her abode in Italy. The accession of George IV.
+brought matters to a crisis. He ordered that no prayer for his wife as
+queen should be admitted into the Prayer Book. She at once challenged
+the accusation which was implied in this omission by returning to
+England. On the 7th of June she arrived in London. Before she left the
+continent she had been informed that proceedings would be taken against
+her for adultery if she landed in England. Two years before, in 1818,
+commissioners had been sent to Milan to investigate charges against her,
+and their report, laid before the cabinet in 1819, was made the basis of
+the prosecution. On the day on which she arrived in London a message was
+laid before both Houses recommending the criminating evidence to
+parliament. A secret committee in the House of Lords after considering
+this evidence brought in a report on which the prime minister founded a
+Bill of Pains and Penalties to divorce the queen and to deprive her of
+her royal title. The bill passed the three readings with diminished
+majorities, and when on the third reading it obtained only a majority of
+nine, it was abandoned by the Government. The king's unpopularity, great
+as it had been before, was now greater than ever. Public opinion,
+without troubling itself to ask whether the queen was guilty or not, was
+roused to indignation by the spectacle of such a charge being brought by
+a husband who had thrust away his wife to fight the battle of life
+alone, without protection or support, and who, whilst surrounding her
+with spies to detect, perhaps to invent, her acts of infidelity, was
+himself notorious for his adulterous life. In the following year (1821)
+she attempted to force her way into Westminster Abbey to take her place
+at the coronation. On this occasion the popular support failed her; and
+her death in August relieved the king from further annoyance.
+
+Immediately after the death of the queen, the king set out for Ireland.
+He remained there but a short time, and his effusive declaration that
+rank, station, honours were nothing compared with the exalted happiness
+of living in the hearts of his Irish subjects gained him a momentary
+popularity which was beyond his attainment in a country where he was
+better known. His reception in Dublin encouraged him to attempt a visit
+to Edinburgh in the following year (August 1822). Since Charles II. had
+come to play the sorry part of a covenanting king in 1650 no sovereign
+of the country had set foot on Scottish soil. Sir Walter Scott took the
+leading part in organizing his reception. The enthusiasm with which he
+was received equalled, if it did not surpass, the enthusiasm with which
+he had been received in Dublin. But the qualities which enabled him to
+fix the fleeting sympathies of the moment were not such as would enable
+him to exercise the influence in the government which had been
+indubitably possessed by his father. He returned from Edinburgh to face
+the question of the appointment of a secretary of state which had been
+raised by the death of Lord Londonderry (Castlereagh). It was upon the
+question of the appointment of ministers that the battle between the
+Whigs and the king had been fought in the reign of George III. George
+IV. had neither the firmness nor the moral weight to hold the reins
+which his father had grasped. He disliked Canning for having taken his
+wife's side very much as his father had disliked Fox for taking his own.
+But Lord Liverpool insisted on Canning's admission to office, and the
+king gave way. Tacitly and without a struggle the constitutional victory
+of the last reign was surrendered. But it was not surrendered to the
+same foe as that from which it had been won. The coalition ministry in
+1784 rested on the great landowners and the proprietors of rotten
+boroughs. Lord Liverpool's ministry had hitherto not been very
+enlightened, and it supported itself to a great extent upon a narrow
+constituency. But it did appeal to public opinion in a way that the
+coalition did not, and what it wanted itself in popular support would be
+supplied by its successors. What one king had gained from a clique
+another gave up to the nation. Once more, on Lord Liverpool's death in
+1827, the same question was tried with the same result. The king not
+only disliked Canning personally, but he was opposed to Canning's
+policy. Yet after some hesitation he accepted Canning as prime minister;
+and when, after Canning's death and the short ministry of Lord Goderich,
+the king in 1828 authorized the duke of Wellington to form a ministry,
+he was content to lay down the principle that the members of it were not
+expected to be unanimous on the Catholic question. When in 1829 the
+Wellington ministry unexpectedly proposed to introduce a Bill to remove
+the disabilities of the Catholics, he feebly strove against the proposal
+and quickly withdrew his opposition. The worn-out debauchee had neither
+the merit of acquiescing in the change nor the courage to resist it.
+
+George IV. died on the 26th of June 1830, and was succeeded by his
+brother, the duke of Clarence, as William IV. His only child by Queen
+Caroline, the princess Charlotte Augusta, was married in 1816 to Leopold
+of Saxe-Coburg, afterwards king of the Belgians, and died in childbirth
+on the 6th of November 1817.
+
+ George IV. was a bad king, and his reign did much to disgust the
+ country with the Georgian type of monarchy; but libertine and
+ profligate as he became, the abuse which has been lavished on his
+ personal character has hardly taken into sufficient consideration the
+ loose morals of contemporary society, the political position of the
+ Whig party, and his own ebullient temperament. Thackeray, in his _Four
+ Georges_, is frequently unfair in this respect. The just condemnation
+ of the moralist and satirist requires some qualification in the light
+ of the picture of the period handed down in the memoirs and diaries of
+ the time, such as Greville's, Croker's, Creevey's, Lord Holland's,
+ Lord Malmesbury's, &c. Among later works see _The First Gentleman of
+ Europe_, by Lewis Melville (1906), a book for the general reader.
+ (S. R. G.; H. Ch.)
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] For a discussion of the ecclesiastical validity of the marriage
+ see W.H. Wilkins, _Mrs Fitzherbert and George IV._ (1905), chs. vi.
+ and vii.
+
+ [2] Mrs Fitzherbert herself, after her final separation from the
+ prince, with an annuity of Ł6000 a year, lived an honoured and more
+ or less retired life mainly at Brighton, a town which owed its rapid
+ development in fashionable popularity and material wealth to its
+ selection by the prince and herself as a residence from the earliest
+ years of their union; and there she died, seven years after the death
+ of George IV., in 1837. William IV. on his accession offered to
+ create her a duchess, but she declined; she accepted, however, his
+ permission to put her servants in royal livery. William IV. in fact
+ did all he could, short of a public acknowledgment (which the duke of
+ Wellington opposed on state grounds), to recognize her position as
+ his brother's widow. Charles Greville, writing of her after her
+ death, says in his _Diary_, "She was not a clever woman, but of a
+ very noble spirit, disinterested, generous, honest and affectionate."
+ The actual existence of a marriage tie and the documentary evidence
+ of her rights were not definitely established for many years; but in
+ 1905 a sealed packet, deposited at Coutts's bank in 1833, was at
+ length opened by royal permission, and the marriage certificate and
+ other conclusive proofs therein contained were published in Mr W.H.
+ Wilkins's _Mrs Fitzherbert and George IV_. In 1796 the prince had
+ made a remarkable will in Mrs Fitzherbert's favour, which he gave her
+ in 1799, and it is included among these documents (now in the private
+ archives at Windsor). In this he speaks of her emphatically
+ throughout as "my wife." It also contained directions that at his
+ death a locket with her miniature, which he always wore, should be
+ interred with him; and Mrs Fitzherbert was privately assured, on the
+ duke of Wellington's authority, that when the king was buried at
+ Windsor the miniature was on his breast.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE V. [GEORGE FREDERICK ERNEST ALBERT], king of Great Britain and
+Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, emperor of India
+(1865- ), second son of King Edward VII., was born at Marlborough House,
+London, on the 3rd of June 1865. When four years old, he and his elder
+brother, Prince Albert Victor, two years his senior, were placed under
+the tutorship of John Neale Dalton, then curate of Sandringham. In 1877
+the two princes became naval cadets on the "Britannia" at Spithead,
+where they passed through the ordinary curriculum, and in 1879 they
+joined H.M.S. "Bacchante" under the command of Captain Lord Charles
+Scott, making a voyage to the West Indies, in the course of which they
+were rated midshipmen. After a month at home in 1880 they returned to
+the ship to make another prolonged cruise in H.M.S. "Bacchante," in the
+course of which they visited South America, South Africa, Australia, the
+Fiji Islands, Japan, Ceylon, Egypt, Palestine and Greece. A narrative of
+this voyage, _The Cruise of H.M.S. "Bacchante_," compiled from the
+letters, diaries and notebooks of the princes, was published in 1886. At
+the close of this tour in 1882 the brothers separated. Prince George,
+who remained in the naval service, was appointed to H.M.S. "Canada,"
+commanded by Captain Durrant, on the North American and West Indian
+station, and was promoted sub-lieutenant. On his return home he passed
+through the Royal Naval College at Greenwich and the gunnery and torpedo
+schools, being promoted lieutenant in 1885. A year later he was
+appointed to H.M.S. "Thunderer" of the Mediterranean squadron, and was
+subsequently transferred to H.M.S. "Dreadnaught" and H.M.S. "Alexandra."
+In 1889 he joined the flagship of the Channel squadron, H.M.S.
+"Northumberland," and in that year was in command of torpedo boat No. 79
+for the naval manoeuvres. In 1890 he was put in command of the gunboat
+H.M.S. "Thrush" for service on the North American and West Indian
+station. After his promotion as commander in 1891 he commissioned H.M.S.
+"Melampus," the command of which he relinquished on the death of his
+brother, Albert Victor, the duke of Clarence, in January 1892, since his
+duties as eventual heir to the crown precluded him from devoting himself
+exclusively to the navy. He was promoted captain in 1893, rear-admiral
+in 1901, and vice-admiral in 1903. He was created duke of York, earl of
+Inverness, and Baron Killarney in 1892, and on the 6th of July 1893 he
+married Princess Victoria Mary (b. 26th May 1867), daughter of Francis,
+duke of Teck, and Princess Mary Adelaide, duchess of Teck, daughter of
+Adolphus Frederick, duke of Cambridge. Their eldest son, Prince Edward
+Albert, was born at White Lodge, Richmond, on the 23rd of June 1894;
+Prince Albert Frederick George was born at Sandringham on the 14th of
+December 1895; Princess Victoria Alexandra on the 25th of April 1897;
+Prince Henry William Frederick Albert on the 31st of March 1900; Prince
+George Edward Alexander Edmund on the 20th of December 1902; and Prince
+John Charles Francis on the 12th of July 1905. The duke and duchess of
+York visited Ireland in 1899, and it had been arranged before the death
+of Queen Victoria that they should make a tour in the colonies. On the
+accession of King Edward VII. (1901) this plan was confirmed. They
+sailed in the "Ophir" on the 16th of March 1901, travelling by the
+ordinary route, and landed at Melbourne in May, when they opened the
+first parliament of the Commonwealth. They then proceeded to New
+Zealand, returning by way of South Africa and Canada. An official
+account of the tour was published by Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace as
+_The Web of Empire_ (1902). In November 1901 the duke was created prince
+of Wales. On the death of Edward VII. (May 6, 1910) he succeeded to the
+Crown as George V., his consort taking the style of Queen Mary.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE V., king of Hanover (1819-1878), was the only son of Ernest
+Augustus, king of Hanover and duke of Cumberland, and consequently a
+grandson of the English king George III. Born in Berlin on the 27th of
+May 1819, his youth was passed in England and in Berlin until 1837, when
+his father became king of Hanover and he took up his residence in that
+country. He lost the sight of one eye during a childish illness, and the
+other by an accident in 1833. Being thus totally blind there were doubts
+whether he was qualified to succeed to the government of Hanover; but
+his father decided that he should do so, as the law of the dissolved
+empire only excluded princes who were born blind. This decision was a
+fatal one to the dynasty. Both from his father and from his maternal
+uncle, Charles Frederick, prince of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1785-1837),
+one of the most influential men at the Prussian court, George had
+learned to take a very high and autocratic view of royal authority. His
+blindness prevented him from acquiring the shrewdness and knowledge of
+the world which had assisted his father, and he easily fell into the
+hands of unwise, and perhaps dishonest and disloyal, advisers. A man of
+deep religious feeling, he formed a fantastic conception of the place
+assigned to the house of Guelph in the divine economy, and had ideas of
+founding a great Guelph state in Europe. It is, therefore, not
+surprising that from the time of his accession in November 1851 he was
+constantly engaged in disputes with his _Landtag_ or parliament, and was
+consequently in a weak and perilous position when the crisis in the
+affairs of Germany came in 1866. Having supported Austria in the diet of
+the German confederation in June 1866, he refused, contrary to the
+wishes of his parliament, to assent to the Prussian demand that Hanover
+should observe an unarmed neutrality during the war. As a result his
+country and his capital were at once occupied by the Prussians, to whom
+his army surrendered on the 29th of June 1866, and in the following
+September Hanover was formally annexed by Prussia. From his retreat at
+Hietzing near Vienna, George appealed in vain to the powers of Europe;
+and supported by a large number of his subjects, an agitation was
+carried on which for a time caused some embarrassment to Prussia. All
+these efforts, however, to bring about a restoration were unavailing,
+and the king passed the remainder of his life at Gmünden in Austria, or
+in France, refusing to the last to be reconciled with the Prussian
+government. Whilst visiting Paris for medical advice he died in that
+city on the 12th of June 1878, and was buried in St George's chapel,
+Windsor. In February 1843 he had married Marie, daughter of Joseph, duke
+of Saxe-Altenburg, by whom he left a son and two daughters. His son,
+Ernest Augustus, duke of Cumberland (b. 1845), continued to maintain the
+claim of his house to the kingdom of Hanover.
+
+By the capitulation of 1866 the king was allowed to retain his personal
+property, which included money and securities equal to nearly
+Ł1,500,000, which had been sent to England before the Prussian invasion
+of Hanover. The crown jewels had also been secretly conveyed to England.
+His valuable plate, which had been hidden at Herrenhausen, was restored
+to him in 1867; his palace at Herrenhausen, near Hanover, was reserved
+as his property; and in 1867 the Prussian government agreed to
+compensate him for the loss of his landed estates, but owing to his
+continued hostility the payment of the interest on this sum was
+suspended in the following year (see HANOVER).
+
+ See O. Klopp, _König Georg V._ (Hanover, 1878); O. Theodor,
+ _Erinnerungen an Georg V._ (Bremerhaven, 1878); and O. Meding,
+ _Memoiren zur Zeitgeschichte_ (Leipzig, 1881-1884).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE I., king of the Hellenes (1845- ), second son of King Christian
+IX. of Denmark, was born at Copenhagen on the 24th of December 1845.
+After the expulsion of King Otho in 1862, the Greek nation, by a
+plebiscite, elected the British prince, Alfred, duke of Edinburgh
+(subsequently duke of Coburg), to the vacant throne, and on his refusal
+the national assembly requested Great Britain to nominate a candidate.
+The choice of the British government fell on Prince Christian William
+Ferdinand Adolphus George of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg,
+whose election as king of the Hellenes, with the title George I., was
+recognized by the powers (6th of June 1863). The sister of the new
+sovereign, Princess Alexandra, had a few months before (10th March)
+married the prince of Wales, afterwards King Edward VII., and his father
+succeeded to the crown of Denmark in the following November. Another
+sister, Princess Dagmar, subsequently married the grand duke Alexander
+Alexandrovitch, afterwards Emperor Alexander III. of Russia. On his
+accession, King George signed an act resigning his right of succession
+to the Danish throne in favour of his younger brother Prince Waldemar.
+He was received with much enthusiasm by the Greeks. Adopting the motto,
+"My strength is the love of my people," he ruled in strict accordance
+with constitutional principles, though not hesitating to make the
+fullest use of the royal prerogative when the intervention of the crown
+seemed to be required by circumstances. For the events of his reign see
+GREECE: _History_.
+
+King George married, on the 27th of October 1867, the grand duchess Olga
+Constantinovna of Russia, who became distinguished in Greece for her
+activity on behalf of charitable objects. Their children were Prince
+Constantine, duke of Sparta (b. 1868), who married in 1889 Princess
+Sophia of Prussia, daughter of the emperor Frederick, and granddaughter
+of Queen Victoria; Prince George (b. 1869), from November 1898 to
+October 1906 high commissioner of the powers in Crete; Prince Nicholas
+(b. 1872), who married in 1902 the grand duchess Helen-Vladimirovna of
+Russia; Prince Andrew (b. 1882), who married in 1903 Princess Alice of
+Battenberg; Prince Christopher (b. 1888); and a daughter, Princess Marie
+(b. 1876), who married in 1900 the grand duke George Michailovich of
+Russia.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE, king of Saxony (1832-1904), the youngest son of King John of
+Saxony (d. 1873) and Queen Amelia, was born at Dresden on the 8th of
+August 1832. From an early age he received a careful scientific and
+military training, and in 1846 entered the active army as a lieutenant
+of artillery. In 1849-1850 he was a student at the university of Bonn,
+but soon returned to military life, for which he had a predilection. In
+the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 he commanded a Saxon cavalry brigade,
+and in the early part of the war of 1870-71 a division, but later
+succeeded to the supreme command of the XII. (Saxon) army corps in the
+room of his brother, the crown prince Albert (afterwards king) of
+Saxony. His name is inseparably associated with this campaign, during
+which he showed undoubted military ability and an intrepidity which
+communicated itself to all ranks under his command, notably at the
+battles of St Privat and Beaumont, in which he greatly distinguished
+himself. On his brother succeeding to the throne he became
+commander-in-chief of the Saxon army, and was in 1888 made a Prussian
+field marshal by the emperor William I. He married in 1859 the infanta
+Maria, sister of King Louis of Portugal, and King Albert's marriage
+being childless, succeeded on his death in 1902 to the throne of Saxony.
+He died on the 15th of October 1904, at Pillnitz.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE OF LAODICEA in Syria, often called "the Cappadocian," from 356 to
+361 Arian archbishop of Alexandria, was born about the beginning of the
+4th century. According to Ammianus (xxii. 11), he was a native of
+Epiphania, in Cilicia. Gregory Nazianzen tells us that his father was a
+fuller, and that he himself soon became notorious as a parasite of so
+mean a type that he would "sell himself for a cake." After many
+wanderings, in the course of which he seems to have amassed a
+considerable fortune, first as an army-contractor and then as a receiver
+of taxes, he ultimately reached Alexandria. It is not known how or when
+he obtained ecclesiastical orders; but, after Athanasius had been
+banished in 356, George was promoted by the influence of the then
+prevalent Arian faction to the vacant see. His theological attitude was
+that known as semi-Arian or Homoiousian, and his associates were
+Eustathius of Sebaste and Basil of Ancyra. At George's instigation the
+second Sirmian formula (promulgated by the third council of Sirmium
+357), which was conciliatory towards strict Arianism, was opposed at the
+council of Ancyra in 358 (Harnack, _Hist. of Dogma_, iv. 76). His
+persecutions and oppressions of the orthodox ultimately raised a
+rebellion which compelled him to flee for his life; but his authority
+was restored, although with difficulty, by a military demonstration.
+Untaught by experience, he resumed his course of selfish tyranny over
+Christians and heathen alike, and raised the irritation of the populace
+to such a pitch that when, on the accession of Julian, his downfall was
+proclaimed and he was committed to prison, they dragged him thence and
+killed him, finally casting his body into the sea (24th of December
+361). With much that was sordid and brutal in his character George
+combined a highly cultivated literary taste, and in the course of his
+chequered career he had found the means of collecting a splendid
+library, which Julian ordered to be conveyed to Antioch for his own use.
+An anonymous work against the Manicheans discovered by Lagarde in 1859
+in a MS. of Titus of Bostra has been attributed to him.
+
+ The original sources for the facts of the life of George of Laodicea
+ are Ammianus, Gregory Nazianzen, Epiphanius and Athanasius. His
+ character has been drawn with graphic fidelity by Gibbon in the 23rd
+ chapter of the _Decline and Fall_; but the theory, accepted by Gibbon,
+ which identifies him with the patron saint of England is now rejected
+ (see GEORGE, SAINT). See C.S. Hulst, _St George of Cappadocia in
+ Legend and History_ (1910).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE OF TREBIZOND (1395-1484), Greek philosopher and scholar, one of
+the pioneers of the revival of letters in the Western world, was born in
+the island of Crete, and derived his surname Trapezuntios from the fact
+that his ancestors were from Trebizond. At what period he came to Italy
+is not certain; according to some accounts he was summoned to Venice
+about 1430 to act as amanuensis to Francesco Barbaro, who appears to
+have already made his acquaintance; according to others he did not visit
+Italy till the time of the council of Florence (1438-1439). He learned
+Latin from Vittorino da Feltre, and made such rapid progress that in
+three years he was able to teach Latin literature and rhetoric. His
+reputation as a teacher and a translator of Aristotle was very great,
+and he was selected as secretary by Pope Nicholas V., an ardent
+Aristotelian. The needless bitterness of his attacks upon Plato (in the
+_Comparatio Aristotelis et Platonis_), which drew forth a powerful
+response from Bessarion (q.v.), and the manifestly hurried and
+inaccurate character of his translations of Plato, Aristotle and other
+classical authors, combined to ruin his fame as a scholar, and to
+endanger his position as a teacher of philosophy. The indignation
+against him on account of his first-named work was so great that he
+would probably have been compelled to leave Italy had not Alphonso V.
+given him protection at the court of Naples. He subsequently returned to
+Rome, where he died in great poverty on the 12th of August 1484. He had
+long outlived his reputation, and towards the end of his life his
+intellect failed him. From all accounts he was a man of very
+disagreeable character, conceited and quarrelsome.
+
+ See G. Voigt, _Die Wiederbelebung des klassischen Altertums_ (1893),
+ and article by C.F. Bähr in Ersch and Gruber's _Allgemeine
+ Encyklopädie_. For a complete list of his numerous works, consisting
+ of translations from Greek into Latin (Plato, Aristotle and the
+ Fathers) and original essays in Greek (chiefly theological) and Latin
+ (grammatical and rhetorical), see Fabricius, _Bibliotheca Graeca_ (ed.
+ Harles), xii.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE THE MONK [GEORGIOS MONACHOS], called Hamartolos (Greek for
+"sinner"), Byzantine chronicler, lived during the reign of Michael III.
+(842-867). He wrote a _Chronicle_ of events, in four books, from the
+creation of the world to the death of the emperor Theophilus (842),
+whose widow Theodora restored the worship of images in the same year. It
+is the only original contemporary authority for the years 813-842, and
+therefore so far indispensable; the early parts of the work are merely a
+compilation. In the introduction the author disclaims all pretensions to
+literary style, and declares that his only object was to relate such
+things as were "useful and necessary" with a strict adherence to truth.
+Far too much attention, however, is devoted to religious matters; the
+iconoclasts are fiercely attacked, and the whole is interlarded with
+theological discussions and quotations from the fathers. The work was
+very popular, and translations of it served as models for Slavonic
+writers. The MSS. give a continuation down to 948, the author of which
+is indicated simply as "the logothete," by whom probably Symeon
+Metaphrastes (second half of the 10th century) is meant. In this
+religious questions are relegated to the background, more attention is
+devoted to political history, and the language is more popular. Still
+further continuations of little value go down to 1143. The large
+circulation of the work and its subsequent reissues, with alterations
+and interpolations, make it very difficult to arrive at the original
+text.
+
+ EDITIONS: E. de Muralt (St Petersburg, 1859); J.P. Migne, _Patrologia
+ Graeca_, cx.; C. de Boor (in Teubner series, 1904- ). See F. Hirsch,
+ _Byzantinische Studien_ (1876); C. de Boor in _Historische
+ Untersuchungen_ (in honour of Arnold Schäfer, Bonn, 1882); C.
+ Krumbacher, _Geschichte der byzantinischen Litteratur_ (1897).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE THE SYNCELLUS [GEORGIOS SYNKELLOS], of Constantinople, Byzantine
+chronicler and ecclesiastic, lived at the end of the 8th and the
+beginning of the 9th century A.D. He was the _syncellus_ (cell-mate, the
+confidential companion assigned to the patriarchs, sometimes little more
+than a spy; see SYNCELLUS) or private secretary of Tara(u)sius,
+patriarch of Constantinople (784-806), after whose death he retired to a
+convent, and wrote his _Chronicle_ of events from Adam to Diocletian
+(285). At his earnest request, the work, which he doubtless intended to
+bring down to his own times, was continued after his death by his friend
+Theophanes Confessor. The _Chronicle_, which, as its title implies, is
+rather a chronological table (with notes) than a history, is written
+with special reference to pre-Christian times and the introduction of
+Christianity, and exhibits the author as a staunch upholder of
+orthodoxy. But in spite of its religious bias and dry and uninteresting
+character, the fragments of ancient writers and apocryphal books
+preserved in it render it specially valuable. For instance, considerable
+portions of the original text of the _Chronicle_ of Eusebius have been
+restored by the aid of Syncellus. His chief authorities were Annianus of
+Alexandria (5th century) and Panodorus, an Egyptian monk, who wrote
+about the year 400 and drew largely from Eusebius, Dexippus and Julius
+Africanus.
+
+ Editio princeps, by J. Goar (1652); in Bonn _Corpus scriptorum hist.
+ Byz._, by W. Dindorf (1829). See also H. Gelzer, _Sextus Julius
+ Africanus_, ii. 1 (1885); C. Krumbacher, _Geschichte der
+ byzantinischen Litteratur_ (1897).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE, HENRY (1839-1897), American author and political economist, was
+born in Philadelphia, Penn., on the 2nd of September 1839. He settled in
+California in 1858; removed to New York, 1880; was first a printer, then
+an editor, but finally devoted all his life to economic and social
+questions. In 1871 he published _Our Land Policy_, which, as further
+developed in 1879 under the title of _Progress and Poverty_, speedily
+attracted the widest attention both in America and in Europe. In 1886 he
+published _Protection or Free Trade_. Henry George had no political
+ambition, but in 1886 he received an independent nomination as mayor of
+New York City, and became so popular that it required a coalition of
+the two strongest political parties to prevent his election. He received
+68,000 votes, against 90,000 for the coalition candidate. His death on
+the 29th of October 1897 was followed by one of the greatest
+demonstrations of popular feeling and general respect that ever attended
+the funeral of any strictly private citizen in American history. The
+fundamental doctrine of Henry George, the equal right of all men to the
+use of the earth, did not originate with him; but his clear statement of
+a method by which it could be enforced, without increasing state
+machinery, and indeed with a great simplification of government, gave it
+a new form. This method he named the _Single Tax_. His doctrine may be
+condensed as follows: The land of every country belongs of right to all
+the people of that country. This right cannot be alienated by one
+generation, so as to affect the title of the next, any more than men can
+sell their yet unborn children for slaves. Private ownership of land has
+no more foundation in morality or reason than private ownership of air
+or sunlight. But the private occupancy and use of land are right and
+indispensable. Any attempt to divide land into equal shares is
+impossible and undesirable. Land should be, and practically is now,
+divided for private use in parcels among those who will pay the highest
+price for the use of each parcel. This price is now paid to some persons
+annually, and it is called _rent_. By applying the rent of land,
+exclusive of all improvements, to the equal benefit of the whole
+community, absolute justice would be done to all. As rent is always more
+than sufficient to defray all necessary expenses of government, those
+expenses should be met by a tax upon rent alone, to be brought about by
+the gradual abolition of all other taxes. Landlords should be left in
+undisturbed possession and nominal ownership of the land, with a
+sufficient margin over the tax to induce them to collect their rents and
+pay the tax. They would thus be transformed into mere land agents.
+Obviously this would involve absolute free trade, since all taxes on
+imports, manufactures, successions, documents, personal property,
+buildings or improvements would disappear. Nothing made by man would be
+taxed at all. The right of private property in all things made by man
+would thus be absolute, for the owner of such things could not be
+divested of his property, without full compensation, even under the
+pretence of taxation. The idea of concentrating all taxes upon
+ground-rent has found followers in Great Britain, North America,
+Australia and New Zealand. In practical politics this doctrine is
+confined to the "Single Tax, Limited," which proposes to defray only the
+needful public expenses from ground-rent, leaving the surplus, whatever
+it may be, in the undisturbed possession of landowners.
+
+ The principal books by Henry George are: _Progress and Poverty_
+ (1879), _The Irish Land Question_ (1881), _Social Problems_ (1884),
+ _Protection or Free Trade_ (1886), _The Condition of Labor_ (1891), _A
+ Perplexed Philosopher_ (1892), _Political Economy_ (1898). His son,
+ Henry George (b. 1862), has written a _Life_ (1900). For the Single
+ Tax theory see Shearman's _Natural Taxation_ (1899). (T. G. S.)
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE PISIDA [GEORGIOS PISIDES], Byzantine poet, born in Pisidia,
+flourished during the 7th century A.D. Nothing is known of him except
+that he was a deacon and chartophylax (keeper of the records) of the
+church of St Sophia. His earliest work, in three cantos ([Greek:
+akroaseis]), on the campaign of the emperor Heraclius against the
+Persians, seems to be the work of an eyewitness. This was followed by
+the _Avarica_, an account of a futile attack on Constantinople by the
+Avars (626), said to have been repulsed by the aid of the Virgin Mary;
+and by the _Heraclias_, a general survey of the exploits of Heraclius
+both at home and abroad down to the final overthrow of Chosroes in 627.
+George Pisida was also the author of a didactic poem, _Hexaëmeron_ or
+_Cosmourgia_, upon the creation of the world; a treatise on the vanity
+of life, after the manner of _Ecclesiastes_; a controversial composition
+against Severus, bishop of Antioch; two short poems upon the
+resurrection of Christ and on the recovery of the sacred crucifix stolen
+by the Persians. The metre chiefly used is the iambic. As a versifier
+Pisida is correct and even elegant; as a chronicler of contemporary
+events he is exceedingly useful; and later Byzantine writers
+enthusiastically compared him with, and even preferred him to Euripides.
+Recent criticism, however, characterizes his compositions as artificial
+and almost uniformly dull.
+
+ Complete works in J.P. Migne, _Patrologia Graeca_, xcii.; see also _De
+ Georgii Pisidae apud Theophanem aliosque historicos reliquiis_.
+ (1900), by S.L. Sternbach, who has edited several new poems for the
+ first time from a Paris MS. in _Wiener Studien_, xiii., xiv.
+ (1891-1892); C. Krumbacher, _Geschichte der byzantinischen Litteratur_
+ (1897); C.F. Bähr in Ersch and Gruber's _Allgemeine Encyklopädie_.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE, LAKE, a lake in the E. part of New York, U.S.A., among the S.E.
+foothills of the Adirondack Mountains. It extends from N.N.E. to S.S.W.
+about 34 m., and varies in width from 2 to 4 m. It has a maximum depth
+of about 400 ft., and is 323 ft. above the sea and 227 ft. above Lake
+Champlain, into which it has an outlet to the northward through a narrow
+channel and over falls and rapids. The lake is fed chiefly by mountain
+brooks and submerged springs; its bed is for the most part covered with
+a clean sand; its clear water is coloured with beautiful tints of blue
+and green; and its surface is studded with about 220 islands and islets,
+all except nineteen of which belong to the state and constitute a part
+of its forest reserve. Near the head of the lake is Prospect Mountain,
+rising 1736 ft. above the sea, while several miles farther down the
+shores is Black Mountain, 2661 ft. in height. Lake George has become a
+favourite summer resort. Lake steamers ply between the village of Lake
+George (formerly Caldwell) at the southern end of the lake and Baldwin,
+whence there is rail connexion with Lake Champlain steamers.
+
+Lake George was formed during the Glacial period by glacial drift which
+clogged a pre-existing valley. According to Prof. J.F. Kemp the valley
+occupied by Lake George was a low pass before the Glacial period; a dam
+of glacial drift at the southern end and of lacustrine clays at the
+northern end formed the lake which has submerged the pass, leaving
+higher parts as islands. Before the advent of the white man the lake was
+a part of the war-path over which the Iroquois Indians frequently made
+their way northward to attack the Algonquins and the Hurons, and during
+the struggle between the English and the French for supremacy in
+America, waterways being still the chief means of communication, it was
+of great strategic importance (see CHAMPLAIN, _Lake_). Father Isaac
+Jogues, René Goupil and Guillaume Couture seem to have been the first
+white men to see the lake (on the 9th of August 1642) as they were being
+taken by their Iroquois captors from the St Lawrence to the towns of the
+Mohawks, and in 1646 Father Jogues, having undertaken a half-religious,
+half-political mission to the Mohawks, was again at the lake, to which,
+in allusion to his having reached it on the eve of Corpus Christi, he
+gave the name Lac Saint Sacrement. This name it bore until the summer of
+1755, when General William Johnson renamed it Lake George in honour of
+King George II.
+
+General Johnson was at this time in command of a force of colonists and
+Indians sent against the French at Crown Point on Lake Champlain. The
+expedition, however, had proceeded no farther than to the head of Lake
+George when Johnson was informed that a force of French and Indians
+under Baron Ludwig August Dieskau was pushing on from Crown Point to
+Fort Lyman (later Fort Edward), 14 m. to the S. of their encampment.
+Accordingly, on the morning of the 8th of September a detachment of 1000
+colonials under Colonel Ephraim Williams (1715-1755) and 200 Indians
+under Hendrick, a Mohawk chief, was sent to aid Fort Lyman, but when
+about 3 m. S. of the lake this detachment fell into an ambuscade
+prepared for it by Dieskau and both Williams and Hendrick were killed.
+The survivors were pursued to their camp, and then followed on the same
+day the main battle of Lake George, in which 1000 colonials fighting at
+first behind a hastily prepared barricade defeated about 1400 French and
+Indians. Both commanders were wounded; Dieskau was captured; the French
+lost about 300; and the colonials nearly the same (including those who
+fell earlier in the day). Johnson now built on the lake shore, near the
+battlefield, a fort of gravel and logs and called it Fort William Henry
+(the site was occupied by the Fort William Henry Hotel till it was
+burned in 1909). In the meantime the French entrenched themselves at
+Ticonderoga at the foot of the lake. In March 1757 Fort William Henry
+successfully withstood an attack of 1600 men sent out by the marquis de
+Vaudreuil, governor of Canada, but on the 9th of August of the same year
+its garrison, after being reduced to desperate straits, surrendered to
+the marquis de Montcalm. By the terms of surrender the garrison was to
+be allowed to march out with the honours of war and was to be escorted
+to Fort Edward, but the guard provided by Montcalm was inadequate to
+protect them from his Indian allies and on the day following the
+surrender many were massacred or taken prisoners. The fort was razed to
+the ground. In 1758 General James Abercrombie proceeded by way of Lake
+George against Fort Ticonderoga, and in 1759 Baron Jeffrey Amherst,
+while on his way to co-operate with General James Wolfe against Quebec,
+built near the site of Fort William Henry one bastion of a fort since
+known as Fort George, the ruins of which still remain.
+
+A monument commemorative of the battle of Lake George was unveiled on
+the 8th of September 1903, on the site of the battle, and within the
+state reservation of 35 acres known as Fort George Battle Park. Horicon
+is a name that was given to the lake by James Fenimore Cooper. The
+Indian name of the lake was Andia-ta-roc-te.
+
+ See Francis Parkman, _Montcalm and Wolfe_ (Boston, 1884); and E.E.
+ Seelye, _Lake George in History_ (Lake George, 1897).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE JUNIOR REPUBLIC, an American industrial institution, situated
+near the small village of Freeville, in Tompkins county, New York,
+U.S.A., 9 m. E.N.E. of Ithaca, at the junction of the Sayre-Auburn and
+the Elmira-Cortland branches of the Lehigh Valley railway. The George
+Junior Republic forms a miniature state whose economic, civic and social
+conditions, as nearly as possible, reproduce those of the United States,
+and whose citizenship is vested in young people, especially those who
+are neglected or wayward, who are thus taught self-reliance,
+self-control and morality. The founder, William Reuben George (b. 1866),
+was a native of West Dryden, a village near Freeville, who as a business
+man in New York City became interested in the Fresh Air Fund charity
+supervised by the New York _Tribune_, took charge of summer outings for
+city children (1890-1894), and, becoming convinced that such charities
+tended to promote pauperism and crime among the older of their protégés,
+devised first (1894) the plan of requiring payment by the children in
+labour for all they received during these summer jaunts, then (1895)
+self-government for a summer colony near Freeville, and finally a
+permanent colony, in which the children stay for several years. The
+Republic was founded on the 10th of July 1895; the only check on the
+powers of executive, representative and judicial branches of the
+government lies in the veto of the superintendent. "Nothing without
+labour" is the motto of the community, so strictly carried out that a
+girl or boy in the Republic who has not money[1] to pay for a night's
+lodging must sleep in jail and work the next day for the use of the
+cell. The legislative body, originally a House of Representatives and a
+Senate, in 1899 became more like the New England town meeting. The
+respect for the law that follows its enactment by the citizens
+themselves is remarkable in a class so largely of criminal tendencies;
+and it is particularly noticeable that positions on the police force are
+eagerly coveted. Fifteen is the age of majority; suffrage is universal,
+children under fifteen must be in charge of a citizen guardian. The
+average age of citizens was seventeen in 1908. The proportion of girls
+to boys was originally small, but gradually increased; in 1908 there
+were about 70 girls and 90 boys. The tendency is to admit only those
+aged at least sixteen and physically well equipped. In the Republic's
+earlier years the citizens lived in boarding-houses of different grades,
+but later in family groups in cottages (there were in 1910 twelve
+cottages) under the care of "house-mothers." The labour of the place is
+divided into sewing, laundry work, cooking and domestic service for the
+girls, and furniture making, carpentry, farm work, baking bread and
+wafers (the business of an Auburn biscuit factory was bought in 1903),
+plumbing and printing for the boys. Masonry and shoe and harness making
+were tried for a few years. There is an efficient preparatory and high
+school, from which students enter directly leading colleges. The
+religious influence is strong, wholesome and unsectarian; students in
+Auburn Theological Seminary have assisted in the religious work; Roman
+Catholic and Hebrew services are also held; and attendance at church
+services is compulsory only on convicts and prisoners.
+
+There are "Woman's Aid" societies in New York City, Ithaca, Syracuse,
+Buffalo, Boston and elsewhere, to promote the work of the Republic. A
+"republic" for younger boys, begun at Freeville, was established in
+Litchfield, Connecticut; and a National Junior Republic near Annapolis
+Junction, Maryland, and a Carter Junior Republic at Readington, near
+Easton, Pennsylvania, are modelled on the George Junior Republic. In
+1908-1910 new "states" were established at Chino, California, Grove
+City, Pennsylvania, and Flemington Junction, New Jersey. In February
+1908 the National Association of Junior Republics was formed with Mr
+George (its founder) as its director, its aims being to establish at
+least one "republic" in each state of the Union, and in other countries
+similar institutions for youth and miniature governments modelled on
+that of the country in which each "state" is established, and to
+establish colonies for younger children, to be sent at the age of
+fifteen to the Junior Republic. At the time of its formation the
+National Association included the "states" at Freeville, N.Y.,
+Litchfield, Conn., and Annapolis Junction, Md.; others joined the
+federation later.
+
+ See William R. George, _The Junior Republic: its History and Ideals_
+ (New York, 1910); _The Junior Republic Citizen_ (Freeville, 1895
+ sqq.), written and printed by "citizens"; _Nothing Without Labor,
+ George Junior Republic_ (7th ed., Freeville, 1909), a manual; J.R.
+ Commons, "The Junior Republic," in _The American Journal of Sociology_
+ (1898); D.F. Lincoln, "The George Junior Republic," in _The Coming
+ Age_ (1900); and Lyman Abbott, "A Republic within a Republic," in the
+ _Outlook_ for February 15, 1908.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] The "government" issued its own currency in tin and later in
+ aluminium, and "American" money could not be passed within the 48
+ acres of the Republic until 1906, when depreciation forced the
+ Republic's coinage out of use and "American" coin was made legal
+ tender.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, the capital of British Guiana (see GUIANA), and the seat of
+the colonial government, situated on the left bank of the Demerara river
+at its mouth, in 6° 29' 24" N. and 58° 11' 30" W. It was known during
+the Dutch occupation as Stabroek, and was established as the seat of
+government of the combined colonies of Essequibo and Demerara (now with
+Berbice forming the three counties of British Guiana) in 1784, its name
+being changed to Georgetown in 1812. It is one of the finest towns in
+this part of the world, the streets being wide and straight,
+intersecting each other at right angles, several having double roadways
+with lily-covered canals in the centre, the grass banks on either side
+carrying rows of handsome shade trees. In Main Street, the finest street
+in Georgetown, the canal has been filled in to form a broad walk, an
+obvious precedent for the treatment of the other canals, which (however
+beautiful) are useless and merely act as breeding grounds for
+mosquitoes. The principal residences, standing in their own gardens
+surrounded by foliage and flowers, are scattered over the town, as are
+also the slums, almost the worst of which abut on the best residential
+quarters. Water Street, the business centre, runs parallel to the river
+for about 2˝ m. and contains the stores of the wholesale and retail
+merchants, their wharves running out into the river to allow steamers to
+come alongside. Most of the houses and public buildings are constructed
+of wood, the former generally raised on brick pillars some 4 ft. to 10
+ft. from the ground, the bright colouring of the wooden walls, jalousies
+and roofs adding to the beauty of the best streets. The large structure
+known as the Public Buildings in the centre of the city, containing the
+offices of the executive government and the hall of the court of policy,
+was erected between 1829 and 1834. It is a handsome, E-shaped,
+brick-plastered building of considerable size, with deep porticos and
+marble-paved galleries carried on cast-iron columns. The law courts,
+built in the 'eighties, have a ground floor of concrete and iron, the
+upper storey being of hardwood. Among other public buildings are the
+town hall, the Anglican and Roman Catholic cathedrals, several handsome
+churches, the local banks and insurance offices, and the almshouse. The
+public hospital consists of several large blocks. The Royal
+Agricultural and Commercial Society has a large reading-room and
+lending library. The assembly rooms, above and owned by the Georgetown
+club, has a good stage and is admirably adapted to dramatic and musical
+entertainments. A museum (free), belonging to the Royal Agricultural and
+Commercial Society, is chiefly devoted to the fauna of British Guiana,
+but also contains an instructive collection of local economic,
+mineralogical and botanical exhibits, a miscellaneous collection of
+foreign birds and mammals, and an interesting series of views of the
+colony. The botanical gardens to the east of the city are of
+considerable extent and admirably laid out. The nurseries cover a large
+area and are devoted chiefly to the raising of plants of economic
+importance which can be purchased at nominal rates. The collections of
+ferns and orchids are very fine. In the gardens are also located the
+fields of the board of agriculture, where experimental work in the
+growth of sugar-cane, rice, cotton and all tropical plants of economic
+importance is carried on. Other popular resorts are the sea wall and the
+promenade gardens in the centre of the city.
+
+The local government of Georgetown is vested in a mayor and town council
+elected under a very restricted franchise. The city is divided into
+fourteen wards each with one representative. A councillor must possess,
+either personally or through his wife, premises within the city of the
+appraised value of at least $1500. A voter must either own house
+property of the appraised value of $250 or occupy premises of an annual
+rental of $240. There are indeed only 297 municipal voters in a
+population of nearly 50,000. The revenue, just over Ł50,000 annually, is
+mainly derived from a direct rate on house property. The colonial
+government pays rates on its property and also gives a grant-in-aid
+towards the upkeep of the streets. The expenditure is principally on
+sanitation, fire brigade, streets, water-supply, street lighting and
+drainage. Street lighting is carried out under contract by the Demerara
+Electric Company, which has a monopoly of private lighting and works an
+excellent tram service. Water for public and domestic purposes is taken
+from the conservancy of the east coast and is delivered by pumping
+throughout the city, but drinking-water is collected in tanks attached
+to the dwellings from the rain falling on the roofs. The fire brigade is
+a branch of the police force, half the cost being borne by the rates and
+half by the general revenue. There is an excellent service of
+telephones, a branch of the post office, and halfpenny postage within
+the city boundaries. There are in Georgetown two well-equipped
+foundries, a dry dock, and factories for the manufacture of rice,
+cigars, soap, boots, chocolate, candles, aerated waters and ice.
+Georgetown is connected by rail and ferry with New Amsterdam, by ferry
+and rail with the west coast of Demerara, and by steamer with all the
+country districts along the coast and up the navigable reaches of the
+principal rivers. (A. G. B.*)
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, formerly a city of the District of Columbia, U.S.A., and now
+part (sometimes called West Washington) of the city of Washington,
+U.S.A., at the confluence of the Potomac river and Rock Creek, and on
+the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, about 2˝ m. W.N.W. of the National
+Capitol. Pop. (1890) 14,046; (1900) 14,549. The streets are
+old-fashioned, narrow and well shaded. On the "Heights" are many fine
+residences with beautiful gardens; the Monastery and Academy (for girls)
+of Visitation, founded in 1799 by Leonard Neale, second archbishop of
+Baltimore; and the college and the astronomical observatory (1842) of
+Georgetown University. The university was founded as a Roman Catholic
+Academy in 1789, was opened in 1791, transferred to the Society of Jesus
+in 1805, authorized in 1815 by Congress to confer college or university
+degrees, and by the Holy See in 1833 to confer degrees in philosophy and
+theology, incorporated as Georgetown College by Act of Congress in 1844,
+and began graduate work about 1856. The college library includes the
+historical collection of James Gilmary Shea. A school of medicine was
+opened in 1851, a dental school in 1901 and a school of law in 1870. In
+1909-1910 the university had an enrolment of 859 students. Rising in
+terraces from Rock Creek is Oak Hill Cemetery, a beautiful
+burying-ground containing the graves of John Howard Payne, the author
+of "Home, Sweet Home," Edwin McMasters Stanton and Joseph Henry. On the
+bank of the Potomac is a brick house which was for several years the
+home of Francis Scott Key, author of "The Star-Spangled Banner"; on
+Analostan Island in the river was a home of James Murray Mason;
+Georgetown Heights was the home of the popular novelist, Mrs Emma
+Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899). Before the advent of
+railways Georgetown had an important commerce by way of the Chesapeake
+and Ohio Canal, by which considerable coal as well as some grain is
+still brought hither, and of which Georgetown is now a terminus; the
+canal formerly crossed the Potomac at this point on an aqueduct bridge
+(1446 ft. long), but in 1887 the crossing was abandoned and the old
+bridge was purchased by the United States government, which in 1889
+constructed a new steel bridge upon the old masonry piers. Chief among
+the manufactories are several large flour mills--Georgetown flour was
+long noted for its excellence. There is a very large fish-market here.
+Georgetown was settled late in the 17th century, was laid out as a town
+in 1751, chartered as a city in 1789, merged in the District of Columbia
+in 1871, and annexed to the city of Washington in 1878. In the early
+days of Washington it was a social centre of some importance, where many
+members of Congress as well as some cabinet officers and representatives
+of foreign countries lived and the President gave state dinners; and
+here were the studio, for two years, of Gilbert Stuart, and "Kalorama,"
+the residence of Joel Barlow.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, a city and the county-seat of Scott county, Kentucky,
+U.S.A., about 11 miles N. of Lexington. Pop. (1900) 3823 (1677 negroes);
+(1910) 4533. Georgetown is served by the Cincinnati Southern (Queen &
+Crescent Route), the Frankfort & Cincinnati, and the Southern railways,
+and is connected with Lexington by an electric line. It is the seat of
+Georgetown College (Baptist, co-educational), chartered in 1829 as the
+successor of Rittenhouse Academy, which was founded in 1798. Georgetown
+is situated in the Blue Grass region of Kentucky, and the surrounding
+country is devoted to agriculture and stock-raising. One of the largest
+independent oil refineries in the country (that of the Indian Refining
+Co.) is in Georgetown, and among manufactures are bricks, flour, ice,
+bagging and hemp. The remarkable "Royal Spring," which rises near the
+centre of the city, furnishes about 200,000 gallons of water an hour for
+the city's water supply, and for power for the street railway and for
+various industries. The first settlement was made in 1775, and was named
+McClellan's, that name being changed to Lebanon a few years afterwards.
+In 1790 the place was incorporated as a town under its present name
+(adopted in honour of George Washington), and Georgetown was chartered
+as a city of the fourth class in 1894. Bacon College, which developed
+into Kentucky (now Transylvania) University (see Lexington, Ky.), was
+established here by the Disciples of Christ in 1836, but in 1839 was
+removed to Harrodsburg.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, a city, a port of entry and the county-seat of Georgetown
+county, South Carolina, U.S.A., at the head of Winyah Bay, and at the
+mouth of the Pedee river, about 15 m. from the Atlantic Ocean, and about
+55 m. N.E. of Charleston. Pop. (1890) 2895; (1900) 4138 (2718 negroes);
+(1910) 5530. Georgetown is served by the Georgetown & Western railway,
+has steamship communication with Charleston, Wilmington, New York City
+and other Atlantic ports, and, by the Pedee river and its tributaries
+(about 1000 m. of navigable streams), has trade connexions with a large
+area of South Carolina and part of North Carolina. The principal public
+buildings are the post office and custom house. Among the city's
+manufactures are lumber, foundry and machine-shop products, naval stores
+and oars; and there are shad and sturgeon fisheries. The growing of
+cotton and truck-gardening are important industries in the neighbouring
+region, and there is considerable trade in such products. The first
+settlement here was made about 1700; and the town was laid out a short
+time before 1734. The Winyah Indigo Society grew out of a social club
+organized about 1740, and was founded in 1757 by a group of planters
+interested in raising indigo; It long conducted a school (discontinued
+during the Civil War) which eventually became part of the city's public
+school system. In 1780 Georgetown was occupied by a body of Loyalist
+troops, with whom the American troops had several skirmishes, but on the
+10th of August 1781 General Francis Marion forced the evacuation of the
+town and took possession of it. A few days later, an American named
+Manson, who had joined the British forces, attacked the town from an
+armed vessel, and burned about forty houses, the small body of militia
+being unable to make an effective resistance. General Lafayette first
+landed on American soil at Georgetown on the 24th of April 1777.
+Georgetown was incorporated as a town in 1805, and was chartered as a
+city in 1895.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, a city and the county-seat of Williamson county, Texas,
+U.S.A., on the San Gabriel river, about 25 m. N. by E. of Austin. Pop.
+(1890) 2447; (1900) 2790 (608 negroes); (1910) 3096. The city is served
+by the International & Great Northern, and the Missouri, Kansas & Texas
+railways. Georgetown is the seat of the Southwestern University
+(Methodist Episcopal, South, co-educational), formed in 1873 (chartered
+1875) by the combination of Ruterville College (Methodist Episcopal, at
+Ruterville, Texas, chartered in 1840, and closed in 1850), McKenzie
+College (at Clarksville, Texas, founded in 1841 and closed in 1872),
+Wesleyan College at San Augustine (chartered in 1844, burned a few years
+later, and not rebuilt), and Soule University at Chapel Hill (chartered
+in 1856, but closed in 1870). The university includes a fitting school
+at Georgetown, and a medical department at Dallas, Texas; in 1909 it had
+an enrolment of 1037 students. The principal manufactures of Georgetown
+are cotton and cotton-seed oil, and planing-mill products. In Page Park
+are mineral springs, whose waters have medicinal qualities similar to
+the famous Karlsbad waters. The first settlement was made here in 1848;
+and Georgetown was incorporated as a town in 1866, and was chartered as
+a city in 1890.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGIA, a southern state of the United States of America, one of the
+thirteen original states, situated between 30° 31' 39" and 35° N., and
+between 81° and 85° 53' 38" W. It is bounded N. by Tennessee and North
+Carolina, E. by South Carolina and the Atlantic Ocean, S. by Florida,
+and W. by Alabama. The total area of the state is 59,265 sq. m., of
+which 540 sq. m. are water surface.
+
+ The surface of Georgia is divided into five physiographic zones. From
+ the sea coast, which is skirted by fertile, semi-tropical islands, a
+ plain of 35,000 sq. m., known as South Georgia, extends northward to
+ the "fall-line" passing from Augusta, through Milledgeville and Macon,
+ to Columbus. This is a part of the great Atlantic Coastal Plain. For
+ 20 m. from the coast its elevation is 10 ft., then it rises abruptly
+ 70 ft. higher, and 20 m. farther N. another elevation begins, which
+ reaches 575 ft. at Milledgeville, the average elevation of the entire
+ region being 250 ft. North of the line mentioned, and collectively
+ known as North Georgia, are the four other regions, each with
+ well-defined characteristics. The largest and southernmost, a broad
+ belt extending from the "fall-line" to a line passing through
+ Clarkesville, Habersham county, Cartersville, Bartow county and
+ Buchanan, Haralson county (approximately), is known as the Piedmont
+ Belt or Plateau, being a region of faint relief eroded on highly
+ complicated crystalline rocks. The Blue Ridge escarpment, a striking
+ topographic feature in Virginia and the Carolinas, extends into
+ Georgia along the north-eastern border of this belt, but is less
+ strongly developed here than elsewhere, dying out entirely towards the
+ south-west. North of the Piedmont Belt lie the Appalachian Mountains
+ Region and the Great Valley Region, the former to the east, the latter
+ to the west of a dividing line from Cartersville northward. The former
+ region consists of detached mountain masses of crystalline rocks, not
+ yet eroded down to the level of the Piedmont Belt. In Towns county, in
+ the Appalachian Region, is the highest point in the state, Brasstown
+ Bald, also called Enota Mountain (4768 ft.). The Great Valley Region
+ consists of folded sedimentary rocks, extensive erosion having removed
+ the soft layers to form valleys, leaving the hard layers as ridges,
+ both layers running in a N.E.-S.W. direction. In the extreme
+ north-west corner of the state is a small part of the Cumberland
+ Plateau, represented by Lookout and Sand Mts.
+
+ On the Blue Ridge escarpment near the N.E. corner of the state is a
+ water-parting separating the waters which find their way respectively
+ N.W. to the Tennessee river, S.W. to the Gulf of Mexico and S.E. to
+ the Atlantic Ocean; indeed, according to B.M. and M.R. Hall (_Water
+ Resources of Georgia_, p. 2), "there are three springs in north-east
+ Georgia within a stone's throw of each other that send out their
+ waters to Savannah, Ga., to Apalachicola, Fla., and to New Orleans,
+ La." The water-parting between the waters flowing into the Atlantic
+ and those flowing into the Gulf extends from this point first S.E. for
+ a few miles, then turns S.W. to Atlanta, and from there extends S.S.E.
+ to the Florida line. West of where the escarpment dies out, the Great
+ Valley Region and a considerable portion of the Appalachian Mountains
+ Region are drained by the Coosa, the Tallapoosa and their tributaries,
+ into Mobile Bay, but the Cumberland Plateau, like that part of the
+ Appalachian Mountains Region which lies directly N. of the Blue Ridge
+ escarpment, constitutes a part of the Tennessee Basin. The principal
+ rivers of the state are the Chattahoochee and the Flint, which unite
+ in the S.W. corner to form the Apalachicola; the Ocmulgee (whose
+ western tributary, the Towaliga, falls 96 ft. in less than a quarter
+ of a mile), and the Oconee, which unite in the S.E. to form the
+ Altamaha; and the Savannah, which forms the boundary between Georgia
+ and South Carolina. All of these rise in the upper part of the
+ Piedmont Plateau, through which they pursue a rapid course over rocky
+ beds, and are navigable only south of the "fall-line," at which and
+ north of which they furnish an abundance of water-power. The upper
+ Savannah river first flows S.W., then turns abruptly S.E., while the
+ Chattahoochee river rises near this point and continues S.W. This is
+ because the upper Savannah[1] was formerly part of the Chattahoochee,
+ but was captured and turned S.E. by headward growth of the Savannah.
+ As a result of the capture there is a deep gorge along the upper
+ Savannah, especially along the branch called the Tallulah river; and
+ the upper Tallulah, in a series of cascades, 2-2/3 m. long, falls 525
+ ft. from the former higher level down to the main bed of the upper
+ Savannah, at Tallulah Falls, a summer resort.
+
+ The fauna and flora have no distinctive features. (See UNITED STATES.)
+
+_Climate and Soils._--The climate of Georgia, though temperate, differs
+considerably in different parts of the state. All the nine climate belts
+in the United States, except that of southern Florida, are represented
+within its borders. The lowest mean annual temperature, 40° F. and
+below, is that of some of the mountain tops of northern Georgia; from
+the mountain-sides to the Piedmont Plateau this mean temperature varies
+from 45° to 60°; on the Piedmont Plateau from 60° to 65°; and on the
+Coastal Plain from 60° to 70°. The July isotherm of 80° crosses the
+state a little N. of Augusta and Macon, touching the W. boundary at West
+Point, Troup county. The mean July temperature for the whole state is
+81.8°; for the part S. of the 80° isotherm the average temperature for
+July is between 80° and 85°. The average rainfall for the state is 49.3
+in.; the maximum is 71.7 in., at Rabun Gap in the extreme N.E. part of
+the state; the minimum is 39.4 at Swainsboro, Emanuel county, a little
+S.E. of the centre of the state.
+
+Georgia is also notable for the variety of its soils. In the Cumberland
+Plateau and Great Valley Regions are a red or brown loam, rich in
+decomposed limestone and calcareous shales, and sandy or gravelly loams.
+In the Piedmont Plateau and Appalachian Mountains Regions the surface
+soil is generally sandy, but in considerable areas the subsoil is a red
+clay derived largely from the decomposition of hornblende. By far the
+greatest variety of soils is found in the Coastal Plain Region. Here the
+Central Cotton Belt, extending from the "fall-line" as far S. as a line
+bisecting Early county in the W. and passing through Baker, Worth,
+Dooly, Dodge, Laurens, Johnson, Jefferson and Burke counties, has three
+distinct kinds of soil; a sand, forming what is known as the sand-hill
+region; red clay derived from silicious rock in the red hills; and grey,
+sandy soils with a subsoil of yellow loam. South of the Cotton Belt is
+the Lime Sink Region, which includes Miller, Baker, Mitchell, Colquitt
+and Worth counties, the northern portions of Decatur, Grady, Thomas,
+Brooks and Lowndes, the eastern parts of Dooly and Lee, and the eastern
+portions of Berrien, Irwin, Wilcox, Dodge, and some parts of Burke,
+Screven and Bulloch. The soft limestone underlying this region is
+covered, in the uplands, with grey, sandy soils, which have a subsoil of
+loam; in the lowlands the surface soils are loams, the subsoils clays.
+Adjoining this region are the pine barrens, which extend S. to a line
+passing through the northern portions of Pierce, Wayne, Liberty, Bryan
+and Effingham counties. Here the prevailing soils are grey and sandy
+with a subsoil of loam, but they are less fertile than those of the Lime
+Sink or Cotton Belts. The coast counties of the S.E. and generally those
+on the Florida frontier are not suitable for cultivation, on account of
+the numerous marshes and swamps, Okefinokee Swamp being 45 m. long and
+approximately 30 m. wide; but the southern portions of Decatur, Grady,
+Thomas and Brooks counties are sufficiently elevated for agriculture,
+and the islands off the coast are exceedingly productive.
+
+ _Minerals._--The mineral resources of Georgia are as varied as its
+ climate and soils, a total of thirty-nine different mineral products
+ being found within its borders. The most important is stone: in 1905
+ the value of the granite quarried in the state was $971,207 (Georgia
+ ranking fifth in the United States), of the marble $774,550 (Georgia
+ ranking third in the United States, Vermont and New York being first
+ and second); in 1908 the granite was valued at $970,832 (Georgia
+ ranking fifth in the United States), and the marble at $916,281
+ (Georgia ranking second in the United States, Vermont being first).
+ Generally more than one-fourth of the granite is used for paving;
+ curb, building and monument stone are next in importance in the order
+ named. Stone Mountain (1686 ft.) in De Kalb county near Atlanta is a
+ remarkable mass of light-coloured muscovite granite, having a
+ circumference at its base of 7 m. Stone Mountain granite was first
+ quarried about 1850; it is extensively used as building material in
+ Georgia and other southern states. A laminated granite, otherwise like
+ the Stone Mountain granite, is found in De Kalb, Rockdale and Gwinnett
+ counties, and is used for curbing and building. Biotite granites,
+ which take a good polish and are used for monuments and for
+ decoration, are quarried in Oglethorpe and Elbert counties. Georgia
+ marble was first quarried on a large scale in Pickens county in 1884;
+ the pure white marble of this county had been worked for tombstones
+ near Tate, the centre of the marble belt, in 1840; after its
+ commercial exploitation it was used in the capitol buildings of
+ Georgia, Rhode Island, Mississippi and Minnesota, in the Corcoran Art
+ Gallery, Washington, D.C., and in St Luke's Hospital, New York City.
+ It is sometimes used for the entire building, and sometimes only for
+ decoration. Other colours than the snowy white are found in the main
+ marble belt of the state, which runs from Canton, Cherokee county, 60
+ m. generally N. to the northern boundary of the state. Other deposits,
+ less well known, are the dark brown and light grey marbles of
+ Whitfield county, which resemble the stone quarried in eastern
+ Tennessee. Limestone and slate are quarried at Rock Mart, Polk county,
+ and there are cement quarries at Cement, near Kingston, Bartow county.
+ Iron deposits occur in Bartow, Polk and Floyd counties, where are the
+ more important brown ores, and (red ores) in Walker and Chattooga
+ counties. The quantity of iron ore mined in Georgia declined from 1890
+ to 1900; it was 200,842 long tons in 1905 and 321,060 long tons in
+ 1908, when 319,812 tons were brown haematite and 1248 tons were red
+ haematite. Before the discovery of gold in California the Georgia
+ "placers" were very profitable, the earliest mining being in 1829 by
+ placer miners from the fields of Burke county, North Carolina, who
+ began work in what is now White county, and went thence to Habersham
+ and Lumpkin counties. Dahlonega and Auraria, the latter named by John
+ C. Calhoun, who owned a mine there, were the centres of this early
+ gold mining. Work was summarily stopped by Federal troops enforcing
+ the governor's proclamation in 1831, because of the disorder in the
+ mining region; but it was soon renewed and a mint was established at
+ Dahlonega in 1838. After the discovery of gold in California, mining
+ in Georgia was not renewed on anything but the smallest scale until
+ the early 'eighties. In 1908 the gold product was valued at $56,207
+ (it was $96,910 in 1905) and the silver product at $106. Up to 1909
+ the gold product of Georgia (see State Geol. Survey _Bulletin 19_) was
+ about $17,500,000. Extensive clay deposits occur in all parts of the
+ state, and are remarkable for their comparative freedom from
+ impurities and for their high fusion point; the most valuable are
+ sedimentary, and form a belt several miles wide across the middle of
+ the state from Augusta to Columbus. In 1908 the clay products of the
+ state were valued at $1,928,611. More asbestos has been found in
+ Georgia than in any other state of the Union; it occurs in the
+ amphibole form throughout the N. part of the state, and most of the
+ country's domestic supply comes from the Sall Mountain mine in White
+ county. Manganese ores, found in Bartow, Polk and Floyd counties, were
+ formerly important; in 1896 4096 long tons were mined, in 1905 only
+ 150 tons, and in 1908 none. Bauxite was found in Georgia first of the
+ United States, near Rome, in 1887; the output, principally from Floyd,
+ Bartow and Polk counties, was the entire product of the United States
+ until 1891, and in 1902 was more than half the country's product, but
+ in 1908, even when combined with the Alabama output, was less than the
+ amount mined in Arkansas. Coal is not extensively found, but the mine
+ on Sand Mountain, in Walker county, was one of the first opened S. of
+ the Ohio river; in 1908 the value of the coal mined in the state was
+ $364,279 (264,822 short tons), the value of coke at the ovens was
+ $137,524 (39,422 short tons), and the value of ammonium sulphate, coal
+ tar, illuminating gas and gas coke was more than $800,000. Copper was
+ mined in Fannin and Cherokee counties before the Civil War. In 1906
+ the copper mined was valued at $5057. Corundum was discovered on
+ Laurel Creek in Rabun county in 1871, and was worked there and at
+ Trackrock, Union county, especially between 1880 and 1893, but in
+ later years low prices closed most of the mines. The limestone
+ formations furnished most of the lime for domestic use. Sandstone,
+ ochre, slate, soapstone, graphite are also mined, and lead, zinc,
+ barytes, gypsum and even diamonds have been discovered but not
+ exploited.
+
+_Agriculture._--The principal occupation in Georgia is agriculture,
+which in 1900 engaged seven-tenths of the land surface of the state and
+the labour of three-fifths of the population, ten years old and over,
+who are employed in profitable occupations. The products are so
+diversified that, with the exception of some tropical fruits of
+California and Florida, almost everything cultivated in the United
+States can be produced. The chief staple is cotton, of which a valuable
+hybrid called the Floradora, a cross of long and short staple, has been
+singularly successful. Cotton is raised in all counties of the state
+except Rabun, Towns and Fannin in the extreme north, and about one-third
+of the total cultivated land of the state was devoted to it in
+1900-1907. In 1899-1904 the crop exceeded that of the other
+cotton-producing states except Texas, and in 1899, 1900 and 1903
+Mississippi, averaging 1,467,121 commercial bales per annum; the crop in
+1904 was 1,991,719 bales, and in 1907-1908 the crop was 1,815,834 bales,
+second only to the crop of Texas. The cause of this extensive
+cultivation of cotton is not a high average yield per acre, but the fact
+that before 1860 "Cotton was King," and that the market value of the
+staple when the Civil War closed was so high that farmers began to
+cultivate it to the exclusion of the cereals, whose production, Indian
+corn excepted, showed a decline during each decade from 1879 to 1899.
+But in the 'nineties the price of the cotton fell below the cost of
+production, owing to the enormous supply, and this was accompanied by
+economic depression. These conditions have caused some diversification
+of crops, and successful experiments in cattle-raising, movements
+encouraged by the Department of Agriculture and the leading newspapers.
+
+The principal cereals cultivated are Indian corn (product, 53,750,000
+bushels in 1908) and wheat; the cultivation of the latter, formerly
+remunerative, declined on account of the competition of the Western
+States, but revived after 1899, largely owing to the efforts of the
+Georgia Wheat Growers' Association (organized in 1897), and in 1908 the
+yield was 2,208,000 bushels. The sugar-cane crop declined in value after
+1890, and each year more of it was made into syrup. In 1908 the tobacco
+crop was 2,705,625 lb., and the average farm price was 35 cents, being
+nearly as high as that of the Florida crop; Sumatra leaf for wrappers is
+grown successfully. The acreage and product of tobacco and peanuts
+increased from 1890 to 1900 respectively 188% and 319.2%, and 92.6% and
+129.9%, and in the production of sweet potatoes Georgia was in 1899
+surpassed only by North Carolina. Alfalfa and grasses grow well. Truck
+farming and the cultivation of orchard and small fruits have long been
+remunerative occupations; the acreage devoted to peaches doubled between
+1890 and 1900. Pecan nuts are an increasingly important crop.
+
+ Agriculture in Georgia was in a state of transition at the beginning
+ of the 20th century. Owing to the abundance of land and to negro
+ slavery, exploitative methods of cultivation were employed before the
+ Civil War, and such methods, by which lands after being worked to
+ exhaustion are deserted for new fields, had not yet been altogether
+ abandoned. One reason for this was that, according to the census of
+ 1900, 36.9% of the farms were operated by negroes, of whom 86% were
+ tenants who desired to secure the greatest possible product without
+ regard to the care of the soil. Consequently there were large tracts
+ of untilled "waste" land; but these rapidly responded to fertilization
+ and rotation of crops, often yielding 800 to 1200 lb. of cotton per
+ acre, and Georgia in 1899 used more fertilizers than any other state
+ in the Union. Another feature of agriculture in Georgia was the great
+ increase in the number of farms, the average size of plantations
+ having declined from 440 acres in 1860 to 117.5 in 1900, or almost
+ 75%, while the area in cultivation increased only 15.6% between 1850
+ and 1900. The tenantry system was also undergoing a change--the share
+ system which developed in the years succeeding the Civil War being
+ replaced by a system of cash rental.
+
+[Illustration: Georgia.]
+
+_Manufactures._--Although excelled by Alabama in the manufacture of
+mineral products, and by North Carolina and South Carolina in the number
+and output of cotton mills, in 1900 and in 1905 Georgia surpassed each
+of those states in the total value of factory products, which was,
+however, less than the value of the factory products of Louisiana and
+Virginia among the southern states. The chief features of this
+industrial activity are its early beginning and steady, constant
+development. As far back as 1850 there were 1522 manufacturing
+establishments (35 of which were cotton mills) in the state, whose total
+product was valued at $7,082,075. Despite the Civil War, there was some
+advance during each succeeding decade, the most prosperous relatively
+being that from 1880 to 1890. In 1900 the number of establishments was
+7504, an increase of 75.1% over the number in 1890; the capital invested
+was $89,789,656, an increase of 57.7%, and the value of products
+($106,654,527) was 54.8% more than in 1890. Of the 7504 establishments
+in 1900, 3015 were conducted under the "factory system," and had a
+capital of $79,303,316 and products valued at $94,532,368. In 1905 there
+were 3219 factories, with a capital of $135,211,551 (an increase of
+70.5% over 1900), and a gross product valued at $151,040,455 (59.8%
+greater than the value of the factory product in 1900).
+
+ The most important manufacturing industries are those that depend upon
+ cotton for raw material, with a gross product in 1900 valued at
+ $26,521,757. In that year[2] there were 67 mills engaged in the
+ manufacture of cotton goods, with a capital of $24,158,159, and they
+ yielded a gross product valued at $18,457,645; the increase between
+ 1900 and 1905 was actually much larger (and proportionately very much
+ larger) than between 1890 and 1900; the number of factories in 1905
+ was 103 (an increase of 53.7% over 1900); their capital was
+ $42,349,618 (75.3% more than in 1900); and their gross product was
+ valued at $35,174,248 (an increase of 90.6% since 1900). The rank of
+ Georgia among the cotton manufacturing states was seventh in 1900 and
+ fourth in 1905. Cotton-seed oil and cake factories increased in number
+ from 17 to 43 from 1890 to 1900, and to 112 in 1905, and the value of
+ their product increased from $1,670,196 to $8,064,112, or 382.8% in
+ 1890-1900, and to $13,539,899 in 1905, or an increase of 67.9% over
+ 1900, and in 1900 and in 1905 the state ranked second (to Texas) in
+ this industry in the United States. This growth in cotton manufactures
+ is due to various causes, among them being the proximity of raw
+ material, convenient water-power, municipal exemption from taxation
+ and the cheapness of labour. The relation between employer and
+ employee is in the main far more personal and kindly than in the mills
+ of the Northern States.
+
+ The forests of Georgia, next to the fields, furnish the largest amount
+ of raw material for manufactures. The yellow pines of the southern
+ part of the state, which have a stand of approximately 13,778,000 ft.,
+ yielded in 1900 rosin and turpentine valued at $8,110,468 (more than
+ the product of any other state in the Union) and in 1905 valued at
+ $7,705,643 (second only to the product of Florida). From the same
+ source was derived most of the lumber product valued[3] in 1900 at
+ $13,341,160 (more than double what it was in 1890) and in 1905 at
+ $16,716,594. The other important woods are cypress, oak and poplar.
+
+ Fourth in value in 1905 (first, cotton goods; second, lumber and
+ timber; third, cotton-seed oil and cake) were fertilizers, the value
+ of which increased from $3,367,353 in 1900 to $9,461,415 in 1905, when
+ the state ranked first of the United States in this industry; in 1900
+ it had ranked sixth.
+
+ _Communications._--Means of transportation for these products are
+ furnished by the rivers, which are generally navigable as far north as
+ the "fall line" passing through Augusta, Milledgeville, Macon and
+ Columbus; by ocean steamship lines which have piers at St Mary's,
+ Brunswick, Darien and Savannah; and by railways whose mileage in
+ January 1909 was 6,871.8 m. The most important of the railways are the
+ Central of Georgia, the Southern, the Atlantic Coast Line, the
+ Seaboard Air Line, the Georgia and the Georgia Southern & Florida. In
+ 1878 a state railway commission was established which has mandatory
+ power for the settlement of all traffic problems and makes annual
+ reports.
+
+_Population._--The population of Georgia in 1880 was 1,542,180; in 1890
+1,837,353, an increase of 19.1%; in 1900 2,216,331, a further increase
+of 20.6%[4]; in 1910, 2,609,121. Of the 1900 population, 53.3% were
+whites and 46.7% were negroes,[5] the centre of the black population
+being a little south of the "fall line." Here the negroes increased,
+from 1890 to 1900, faster than the whites in eighteen counties, but in
+northern Georgia, where the whites are in the majority, the negro
+population declined in twelve counties. Also the percentage of negro
+illiteracy is higher in northern Georgia than in other parts of the
+state, the percentage of negro male illiterates of voting age being
+38.3% in Atlanta in 1900, and in Savannah only 30.7%. The population of
+Georgia has a very slight foreign-born element (.6% in 1900) and a small
+percentage (1.7% in 1900) of people of foreign parentage. The urban
+population (i.e. the population in places of 2500 inhabitants and over)
+was 15.6% of the total in 1900, and the number of incorporated cities,
+towns and villages was 372. Of these only forty had a population
+exceeding 2000, and thirteen exceeding 5000. The largest city in 1900
+was Atlanta, the capital since 1868 (Louisville, Jefferson county, was
+the capital in 1795-1804, and Milledgeville in 1804-1868), with 89,872
+inhabitants. Savannah ranked second with 54,244, and Augusta third with
+39,441. In 1900 the other cities in the state with a population of more
+than 5000 were: Macon (23,272), Columbus (17,614), Athens (10,245),
+Brunswick (9081), Americus (7674), Rome (7291), Griffin (6857), Waycross
+(5919), Valdosta (5613), and Thomasville (5322).
+
+The total membership of the churches in 1906 was about 1,029,037, of
+whom 596,319 were Baptists, 349,079 were Methodists, 24,040 were
+Presbyterians, 19,273 were Roman Catholics, 12,703 were Disciples of
+Christ, 9790 were Protestant Episcopalians, and 5581 were
+Congregationalists.
+
+_Government._--The present constitution, which was adopted in 1877,[6]
+provides for a system of government similar in general to that of the
+other states (see UNITED STATES). The executive officials are elected
+for a term of two years, and the judges of the Supreme Court and of the
+court of appeals for six years, while those of the superior court and of
+the ordinaries and the justices of the peace are chosen every four
+years. Before 1909 all male citizens of the United States at least
+twenty-one years of age (except those mentioned below), who had lived in
+the state for one year immediately preceding an election and in the
+county six months, and had paid their taxes, were entitled to vote. From
+the suffrage and the holding of office are excluded idiots and insane
+persons and all those who have been convicted of treason, embezzlement,
+malfeasance in office, bribery or larceny, or any crime involving moral
+turpitude and punishable under the laws of the state by imprisonment in
+the penitentiary--this last disqualification, however, is removable by a
+pardon for the offence. Before 1909 there was no constitutional
+discrimination aimed against the exercise of the suffrage by the negro,
+but in fact the negro vote had in various ways been greatly reduced. By
+a constitutional amendment adopted by a large majority at a special
+election in October 1908, new requirements for suffrage, designed
+primarily to exclude negroes, especially illiterate negroes, were
+imposed (supplementary to the requirements mentioned above concerning
+age, residence and the payment of taxes), the amendment coming into
+effect on the 1st of January 1909: in brief this amendment requires that
+the voter shall have served in land or naval forces of the United States
+or of the Confederate States or of the state of Georgia in time of war,
+or be lawfully descended from some one who did so serve; or that he be a
+person of good character who proves to the satisfaction of the
+registrars of elections that he understands the duties and obligations
+of a citizen; or that he read correctly in English and (unless
+physically disabled) write any paragraph of the Federal or state
+constitution; or that he own 40 acres of land or property valued at $500
+and assessed for taxation. After the 1st of January 1915 no one may
+qualify as a voter under the first or second of these clauses (the
+"grandfather" and "understanding" clauses); but those who shall have
+registered under their requirements before the 1st of January 1915 thus
+become voters for life.
+
+The governor, who receives a salary of $5000, must be at least thirty
+years old, must at the time of his election have been a citizen of the
+United States for fifteen years and of the state for six years, and
+"shall not be eligible to re-election after the expiration of a second
+term, for the period of four years." In case of his "death, removal or
+disability," the duties of his office devolve in the first instance upon
+the president of the Senate, and in the second upon the speaker of the
+House of Representatives. The governor's power of veto extends to
+separate items in appropriation bills, but in every case his veto may be
+overridden by a two-thirds vote of the legislature. An amendment to the
+constitution may be proposed by a two-thirds vote of the legislature,
+and comes into effect on receiving a majority of the popular vote.
+Members of the Senate must be at least twenty-five years old, must be
+citizens of the United States, and must, at the time of their election,
+have been citizens of the state for four years, and of the senatorial
+district for one year; representatives must be at least twenty-one years
+old, and must, at the time of their election, have been citizens of the
+state for two years. By law, in Georgia, lobbying is a felony.
+
+Habitual intoxication, wilful desertion for three years, cruel
+treatment, and conviction for an offence the commission of which
+involved moral turpitude and for which the offender has been sentenced
+to imprisonment for at least two years, are recognized as causes for
+divorce. All petitions for divorce must be approved by two successive
+juries, and a woman holds in her own name all property acquired before
+and after marriage. Marriage between the members of the white and negro
+races is prohibited by law.
+
+As the result of the general campaign against child labour, an act was
+passed in 1906 providing that no child under 10 shall be employed or
+allowed to labour in or about any factory, under any circumstances;
+after the 1st of January 1907 no child under 12 shall be so employed,
+unless an orphan with no other means of support, or unless a widowed
+mother or disabled or aged father is dependent on the child's labour, in
+which case a certificate to the facts, holding good for one year only,
+is required; after the 1st of January 1908 no child under 14 shall be
+employed in a factory between the hours of 7 P.M. and 6 A.M.; after the
+same date no child under 14 shall be employed in any factory without a
+certificate of school attendance for 12 weeks (of which 6 weeks must be
+consecutive) of the preceding year; no child shall be employed without
+the filing of an affidavit as to age. Making a false affidavit as to age
+or as to other facts required by the act, and the violation of the act
+by any agent or representative of a factory or by any parent or guardian
+of a child are misdemeanours.
+
+In 1907 a state law was passed prohibiting after the 1st of January 1908
+the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors; nine-tenths of the
+counties of the state, under local option laws, were already "dry" at
+the passage of this bill. The law permits druggists to keep for sale no
+other form of alcoholic drink than pure alcohol; physicians prescribing
+alcohol must fill out a blank, specifying the patient's ailment, and
+certifying that alcohol is necessary; the prescription must be filled
+the day it is dated, must be served directly to the physician or to the
+patient, must not call for more than a pint, and may not be refilled.[7]
+
+The state supports four benevolent institutions: a lunatic asylum for
+the whites and a similar institution for the negroes, both at
+Milledgeville, an institute for the deaf and dumb at Cave Spring, and an
+academy for the blind at Macon. There are also a number of private
+charitable institutions, the oldest being the Bethesda orphan asylum,
+near Savannah, founded by George Whitefield in 1739. The Methodist,
+Baptist, Roman Catholic and Protestant Episcopal Churches, and the
+Hebrews of the state also support homes for orphans. A penitentiary was
+established in 1817 at Milledgeville. In 1866 the lease system was
+introduced, by which the convicts were leased for a term of years to
+private individuals. In 1897 this was supplanted by the contract system,
+by which a prison commission accepted contracts for convict labour, but
+the prisoners were cared for by state officials. But the contract system
+for convicts and the peonage system (under which immigrants were held in
+practical slavery while they "worked out" advances made for
+passage-money, &c.) were still sources of much injustice. State laws
+made liable to prosecution for misdemeanour any contract labourer who,
+having received advances, failed for any but good cause to fulfil the
+contract; or any contract labourer who made a second contract without
+giving notice to his second employer of a prior and unfulfilled
+contract; or any employer of a labourer who had not completed the term
+of a prior contract. In September 1908, after an investigation which
+showed that many wardens had been in the pay of convict lessees and that
+terrible cruelty had been practised in convict camps, an extra session
+of the legislature practically put an end to the convict lease or
+contract system; the act then passed provided that after the 31st of
+March 1909, the date of expiration of leases in force, no convicts may
+be leased for more than twelve months and none may be leased at all
+unless there are enough convicts to supply all demands for convict
+labour on roads made by counties, each county to receive its _pro rata_
+share on a population basis, and to satisfy all demands made by
+municipalities which thus secure labour for $100 per annum (per man)
+paid into the state treasury, and all demands made by the state prison
+farm and factory established by this law.
+
+_Education._--Georgia's system of public instruction was not instituted
+until 1870, but as early as 1817 the legislature provided a fund for the
+education in the private schools of the state of children of indigent
+parents. The constitution of 1868 authorized "a thorough system of
+general education, to be for ever free to all children of the State,"
+and in 1870 the first public school law was enacted. Education, however,
+has never been made compulsory. The constitution, as amended in 1905,
+provides that elections on the question of local school taxes for
+counties or for school districts may be called upon a petition signed by
+one-fourth of the qualified voters of the county, or district, in
+question; under this provision several counties and a large number of
+school districts are supplementing the general fund. But the principal
+source of the annual school revenue is a state tax; the fund derived
+from this tax, however, is not large enough. In 1908 the common school
+fund approximated $3,786,830, of which amount the state paid $2,163,200
+and about $1,010,680 was raised by local taxation. In 1908 69% of the
+school population (79% of whites; 58% of negroes) were enrolled in the
+schools; in 1902 it was estimated that the negroes, 52.3% of whom (10
+years of age and over) were illiterates (i.e. could not write or could
+neither read nor write) in 1900 (81.6% of them were illiterate in 1880),
+received the benefit of only about a fifth of the school fund. Of the
+total population, 10 years of age and over, 30.5% were illiterates in
+1900--49.9% were illiterates in 1880--and as regards the whites of
+native birth alone, Georgia ranked ninth in illiteracy, in 1900, among
+the states and territories of the Union. Of the illiterates about
+four-fifths were negroes in 1900. In addition to the public schools, the
+state also supports the University of Georgia; and in 1906 $235,000 was
+expended for the support of higher education. In 1906-1907 eleven
+agricultural and mechanical arts colleges were established, one in each
+congressional district of the state. Of the colleges of the university,
+Franklin was the first state college chartered in America (1785); the
+Medical College of Georgia, at Augusta, was opened in 1829; the State
+College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts was established at Athens in
+1872; the North Georgia Agricultural College, at Dahlonega, was opened
+in 1873; the Georgia School of Technology, at Atlanta, in 1888; the
+Georgia Normal and Industrial College (for women), in Milledgeville, in
+1899; the Georgia State Normal School, at Athens, in 1895; the Georgia
+State Industrial College for Coloured Youth, near Savannah, in 1890; the
+School of Pharmacy, at Athens, in 1903; and the School of Forestry, and
+the Georgia State College of Agriculture, at Athens, in 1906. Affiliated
+with the university, but not receiving state funds, are three
+preparatory schools, the South Georgia Military and Agricultural College
+at Thomasville, the Middle Georgia Military and Agricultural College at
+Milledgeville, and the West Georgia Agricultural and Mechanical College
+at Hamilton. Among the institutions generally grouped as denominational
+are--Baptist: Mercer University, at Macon (Penfield, 1837; Macon, 1871),
+Shorter College (1877) at Rome, Spelman Seminary (1881) in Atlanta for
+negro women and girls, and Bessie Tift College, formerly Monroe College
+(1849) for women, at Forsyth; Methodist Episcopal: Emory College (1836),
+at Oxford, and Wesleyan Female College (1836) at Macon, both largely
+endowed by George Ingraham Seney (1837-1893), and the latter one of the
+earliest colleges for women in the country; Methodist Episcopal Church,
+South: Young Harris College (1855) at Young Harris, Andrew Female
+College (1854) at Cuthbert, and Dalton Female College (1872) at Dalton;
+Presbyterian: Agnes Scott College at Decatur; and African Methodist
+Episcopal: Morris Brown College (1885) at Atlanta. A famous school for
+negroes is the non-sectarian Atlanta University (incorporated in 1867,
+opened in 1869), which has trained many negroes for teaching and other
+professions. Non-sectarian colleges for women are: Lucy Cobb Institute
+(1858) at Athens, Cox College (1843) at College Park, near Atlanta, and
+Brenau College Conservatory (1878) at Gainesville.
+
+ _Finance._--The assessed value of taxable property in 1910 was about
+ $735,000,000. A general property tax, which furnishes about
+ four-fifths of the public revenue, worked so inequitably that a Board
+ of Equalization was appointed in 1901. By the Constitution the tax
+ rate is limited to $5 on the thousand, and, as the rate of taxation
+ has increased faster than the taxable property, the state has been
+ forced to contract several temporary loans since 1901, none of which
+ has exceeded $200,000, the limit for each year set by the
+ Constitution. On the 1st of January 1910 the bonded debt was
+ $6,944,000, mainly incurred by the extravagance of the Reconstruction
+ administration (see _History_, below). Each year $100,000 of this debt
+ is paid off, and there are annual appropriations for the payment of
+ interest (about $303,260 in 1910). The state owns the Western &
+ Atlantic railway (137 m. long) from Chattanooga, Tennessee, to
+ Atlanta, which has valuable terminal facilities in both cities, and
+ which in 1910 was estimated to be worth $8,400,240 (more than the
+ amount of the bonded debt); this railway the state built in 1841-1850,
+ and in 1890 leased for 29 years, at an annual rental of $420,012, to
+ the Nashville, Chattanooga & St Louis railway.
+
+ Banking in Georgia is in a prosperous condition. The largest class of
+ depositors are the farmers, who more and more look to the banks for
+ credit, instead of to the merchants and cotton speculators. Hence the
+ number of banks in agricultural districts is increasing. The state
+ treasurer is the bank examiner, and to him all banks must make a
+ quarterly statement and submit their books for examination twice a
+ year. The legal rate of interest is 7%, but by contract it may be 8%.
+
+_History._--Georgia derives its name from King George II. of Great
+Britain. It was the last to be established of the English colonies in
+America. Its formation was due to a desire of the British government to
+protect South Carolina from invasion by the Spaniards from Florida and
+by the French from Louisiana, as well as to the desire of James Edward
+Oglethorpe (q.v.) to found a refuge for the persecuted Protestant sects
+and the unfortunate but worthy indigent classes of Europe. A charter was
+granted in 1732 to "the Trustees for establishing the colony of Georgia
+in America," and parliament gave Ł10,000 to the enterprise. The first
+settlement was made at Savannah in 1733 under the personal supervision
+of Oglethorpe. The early colonists were German Lutherans (Salzburgers),
+Piedmontese, Scottish Highlanders, Swiss, Portuguese Jews and
+Englishmen; but the main tide of immigration, from Virginia and the
+Carolinas, did not set in until 1752. As a bulwark against the Spanish,
+the colony was successful, but as an economic experiment it was a
+failure. The trustees desired that there should be grown in the colony
+wine grapes, hemp, silk and medical plants (barilla, kali, cubeb, caper,
+madder, &c.) for which England was dependent upon foreign countries;
+they required the settlers to plant mulberry trees, and forbade the sale
+of rum, the chief commercial staple of the colonies. They also forbade
+the introduction of negro slaves. Land was leased by military tenure,
+and until 1739 grants were made only in male tail and alienations were
+forbidden. The industries planned for the colony did not thrive, and as
+sufficient labour could not be obtained, the importation of slaves was
+permitted under certain conditions in 1749. About the same time the
+House of Commons directed the trustees to remove the prohibition on the
+sale of rum. In 1753 the charter of the trustees expired and Georgia
+became a royal province.
+
+Under the new regime the colony was so prosperous that Sir James Wright
+(1716-1785), the last of the royal governors, declared Georgia to be
+"the most flourishing colony on the continent." The people were led to
+revolt against the mother country through sympathy with the other
+colonies rather than through any grievance of their own. The centre of
+revolutionary ideas was St John's Parish, settled by New Englanders
+(chiefly from Dorchester, Massachusetts). The Loyalist sentiment was so
+strong that only five of the twelve parishes sent representatives to the
+First Provincial Congress, which met on the 18th of January 1775, and
+its delegates to the Continental Congress therefore did not claim seats
+in that assembly. But six months later all the parishes sent
+representatives to another Provincial Congress which met on the 4th of
+July 1775. Soon afterward the royal government collapsed and the
+administration of the colony was assumed by a council of safety.
+
+The war that followed was really a severe civil conflict, the Loyalist
+and Revolutionary parties being almost equal in numbers. In 1778 the
+British seized Savannah, which they held until 1782, meanwhile reviving
+the British civil administration, and in 1779 they captured Augusta and
+Sunbury; but after 1780 the Revolutionary forces were generally
+successful. Civil affairs also fell into confusion. In 1777 a state
+constitution was adopted, but two factions soon appeared in the
+government, led by the governor and the executive council respectively,
+and harmony was not secured until 1781.
+
+Georgia's policy in the formation of the United States government was
+strongly national. In the constitutional convention of 1787 its
+delegates almost invariably gave their support to measures designed to
+strengthen the central government. Georgia was the fourth state to
+ratify (January 2, 1788), and one of the three that ratified
+unanimously, the Federal Constitution. But a series of conflicts between
+the Federal government and the state government caused a decline of this
+national sentiment and the growth of States Rights theories.
+
+First of these was the friction involved in the case, before the Supreme
+Court of the United States, of _Chisolm_ v. _Georgia_, by which the
+plaintiff, one Alexander Chisolm, a citizen of South Carolina, secured
+judgment in 1793 against the state of Georgia (see 2 Dallas Reports
+419). In protest, the Georgia House of Representatives, holding that the
+United States Supreme Court had no constitutional power to try suits
+against a sovereign state, resolved that any Federal marshal who should
+attempt to execute the court's decision would be "guilty of felony, and
+shall suffer death, without benefit of clergy, by being hanged." No
+effort was made to execute the decision, and in 1798 the Eleventh
+Amendment to the Federal Constitution was adopted, taking from Federal
+courts all jurisdiction over any suit brought "against one of the United
+States by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects of any
+foreign state."
+
+The position of Congress and of the Supreme Court with reference to
+Georgia's policy in the Yazoo Frauds also aroused distrust of the
+Federal government. In 1795 the legislature granted for $500,000 the
+territory extending from the Alabama and Coosa rivers to the Mississippi
+river and between 35° and 31° N. lat. (almost all of the present state
+of Mississippi and more than half of the present state of Alabama) to
+four land companies, but in the following year a new legislature
+rescinded the contracts on the ground that they had been fraudulently
+and corruptly made, as was probably the case, and the rescindment was
+embodied in the Constitution of 1798., In the meantime the United States
+Senate had appointed a committee to inquire into Georgia's claim to the
+land in question, and as this committee pronounced that claim invalid,
+Congress in 1800 established a Territorial government over the region.
+The legislature of Georgia remonstrated but expressed a willingness to
+cede the land to the United States, and in 1802 the cession was
+ratified, it being stipulated among other things that the United States
+should pay to the state $1,250,000, and should extinguish "at their own
+expense, for the use of Georgia, as soon as the same can be peaceably
+obtained on reasonable terms," the Indian title to all lands within the
+state of Georgia. Eight years later the Supreme Court of the United
+States decided in the case of _Fletcher_ v. _Peck_ (6 Cranch 87) that
+such a rescindment as that in the new state constitution was illegal, on
+the ground that a state cannot pass a law impairing the obligation of
+contracts; and at an expense of more than four millions of dollars the
+Federal government ultimately extinguished all claims to the lands.
+
+This decision greatly irritated the political leaders of Georgia, and
+the question of extinguishing the Indian titles, on which there had long
+been a disagreement, caused further and even more serious friction
+between the Federal and state authorities. The National government,
+until the administration of President Jackson, regarded the Indian
+tribes as sovereign nations with whom it alone had the power to treat,
+while Georgia held that the tribes were dependent communities with no
+other right to the soil than that of tenants at will. In 1785 Georgia
+made treaties with the Creeks by which those Indians ceded to the state
+their lands S. and W. of the Altamaha river and E. of the Oconee river,
+but after a remonstrance of one of their half-breed chiefs Congress
+decided that the cessions were invalid, and the National government
+negotiated, in 1790, a new treaty which ceded only the lands E. of the
+Oconee. The state appealed to the National government to endeavour to
+secure further cessions, but none had been made when, in 1802, the
+United States assumed its obligation to extinguish all Indian titles
+within the state. Several cessions were made between 1802 and 1824, but
+the state in the latter year remonstrated in vigorous terms against the
+dilatory manner in which the National government was discharging its
+obligation, and the effect of this was that in 1825 a treaty was
+negotiated at Indian Springs by which nearly all the Lower Creeks agreed
+to exchange their remaining lands in Georgia for equal territory beyond
+the Mississippi. But President J.Q. Adams, learning that this treaty was
+not approved by the entire Creek nation, authorized a new one, signed at
+Washington in 1826, by which the treaty of 1825 was abrogated and the
+Creeks kept certain lands W. of the Chattahoochee. The Georgia
+government, under the leadership of Governor George M. Troup
+(1780-1856), had proceeded to execute the first treaty, and the
+legislature declared the second treaty illegal and unconstitutional. In
+reply to a communication of President Adams early in 1827 that the
+United States would take strong measures to enforce its policy, Governor
+Troup declared that he felt it his duty to resist to the utmost any
+military attack which the government of the United States should think
+proper to make, and ordered the military companies to prepare to resist
+"any hostile invasion of the territory of this state." But the strain
+produced by these conditions was relieved by information that new
+negotiations had been begun for the cession of all Creek lands in
+Georgia. These negotiations were completed late in the year.
+
+There was similar conflict in the relation of the United States and
+Georgia with the Cherokees. In 1785 the Cherokees of Georgia placed
+themselves under the protection of the Federal government, and in 1823
+their chiefs, who were mostly half-breeds, declared: "It is the fixed
+and unalterable determination of this nation never again to cede one
+foot more of land," and that they could not "recognize the sovereignty
+of any state within the limits of their territory"; in 1827 they framed
+a constitution and organized a representative government. President
+Monroe and President J.Q. Adams treated the Cherokees with the courtesy
+due to a sovereign nation, and held that the United States had done all
+that was required to meet the obligation assumed in 1802. The Georgia
+legislature, however, contended that the United States had not acted in
+good faith, declared that all land within the boundaries of the state
+belonged to Georgia, and in 1828 extended the jurisdiction of Georgia
+law to the Cherokee lands. Then President Jackson, holding that Georgia
+was in the right on the Indian question, informed the Cherokees that
+their only alternative to submission to Georgia was emigration.
+Thereupon the chiefs resorted to the United States Supreme Court, which
+in 1832 declared that the Cherokees formed a distinct community "in
+which the laws of Georgia have no force," and annulled the decision of a
+Georgia court that had extended its jurisdiction into the Cherokee
+country (_Worcester_ v. _Georgia_). But the governor of Georgia declared
+that the decision was an attempt at usurpation which would meet with
+determined resistance, and President Jackson refused to enforce the
+decree. The President did, however, work for the removal of the Indians,
+which was effected in 1838.
+
+On account of these conflicts a majority of Georgians adopted the
+principles of the Democratic-Republican party, and early in the 19th
+century the people were virtually unanimous in their political ideas.
+Local partisanship centred in two factions: one, led by George M. Troup,
+which represented the interests of the aristocratic and slave-holding
+communities; the other, formed by John Clarke (1766-1832) and his
+brother Elijah, found support among the non-slave-holders and the
+frontiersmen. The cleavage of these factions was at first purely
+personal; but by 1832 it had become one of principle. Then the Troup
+faction under the name of States Rights party, endorsed the
+nullification policy of South Carolina, while the Clarke faction,
+calling itself a Union party, opposed South Carolina's conduct, but on
+the grounds of expediency rather than of principle. On account, however,
+of its opposition to President Jackson's attitude toward nullification,
+the States Rights party affiliated with the new Whig party, which
+represented the national feeling in the South, while the Union party was
+merged into the Democratic party, which emphasized the sovereignty of
+the states.
+
+The activity of Georgia in the slavery controversy was important. As
+early as 1835 the legislature adopted a resolution which asserted the
+legality of slavery in the Territories, a principle adopted by Congress
+in the Kansas Bill in 1854, and in 1847 ex-Governor Wilson Lumpkin
+(1783-1870) advocated the organization of the Southern states to resist
+the aggression of the North. Popular opinion at first opposed the
+Compromise of 1850, and some politicians demanded immediate secession
+from the Union; and the legislature had approved the Alabama Platform of
+1848. But Congressmen Robert Toombs, Alexander H. Stephens, Whigs, and
+Howell Cobb, a Democrat, upon their return from Washington, contended
+that the Compromise was a great victory for the South, and in a campaign
+on this issue secured the election of such delegates to the state
+convention (at Milledgeville) of 1850 that that body adopted on the 10th
+of December, by a vote of 237 to 19, a series of conciliatory
+resolutions, since known as the "Georgia Platform," which declared in
+substance: (1) that, although the state did not wholly approve of the
+Compromise, it would "abide by it as a permanent adjustment of this
+sectional controversy," to preserve the Union, as the thirteen original
+colonies had found compromise necessary for its formation; (2) that the
+state "will and ought to resist, even (as a last resort) to the
+disruption of every tie that binds her to the Union," any attempt to
+prohibit slavery in the Territories or a refusal to admit a slave state.
+The adoption of this platform was accompanied by a party reorganization,
+those who approved it organizing the Constitutional Union party, and
+those who disapproved, mostly Democrats, organizing the Southern Rights
+party; the approval in other states of the Georgia Platform in
+preference to the Alabama Platform (see ALABAMA) caused a reaction in
+the South against secession. The reaction was followed for a short
+interval by a return to approximately the former party alignment, but in
+1854 the rank and file of the Whigs joined the American or Know-Nothing
+party while most of the Whig leaders went over to the Democrats. The
+Know-Nothing party was nearly destroyed by its crushing defeat in 1856
+and in the next year the Democrats by a large majority elected for
+governor Joseph Emerson Brown (1821-1894) who by three successive
+re-elections was continued in that office until the close of the Civil
+War. Although Governor Brown represented the poorer class of white
+citizens he had taken a course in law at Yale College, had practised
+law, and at the time of his election was judge of a superior court;
+although he had never held slaves he believed that the abolition of
+slavery would soon result in the ruin of the South, and he was a man of
+strong convictions. The Kansas question and the attitude of the North
+toward the decision in the Dred Scott case were arousing the South when
+he was inaugurated the first time, and in his inaugural address he
+clearly indicated that he would favour secession in the event of any
+further encroachment on the part of the North. In July 1859 Senator
+Alfred Iverson (1798-1874) declared that in the event of the election of
+a Free-Soil resident in 1860 he would favour the establishment of an
+independent confederacy; later in the same year Governor Brown expressed
+himself to a similar effect and urged the improvement of the military
+service. On the 7th of November following the election of President
+Lincoln the governor, in a special message to the legislature,
+recommended the calling of a convention to decide the question of
+secession, and Alexander H. Stephens was about the only prominent
+political leader who contended that Lincoln's election was insufficient
+ground for such action. On the 17th of November the legislature passed
+an act directing the governor to order an election of delegates on the
+2nd of January 1861 and their meeting in a convention on the 16th. On
+the 19th this body passed an ordinance of secession by a vote of 208 to
+89. Already the first regiment of Georgia Volunteers, under Colonel
+Alexander Lawton (1818-1896) had seized Fort Pulaski at the mouth of the
+Savannah river and now Governor Brown proceeded to Augusta and seized
+the Federal arsenal there. Toward the close of the same year, however,
+Federal warships blockaded Georgia's ports, and early in 1862 Federal
+forces captured Tybee Island, Fort Pulaski, St Mary's, Brunswick and St
+Simon Island. Georgia had responded freely to the call for volunteers,
+but when the Confederate Congress had passed, in April 1862, the
+Conscript Law which required all white men (except those legally
+exempted from service) between the ages of 18 and 35 to enter the
+Confederate service, Governor Brown, in a correspondence with President
+Davis which was continued for several months, offered serious
+objections, his leading contentions being that the measure was
+unnecessary as to Georgia, unconstitutional, subversive of the state's
+sovereignty, and therefore "at war with the principles for the support
+of which Georgia entered into this revolution."
+
+In 1863 north-west Georgia was involved in the Chattanooga campaign. In
+the following spring Georgia was invaded from Tennessee by a Federal
+army under General William T. Sherman; the resistance of General Joseph
+E. Johnston and General J.B. Hood proved ineffectual; and on the 1st of
+September Atlanta was taken. Then Sherman began his famous "march to the
+sea," from Atlanta to Savannah, which revealed the weakness of the
+Confederacy. In the spring of 1865, General J.H. Wilson with a body of
+cavalry entered the state from Alabama, seized Columbus and West Point
+on the 16th of April, and on the 10th of May captured Jefferson Davis,
+president of the Confederacy, at Irwinville in Irwin county.
+
+In accord with President Andrew Johnson's plan for reorganizing the
+Southern States, a provisional governor, James Johnson, was appointed on
+the 17th of June 1865, and a state convention reformed the constitution
+to meet the new conditions, rescinding the ordinance of secession,
+abolishing slavery and formally repudiating the state debt incurred in
+the prosecution of the war. A governor and legislature were elected in
+November 1865, the legislature ratified the Thirteenth Amendment on the
+9th of December and five days later the governor-elect was inaugurated.
+But both the convention and legislature incurred the suspicion and
+ill-will of Congress; the convention had congratulated the president on
+his policy, memorialized him on behalf of Jefferson Davis, and provided
+pensions for disabled Confederate soldiers and the widows of those who
+had lost their lives during the war, while the legislature passed
+apprenticeship, labour and vagrancy laws to protect and regulate the
+negroes, and rejected the Fourteenth Amendment. Although the civil
+rights were conferred upon the freedmen, Congress would not tolerate the
+political incapacity and social inferiority which the legislature had
+assigned to them, and therefore Georgia was placed under military
+government, as part of the third military district, by the
+Reconstruction Act of the 2nd of March 1867. Under the auspices of the
+military authorities registration of electors for a new state convention
+was begun and 95,168 negroes and 96,333 whites were registered. The
+acceptance of the proposition to call the convention and the election of
+many conscientious and intelligent delegates were largely due to the
+influence of ex-Governor Brown, who was strongly convinced that the
+wisest course for the South was to accept quickly what Congress had
+offered. The convention met in Atlanta on the 9th of December 1867 and
+by March 1868 had revised the constitution to meet the requirements of
+the Reconstruction Acts. The constitution was duly adopted by popular
+vote, and elections were held for the choice of a governor and
+legislature. Rufus Brown Bullock (b. 1834), Republican, was chosen
+governor, the Senate had a majority of Republicans, but in the House of
+Representatives a tie vote was cast for the election of a speaker. On
+the 21st of July the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, and a section of
+the state constitution (which denied the power of state courts to
+entertain against any resident of the state suits founded on contracts
+existing on the 15th of June 1865) was repealed by the legislature in
+pursuance of the congressional "Omnibus Bill" of the 25th of June 1868,
+and as evidence of the restoration of Georgia to the Union the
+congressmen were seated on the 25th of July in that year.
+
+But in September of the same year the Democrats in the state
+legislature, being assisted by some of the white Republicans, expelled
+the 27 negro members and seated their defeated white contestants,
+relying upon the legal theory that the right to hold office belonged
+only to those citizens designated by statute, the common law or custom.
+In retaliation the 41st Congress excluded the state's representatives on
+a technicality, and, on the theory that the government of Georgia was a
+provisional organization, passed an act requiring the ratification of
+the Fifteenth Amendment before the admission of Georgia's senators and
+representatives. The war department now concluded that the state was
+still subject to military authority, and placed General A.H. Terry in
+command. With his aid, and that of Congressional requirements that all
+members of the legislature must take the Test Oath and none be excluded
+on account of colour, a Republican majority was secured for both houses,
+and the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified. Georgia was now finally
+admitted to the Union by Act of Congress, on the 15th of July 1870.
+
+The Reconstruction period in Georgia is remarkable for its comparative
+moderation. Although there was great political excitement, there was not
+as much extravagance in public administration as there was in other
+Southern States, the state debt increasing approximately from $6,600,000
+to $16,000,000. The explanation lies in the fact that there were
+comparatively few "carpet-baggers" or adventurers in the state, and that
+a large number of conservative citizens, under the leadership of
+ex-Governor Brown, supported the Reconstruction policy of Congress and
+joined the Republican party.
+
+The election of 1871 gave the Democrats a majority in the legislature;
+Governor Bullock, fearing impeachment, resigned, and at a special
+election James M. Smith was chosen to fill the unexpired term. After
+that the control of the Democrats was complete. In 1891 the Populist
+party was organized, but it never succeeded in securing a majority of
+the votes in the state.
+
+LIST OF GOVERNORS
+
+ I. _Administration of the Trustees._
+
+ James Edward Oglethorpe[8] 1732-1743
+ William Stephens[9] 1743-1751
+ Henry Parker[9] 1751-1753
+ Patrick Graham[9] 1753-1754
+
+ II. _Royal Administration._
+
+ John Reynolds 1754-1757
+ Henry Ellis 1757-1760
+ Sir James Wright 1760-1782
+
+ III. _Provincial Administration._
+
+ William Ewen[10] 1775
+ Archibald Bulloch[11] 1776
+ Button Gwinnett[11] 1777
+ Jonathan Bryan[11] 1777
+
+ IV. _Georgia as a State._
+
+ John A. Treutlen[12] 1777-1778
+ John Houston 1778-1779
+ John Wereat[13] 1779
+ George Walton 1779-1780
+ Richard Hawley 1780
+ Stephen Heard[13] 1780-1781
+ Myrick Davies[13] 1781
+ Nathan Brownson 1781-1782
+ John Martin 1782-1783
+ Lyman Hall 1783-1785
+ Samuel Elbert 1785-1786
+ Edward Telfair 1786-1787
+ George Matthews 1787-1788
+ George Handley 1788-1789
+ George Walton 1789-1790 Democratic-Republican
+ Edward Telfair 1790-1793 " "
+ George Matthews 1793-1796 " "
+ Jared Irwin 1796-1798 " "
+ James Jackson 1798-1801 " "
+ David Emanuel 1801 " "
+ Josiah Tattnall 1801-1802 " "
+ John Milledge 1802-1806 " "
+ Jared Irwin 1806-1809 " "
+ David B. Mitchell 1809-1813 " "
+ Peter Early 1813-1815 " "
+ David B. Mitchell 1815-1817 " "
+ William Rabun[14] 1817-1819 " "
+ Matthew Talbot[14] 1819 " "
+ John Clarke 1819-1823 " "
+ George M. Troup 1823-1827 " "
+ John Forsyth 1827-1829 " "
+ George R. Gilmer 1829-1831 National Republican
+ Wilson Lumpkin 1831-1835 Democratic-Republican
+ William Schley 1835-1837 Union
+ George Gilmer 1837-1839 Democrat
+ Charles J. McDonald 1839-1843 Union
+ George W. Crawford 1843-1847 Whig
+ George W.B. Towns 1847-1851 Democrat
+ Howell Cobb 1851-1853 Constitutional Union
+ Herschell V. Johnson 1853-1856 Democrat
+ Joseph E. Brown 1857-1865 "
+ James Johnson[15] 1865 "
+ Charles J. Jenkins 1865-1868 "
+ Thomas H. Ruger 1868 "
+ Rufus B. Bullock 1868-1871 Republican
+ Benjamin Conley[14] 1871-1872 "
+ James M. Smith 1872-1876 Democrat
+ Alfred H. Colquitt 1876-1882 "
+ Alexander H. Stephens 1882-1883 "
+ James S. Boynton[14] 1883 "
+ Henry D. McDaniel 1883-1886 "
+ John B. Gordon 1886-1890 "
+ W.J. Northen 1890-1894 "
+ W.Y. Atkinson 1894-1898 "
+ A.D. Candler 1898-1902 "
+ Joseph M. Terrell 1902-1907 "
+ Hoke Smith 1907-1909 "
+ Joseph M. Brown 1909-1911 "
+ Hoke Smith 1911- "
+
+ A brief bibliography, chiefly of historical materials, is given by
+ U.B. Phillips in his monograph "Georgia and State Rights," in vol. ii.
+ of the _Annual Report of the American Historical Association for 1901_
+ (Washington, 1902). Valuable information concerning the resources and
+ products of the state is given in the publications of the Department
+ of Agriculture, which include weekly and monthly _Bulletins_, biennial
+ _Reports_ and a volume entitled _Georgia, Historical and Industrial_
+ (Atlanta, 1901). The Reports of the United States Census (especially
+ the Twelfth Census for 1900 and the special census of manufactures for
+ 1905) should be consulted, and _Memoirs of Georgia_ (2 vols., Atlanta,
+ Ga., 1895) contains chapters on industrial conditions.
+
+ The principal sources for public administration are the annual reports
+ of the state officers, philanthropic institutions, the prison
+ commission and the railroad commission, and the revised Code of
+ Georgia (Atlanta, 1896), adopted in 1895; see also L.F. Schmeckebier's
+ "Taxation in Georgia" (_Johns Hopkins University Studies_, vol.
+ xviii.) and "Banking in Georgia" (_Banker's Magazine_, vol. xlviii.).
+ Education and social conditions are treated in C.E. Jones's _History
+ of Education in Georgia_ (Washington, 1890), the Annual Reports of the
+ School Commissioner, and various magazine articles, such as "Georgia
+ Cracker in the Cotton Mill" (_Century Magazine_, vol. xix.) and "A
+ Plea for Light" (_South Atlantic Quarterly_, vol. iii.). The view of
+ slavery given in Frances A. Kemble's _Journal of a Residence on a
+ Georgia Plantation in 1838-1839_ (New York, 1863) should be compared
+ with R.Q. Mallard's _Plantation Life before Emancipation_ (Richmond,
+ Va., 1897), and with F.L. Olmsted's _A Journey in the Seaboard Slave
+ States_ (New York, 1856).
+
+ The best book for the entire field of Georgia history is Lawton B.
+ Evans's _A Student's History of Georgia_ (New York, 1898), a textbook
+ for schools. This should be supplemented by C.C. Jones's _Antiquities
+ of the Southern Indians, particularly of the Georgia Tribes_ (New
+ York, 1873), for the aborigines; W.B. Stevens's _History of Georgia to
+ 1798_ (2 vols., Philadelphia, 1847-1859) and C.C. Jones, jun., History
+ of Georgia (2 vols., Boston, 1883) for the Colonial and Revolutionary
+ periods; C.H. Haskins's _The Yazoo Land Companies_ (Washington, 1891);
+ the excellent monograph (mentioned above) by U.B. Phillips for
+ politics prior to 1860; Miss Annie H. Abel's monograph "The History of
+ Events Resulting in Indian Consolidation West of the Mississippi," in
+ vol. i. of the _Annual Report of the American Historical Association
+ for 1906_ (Washington, 1908) for a good account of the removal of the
+ Indians from Georgia; the judicious monograph by E.C. Woolley,
+ _Reconstruction in Georgia_ (New York, 1901); and I.W. Avery's
+ _History of Georgia from 1850 to 1881_ (New York, 1881), which is
+ marred by prejudice but contains material of value. _The Confederate
+ Records of the State of Georgia_ were published at Atlanta in 1909.
+ See also: E.J. Harden's _Life of George M. Troup_ (Savannah, 1840);
+ R.M. Johnston and W.H. Browne, _Life of Alexander H. Stephens
+ (Philadelphia, 1878), and Louis Pendleton, Life of Alexander H.
+ Stephens_ (Philadelphia, 1907); P.A. Stovall's _Robert Toombs_ (New
+ York, 1892); H. Fielder's _Life, Times and Speeches of Joseph E.
+ Brown_ (Springfield, Mass., 1883) and C.C. Jones, jun., _Biographical
+ Sketches of Delegates from Georgia to the Continental Congress_ (New
+ York, 1891). There is much valuable material, also, in the
+ publications (beginning with 1840) of the Georgia Historical Society
+ (see the list in vol. ii. of the _Report of the American Historical
+ Association for 1905_).
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] According to the usual nomenclature, the branch flowing S.W. is
+ called the Chattooga; this unites with the Tallulah to form the
+ Tugaloo, which in turn unites with the Kiowee to form the Savannah
+ proper.
+
+ [2] The manufacturing statistics for 1900 which follow are not those
+ given in the Twelfth Census, but are taken from the _Census of
+ Manufactures_, 1905, the 1900 figures here given being only for
+ "establishments on a factory basis," and thus being comparable with
+ those of 1905. In 1890 there were 53 mills with a capital of
+ $17,664,675 and a product valued at $12,035,629.
+
+ [3] In these valuations for 1900 and for 1905 the rough lumber
+ dressed or remanufactured in planing mills enters twice into the
+ value of the product.
+
+ [4] The population of the state was 82,548 in 1790, 162,686 in 1800,
+ 252,433 in 1810, 340,989 in 1820, 516,823 in 1830, 691,392 in 1840,
+ 906,185 in 1850, 1,057,286 in 1860, and 1,184,100 in 1870.
+
+ [5] This negro percentage includes 211 Chinese, Japanese and Indians.
+
+ [6] The state has had four other constitutions--those of 1777, 1789,
+ 1798 and 1868.
+
+ [7] Owing to the custom which holds in Georgia of choosing state
+ senators in rotation from each of the counties making up a senatorial
+ district, it happened in 1907 that few cities were represented
+ directly by senators chosen from municipalities. It is believed that
+ this fact contributed to the passage of the prohibition law.
+
+ [8] _De facto._
+
+ [9] President of the Colony.
+
+ [10] President of the Council of Safety.
+
+ [11] President of Georgia.
+
+ [12] First Governor under a State Constitution.
+
+ [13] President Executive Council and _de facto_ Governor.
+
+ [14] President of Senate.
+
+ [15] Provisional.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGIA, a former kingdom of Transcaucasia, which existed historically
+for more than 2000 years. Its earliest name was Karthli or Karthveli;
+the Persians knew it as Gurjistan, the Romans and Greeks as Iberia,
+though the latter placed Colchis also in the west of Georgia. Vrastan is
+the Armenian name and Gruzia the Russian. Georgia proper, which included
+Karthli and Kakhetia, was bounded on the N. by Ossetia and Daghestan, on
+the S. by the principalities of Erivan and Kars, and on the W. by Guria
+and Imeretia; but the kingdom also included at different times Guria,
+Mingrelia, Abkhasia, Imeretia and Daghestan, and extended from the
+Caucasus range on the N. to the Aras or Araxes on the S. It is now
+divided between the Russian governments of Tiflis and Kutais, under
+which headings further geographical particulars are given. (See also
+CAUCASIA.)
+
+_History._--According to traditional accounts, the Georgian (Karthlian),
+Kakhetian, Lesghian, Mingrelian and other races of Transcaucasia are the
+descendants of Thargamos, great-grandson of Japheth, son of Noah, though
+Gen. x. 3 makes Togarmah to be the son of Gomer, who was the son of
+Japheth. These various races were subsequently known under the general
+name of Thargamosides. Karthlos, the second son of Thargamos, is the
+eponymous king of his race, their country being called Karthli after
+him. Mtskhethos, son of Karthlos, founded the city of Mtskhetha (the
+modern Mtskhet) and made it the capital of his kingdom. We come,
+however, to firmer historic ground when we read that Georgia was
+conquered by Alexander the Great, or rather by one of his generals. The
+Macedonian yoke was shaken off by Pharnavaz or Pharnabazus, a prince of
+the royal race, who ruled from 302 to 237 B.C. All through its history
+Georgia, being on the outskirts of Armenia and Persia, both of them
+more powerful neighbours than itself, was at times more or less closely
+affected by their destinies. In this way it was sometimes opposed to
+Rome, sometimes on terms of friendship with Byzantium, according as
+these were successively friendly or hostile to the Armenians and the
+Persians. In the end of the 2nd century B.C. the last Pharnavazian
+prince was dethroned by his own subjects and the crown given to Arsaces,
+king of Armenia, whose son Arshag, ascending the throne of Georgia in 93
+B.C., established there the Arsacid dynasty. This close association with
+Armenia brought upon the country an invasion (65 B.C.) by the Roman
+general Pompey, who was then at war with Mithradates, king of Pontus and
+Armenia; but Pompey did not establish his power permanently over Iberia.
+A hundred and eighty years later the Emperor Trajan penetrated (A.D.
+114) into the heart of the country, and chastised the Georgians; yet his
+conquest was only a little more permanent than Pompey's. During one of
+the internecine quarrels, which were not infrequent in Georgia, the
+throne fell to Mirhan or Mirian (265-342), a son of the Persian king,
+who had married a daughter of Asphagor, the last sovereign of the
+Arsacid dynasty.
+
+With Mirian begins the Sassanian dynasty. He and his subjects were
+converted to Christianity by a nun Nuno (Nino), who had escaped from the
+religious persecutions of Tiridates, king of Armenia. Mirian erected the
+first Christian church in Georgia on the site now occupied by the
+cathedral of Mtskhet. In or about the year 371 Georgia was overrun by
+the Persian king Shapur or Sapor II., and in 379 a Persian general built
+the stronghold of Tphilis (afterwards Tiflis) as a counterpoise to
+Mtskhet. The Persian grasp upon Georgia was loosened by Tiridates, who
+reigned from 393 to 405. One of Mirian's successors, Vakhtang (446-499),
+surnamed Gurgaslan or Gurgasal, the Wolf-Lion, established a
+patriarchate at Mtskhet and made Tphilis his capital. This sovereign,
+having conquered Mingrelia and Abkhasia, and subdued the Ossetes, made
+himself master of a large part of Armenia. Then, co-operating for once
+with the king of Persia, he led an army into India; but towards the end
+of his reign there was enmity between him and the Persians, against whom
+he warred unsuccessfully. His son Dachi or Darchil (499-514) upon
+ascending the throne transferred the seat of government permanently from
+Mtskhet to Tphilis (Tiflis). Again Persia stretched out her hand over
+Georgia, and proved a formidable menace to the existence of the kingdom,
+until, owing to the severe pressure of the Turks on the one side and of
+the Byzantine Greeks on the other, she found it expedient to relax her
+grasp. The Georgians, seizing the opportunity, appealed (571) to the
+Byzantine emperor, Justin II. who gave them a king in the person of
+Guaram, a prince of the Bagratid family of Armenia, conferring upon him
+the title, not of king, but of viceroy. Thus began the dynasty of the
+Bagratids, who ruled until 1803.
+
+This was not, however, the first time that Byzantine influence had been
+effectively exercised in Georgia. As early as the reign of Mirian, in
+the 3rd century, the organizers of the early Georgian church had looked
+to Byzantium, the leading Christian power in the East, for both
+instruction and guidance, and the connexion thus begun had been
+strengthened as time went on. From this period until the Arab (i.e.
+Mahommedan) invasions began, the authority of Byzantium was supreme in
+Georgia. Some seventy years after the Bagratids began to rule in Georgia
+the all-conquering Arabs appeared on the frontiers of the country, and
+for the next one hundred and eighty years they frequently devastated the
+land, compelling its inhabitants again and again to accept Islam at the
+sword's point. But it was not until the death of the Georgian king Ashod
+(787-826) that they completely subdued the Caucasian state and imposed
+their will upon it. Nevertheless they were too much occupied elsewhere
+or too indifferent to its welfare to defend it against alien aggressors,
+for in 842 Bogha, a Turkish chief, invaded the country, and early in the
+10th century the Persians again overran it. But a period of relief from
+these hostile incursions was afforded by the reign of Bagrat III.
+(980-1014). During his father's lifetime he had been made king of
+Abkhasia, his mother belonging to the royal house of that land, and
+after ascending the Georgian throne he made his power felt far beyond
+the frontiers of his hereditary dominions, until his kingdom extended
+from the Black Sea to the Caspian, while Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kirman
+all paid him tribute. Not only did he encourage learning and patronize
+the fine arts, but he built, in 1003, the cathedral at Kutais, one of
+the finest examples extant of Georgian architecture. During the reign of
+Bagrat IV. (1027-1072) the Seljuk Turks more than once burst, after
+1048, into the country from Asia Minor, but they were on the whole
+successfully repulsed, although they plundered Tiflis. During the reign
+of the next king, George II., they again devastated Tiflis. But once
+more fortune changed after the accession of David II. (1089-1125),
+surnamed the Renovator, one of the greatest of Georgian kings. With the
+help of the Kipchaks, a Mongol or Turkish race, from the steppe lands to
+the north of the Caucasus, whom he admitted into his country, David
+drove the Seljuks out of his domains and forced them back over the
+Armenian mountains. Under George III. (1156-1184), a grandson of David
+II., Armenia was in part conquered, and Ani, one of its capitals, taken.
+George's daughter Thamar or Tamara, who succeeded him, reigned over the
+kingdom as left by David II. and further extended her power over
+Trebizond, Erzerum, Tovin (in Armenia) and Kars. These successes were
+continued by her son George IV. (1212-1223), who conquered Ganja (now
+Elisavetpol) and repulsed the attacks of the Persians; but in the last
+years of his reign there appeared (1220 and 1222) the people who were to
+prove the ruin of Georgia, namely the Mongol hosts of Jenghiz Khan, led
+by his sons. George IV. was succeeded by his sister Rusudan, whose
+capital was twice captured by the Persians and her kingdom overrun and
+fearfully devastated by the Mongols in 1236. Then, after a period of
+wonderful recovery under George V. (1318-1346), who conquered Imeretia
+and reunited it to his crown, Georgia was again twice (1386 and
+1393-1394) desolated by the Mongols under Timur (Tamerlane), prince of
+Samarkand, who on the second occasion laid waste the entire country with
+fire and sword, and crushed it under his relentless heel until the year
+1403. Alexander I. (1413-1442) freed his country from the last of the
+Mongols, but at the end of his reign divided his territory between his
+three sons, whom he made sovereigns of Imeretia, Kakhetia and Karthli
+(Georgia) respectively. The first mentioned remained a separate state
+until its annexation to Russia in 1810; the other two were soon
+reunited.
+
+Political relations between Russia and Georgia began in the end of the
+same century, namely in 1492, when the king of Kakhetia sought the
+protection of Ivan III. during a war between the Turks and the Persians.
+In the 17th century the two states were brought into still closer
+relationship. In 1619, when Georgia was harried by Shah Abbas of Persia,
+Theimuraz (1629-1634), king of Georgia, appealed for help to Michael,
+the first of the Romanov tsars of Russia, and his example was followed
+later in the century by the rulers of other petty Thargamosid or
+Caucasian states, namely Imeretia and Guria. In 1638 the prince of
+Mingrelia took the oath of allegiance to the Russian tsar, and in 1650
+the same step was taken by the prince of Imeretia. Vakhtang VI. of
+Georgia put himself under the protection of Peter the Great early in the
+18th century. When Persia fell into the grip of the Afghans early in the
+18th century the Turks seized the opportunity, and, ousting the Persians
+from Georgia, captured Tiflis and compelled Vakhtang to abdicate. But in
+1735 they renounced all claim to supremacy over the Caucasian states.
+This left Persia with the predominating influence, for though Peter the
+Great extorted from Persia (1722) her prosperous provinces beside the
+Caspian, he left the mountaineers to their own dynastic quarrels.
+Heraclius II. of Georgia declared himself the vassal of Russia in 1783,
+and when, twelve years later, he was hard pressed by Agha Mahommed, shah
+of Persia, who seized Tiflis and laid it in ruins, he appealed to Russia
+for help. The appeal was again renewed by the next king of Georgia,
+George XIII., in 1798, and in the following year he renounced his crown
+in favour of the tsar, and in 1801 Georgia was converted into a Russian
+province. The state of Guria submitted to Russia in 1829. (J. T. Be.)
+
+_Ethnology._--Of the three main groups into which the Caucasian races
+are now usually divided, the Georgian is in every respect the most
+important and interesting. It has accordingly largely occupied the
+attention of Orientalists almost incessantly from the days of Klaproth.
+Yet such are the difficulties connected with the origin and mutual
+relations of the Caucasian peoples that its affinities are still far
+from being clearly established. Anton von Schiefner and P.V. Uslar,
+however, arrived at some negative conclusions valuable as
+starting-points for further research. In their papers, published in the
+_Memoirs_ of the St Petersburg Imperial Academy of Sciences and
+elsewhere (1859 et seq.), they finally disposed of the views of Bopp and
+Brosset (1836), who attempted on linguistic grounds to connect the
+Georgians with the Indo-European family. They also clearly show that Max
+Müller's "Turanian" theory is untenable, and they go a long way towards
+proving that the Georgian, with all the other Caucasian languages except
+the Ossetian, forms a distinct linguistic family absolutely independent
+of all others. This had already been suspected by Klaproth, and the same
+conclusion was arrived at by Fr. Müller and Zagarelli.
+
+Uslar's "Caucasian Family" comprises the following three great
+divisions:
+
+ 1. Western Group. Typical races: Circassians and Abkhasians.
+ 2. Eastern Group. Typical races: Chechens and Lesghians.
+ 3. Southern Group. Typical race: Georgians.
+
+Here the term "family" must be taken in a far more elastic sense than
+when applied, for instance, to the Indo-European, Semitic or Eastern
+Polynesian divisions of mankind. Indeed the three groups present at
+least as wide divergences as are found to exist between the Semitic and
+Hamitic linguistic families. Thus, while the Abkhasian of group 1 is
+still at the agglutinating, the Lesghian of group 2 has fairly reached
+the inflecting stage, and the Georgian seems still to waver between the
+two. In consequence of these different stages of development, Uslar
+hesitated finally to fix the position of Georgian in the family,
+regarding it as possibly a connecting link between groups 1 and 2, but
+possibly also radically distinct from both.
+
+Including all its numerous ramifications, the Georgian or southern group
+occupies the greater part of Transcaucasia, reaching from about the
+neighbourhood of Batum on the Black Sea eastwards to the Caspian, and
+merging southwards with the Armenians of Aryan stock. It comprises
+altogether nine subdivisions, as in the subjoined table:
+
+ 1. The GEORGIANS PROPER, who are the Iberians of the ancients and the
+ Grusians of the Russians, but who call themselves Karthlians, and who
+ in medieval times were masters of the Rion and Upper Kura as far as
+ its confluence with the Alazan.
+
+ 2. The IMERETIANS, west of the Suram mountains as far as the river
+ Tskheniz-Tskhali.
+
+ 3. The GURIANS, between the Rion and Lazistan.
+
+ 4. The LAZIS of Lazistan on the Black Sea.
+
+ 5. The SVANETIANS, SHVANS or SWANIANS, on the Upper Ingur and
+ Tskheniz-Tskhali rivers.
+
+ 6. The MINGRELIANS, between the rivers Tskheniz-Tskhali, Rion, Ingur
+ and the Black Sea.
+
+ 7. The TUSHES or MOSOKS \
+ | about the headstreams of the
+ 8. The PSHAVS or PH'CHAVY > Alazan and Yora rivers.
+ |
+ 9. The KHEVSURS /
+
+The representative branch of the race has always been the Karthlians. It
+is now pretty well established that the Georgians are the descendants of
+the aborigines of the Pambak highlands, and that they found their way to
+their present homes from the south-east some four or five thousand years
+ago, possibly under pressure from the great waves of Aryan migration
+flowing from the Iranian tableland westwards to Asia Minor and Europe.
+The Georgians proper are limited on the east by the Alazan, on the north
+by the Caucasus, on the west by the Meskes hills, separating them from
+the Imeretians, and on the south by the Kura river and Kara-dagh and
+Pambak mountains. Southwards, however, no hard and fast ethnical line
+can be drawn, for even immediately south of Tiflis, Georgians, Armenians
+and Tatars are found intermingled confusedly together.
+
+The Georgian race, which represents the oldest elements of civilization
+in the Caucasus, is distinguished by some excellent mental qualities,
+and is especially noted for personal courage and a passionate love of
+music. The people, however, are described as fierce and cruel, and
+addicted to intemperance, though Max von Thielmann (_Journey in the
+Caucasus_, &c., 1875) speaks of them as "rather hard drinkers than
+drunkards." Physically they are a fine athletic race of pure Caucasian
+type; hence during the Moslem ascendancy Georgia supplied, next to
+Circassia, the largest number of female slaves for the Turkish harems
+and of recruits for the Osmanli armies, more especially for the select
+corps of the famous Mamelukes.
+
+The social organization rested on a highly aristocratic basis, and the
+lowest classes were separated by several grades of vassalage from the
+highest. But since their incorporation with the Russian empire, these
+relations have become greatly modified, and a more sharply defined
+middle class of merchants, traders and artisans has been developed. The
+power of life and death, formerly claimed and freely exercised by the
+nobles over their serfs, has also been expressly abolished. The
+Georgians are altogether at present in a fairly well-to-do condition,
+and under Russian administration they have become industrious, and have
+made considerable moral and material progress.
+
+Missionaries sent by Constantine the Great introduced Christianity about
+the beginning of the 4th century. Since that time the people have,
+notwithstanding severe pressure from surrounding Mahommedan communities,
+remained faithful to the principles of Christianity, and are still
+amongst the most devoted adherents of the Orthodox Greek Church. Indeed
+it was their attachment to the national religion that caused them to
+call in the aid of the Christian Muscovites against the proselytizing
+attempts of the Shiite Persians--a step which ultimately brought about
+their political extinction.
+
+As already stated, the Karthli language is not only fundamentally
+distinct from the Indo-European linguistic family, but cannot be shown
+to possess any clearly ascertained affinities with either of the two
+northern Caucasian groups. It resembles them chiefly in its phonetic
+system, so that according to Rosen (_Sprache der Lazen_) all the
+languages of central and western Caucasus might be adequately rendered
+by the Georgian alphabet. Though certainly not so harsh as the Avar,
+Lesghian and other Daghestan languages, it is very far from being
+euphonious, and the frequent recurrence of such sounds as ts, ds, thz,
+kh, khh, gh (Arab. [Arabic: gh]), q (Arab. [Arabic: q]), for all of
+which there are distinct characters, renders its articulation rather
+more energetic and rugged than is agreeable to ears accustomed to the
+softer tones of the Iranian and western Indo-European tongues. It
+presents great facilities for composition, the laws of which are very
+regular. Its peculiar morphology, standing midway between agglutination
+and true inflexion, is well illustrated by its simple declension common
+to noun, adjective and pronoun, and its more intricate verbal
+conjugation, with its personal endings, seven tenses and incorporation
+of pronominal subject and object, all showing decided progress towards
+the inflecting structure of the Indo-European and Semitic tongues.
+
+Georgian is written in a native alphabet obviously based on the
+Armenian, and like it attributed to St Mesropius (Mesrop), who
+flourished in the 5th century. Of this alphabet there are two forms,
+differing so greatly in outline and even in the number of the letters
+that they might almost be regarded as two distinct alphabetic systems.
+The first and oldest, used exclusively in the Bible and liturgical
+works, is the square or monumental Khutsuri, i.e. "sacerdotal,"
+consisting of 38 letters, and approaching the Armenian in appearance.
+The second is the Mkhedruli kheli, i.e. "soldier's hand," used in
+ordinary writing, and consisting of 40 letters, neatly shaped and full
+of curves, hence at first sight not unlike the modern Burmese form of
+the Pali.
+
+Of the Karthli language there are several varieties; and, besides those
+comprised in the above table, mention should be made of the Kakhetian
+current in the historic province of Kakhetia. A distinction is sometimes
+drawn between the Karthlians proper and the Kakhetians, but it rests on
+a purely political basis, having originated with the partition in 1424
+of the ancient Iberian estates into the three new kingdoms of
+Karthlinia, Kakhetia and Imeretia. On the other hand, both the Laz of
+Lazistan and the Svanetian present such serious structural and verbal
+differences from the common type that they seem to stand rather in the
+relation of sister tongues than of dialects to the Georgian proper. All
+derive obviously from a common source, but have been developed
+independently of each other. The Tush or Mosok appears to be
+fundamentally a Kistinian or Chechen idiom affected by Georgian
+influences.
+
+The Bible is said to have been translated into Georgian as early as the
+5th century. The extant version, however, dates only from the 8th
+century, and is attributed to St Euthymius. But even so, it is far the
+most ancient work known to exist in the language. Next in importance is,
+perhaps, the curious poem entitled _The Amours of Turiel and Nestan
+Darejan_, or _The man clothed in the panther's skin_, attributed to
+Rustevel, who lived during the prosperous reign of Queen Thamar (11th
+century). Other noteworthy compositions are the national epics of the
+_Baramiani_ and the _Rostomiani_, and the prose romances of _Visramiani_
+and _Darejaniani_, the former by Sarg of Thmogvi, the latter by Mosi of
+Khoni. Apart from these, the great bulk of Georgian literature consists
+of ecclesiastical writings, hymns sacred and profane, national codes and
+chronicles.
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY.--The standard authority on the history is M.F. Brosset's
+ translation of the Georgian chronicles under the title of _Histoire de
+ la Géorgie_ (5 vols., St Petersburg, 1849-1858); but compare also
+ Khakanov, _Histoire de Géorgie_ (Paris, 1900). See further A. Leist,
+ _Das georgische Volk_ (Dresden, 1903); M. de Villeneuve, _La Géorgie_
+ (Paris, 1870); O. Wardrop, _The Kingdom of Georgia_ (London, 1888);
+ and Langlois, _Numismatique géorgienne_ (Paris, 1860). For the
+ philology see Zagarelli, _Examen de la littérature relative ŕ la
+ grammaire géorgienne_ (1873); _Friedrich Müller, Grundriss der
+ Sprachwissenschaft_ (1887), iii. 2; Leist, _Georgische Dichter_
+ (1887); Erskert, _Sprachen des kaukasischen Stammes_ (1895). For other
+ points as to anthropology, Michel Smirnow's paper in _Revue
+ d'anthropologie_ (April 15, 1878); Chantre, _Recherches
+ anthropologiques dans le Caucase_ (1885-1887); and Erckert, _Der
+ Kaukasus und seine Völker_ (1887).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGIAN BAY, the N.E. section of Lake Huron, separated from it by
+Manitoulin Island and the peninsula comprising the counties of Grey and
+Bruce, Ontario. It is about 100 m. long and 50 m. wide, and is said to
+contain 30,000 islands. It receives numerous rivers draining a large
+extent of country; of these the chief are the French river draining Lake
+Nipissing, the Maganatawan draining a number of small lakes, the Muskoka
+draining the Muskoka chain of lakes (Muskoka, Rosseau, Joseph, &c.) and
+the Severn draining Lake Simcoe. Into its southern extremity, known as
+Nottawasaga Bay, flows the river of the same name. The Trent valley
+canal connects Georgian Bay with the Bay of Quinte and Lake Ontario, and
+a canal system has long been projected to Montreal by way of the French
+and Ottawa rivers and Lake Nipissing.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGSWALDE, a town of Bohemia, Austria, 115 m. N.E. of Prague by rail.
+Pop. (1900) 8131, including Neu-Georgswalde, Wiesenthal and
+Philippsdorf, which form together a single commune. Georgswalde is one
+of the oldest industrial places of Bohemia, and together with the
+neighbouring town of Rumburg is the principal centre of the linen
+industry. The village of Philippsdorf, now incorporated with
+Georgswalde, has become since 1866 a famous place of pilgrimage, owing
+to the miracles attributed to an image of the Virgin, placed now in a
+magnificent new church (1885).
+
+
+
+
+GEPHYREA, the name used for several groups of worm-like animals with
+certain resemblances but of doubtful affinity. In the article "Annelida"
+in the 9th edition of this Encyclopaedia, W.C. McIntosh followed the
+accepted view in associating in this group the _Echiuridae_,
+_Sipunculidae_ and _Priapulidae_. E. Ray Lankester, in the preface to
+the English translation of C. Gegenbaur's _Comparative Anatomy_ (1878),
+added the _Phoronidae_ to these forms. Afterwards the same author
+(article "Zoology," _Ency. Brit._, 9th ed.) recognized that the
+_Phoronidae_ had other affinities, and placed the other "gephyreans" in
+association with the Polyzoa as the two classes of a phylum _Podaxonia_.
+In the present state of knowledge the old group _Gephyrea_ is broken up
+into _Echiuroidea_ (q.v.) or _Gephyrea armata_, which are certainly
+Annelids; the _Sipunculoidea_ (q.v.) or _Gephyrea achaeta_, an independent
+group, certainly coelomate, but of doubtful affinity; the _Priapuloidea_
+(q.v.), equally of doubtful affinity; and the _Phoronidea_ (q.v.), which
+are almost certainly _Hemichordata_.
+
+
+
+
+GERA, a town of Germany, capital of the principality of Reuss-Schleiz
+(called also Reuss younger line), situated in a valley on the banks of
+the White Elster, 45 m. S.S.W. of Leipzig on the railway to Probstzella.
+Pop. (1885) 34,152; (1905) 47,455. It has been mostly rebuilt since a
+great fire in 1780, and the streets are in general wide and straight,
+and contain many handsome houses. There are three Evangelical churches
+and one Roman Catholic. Among other noteworthy buildings are the
+handsome town-hall (1576, afterwards restored) and the theatre (1902).
+Its educational establishments include a gymnasium, a commercial and a
+weaving school. The castle of Osterstein, the residence of the princes
+of Reuss, dates from the 9th century, but has been almost entirely
+rebuilt in modern times. Gera is noted for its industrial activity. Its
+industries include wool-weaving and spinning, dyeing, iron-founding, the
+manufacture of cotton and silk goods, machinery, sewing machines and
+machine oil, leather and tobacco, and printing (books and maps) and
+flower gardening.
+
+Gera (in ancient chronicles _Geraha_) was raised to the rank of a town
+in the 11th century, at which time it belonged to the counts of Groitch.
+In the 12th century it came into the possession of the lords of Reuss.
+It was stormed and sacked by the Bohemians in 1450, was two-thirds
+burned down by the Swedes in 1639 during the Thirty Years' War, and
+suffered afterwards from great conflagrations in 1686 and 1780, being in
+the latter year almost completely destroyed.
+
+
+
+
+GERALDTON, a town in the district of Victoria, West Australia, on
+Champion Bay, 306 m. by rail N.W. of Perth. Pop. (1901) 2593. It is the
+seat of a Roman Catholic bishop, an important seaport carrying on a
+considerable trade with the surrounding gold-fields and agricultural
+districts, the centre of a considerable railway system and an
+increasingly popular seaside resort. The harbour is safe and extensive,
+having a pier affording accommodation for large steamers. The chief
+exports are gold, copper, lead, wool and sandalwood.
+
+
+
+
+GÉRANDO, MARIE JOSEPH DE (1772-1842), French philosopher, was born at
+Lyons on the 29th of February 1772. When the city was besieged in 1793
+by the armies of the Republic, de Gérando took up arms, was made
+prisoner and with difficulty escaped with his life. He took refuge in
+Switzerland, whence he afterwards fled to Naples. In 1796 the
+establishment of the Directory allowed him to return to France. At the
+age of twenty-five he enlisted as a private in a cavalry regiment. About
+this time the Institute proposed as a subject for an essay this
+question,--"What is the influence of symbols on the faculty of thought?"
+De Gérando gained the prize, and heard of his success after the battle
+of Zürich, in which he had distinguished himself. This literary triumph
+was the first step in his upward career. In 1799 he was attached to the
+ministry of the interior by Lucien Bonaparte; in 1804 he became general
+secretary under Champagny; in 1805 he accompanied Napoleon into Italy;
+in 1808 he was nominated master of requests; in 1811 he received the
+title of councillor of state; and in the following year he was appointed
+governor of Catalonia. On the overthrow of the empire, de Gérando was
+allowed to retain this office; but having been sent during the hundred
+days into the department of the Moselle to organize the defence of that
+district, he was punished at the second Restoration by a few months of
+neglect. He was soon after, however, readmitted into the council of
+state, where he distinguished himself by the prudence and conciliatory
+tendency of his views. In 1819 he opened at the law-school of Paris a
+class of public and administrative law, which in 1822 was suppressed by
+government, but was reopened six years later under the Martignac
+ministry. In 1837 he was made a baron. He died at Paris on the 9th of
+November 1842.
+
+De Gérando's best-known work is his _Histoire comparée des systčmes de
+philosophie relativement aux principes des connaissances humaines_
+(Paris, 1804, 3 vols.). The germ of this work had already appeared in
+the author's _Mémoire de la génération des connaissances humaines_
+(Berlin, 1802), which was crowned by the Academy of Berlin. In it de
+Gérando, after a rapid review of ancient and modern speculations on the
+origin of our ideas, singles out the theory of primary ideas, which he
+endeavours to combat under all its forms. The latter half of the work,
+devoted to the analysis of the intellectual faculties, is intended to
+show how all human knowledge is the result of experience; and reflection
+is assumed as the source of our ideas of substance, of unity and of
+identity. It is divided into two parts, the first of which is purely
+historical, and devoted to an exposition of various philosophical
+systems; in the second, which comprises fourteen chapters of the entire
+work, the distinctive characters and value of these systems are compared
+and discussed. In spite of the disadvantage that it is impossible to
+separate advantageously the history and critical examination of any
+doctrine in the arbitrary manner which de Gérando chose, the work has
+great merits. In correctness of detail and comprehensiveness of view it
+was greatly superior to every work of the same kind that had hitherto
+appeared in France. During the Empire and the first years of the
+Restoration, de Gérando found time to prepare a second edition (Paris,
+1822, 4 vols.), which is enriched with so many additions that it may
+pass for an entirely new work. The last chapter of the part published
+during the author's lifetime ends with the revival of letters and the
+philosophy of the 15th century. The second part, carrying the work down
+to the close of the 18th century, was published posthumously by his son
+in 4 vols. (Paris, 1847). Twenty-three chapters of this were left
+complete by the author in manuscript; the remaining three were supplied
+from other sources, chiefly printed but unpublished memoirs.
+
+His essay _Du perfectionnement moral et de l'éducation de soi-męme_ was
+crowned by the French Academy in 1825. The fundamental idea of this work
+is that human life is in reality only a great education, of which
+perfection is the aim.
+
+ Besides the works already mentioned, de Gérando left many others, of
+ which we may indicate the following:--_Considérations sur diverses
+ méthodes d'observation des peuples sauvages_ (Paris, 1801); _Éloge de
+ Dumarsais,--discours qui a remporté le prix proposé par la seconde
+ classe de l'Institut National_ (Paris, 1805); _Le Visiteur de pauvre_
+ (Paris, 1820); _Instituts du droit administratif_ (4 vols., Paris,
+ 1830); _Cours normal des instituteurs primaires ou directions
+ relatives ŕ l'éducation physique, morale, et intellectuelle dans les
+ écoles primaires_ (Paris, 1832); _De l'éducation des sourds-muets_ (2
+ vols., Paris, 1832); _De la bienfaisance publique_ (4 vols., 1838). A
+ detailed analysis of the _Histoire comparée des systčmes_ will be
+ found in the _Fragments philosophiques_ of M. Cousin. In connexion
+ with his psychological studies, it is interesting that in 1884 the
+ French Anthropological Society reproduced his instructions for the
+ observation of primitive peoples, and modern students of the
+ beginnings of speech in children and the cases of deaf-mutes have
+ found useful matter in his works. See also J.P. Damiron, _Essai sur la
+ philosophie en France au XIX^e sičcle_.
+
+
+
+
+GERANIACEAE, in botany, a small but very widely distributed natural
+order of Dicotyledons belonging to the subclass Polypetalae, containing
+about 360 species in 11 genera. It is represented in Britain by two
+genera, _Geranium_ (crane's-bill) and _Erodium_ (stork's-bill), to which
+belong nearly two-thirds of the total number of species. The plants are
+mostly herbs, rarely becoming shrubby, with generally simple glandular
+hairs on the stem and leaves. The opposite or alternate leaves have a
+pair of small stipules at the base of the stalk and a palminerved blade.
+The flowers, which are generally arranged in a cymose inflorescence, are
+hermaphrodite, hypogynous, and, except in _Pelargonium_, regular. The
+parts are arranged in fives. There are five free sepals, overlapping in
+the bud, and, alternating with these, five free petals. In _Pelargonium_
+the flower is zygomorphic with a spurred posterior sepal and the petals
+differing in size or shape. In _Geranium_ the stamens are
+obdiplostemonous, i.e. an outer whorl of five opposite the petals
+alternates with an inner whorl of five opposite the sepals; at the base
+of each of the antisepalous stamens is a honey-gland. In _Erodium_ the
+members of the outer whorl are reduced to scale-like structures
+(staminodes), and in _Pelargonium_ from two to seven only are fertile.
+There is no satisfactory explanation of this break in the regular
+alternation of successive whorls; the outer whorl of stamens arises in
+course of development before the inner, so that there is no question of
+subsequent displacement. There are five, or sometimes fewer, carpels,
+which unite to form an ovary with as many chambers, in each of which are
+one or two, rarely more, pendulous anatropous ovules, attached to the
+central column in such a way that the micropyle points outwards and the
+raphe is turned towards the placenta. The long beak-like style divides
+at the top into a corresponding number of slender stigmas.
+
+[Illustration: Meadow Crane's-bill, _Geranium pratense_. (After Curtis,
+_Flora Londinensis_.)
+
+ 1, Flower after removal of petals.
+
+ 2, Fruit after splitting. 1 and 2 about natural size.
+
+ 3, Floral diagram, the dots opposite the inner stamens represent
+ honey-glands.]
+
+The larger-flowered species of _Geranium_ are markedly protandrous, the
+outer stamens, inner stamens and stigmas becoming functional in
+succession. For instance, in meadow crane's-bill _G. pratense_, each
+whorl of stamens ripens in turn, becoming erect and shedding their
+pollen; as the anthers wither the filaments bend outwards, and when all
+the anthers have diverged the stigmas become mature and ready for
+pollination. By this arrangement self-pollination is prevented and
+cross-pollination ensured by the visits of bees which come for the honey
+secreted by the glands at the base of the inner stamens.
+
+In species with smaller and less conspicuous flowers, such as _G.
+molle_, the flowers of which are only 1/3 to ˝ in. in diameter,
+self-pollination is rendered possible, since the divisions of the stigma
+begin to separate before the outer stamens have shed all their pollen;
+the nearness of the stigmas to the dehiscing anthers favours
+self-pollination.
+
+In the ripe fruit the carpels separate into five one-seeded portions
+(_cocci_), which break away from the central column, either rolling
+elastically outwards and upwards or becoming spirally twisted. In most
+species of _Geranium_ the cocci split open on the inside and the seeds
+are shot out by the elastic uptwisting (fig. 1); in _Erodium_ and
+_Pelargonium_ each coccus remains closed, and the long twisted upper
+portion separates from the central column, forming an awn, the
+distribution of which is favoured by the presence of bristles or hairs.
+The embryo generally fills the seed, and the cotyledons are rolled or
+folded on each other.
+
+_Geranium_ is the most widely distributed genus; it has 160 species and
+is spread over all temperate regions with a few species in the tropics.
+Three British species--_G. sylvaticum_, _G. pratense_ and _G.
+Robertianum_ (herb-Robert)--reach the arctic zone, while _G.
+patagonicum_ and _G. magellanicum_ are found in the antarctic. _Erodium_
+contains 50 species (three are British), most of which are confined to
+the Mediterranean region and west Asia, though others occur in America,
+in South Africa and West Australia. _Pelargonium_, with 175 species, has
+its centre in South Africa; the well-known garden and greenhouse
+"geraniums" are species of _Pelargonium_ (see GERANIUM).
+
+
+
+
+GERANIUM, the name of a genus of plants, which is taken by botanists as
+the type of the natural order Geraniaceae. The name, as a scientific
+appellation, has a much more restricted application than when taken in
+its popular sense. Formerly the genus _Geranium_ was almost conterminous
+with the order Geraniaceae. Then as now the geranium was very popular as
+a garden plant, and the species included in the original genus became
+widely known under that name, which has more or less clung to them ever
+since, in spite of scientific changes which have removed the large
+number of them to the genus _Pelargonium_. This result has been probably
+brought about in some degree by an error of the nurserymen, who seem in
+many cases to have acted on the conclusion that the group commonly known
+as _Scarlet Geraniums_ were really geraniums and not pelargoniums, and
+were in consequence inserted under the former name in their trade
+catalogues. In fact it may be said that, from a popular point of view,
+the pelargoniums of the botanist are still better known as geraniums
+than are the geraniums themselves, but the term "zonal Pelargonium" is
+gradually making its way amongst the masses.
+
+The species of _Geranium_ consist mostly of herbs, of annual or
+perennial duration, dispersed throughout the temperate regions of the
+world. They number about 160, and bear a considerable family
+resemblance. The leaves are for the most part palmately-lobed, and the
+flowers are regular, consisting of five sepals, five imbricating petals,
+alternating with five glandules at their base, ten stamens and a beaked
+ovary. Eleven species are natives of the British Isles and are popularly
+known as crane's-bill. _G. Robertianum_ is herb-Robert, a common plant
+in hedgebanks. _G. sanguineum_, with flowers a deep rose colour, is
+often grown in borders, as are also the double-flowered varieties of _G.
+pratense_. Many others of exotic origin form handsome border plants in
+our gardens of hardy perennials; amongst these _G. armenum_, _G.
+Endressi_, _G. ibericum_ and its variety _platypetalum_ are conspicuous.
+
+From these regular-flowered herbs, with which they had been mixed up by
+the earlier botanists, the French botanist L'Heritier in 1787 separated
+those plants which have since borne the name of _Pelargonium_, and
+which, though agreeing with them in certain points of structure, differ
+in others which are admitted to be of generic value. One obvious
+distinction of _Pelargonium_ is that the flowers are irregular, the two
+petals which stand uppermost being different--larger, smaller or
+differently marked--from the other three, which latter are occasionally
+wanting. This difference of irregularity the modern florist has done
+very much to annul, for the increased size given to the flowers by high
+breeding has usually been accompanied by the enlargement of the smaller
+petals, so that a very near approach to regularity has been in some
+cases attained. Another well-marked difference, however, remains in
+_Pelargonium_: the back or dorsal sepal has a hollow spur, which spur is
+adnate, i.e. joined for its whole length with the flower-stalk; while in
+_Geranium_ there is no spur. This peculiarity is best seen by cutting
+clean through the flower-stalk just behind the flower, when in
+_Pelargonium_ there will be seen the hollow tube of the spur, which in
+the case of _Geranium_ will not be found, but the stalk will appear as a
+solid mass. There are other characters which support those already
+pointed out, such as the absence of the glandules, and the declination
+of the stamens; but the features already described offer the most ready
+and obvious distinctions.
+
+To recapitulate, the geraniums properly so-called are regular-flowered
+herbs with the flower-stalks solid, while many geraniums falsely
+so-called in popular language are really pelargoniums, and may be
+distinguished by their irregular flowers and hollow flower-stalks. In a
+great majority of cases too, the pelargoniums so commonly met with in
+greenhouses and summer parterres are of shrubby or sub-shrubby habit.
+
+The various races of pelargoniums have sprung from the intermixture of
+some of the species obtained from the Cape. The older show-flowered
+varieties have been gradually acquired through a long series of years.
+The fancy varieties, as well as the French spotted varieties and the
+market type, have been evolved from them. The zonal or bedding race, on
+the other hand, has been more recently perfected; they are supposed to
+have arisen from hybrids between _Pelargonium inquinans_ and _P.
+zonale_. In all the sections the varieties are of a highly ornamental
+character, but for general cultivation the market type is preferable for
+indoor purposes, while the zonals are effective either in the greenhouse
+or flower garden. Some of the Cape species are still in cultivation--the
+leaves of many of them being beautifully subdivided, almost fern-like in
+character, and some of them are deliciously scented; _P. quercifolium_
+is the oak-leaf geranium. The ivy-leaf geranium, derived from _P.
+peltatum_, has given rise to an important class of both double- and
+single-flowered forms adapted especially for pot culture, hanging
+baskets, window boxes and the greenhouse. Of late years the ivy-leaf
+"geraniums" have been crossed with the "zonals," and a new race is being
+gradually evolved from these two distinct groups.
+
+The best soil for pelargoniums is a mellow fibrous loam with good
+well-rotted stable manure or leaf-mould in about the proportion of
+one-fifth; when used it should not be sifted, but pulled to pieces by
+the hand, and as much sand should be added as will allow the water to
+pass freely through it. The large-flowered and fancy kinds cannot bear
+so much water as most soft-wooded plants, and the latter should have a
+rather lighter soil.
+
+All the pelargoniums are readily increased by cuttings made from the
+shoots when the plants are headed down after flowering, or in the
+spring, when they will root freely in a temperature of 65° to 70°. They
+must not be kept too close, and must be very moderately watered. When
+rooted they may be moved into well-drained 3-in. pots, and when from 6
+to 8 in. high, should have the points pinched out in order to induce
+them to push out several shoots nearer the base. These shoots are, when
+long enough, to be trained in a horizontal direction; and when they have
+made three joints they should have the points again pinched out. These
+early-struck plants will be ready for shifting into 6-in. pots by the
+autumn, and should still be trained outwards. The show varieties after
+flowering should be set out of doors in a sunny spot to ripen their
+wood, and should only get water enough to keep them from flagging. In
+the course of two or three weeks they will be ready to cut back within
+two joints of where these were last stopped, when they should be placed
+in a frame or pit, and kept close and dry until they have broken. When
+they have pushed an inch or so, turn them out of their pots, shake off
+the old soil, trim the straggling roots, and repot them firmly in
+smaller pots if practicable; keep them near the light, and as the shoots
+grow continue to train them outwardly. They require to be kept in a
+light house, and to be set well up to the glass; the night temperature
+should range about 45°; and air should be given on all mild days, but no
+cold currents allowed, nor more water than is necessary to keep the soil
+from getting parched. The young shoots should be topped about the end of
+October, and when they have grown an inch or two beyond this, they may
+be shifted into 7-in. pots for flowering. The shoots must be kept tied
+out so as to be fully exposed to the light. If required to flower early
+they should not be stopped again; if not until June they may be stopped
+in February.
+
+The zonal varieties, which are almost continuous bloomers, are of much
+value as decorative subjects; they seldom require much pruning after the
+first stopping. For winter flowering, young plants should be raised
+from cuttings about March, and grown on during the summer, but should
+not be allowed to flower. When blossoms are required, they should be
+placed close up to the glass in a light house with a temperature of 65°,
+only just as much water being given as will keep them growing. For
+bedding purposes the zonal varieties are best struck towards the middle
+of August in the open air, taken up and potted or planted in boxes as
+soon as struck, and preserved in frames or in the greenhouse during
+winter.
+
+The fancy varieties root best early in spring from the half-ripened
+shoots; they are slower growers, and rather more delicate in
+constitution than the zonal varieties, and very impatient of excess of
+water at the root.
+
+
+
+
+GERARD (d. 1108), archbishop of York under Henry I., began his career as
+a chancery clerk in the service of William Rufus. He was one of the two
+royal envoys who, in 1095, persuaded Urban II. to send a legate and
+Anselm's pallium to England. Although the legate disappointed the king's
+expectations, Gerard was rewarded for his services with the see of
+Hereford (1096). On the death of Rufus he at once declared for Henry I.,
+by whom he was nominated to the see of York. He made difficulties when
+required to give Anselm the usual profession of obedience; and it was
+perhaps to assert the importance of his see that he took the king's side
+on the question of investitures. He pleaded Henry's cause at Rome with
+great ability, and claimed that he had obtained a promise, on the pope's
+part, to condone the existing practice of lay investiture. But this
+statement was contradicted by Paschal, and Gerard incurred the suspicion
+of perjury. About 1103 he wrote or inspired a series of tracts which
+defended the king's prerogative and attacked the oecumenical pretensions
+of the papacy with great freedom of language. He changed sides in 1105,
+becoming a stanch friend and supporter of Anselm. Gerard was a man of
+considerable learning and ability; but the chroniclers accuse him of
+being lax in his morals, an astrologer and a worshipper of the devil.
+
+ See the _Tractatus Eboracenses_ edited by H. Bochmer in _Libelli de
+ lite Sacerdotii et Imperii_, vol. iii. (in the _Monumenta hist.
+ Germaniae_, quarto series), and the same author's _Kirche und Staat in
+ England und in der Normandie_ (Leipzig, 1899). (H. W. C. D.)
+
+
+
+
+GERARD (c. 1040-1120), variously surnamed TUM, TUNC, TENQUE or THOM,
+founder of the order of the knights of St John of Jerusalem (q.v.), was
+born at Amalfi about the year 1040. According to other accounts
+Martigues in Provence was his birthplace, while one authority even names
+the Château d'Avesnes in Hainaut. Either as a soldier or a merchant, he
+found his way to Jerusalem, where a hospice had for some time existed
+for the convenience of those who wished to visit the holy places. Of
+this institution Gerard became guardian or provost at a date not later
+than 1100; and here he organized that religious order of St John which
+received papal recognition from Paschal II. in 1113, by a bull which was
+renewed and confirmed by Calixtus II. shortly before the death of Gerard
+in 1120.
+
+
+
+
+GERARD OF CREMONA (c. 1114-1187), the medieval translator of Ptolemy's
+Astronomy, was born at Cremona, Lombardy, in or about 1114. Dissatisfied
+with the meagre philosophies of his Italian teachers, he went to Toledo
+to study in Spanish Moslem schools, then so famous as depositories and
+interpreters of ancient wisdom; and, having thus acquired a knowledge of
+the Arabic language, he appears to have devoted the remainder of his
+life to the business of making Latin translations from its literature.
+The date of his return to his native town is uncertain, but he is known
+to have died there in 1187. His most celebrated work is the Latin
+version by which alone Ptolemy's _Almagest_ was known to Europe until
+the discovery of the original [Greek: Megalę Suntaxis]. In addition to
+this, he translated various other treatises, to the number, it is said,
+of sixty-six; among these were the _Tables_ of "Arzakhel," or Al Zarkala
+of Toledo, Al Farabi _On the Sciences_ (_De scientiis_), Euclid's
+_Geometry_, Al Farghani's _Elements of Astronomy_, and treatises on
+algebra, arithmetic and astrology. In the last-named latitudes are
+reckoned from Cremona and Toledo. Some of the works, however, with which
+he has been credited (including the _Theoria_ or _Theorica planetarum_,
+and the versions of Avicenna's _Canon of Medicine_--the basis of the
+numerous subsequent Latin editions of that well-known work--and of the
+_Almansorius_ of Abu Bakr Razi) are probably due to a later Gerard, of
+the 13th century, also called Cremonensis but more precisely de
+Sabloneta (Sabbionetta). This writer undertook the task of interpreting
+to the Latin world some of the best work of Arabic physicians, and his
+translation of Avicenna is said to have been made by order of the
+emperor Frederic II.
+
+ See Pipini, "Cronica," in Muratori, _Script. rer. Ital._ vol. ix.;
+ Nicol. Antonio, _Bibliotheca Hispana vetus_, vol. ii.; Tiraboschi,
+ _Storia della letteratura Italiana_, vols. iii. (333) and iv.; Arisi,
+ _Cremona literata_; Jourdain, Recherches sur ... _l'origine des
+ traductions latines d'Aristote_; Chasles, _Aperçu historique des
+ méthodes en géométrie_, and in _Comptes rendus de l'Académie des
+ Sciences_, vol. xiii. p. 506; J.T. Reinaud, _Géographie d'Aboulféda_,
+ introduction, vol. i. pp. ccxlvi.-ccxlviii.; Boncompagni, _Della vita
+ e delle opere di Gherardo Cremonese e di Gherardo da Sabbionetta_
+ (Rome, 1851). Much of the work of both the Gerards remains in
+ manuscript, as in Paris, National Library, MSS. Lat. 7400, 7421; MSS.
+ Suppl. Lat. 49; Rome, Vatican library, 4083, and Ottobon, 1826;
+ Oxford, Bodleian library, Digby, 47, 61. The Vatican MS. 2392 is
+ stated to contain a eulogy of "Gerard of Cremona" and a list of "his"
+ translations, apparently confusing the two scholars. The former's most
+ valuable work was in astronomy; the latter's in medicine.
+ (C. R. B.)
+
+
+
+
+GÉRARD, ÉTIENNE MAURICE, COUNT (1773-1852), French general, was born at
+Damvilliers (Meuse), on the 4th of April 1773. He joined a battalion of
+volunteers in 1791, and served in the campaigns of 1792-1793 under
+Generals Dumouriez and Jourdan. In 1795 he accompanied Bernadotte as
+aide-de-camp. In 1799 he was promoted _chef d'escadron_, and in 1800
+colonel. He distinguished himself at the battles of Austerlitz and Jena,
+and was made general of brigade in November 1806, and for his conduct in
+the battle of Wagram he was created a baron. In the Spanish campaign of
+1810 and 1811 he gained special distinction at the battle of Fuentes
+d'Onor; and in the expedition to Russia he was present at Smolensk and
+Valutina, and displayed such bravery and ability in the battle of
+Borodino that he was made general of division. He won further
+distinction in the disastrous retreat from Moscow. In the campaign of
+1813, in command of a division, he took part in the battles of Lützen
+and Bautzen and the operations of Marshal Macdonald, and at the battle
+of Leipzig (in which he commanded the XI. corps) he was dangerously
+wounded. After the battle of Bautzen he was created by Napoleon a count
+of the empire. In the campaign of France of 1814, and especially at La
+Rothičre and Montereau, he won still greater distinction. After the
+first restoration he was named by Louis XVIII. grand cross of the Legion
+of Honour and chevalier of St Louis. In the Hundred Days Napoleon made
+Gérard a peer of France and placed him in command of the IV. corps of
+the Army of the North. In this capacity Gérard took a brilliant part in
+the battle of Ligny (see WATERLOO CAMPAIGN), and on the morning of the
+18th of June he was foremost in advising Marshal Grouchy to march to the
+sound of the guns. Gérard retired to Brussels after the fall of
+Napoleon, and did not return to France till 1817. He sat as a member of
+the chamber of deputies in 1822-1824, and was re-elected in 1827. He
+took part in the revolution of 1830, after which he was appointed
+minister of war and named a marshal of France. On account of his health
+he resigned the office of war minister in the October following, but in
+1831 he took the command of the northern army, and was successful in
+thirteen days in driving the army of Holland out of Belgium. In 1832 he
+commanded the besieging army in the famous scientific siege of the
+citadel of Antwerp. He was again chosen war minister in July 1834, but
+resigned in the October following. In 1836 he was named grand chancellor
+of the Legion of Honour in succession to Marshal Mortier, and in 1838
+commander of the National Guards of the Seine, an office which he held
+till 1842. He became a senator under the empire in 1852, and died on the
+17th of April in the same year.
+
+
+
+
+GÉRARD, FRANÇOIS, BARON (1770-1837), French painter, was born on the 4th
+of May 1770, at Rome, where his father occupied a post in the house of
+the French ambassador. At the age of twelve Gérard obtained admission
+into the Pension du Roi at Paris. From the Pension he passed to the
+studio of Pajou (sculptor), which he left at the end of two years for
+that of the painter Brenet, whom he quitted almost immediately to place
+himself under David. In 1789 he competed for the Prix de Rome, which was
+carried off by his comrade Girodet. In the following year (1790) he
+again presented himself, but the death of his father prevented the
+completion of his work, and obliged him to accompany his mother to Rome.
+In 1791 he returned to Paris; but his poverty was so great that he was
+forced to forgo his studies in favour of employment which should bring
+in immediate profit. David at once availed himself of his help, and one
+of that master's most celebrated pictures--Le Pelletier de St
+Fargeau--may owe much to the hand of Gérard. This painting was executed
+early in 1793, the year in which Gérard, at the request of David, was
+named a member of the revolutionary tribunal, from the fatal decisions
+of which he, however, invariably absented himself. In 1794 he obtained
+the first prize in a competition, the subject of which was "The Tenth of
+August," and, further stimulated by the successes of his rival and
+friend Girodet in the Salons of 1793 and 1794, Gérard (nobly aided by
+Isabey the miniaturist) produced in 1795 his famous "Bélisaire." In 1796
+a portrait of his generous friend (in the Louvre) obtained undisputed
+success, and the money received from Isabey for these two works enabled
+Gérard to execute in 1797 his "Psyché et l'Amour." At last, in 1799, his
+portrait of Madame Bonaparte established his position as one of the
+first portrait-painters of the day. In 1808 as many as eight, in 1810 no
+less than fourteen portraits by him, were exhibited at the Salon, and
+these figures afford only an indication of the enormous numbers which he
+executed yearly; all the leading figures of the empire and of the
+restoration, all the most celebrated men and women of Europe, sat to
+Gérard. This extraordinary vogue was due partly to the charm of his
+manner and conversation, for his _salon_ was as much frequented as his
+studio; Madame de Staël, Canning, Talleyrand, the duke of Wellington,
+have all borne witness to the attraction of his society. Rich and
+famous, Gérard was stung by remorse for earlier ambitions abandoned; at
+intervals he had indeed striven to prove his strength with Girodet and
+other rivals, and his "Bataille d'Austerlitz" (1810) showed a breadth of
+invention and style which are even more conspicuous in "L'Entrée d'Henri
+IV" (Versailles)--the work with which in 1817 he did homage to the
+Bourbons. After this date Gérard declined, watching with impotent grief
+the progress of the Romantic school. Loaded with honours--baron of the
+empire, member of the Institute, officer of the legion of honour, first
+painter to the king--he worked on sad and discouraged; the revolution of
+1830 added to his disquiet; and on the 11th of January 1837, after three
+days of fever, he died. By his portraits Gérard is best remembered; the
+colour of his paintings has suffered, but his drawings show in uninjured
+delicacy the purity of his line; and those of women are specially
+remarkable for a virginal simplicity and frankness of expression.
+
+ M. Ch. Lenormant published in 1846 _Essai de biographie et de critique
+ sur François Gérard_, a second edition of which appeared in 1847; and
+ M. Delécluze devoted several pages to the same subject in his work
+ _Louis David, son école et son temps_.
+
+
+
+
+GÉRARD, JEAN IGNACE ISIDORE (1803-1847), French caricaturist, generally
+known by the pseudonym of Grandville--the professional name of his
+grandparents, who were actors--was born at Nancy on the 13th of
+September 1803. He received his first instruction in drawing from his
+father, a miniature painter, and at the age of twenty-one came to Paris,
+where he soon afterwards published a collection of lithographs entitled
+_Les Tribulations de la petite propriété_. He followed this by Les
+Plaisirs de toutâge and _La Sibylle des salons_; but the work which
+first established his fame was _Métamorphoses du jour_, published in
+1828, a series of seventy scenes in which individuals with the bodies of
+men and faces of animals are made to play a human comedy. These drawings
+are remarkable for the extraordinary skill with which human
+characteristics are represented in animal features. The success of this
+work led to his being engaged as artistic contributor to various
+periodicals, such as _La Silhouette_, _L'Artiste_, _La Caricature_, _Le
+Charivari_; and his political caricatures, which were characterized by
+marvellous fertility of satirical humour, soon came to enjoy a general
+popularity. Besides supplying illustrations for various standard works,
+such as the songs of Béranger, the fables of La Fontaine, _Don Quixote_,
+_Gulliver's Travels_, _Robinson Crusoe_, he also continued the issue of
+various lithographic collections, among which may be mentioned _La Vie
+privée et publique des animaux_, _Les Cent Proverbes_, _L'Autre Monde_
+and _Les Fleurs animées_. Though the designs of Gérard are occasionally
+unnatural and absurd, they usually display keen analysis of character
+and marvellous inventive ingenuity, and his humour is always tempered
+and refined by delicacy of sentiment and a vein of sober thoughtfulness.
+He died of mental disease on the 17th of March 1847.
+
+ A short notice of Gérard, under the name of Grandville, is contained
+ in Théophile Gautier's _Portraits contemporains_. See also Charles
+ Blanc, _Grandville_ (Paris, 1855).
+
+
+
+
+GERARD, JOHN (1545-1612), English herbalist and surgeon, was born
+towards the end of 1545 at Nantwich in Cheshire. He was educated at
+Wisterson, or Willaston, 2 m. from Nantwich, and eventually, after
+spending some time in travelling, took up his abode in London, where he
+exercised his profession. For more than twenty years he also acted as
+superintendent of the gardens in London and at Theobalds, in
+Hertfordshire, of William Cecil, Lord Burghley. In 1596 he published a
+catalogue of plants cultivated in his own garden in Holborn, London,
+1039 in number, inclusive of varieties of the same species. Their
+English as well as their Latin names are given in a revised edition of
+the catalogue issued in 1599. In 1597 appeared Gerard's well-known
+_Herball_, described by him in its preface as "the first fruits of these
+mine own labours," but more truly an adaptation of the _Stirpium
+historiae pemptades_ of Rembert Dodoens (1518-1585), published in 1583,
+or rather of a translation of the whole or part of the same by Dr
+Priest, with M. Lobel's arrangement. Of the numerous illustrations of
+the _Herball_ sixteen appear to be original, the remainder are mostly
+impressions from the wood blocks employed by Jacob Theodorus
+Tabernaemontanus in his _Icones stirpium_, published at Frankfort in
+1590. A second edition of the _Herball_, with considerable improvements
+and additions, was brought out by Thomas Johnson in 1633, and reprinted
+in 1636. Gerard was elected a member of the court of assistants of the
+barber-surgeons in 1595, by which company he was appointed an examiner
+in 1598, junior warden in 1605, and master in 1608. He died in February
+1612, and was buried at St Andrews, Holborn.
+
+ See Johnson's preface to his edition of the _Herball_; and _A
+ Catalogue of Plants cultivated in the Garden of John Gerard in the
+ years 1596-1599, edited with Notes, References to Gerard's Herball,
+ the Addition of modern Names, and a Life of the Author, by Benjamin
+ Daydon Jackson, F.L.S._, privately printed (London, 1876, 4to).
+
+
+
+
+GÉRARDMER, a town of north-eastern France, in the department of Vosges,
+33 m. E.S.E. of Epinal by rail. Pop. (1906) of the town, 3993; of the
+commune, 10,041. Gérardmer is beautifully situated at a height of 2200
+ft. at the eastern end of the small Lake of Gérardmer (285 acres in
+extent) among forest-clad mountains. It is the chief summer-resort of
+the French Vosges and is a centre for excursions, among which may be
+mentioned those to the Höhneck (4481 ft.), the second highest summit in
+the Vosges, the Schlucht, the mountain pass from France to Germany, and,
+nearer the town, the picturesque defile of Granges, watered by the
+Vologne, which at one point forms the cascade known as the Saut des
+Cuves. The town itself, in which the chief object of interest is the
+huge lime-tree in the market-place, carries on cloth-weaving, bleaching,
+wood-sawing and the manufacture of wooden goods; there is trade in the
+cheeses (_géromés_) manufactured in the neighbourhood. Gérardmer is said
+to owe its name to Gerard of Alsace, 1st duke of Lorraine, who in the
+11th century built a tower on the bank of the lake or _mer_, near which,
+in 1285, a new town was founded.
+
+
+
+
+GERASA (mod. _Gerash_ or _Jerash_), a city of Palestine, and a member of
+the league known as the Decapolis (q.v.), situated amid the mountains of
+Gilead, about 1757 ft. above the sea, 20 m. from the Jordan and 21 m. N.
+of Philadelphia. Of its origin nothing is known; it has been suggested
+that it represents the biblical Ramoth Gilead. From Josephus we learn
+that it was captured by Alexander Jannaeus (c. 83 B.C.), rebuilt by the
+Romans (c. A.D. 65), burned by the Jews in revenge for the massacre at
+Caesarea, and again plundered and depopulated by Annius, the general of
+Vespasian; but, in spite of these disasters, it was still in the 2nd and
+3rd centuries of the Christian era one of the wealthiest and most
+flourishing cities of Palestine. It was a centre of Greek civilization,
+devoted especially to the worship of Artemis, and producing famous
+teachers, of whom Stephen the Byzantine mentions Ariston, Kerykos and
+Plato. As late as 1121 the soldiers of Baldwin II. found it defended by
+a castle built by a king of Damascus; but at the beginning of the
+following century the Arabian geographer Yaqut speaks of it as deserted
+and overthrown. The ruins of Jerash, discovered about 1806, and since
+then frequently visited and described, still attest the splendour of the
+Roman city. They are distributed along both banks of the Kerwan, a brook
+which flows south through the Wadi-ed-Der to join the Zerka or Jabbok;
+but all the principal buildings are situated on the level ground to the
+right of the stream. The town walls, which can still be traced and
+indeed are partly standing, had a circuit of not more than 2 m., and the
+main street was less than half a mile in length; but remains of
+buildings on the road for fully a mile beyond the south gate, show that
+the town had outgrown the limit of its fortifications. The most striking
+feature of the ruins is the profusion of columns, no fewer than 230
+being even now in position; the main street is a continuous colonnade, a
+large part of which is still entire, and it terminates to the south in a
+forum of similar formation. Among the public buildings still
+recognizable are a theatre capable of accommodating 6000 spectators, a
+naumachia (circus for naval combats) and several temples, of which the
+largest was probably the grandest structure in the city, possessing a
+portico of Corinthian pillars 38 ft. high. The desolation of the city is
+probably due to earthquake; and the absence of Moslem erections or
+restorations seems to show that the disaster took place before the
+Mahommedan period.
+
+The town is now occupied by a colony of Circassians, whose houses have
+been built with materials from the earlier buildings, and there has been
+much destruction of the interesting ruins. "The country of the
+Gerasenes" (Matt. viii. 28 and parallels; other readings, Gadarenes,
+Gergesenes) must be looked for in another quarter--on the E. coast of
+the Sea of Galilee, probably in the neighbourhood of the modern Khersa
+(C.W. Wilson in _Recovery of Jerusalem_, p. 369). (R. A. S. M.)
+
+
+
+
+GÉRAULT-RICHARD, ALFRED LÉON (1860- ), French journalist and politician,
+was born at Bonnétable in the department of Sarthe, of a peasant family.
+He began life as a working upholsterer, first at Mans, then at Paris
+(1880), where his peasant and socialist songs soon won him fame in the
+Montmartre quarter. Lissagaray, the communist, offered him a position on
+_La Bataille_, and he became a regular contributor to the advanced
+journals, especially to _La Petite République_, of which he became
+editor-in-chief in 1897. In 1893 he founded _Le Chambard_, and was
+imprisoned for a year (1894) on account of a personal attack upon the
+president, Casimir-Périer. In January 1895 he was elected to the chamber
+as a Socialist for the thirteenth arrondissement of Paris. He was
+defeated at the elections of 1898 at Paris, but was re-elected in 1902
+and in 1906 by the colony of Guadeloupe.
+
+
+
+
+GERBER, ERNST LUDWIG (1746-1819), German musician, author of a famous
+dictionary of musicians, was born at Sondershausen in the principality of
+Schwarzburg-Sondershausen on the 29th of September 1746. His father,
+Henry Nicolas Gerber (1702-1775), a pupil of J.S. Bach, was an organist
+and composer of some distinction, and under his direction Ernst Ludwig at
+an early age had made great progress in his musical studies. In 1765 he
+went to Leipzig to study law, but the claims of music, which had gained
+additional strength from his acquaintanceship with J.A. Hiller, soon came
+to occupy almost his sole attention. On his return to Sondershausen he
+was appointed music teacher to the children of the prince, and in 1775 he
+succeeded his father as court organist. Afterwards he devoted much of his
+time to the study of the literature and history of music, and with this
+view he made himself master of several modern languages. His
+_Historisch-biographisches Lexikon der Tonkünstler_ appeared in 1790 and
+1792 in two volumes; and the first volume of what was virtually an
+improved and corrected edition of this work was published in 1810 under
+the title _Neues historisch-biographisches Lexikon der Tonkünstler_,
+followed by other three volumes in 1812, 1813 and 1814. Gerber also
+contributed a number of papers to musical periodicals, and published
+several minor musical compositions. He died at Sondershausen on the 30th
+of June 1819.
+
+
+
+
+GERBERON, GABRIEL (1628-1711), French Jansenist monk, was born on the
+12th of August 1628 at St Calais, in the department of Sarthe. At the
+age of twenty he took the vows of the Benedictine order at the abbey of
+Ste Melaine, Rennes, and afterwards taught rhetoric and philosophy in
+several monasteries. His open advocacy of Jansenist opinions, however,
+caused his superiors to relegate him to the most obscure houses of the
+order, and finally to keep him under surveillance at the abbey of St
+Germain-des-Prés at Paris. Here he wrote a defence of the doctrine of
+the Real Presence against the Calvinists in the form of an apology for
+Rupert, abbot of Deutz (_Apologia pro Ruperto abbate Tuitensi_, Paris,
+1669). In 1676 he published at Brussels, under the name of "Sieur Flore
+de Ste Foi" his _Miroir de la piété chrétienne_, an enlarged edition of
+which appeared at Liége in the following year. This was condemned by
+certain archbishops and theologians as the repetition of the five
+condemned propositions of Jansen, and Gerberon defended it, under the
+name of "Abbé Valentin" in _Le Miroir sans tache_ (Paris, 1680). He had
+by this time aroused against him the full fury of the Jesuits, and at
+their instigation a royal provost was sent to Corbie to arrest him. He
+had, however, just time to escape, and fled to the Low Countries, where
+he lived in various towns. He was invited by the Jansenist clergy to
+Holland, where he wrote another controversial work against the
+Protestants: _Défense de l'Église Romain contre la calomnie des
+Protestants_ (Cologne, 1688-1691). This produced unpleasantness with the
+Reformed clergy, and feeling himself no longer safe he returned to
+Brussels. In 1700 he published his history of Jansenism (_Histoire
+générale du Jansénisme_), a dry work, by which, however, he is best
+remembered. He adhered firmly to the Augustinian doctrine of
+Predestination, and on the 30th of May 1703 he was arrested at Brussels
+at the instance of the archbishop of Malines, and ordered to subscribe
+the condemnation of the five sentences of Jansen. On his refusal, he was
+handed over to his superiors and imprisoned in the citadel of Amiens and
+afterwards at Vincennes. Every sort of pressure was brought to bear upon
+him to make his submission, and at last, broken in health and spirit, he
+consented to sign a formula which the cardinal de Noailles claimed as a
+recantation. Upon this he was released in 1710. The first use he made of
+his freedom was to write a work (which, however, his friends prudently
+prevented him from publishing), _Le Vaine Triomphe du cardinal de
+Noailles_, containing a virtual withdrawal of the compulsory
+recantation. He died at the abbey of St Denis on the 29th of March 1711.
+
+
+
+
+GERBERT, MARTIN (1720-1793), German theologian, historian and writer on
+music, belonged to the noble family of Gerbert von Hornau, and was born
+at Horb on the Neckar, Württemberg, on the 12th (or 11th or 13th) of
+August 1720. He was educated at Freiburg in the Breisgau, at Klingenau
+in Switzerland and at the Benedictine abbey of St Blasien in the Black
+Forest, where in 1737 he took the vows. In 1744 he was ordained priest,
+and immediately afterwards appointed professor, first of philosophy and
+later of theology. Between 1754 and 1764 he published a series of
+theological treatises, their main tendency being to modify the rigid
+scholastic system by an appeal to the Fathers, notably Augustine; from
+1759 to 1762 he travelled in Germany, Italy and France, mainly with a
+view to examining the collections of documents in the various monastic
+libraries. In 1764 he was elected prince-abbot of St Blasien, and proved
+himself a model ruler both as abbot and prince. His examination of
+archives during his travels had awakened in him a taste for historical
+research, and under his rule St Blasien became a notable centre of the
+methodical study of history; it was here that Marquard Herrgott wrote
+his _Monumenta domus Austriacae_, of which the first two volumes were
+edited, for the second edition, by Gerbert, who also published a _Codex
+epistolaris Rudolphi I., Romani regis_ (1772) and _De Rudolpho Suevico
+comite de Rhinfelden, duce et rege, deque ejus familia_ (1785). It was,
+however, in sacramental theology, liturgiology, and notably
+ecclesiastical music that Gerbert was mainly interested. In 1774 he
+published two volumes _De cantu et musica sacra_; in 1777, _Monumenta
+veteris liturgiae Alemannicae_; and in 1784, in three volumes,
+_Scriptores ecclesiastici de musica sacra_, a collection of the
+principal writers on church music from the 3rd century till the
+invention of printing. The materials for this work he had gathered
+during his travels, and although it contains many textual errors, its
+publication has been of great importance for the history of music, by
+preserving writings which might either have perished or remained
+unknown. His interest in music led to his acquaintance with the composer
+Gluck, who became his intimate friend.
+
+As a prince of the Empire Gerbert was devoted to the interests of the
+house of Austria; as a Benedictine abbot he was opposed to Joseph II.'s
+church policy. In the Febronian controversy (see FEBRONIANISM) he had
+early taken a mediating attitude, and it was largely due to his
+influence that Bishop Hontheim had been induced to retract his extreme
+views.
+
+In 1768 the abbey of St Blasien, with the library and church, was burnt
+to the ground, and the splendid new church which rose on the ruins of
+the old (1783) remained until its destruction by fire in 1874, at once a
+monument of Gerbert's taste in architecture and of his Habsburg
+sympathies. It was at his request that it was made the mausoleum of all
+the Austrian princes buried outside Austria, whose remains were solemnly
+transferred to its vaults. In connexion with its consecration he
+published his _Historia Nigrae Silvae, ordinis S. Benedicti coloniae_ (3
+vols., St Blasien, 1783).
+
+Gerbert, who was beloved and respected by Catholics and Protestants
+alike, died on the 3rd of May 1793.
+
+ See Joseph Bader, _Das ehemalige Kloster St Blasien und seine
+ Gelehrtenakademie_ (Freiburg-im-Breisgau, 1874), which contains a
+ chronological list of Gerbert's works.
+
+
+
+
+GERBIL, or GERBILLE, the name of a group of small, elegant, large-eyed,
+jumping rodents typified by the North African _Gerbillus aegyptiacus_
+(or _gerbillus_), and forming a special subfamily, _Gerbillinae_, of the
+rat tribe or _Muridae_. They are found over the desert districts of both
+Asia and Africa, and are classed in the genera _Gerbillus_ (or
+_Tatera_), _Pachyuromys_, _Meriones_, _Psammomys_ and _Rhombomys_, with
+further divisions into subgenera. They have elongated hind-limbs and
+long hairy tails; and progress by leaps, in the same manner as jerboas,
+from which they differ in having five hind-toes. The cheek-teeth have
+transverse plates of enamel on the crowns; the number of such plates
+diminishing from three in the first tooth to one or one and a half in
+the third. The upper incisor teeth are generally marked by grooves.
+Gerbils are inhabitants of open sandy plains, where they dwell in
+burrows furnished with numerous exits, and containing large grass-lined
+chambers. The Indian _G. indicus_ produces at least a dozen young at a
+birth. All are more or less completely nocturnal.
+
+
+
+
+GERENUK, the Somali name of a long-necked aberrant gazelle, commonly
+known as Waller's gazelle (_Lithocranius walleri_), and ranging from
+Somaliland to Kilimanjaro. The long neck and limbs, coupled with
+peculiarities in the structure of the skull, entitle the gerenuk, which
+is a large species, to represent a genus. The horns of the bucks are
+heavy, and have a peculiar forward curvature at the tips; the colour of
+the coat is red-fawn, with a broad brown band down the back. Gerenuk are
+browsing ruminants, and, in Somaliland, are found in small
+family-parties, and feed more by browsing on the branches and leaves of
+trees and shrubs than by grazing. Frequently they raise themselves by
+standing on their hind-legs with the fore-feet resting against the trunk
+of the tree on which they are feeding. Their usual pace is an awkward
+trot, not unlike that of a camel; and they seldom break into a gallop.
+The Somali form has been separated as _L. sclateri_, but is not more
+than a local race. (See ANTELOPE.)
+
+
+
+
+GERGOVIA (mod. _Gergovie_), in ancient geography, the chief town of the
+Arverni, situated on a hill in the Auvergne, about 8 m. from the Puy de
+Dôme, France. Julius Caesar attacked it in 52 B.C., but was beaten off;
+some walls and earthworks seem still to survive from this period. Later,
+when Gaul had been subdued, the place was dismantled and its Gaulish
+inhabitants resettled 4 m. away in the plain at the new Roman city of
+Augustonemetum (mod. _Clermont-Ferrand_).
+
+
+
+
+GERHARD, FRIEDRICH WILHELM EDUARD (1795-1867), German archaeologist, was
+born at Posen on the 29th of November 1795, and was educated at Breslau
+and Berlin. The reputation he acquired by his _Lectiones Apollonianae_
+(1816) led soon afterwards to his being appointed professor at the
+gymnasium of Posen. On resigning that office in 1819, on account of
+weakness of the eyes, he went in 1822 to Rome, where he remained for
+fifteen years. He contributed to Platner's _Beschreibung der Stadt Rom_,
+then under the direction of Bunsen, and was one of the principal
+originators and during his residence in Italy director of the _Instituto
+di corrispondenza archeologica_, founded at Rome in 1828. Returning to
+Germany in 1837 he was appointed archaeologist at the Royal Museum of
+Berlin, and in 1844 was chosen a member of the Academy of Sciences, and
+a professor in the university. He died at Berlin on the 12th of May
+1867.
+
+ Besides a large number of archaeological papers in periodicals, in the
+ _Annali_ of the Institute of Rome, and in the Transactions of the
+ Berlin Academy, and several illustrated catalogues of Greek, Roman and
+ other antiquities in the Berlin, Naples and Vatican Museums, Gerhard
+ was the author of the following works: _Antike Bildwerke_ (Stuttgart,
+ 1827-1844); _Auserlesene griech. Vasenbilder_ (1839-1858);
+ _Etruskische Spiegel_ (1839-1865); _Hyperboreisch-röm. Studien_ (vol.
+ i., 1833; vol. ii., 1852); _Prodromus mytholog. Kunsterklärung_
+ (Stuttgart and Tübingen, 1828); and _Griech. Mythologie_ (1854-1855).
+ His _Gesammelte akademische Abhandlungen und kleine Schriften_ were
+ published posthumously in 2 vols., Berlin, 1867.
+
+
+
+
+GERHARD, JOHANN (1582-1637), Lutheran divine, was born in Quedlinburg on
+the 17th of October 1582. In his fifteenth year, during a dangerous
+illness, he came under the personal influence of Johann Arndt, author of
+_Das wahre Christenthum_, and resolved to study for the church. He
+entered the university of Wittenberg in 1599, and first studied
+philosophy. He also attended lectures in theology, but, a relative
+having persuaded him to change his subject, he studied medicine for two
+years. In 1603, however, he resumed his theological reading at Jena, and
+in the following year received a new impulse from J.W. Winckelmann
+(1551-1626) and Balthasar Mentzer (1565-1627) at Marburg. Having
+graduated and begun to give lectures at Jena in 1605, he in 1606
+accepted the invitation of John Casimir, duke of Coburg, to the
+superintendency of Heldburg and mastership of the gymnasium; soon
+afterwards he became general superintendent of the duchy, in which
+capacity he was engaged in the practical work of ecclesiastical
+organization until 1616, when he became theological professor at Jena,
+where the remainder of his life was spent. Here, with Johann Major and
+Johann Himmel, he formed the "Trias Johannea." Though still
+comparatively young, Gerhard had already come to be regarded as the
+greatest living theologian of Protestant Germany; in the numerous
+"disputations" of the period he was always protagonist, while on all
+public and domestic questions touching on religion or morals his advice
+was widely sought. It is recorded that during the course of his lifetime
+he had received repeated calls to almost every university in Germany
+(e.g. Giessen, Altdorf, Helmstädt, Jena, Wittenberg), as well as to
+Upsala in Sweden. He died in Jena on the 20th of August 1637.
+
+ His writings are numerous, alike in exegetical, polemical, dogmatic
+ and practical theology. To the first category belong the _Commentarius
+ in harmoniam historiae evangelicae de passione Christi_ (1617), the
+ _Comment, super priorem D. Petri epistolam_ (1641), and also his
+ commentaries on Genesis (1637) and on Deuteronomy (1658). Of a
+ controversial character are the _Confessio Catholica_ (1633-1637), an
+ extensive work which seeks to prove the evangelical and catholic
+ character of the doctrine of the Augsburg Confession from the writings
+ of approved Roman Catholic authors; and the _Loci communes theologici_
+ (1610-1622), his principal contribution to science, in which
+ Lutheranism is expounded "nervose, solide, et copiose," in fact with
+ a fulness of learning, a force of logic and a minuteness of detail
+ that had never before been approached. _The Meditationes sacrae_
+ (1606), a work expressly devoted to the uses of Christian edification,
+ has been frequently reprinted in Latin and has been translated into
+ most of the European languages, including Greek. The English
+ translation by R. Winterton (1631) has passed through at least
+ nineteen editions. There is also an edition by W. Papillon in English
+ blank verse (1801). His life, _Vita Joh. Gerhardi_, was published by
+ E.R. Fischer in 1723, and by C.J. Böttcher, _Das Leben Dr Johann
+ Gerhards_, in 1858. See also W. Gass, _Geschichte der protestantischen
+ Dogmatik_ (1854-1867), and the article in the _Allgemeine deutsche
+ Biographie_.
+
+
+
+
+GERHARDT, CHARLES FRÉDÉRIC (1816-1856), French chemist, was born at
+Strassburg on the 21st of August 1816. After attending the gymnasium at
+Strassburg and the polytechnic at Karlsruhe, he was sent to the school
+of commerce at Leipzig, where he studied chemistry under Otto Erdmann.
+Returning home in 1834 he entered his father's white lead factory, but
+soon found that business was not to his liking, and after a sharp
+disagreement with his father enlisted in a cavalry regiment. In a few
+months military life became equally distasteful, and he purchased his
+discharge with the assistance of Liebig, with whom, after a short
+interval at Dresden, he went to study at Giessen in 1836. But his stay
+at Giessen was also short, and in 1837 he re-entered the factory. Again,
+however, he quarrelled with his father, and in 1838 went to Paris with
+introductions from Liebig. There he attended Jean Baptiste Dumas'
+lectures and worked with Auguste Cahours (1813-1891) on essential oils,
+especially cumin, in Michel Eugéne Chevreul's laboratory, while he
+earned a precarious living by teaching and making translations of some
+of Liebig's writings. In 1841, by the influence of Dumas, he was charged
+with the duties of the chair of chemistry at the Montpellier faculty of
+sciences, becoming titular professor in 1844. In 1842 he annoyed his
+friends in Paris by the matter and manner of a paper on the
+classification of organic compounds, and in 1845 he and his opinions
+were the subject of an attack by Liebig, unjustifiable in its
+personalities but not altogether surprising in view of his wayward
+disregard of his patron's advice. The two were reconciled in 1850, but
+his faculty for disagreeing with his friends did not make it easier for
+him to get another appointment after resigning the chair at Montpellier
+in 1851, especially as he was unwilling to go into the provinces. He
+obtained leave of absence from Montpellier in 1848 and from that year
+till 1855 resided in Paris. During that period he established an "École
+de chimie pratique" of which he had great hopes; but these were
+disappointed, and in 1855, after refusing the offer of a chair of
+chemistry at the new Zürich Polytechnic in 1854, he accepted the
+professorships of chemistry at the Faculty of Sciences and the École
+Polytechnique at Strassburg, where he died on the 19th of August in the
+following year. Although Gerhardt did some noteworthy experimental
+work--for instance, his preparation of acid anhydrides in 1852--his
+contributions to chemistry consist not so much in the discovery of new
+facts as in the introduction of new ideas that vitalized and organized
+an inert accumulation of old facts. In particular, with his
+fellow-worker Auguste Laurent (1807-1853), he did much to reform the
+methods of chemical formulation by insisting on the distinction between
+atoms, molecules and equivalents; and in his unitary system, directly
+opposed to the dualistic doctrines of Berzelius, he combined Dumas'
+substitution theory with the old radicle theory and greatly extended the
+notion of types of structure. His chief works were _Précis de chimie
+organique_ (1844-1845), and _Traité de chimie organique_ (1853-1856).
+
+ See _Charles Gerhardt, sa vie, son oeuvre, sa correspondance_, by his
+ son, Charles Gerhardt, and E. Grimaux (Paris, 1900).
+
+
+
+
+GERHARDT, PAUL (c. 1606-1676), German hymn-writer, was born of a good
+middle-class family at Gräfenhainichen, a small town on the railway
+between Halle and Wittenberg, in 1606 or 1607--some authorities, indeed,
+give the date March 12, 1607, but neither the year nor the day is
+accurately known. His education appears to have been retarded by the
+troubles of the period, the Thirty Years' War having begun about the
+time he reached his twelfth year. After completing his studies for the
+church he is known to have lived for some years at Berlin as tutor in
+the family of an advocate named Berthold, whose daughter he subsequently
+married, on receiving his first ecclesiastical appointment at Mittelwald
+(a small town in the neighbourhood of Berlin) in 1651. In 1657 he
+accepted an invitation as "diaconus" to the Nicolaikirche of Berlin;
+but, in consequence of his uncompromising Lutheranism in refusing to
+accept the elector Frederick William's "syncretistic" edict of 1664, he
+was deprived in 1666. Though absolved from submission and restored to
+office early in the following year, on the petition of the citizens, his
+conscience did not allow him to retain a post which, as it appeared to
+him, could only be held on condition of at least a tacit repudiation of
+the Formula Concordiae, and for upwards of a year he lived in Berlin
+without fixed employment. In 1668 he was appointed archdeacon of Lübben
+in the duchy of Saxe-Merseburg, where, after a somewhat sombre ministry
+of eight years, he died on the 7th of June 1676. Gerhardt is the
+greatest hymn-writer of Germany, if not indeed of Europe. Many of his
+best-known hymns were originally published in various church hymn-books,
+as for example in that for Brandenburg, which appeared in 1658; others
+first saw the light in Johann Crüger's _Geistliche Kirchenmelodien_
+(1649) and _Praxis pietatis melica_ (1656). The first complete set of
+them is the _Geistliche Andachten_, published in 1666-1667 by Ebeling,
+music director in Berlin. No hymn by Gerhardt of a later date than 1667
+is known to exist.
+
+ The life of Gerhardt has been written by Roth (1829), by Langbecker
+ (1841), by Schultz (1842), by Wildenhahn (1845) and by Bachmann
+ (1863); also by Kraft in Ersch u. Gruber's _Allg. Encycl._ (1855). The
+ best modern edition of the hymns, published by Wackernagel in 1843,
+ has often been reprinted. There is an English translation by Kelly
+ (_Paul Gerhardt's Spiritual Songs_, 1867).
+
+
+
+
+GÉRICAULT, JEAN LOUIS ANDRÉ THÉODORE (1791-1824), French painter, the
+leader of the French realistic school, was born at Rouen in 1791. In
+1808 he entered the studio of Charles Vernet, from which, in 1810, he
+passed to that of Guérin, whom he drove to despair by his passion for
+Rubens, and by the unorthodox manner in which he persisted in
+interpreting nature. At the Salon of 1812 Géricault attracted attention
+by his "Officier de Chasseurs ŕ Cheval" (Louvre), a work in which he
+personified the cavalry in its hour of triumph, and turned to account
+the solid training received from Guérin in rendering a picturesque point
+of view which was in itself a protest against the cherished convictions
+of the pseudo-classical school. Two years later (1814) he re-exhibited
+this work accompanied with the reverse picture "Cuirassier blessé"
+(Louvre), and in both subjects called attention to the interest of
+contemporary aspects of life, treated neglected types of living form,
+and exhibited that mastery of and delight in the horse which was a
+feature of his character. Disconcerted by the tempest of contradictory
+opinion which arose over these two pictures, Géricault gave way to his
+enthusiasm for horses and soldiers, and enrolled himself in the
+_mousquetaires_. During the Hundred Days he followed the king to
+Bethune, but, on his regiment being disbanded, eagerly returned to his
+profession, left France for Italy in 1816, and at Rome nobly illustrated
+his favourite animal by his great painting "Course des Chevaux Libres."
+Returning to Paris, Géricault exhibited at the Salon of 1819 the "Radeau
+de la Méduse" (Louvre), a subject which not only enabled him to prove
+his zealous and scientific study of the human form, but contained those
+elements of the heroic and pathetic, as existing in situations of modern
+life, to which he had appealed in his earliest productions. Easily
+depressed or elated, Géricault took to heart the hostility which this
+work excited, and passed nearly two years in London, where the "Radeau"
+was exhibited with success, and where he executed many series of
+admirable lithographs now rare. At the close of 1822 he was again in
+Paris, and produced a great quantity of projects for vast compositions,
+models in wax, and a horse _écorché_, as preliminary to the production
+of an equestrian statue. His health was now completely undermined by
+various kinds of excess, and on the 26th of January 1824 he died, at the
+age of thirty-three.
+
+ Géricault's biography, accompanied by a _catalogue raisonné_ of his
+ works, was published by M.C. Clément in 1868.
+
+
+
+
+GERIZIM, a mountain in the hill-country of Samaria, 2849 ft. above the
+sea-level, and enclosing, with its companion Ebal, the valley in which
+lies the town of Nablus (Shechem). It is the holy place of the community
+of the Samaritans, who hold that it was the scene of the sacrifice of
+Isaac--a tradition accepted by Dean Stanley but no other western writers
+of importance. Here, on the formal entrance of the Israelites into the
+possession of the Promised Land, were pronounced the blessings connected
+with a faithful observance of the law (Josh. viii. 33, 34; cf. Deut. xi.
+29, 30, xxvii. 12-26), the six tribes, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar,
+Joseph and Benjamin, standing here for the purpose while the remaining
+tribes stood on Ebal to accept the curses attached to specific
+violations thereof. Gerizim was probably chosen as the mount of blessing
+as being on the right hand, the fortunate side, of a spectator facing
+east. The counter-suggestion of Eusebius and Jerome that the Ebal and
+Gerizim associated with this solemnity were not the Shechem mountains at
+all, but two small hills near Jericho, is no longer considered
+important. From this mountain Jotham spoke his parable to the elders of
+Shechem (Judg. ix. 7). Manasseh, the son of the Jewish high-priest in
+the days of Nehemiah, married the daughter of Sanballat and, about 432
+B.C., erected on this mountain a temple for the Samaritans; it was
+destroyed by Hyrcanus about 300 years afterwards. Its site is a small
+level plateau a little under the summit of the mountain. Close to this
+is the place where the Passover is still annually celebrated in exact
+accordance with the rites prescribed in the Pentateuch. On the summit of
+the mountain, which commands a view embracing the greater part of
+Palestine, are a small Moslem shrine and the ruins of a castle probably
+dating from Justinian's time. There was an octagonal Byzantine church
+here, but the foundations alone remain. Josephus describes it as the
+highest of the mountains of Samaria, but Ebal and Tell Azur are both
+higher. (R. A. S. M.)
+
+
+
+
+GERLACHE, ÉTIENNE CONSTANTIN, BARON DE (1785-1871), Belgian politician
+and historian, was born at Biourge, Luxemburg, on the 24th of December
+1785. He studied law in Paris and practised there for some time, but
+settled at Liege after the establishment of the kingdom of the
+Netherlands. As member of the states-general he was an energetic member
+of the opposition, and, though he repudiated an ultramontane policy, he
+supported the alliance of the extreme Catholics with the Liberal party,
+which paved the way for the revolution of 1830. On the outbreak of
+disturbance in August 1830 he still, however, thought the Orange-Nassau
+dynasty and the union with the Dutch states essential; but his views
+changed, and, after holding various offices in the provisional
+government, he became president of congress, and brought forward the
+motion inviting Leopold of Saxe-Coburg to become king of the Belgians.
+In 1832 he was president of the chamber of representatives, and for
+thirty-five years he presided over the court of appeal. He presided over
+the Catholic congresses held at Malines between 1863 and 1867. That his
+early Liberal views underwent some modification is plain from the
+Conservative principles enunciated in his _Essai sur le mouvement des
+partis en Belgique_ (Brussels, 1852). As an historian his work was
+strongly coloured by his anti-Dutch prejudices and his Catholic
+predilections. His _Histoire des Pays-Bas depuis 1814 jusqu'en 1830_
+(Brussels, 2 vols., 1839), which reached a fourth edition in 1875, was a
+piece of special pleading against the Dutch domination. The most
+important of his other works were his _Histoire de Liége_ (Brussels,
+1843) and his _Études sur Salluste et sur quelques-uns des principaux
+historiens de l'antiquité_ (Brussels, 1847).
+
+ A complete edition of his works (6 vols., Brussels, 1874-1875)
+ contains a biography by M. Thonissen.
+
+
+
+
+GERLE, CHRISTOPHE ANTOINE (1736-c. 1801), French revolutionist and
+mystic, was born at Riom in Auvergne. Entering the Carthusian order
+early in life, he became prior of Laval-Dieu in Perche, and afterwards
+of Pont-Sainte-Marie at Moulins. Elected deputy to the states-general in
+1789, Gerle became very popular, and though he had no seat in the
+assembly until after the Tennis Court oath, being only deputy
+_suppléant_, he is represented in David's classic painting as taking
+part in it. In 1792 he was chosen elector of Paris. In the
+revolutionary turmoil Gerle developed a strong vein of mysticism,
+mingled with ideas of reform, and in June 1790 the prophetic powers of
+Suzanne Labrousse (1747-1821), a visionary who had predicted the
+Revolution ten years before, were brought by him to the notice of the
+Convention. In Paris, where he lived first with a spiritualistic doctor
+and afterwards, like Robespierre, at the house of a cabinetmaker, his
+mystical tendencies were strengthened. The insane fancies of Catherine
+Théot, a convent servant turned prophetess, who proclaimed herself the
+Virgin, the "Mother of God" and the "new Eve," were eminently attractive
+to Gerle; in the person of Robespierre he recognized the Messiah, and at
+the meetings of the Théotists he officiated with the aged prophetess as
+co-president. But the activities of Catherine and her adepts were
+short-lived. The Théotists' cult of Robespierre was a weapon in the
+hands of his opponents; and shortly after the festival of the Supreme
+Being, Vadier made a report to the Convention calling for the
+prosecution of Catherine, Gerle and others as fanatics and conspirators.
+They were arrested, thrown into prison and, in the confusion of
+Robespierre's fall, apparently forgotten. Catherine died in prison, but
+Gerle, released by the Directory, became one of the editors of the
+_Messager du soir_, and was afterwards in the office of Pierre Bénézech
+(1775-1802), minister of the interior. Having renounced his monastic
+vows in Paris, he is thought to have married, towards the close of his
+life, Christine Raffet, aunt of the artist Denis Raffet. The date of his
+death is uncertain.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN BAPTIST BRETHREN, or GERMAN BRETHREN, a sect of American Baptists
+which originated in Germany, and whose members are popularly known in
+the United States as "Dunkers," "Dunkards" or "Tunkers," corruptions of
+the German verb _tunken_, "to dip," in recognition of the sect's
+continued adherence to the practice of trine immersion. The sect was the
+outcome of one of the many Pietistic movements of the 17th century, and
+was founded in 1708 by Andrew Mack of Swartzenau, Germany, and seven of
+his followers, upon the general issue that both the Lutheran and
+Reformed churches were taking liberties with the literal teachings of
+the Scriptures. The new sect was scarcely organized in Germany when its
+members were compelled by persecution to take refuge in Holland, whence
+they emigrated to Pennsylvania, in small companies, between 1719 and
+1729. The first congregation in America was organized on Christmas Day
+1723 by Peter Becker at Germantown, Pennsylvania, and here in 1743
+Christopher Sauer, one of the sect's first pastors, and a printer by
+trade, printed the first Bible (a few copies of which are still in
+existence) published in a European language in America. From
+Pennsylvania the sect spread chiefly westward, and, after various
+vicissitudes, caused by defections and divisions due to doctrinal
+differences, in 1908 were most numerous in Pennsylvania, Maryland,
+Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas and
+North Dakota.
+
+There is much uncertainty about the early theological history of the
+sect, but it is probable that Mack and his followers were influenced by
+both the Greek Catholics and the Waldensians. P.H. Bashor in his
+historical sketch, read before the World's Fair Congress of the Brethren
+Church (1894), says: "From the history of extended labour by Greek
+missionaries, from the active propaganda of doctrine by scattered
+Waldensian refugees, through parts of Germany and Bavaria, from the
+credence that may generally be given to local tradition, and from the
+strong similarity between the three churches in general features of
+circumstantial service, the conclusion, without additional evidence, is
+both reasonable and natural that the founders of the new church received
+their teaching, their faith and much of their church idea from intimate
+acquaintance with the established usages of both societies, and from
+their amplification and enforcement by missionaries and pastors.... In
+doctrine the church has been from the first contentious for believers'
+baptism, holding that nowhere in the New Testament can be found any
+authority even by inference, precept or example for the baptism of
+infants. On questions of fundamental doctrine they held to the belief
+in one self-existing supreme ruler of the Universe--the Divine
+Godhead--the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit--the tri-personality."
+Hence their practice of triple immersion, which provides that the
+candidate shall kneel in the water and be immersed, face first, three
+times--in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. (From
+this practice the sect received the less commonly used nickname
+"Dompelaers," meaning "tumblers.") They accept implicitly and literally
+the New Testament as the infallible guide in spiritual matters, holding
+it to be the inspired word of God, revealed through Jesus Christ and, by
+inspiration, through the Apostles. They also believe in the inspiration
+of the Old Testament. In their celebration of the communion service they
+aim exactly to imitate the forms observed by Christ. It is celebrated in
+the evening, and is accompanied by the ancient love feast (partaken by
+all communicants seated at a common table), by the ceremony of the
+washing of feet and by the salutation of the holy kiss, the three
+last-named ceremonies being observed by the sexes separately. They pray
+over their sick and, when so requested, anoint them with oil. They are
+rigid non-resistants, and will not bear arms or study the art of war;
+they refuse to take oaths, and discountenance going to law over issues
+that can possibly be settled out of the courts. The taking of interest
+was at first forbidden, but that prohibition is not now insisted upon.
+They "testify" against the use of intoxicating liquor and tobacco, and
+advocate simplicity in dress. In its earlier history the sect opposed
+voting or taking any active part in political affairs, but these
+restrictions have quite generally disappeared. Similarly the earlier
+prejudice against higher education, and the maintenance of institutions
+for that purpose, has given place to greater liberality along those
+lines. In 1782 the sect forbade slave-holding by its members.
+
+The church officers (generally unpaid) comprise bishops (or
+ministers), elders, teachers, deacons (or visiting brethren) and
+deaconesses--chiefly aged women who are permitted at times to take
+leading parts in church services. The bishops are chosen from the
+teachers; they are itinerant, conduct marriage and funeral services, and
+are present at communions, at ordinations, when deacons are chosen or
+elected, and at trials for the excommunication of members. The elders
+are the first or oldest teachers of congregations, for which there is no
+regular bishop. They have charge of the meetings of such congregations,
+and participate in excommunication proceedings, besides which they
+preach, exhort, baptize, and may, when needed, take the offices of the
+deacons. The teachers, who are chosen by vote, may also exhort or
+preach, when their services are needed for such purposes, and may, at
+the request of a bishop, perform marriage or baptismal ceremonies. The
+deacons have general oversight of the material affairs of the
+congregation, and are especially charged with the care of poor widows
+and their children. In the discharge of these duties they are expected
+to visit each family in the congregation at least once a year. The
+government of the church is chiefly according to the congregational
+principle, and the women have an equal voice with the men; but annual
+meetings, attended by the bishops, teachers and other delegates from the
+several congregations are held, and at these sessions the larger
+questions involving church polity are considered and decided by a
+committee of five bishops.
+
+An early secession from the general body of Dunkers was that of the
+Seventh Day Dunkers, whose distinctive principle was that the seventh
+day was the true Sabbath. Their founder was Johann Conrad Beissel
+(1690-1768), a native of Eberbach and one of the first emigrants, who,
+after living as a hermit for several years on Mill Creek, Lancaster
+county, Pennsylvania, founded the sect (1725), then again lived as a
+hermit in a cave (formerly occupied by another hermit, one Elimelech) on
+the Cocalico Creek in Pennsylvania, and in 1732-1735 established a
+semi-monastic community (the "Order of the Solitary") with a convent
+(the "Sister House") and a monastery (the "Brother House") at Ephrata,
+in what is now Lancaster county, about 55 m. W. by N. from Philadelphia.
+Among the industries of the men were printing (in both English and
+German), book-binding, tanning, quarrying, and the operation of a saw
+mill, a bark mill, and perhaps a pottery; the women did embroidery,
+quilting, and engrossing in a beautiful but peculiar hand, known as
+Fracturschrift.[1] The monastic feature was gradually abandoned, and in
+1814 the Society was incorporated as the Seventh Day Baptists, its
+affairs being placed in the hands of a board of trustees. More important
+in the history of the modern church was the secession, in the decade
+between 1880 and 1890, of the Old Order Brethren, who opposed Sunday
+Schools and the missionary work of the Brethren, in Asia Minor and
+India, and in several European countries; and also in 1882 of the
+radicals, or Progressives, who objected to a distinctive dress and to
+the absolute supremacy of the yearly conferences. Higher education was
+long forbidden and is consistently opposed by the Old Order. The same
+element in the Brethren opposed a census, but according to Howard
+Miller's census of 1880 (_Record of the Faithful_) the number of Dunkers
+was 59,749 in that year; by the United States census of 1890 it was then
+73,795; the figures for 1904 are given by Henry King Carroll in his
+"Statistics of the Churches" in the _Christian Advocate_ (Jan. 5, 1905):
+Conservatives, or German Baptist Brethren, 95,000; Old Order, 4000;
+Progressives or Brethren, 15,000; Seventh Day, 194; total, 114,194. In
+1909 the German Baptist Brethren had an estimated membership of
+approximately 100,000, and the Brethren of 18,000. The main body, or
+Conservatives, support schools at Huntingdon, Pennsylvania; Mt. Morris,
+Illinois; Lordsburg, California; McPherson, Kansas; Bridgewater,
+Virginia; Canton, Ohio; Chicago, Illinois; North Manchester, Indiana;
+Plattsburg, Missouri; Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania; Union Bridge,
+Maryland; and Fruitdale, Alabama. They have a publishing house at Elgin,
+Illinois, and maintain missions in Denmark, Sweden, France, Italy, India
+and China. The Progressives have a college, a theological seminary and a
+publishing house at Ashland, Ohio; and they carry on missionary work in
+Canada, South America and Persia.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--Lamech and Agrippa, _Chronicon Ephratense_, in German
+ (Ephrata, Penn., 1786) and in English (Lancaster, 1889); G.N.
+ Falkenstein, "The German Baptist Brethren, or Dunkers," part 8 of
+ "Pennsylvania: The German Influence in its Settlement and
+ Development," in vol. x. of the _Pennsylvania German Society,
+ Proceedings and Addresses_ (Lancaster, Penn., 1900); Julius Friedrich
+ Sachse, _The German Sectarians of Pennsylvania, 1742-1800: A Critical
+ and Legendary History of the Ephrata Cloister and the Dunkers_
+ (Philadelphia, 1900); and John Lewis Gillin, _The Dunkers: A
+ Sociological Interpretation_ (New York, 1906), a doctor's
+ dissertation, with full bibliography.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] Beissel (known in the community as "Friedsam") was their leader
+ until his death; he published several collections of hymns. The stone
+ over his grave bears the inscription: "Here rests an outgrowth of the
+ love of God, 'Friedsam,' a Solitary Brother, afterwards a leader of
+ the Solitary and the Congregation of Grace in and around Ephrata ...
+ Fell asleep July 6, 1768, in the 52nd year of his spiritual life, but
+ the 72nd year and fourth month of his natural life." The borough of
+ Ephrata was separated from the township in 1891. Pop. (1900) of the
+ borough, 2451; of the township, 2390. The "Brother House" and the
+ "Sister House" are still standing (though in a dilapidated
+ condition). In 1777, after the battle of Brandywine, many wounded
+ American soldiers were nursed here by the Sisters, and about 200 are
+ buried here.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN CATHOLICS (_Deutschkatholiken_), the name assumed in Germany
+towards the close of 1844 by certain dissentients from the Church of
+Rome. The most prominent leader of the German Catholic movement was
+Johann Ronge, a priest who in the _Sächsische Vaterlandsblätter_ for the
+15th of October 1844 made a vigorous attack upon Wilhelm Arnoldi, bishop
+of Trier since 1842, for having ordered (for the first time since 1810)
+the exposition of the "holy coat of Trier," alleged to be the seamless
+robe of Christ, an event which drew countless pilgrims to the cathedral.
+Ronge, who had formerly been chaplain at Grottkau, was then a
+schoolmaster at Laurahütte near the Polish border. The article made a
+great sensation, and led to Ronge's excommunication by the chapter of
+Breslau in December 1844. The ex-priest received a large amount of
+public sympathy, and a dissenting congregation was almost immediately
+formed at Breslau with a very simple creed, in which the chief articles
+were belief in God the Father, creator and ruler of the universe; in
+Jesus Christ the Saviour, who delivers from the bondage of sin by his
+life, doctrine and death; in the operation of the Holy Ghost; in a holy,
+universal, Christian church; in forgiveness of sins and the life
+everlasting. The Bible was made the sole rule, and all external
+authority was barred. Within a few weeks similar communities were formed
+at Leipzig, Dresden, Berlin, Offenbach, Worms, Wiesbaden and elsewhere;
+and at a "council" convened at Leipzig at Easter 1845, twenty-seven
+congregations were represented by delegates, of whom only two or at most
+three were in clerical orders.
+
+Even before the beginning of the agitation led by Ronge, another
+movement fundamentally distinct, though in some respects similar, had
+been originated at Schneidemühl, Posen, under the guidance of Johann
+Czerski (1813-1893), also a priest, who had come into collision with the
+church authorities on the then much discussed question of mixed
+marriages, and also on that of the celibacy of the clergy. The result
+had been his suspension from office in March 1844; his public
+withdrawal, along with twenty-four adherents, from the Roman communion
+in August; his excommunication; and the formation, in October, of a
+"Christian Catholic" congregation which, while rejecting clerical
+celibacy, the use of Latin in public worship, and the doctrines of
+purgatory and transubstantiation, retained the Nicene theology and the
+doctrine of the seven sacraments. Czerski had been at some of the
+sittings of the "German Catholic" council of Leipzig; but when a formula
+somewhat similar to that of Breslau had been adopted, he refused his
+signature because the divinity of Christ had been ignored, and he and
+his congregation continued to retain by preference the name of
+"Christian Catholics," which they had originally assumed. Of the German
+Catholic congregations which had been represented at Leipzig some
+manifested a preference for the fuller and more positive creed of
+Schneidemühl, but a great majority continued to accept the comparatively
+rationalistic position of the Breslau school. The number of these
+rapidly increased, and the congregations scattered over Germany numbered
+nearly 200. External and internal checks, however, soon limited this
+advance. In Austria, and ultimately also in Bavaria, the use of the name
+German Catholics was officially prohibited, that of "Dissidents" being
+substituted, while in Prussia, Baden and Saxony the adherents of the new
+creed were laid under various disabilities, being suspected both of
+undermining religion and of encouraging the revolutionary tendencies of
+the age. Ronge himself was a foremost figure in the troubles of 1848;
+after the dissolution of the Frankfort parliament he lived for some time
+in London, returning in 1861 to Germany. He died at Vienna on the 26th
+of October 1887. In 1859 some of the German Catholics entered into
+corporate union with the "Free Congregations," an association of
+free-thinking communities that had since 1844 been gradually withdrawing
+from the orthodox Protestant Church, when the united body took the title
+of "The Religious Society of Free Congregations." Before that time many
+of the congregations which were formed in 1844 and the years immediately
+following had been dissolved, including that of Schneidemühl itself,
+which ceased to exist in 1857. There are now only about 2000 strict
+German Catholics, all in Saxony. The movement has been superseded by the
+Old Catholic (q.v.) organization.
+
+ See G.G. Gervinus, _Die Mission des Deutschkatholicismus_ (1846); F.
+ Kampe, _Das Wesen des Deutschkatholicismus_ (1860); Findel, _Der
+ Deutschkatholicismus in Sachsen_ (1895); Carl Mirbt, in Herzog-Hauck's
+ _Realencyk. für prot. Theol._ iv. 583.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN EAST AFRICA, a country occupying the east-central portion of the
+African continent. The colony extends at its greatest length north to
+south from 1° to 11° S., and west to east from 30° to 40° E. It is
+bounded E. by the Indian Ocean (the coast-line extending from 4° 20' to
+10° 40' S.), N.E. and N. by British East Africa and Uganda, W. by
+Belgian Congo, S.W. by British Central Africa and S. by Portuguese East
+Africa.
+
+[Illustration: German East Africa.]
+
+ _Area and Boundaries._--On the north the boundary line runs N.W. from
+ the mouth of the Umba river to Lake Jipe and Mount Kilimanjaro
+ including both in the protectorate, and thence to Victoria Nyanza,
+ crossing it at 1° S., which parallel it follows till it reaches 30° E.
+ In the west the frontier is as follows: From the point of intersection
+ of 1° S. and 30° E., a line running S. and S.W. to the north-west end
+ of Lake Kivu, thence across that lake near its western shore, and
+ along the river Rusizi, which issues from it, to the spot where the
+ Rusizi enters the north end of Lake Tanganyika; along the middle line
+ of Tanganyika to near its southern end, when it is deflected eastward
+ to the point where the river Kalambo enters the lake (thus leaving the
+ southern end of Tanganyika to Great Britain). From this point the
+ frontier runs S.E. across the plateau between Lakes Tanganyika and
+ Nyasa, in its southern section following the course of the river
+ Songwe. Thence it goes down the middle of Nyasa as far as 11° 30' S.
+ The southern frontier goes direct from the last-named point eastward
+ to the Rovuma river, which separates German and Portuguese territory.
+ A little before the Indian Ocean is reached the frontier is deflected
+ south so as to leave the mouth of the Rovuma in German East Africa.
+ These boundaries include an area of about 364,000 sq. m. (nearly
+ double the size of Germany), with a population estimated in 1910 at
+ 8,000,000. Of these above 10,000 were Arabs, Indians, Syrians and
+ Goanese, and 3000 Europeans (over 2000 being Germans). The island of
+ Mafia (see below) is included in the protectorate.
+
+ _Physical Features._--The coast of German East Africa (often spoken of
+ as the Swahili coast, after the inhabitants of the seaboard) is
+ chiefly composed of coral, is little indented, and is generally low,
+ partly sandy, partly rich alluvial soil covered with dense bush or
+ mangroves. Where the Arabs have established settlements the coco-palm
+ and mango tree introduced by them give variety to the vegetation. The
+ coast plain is from 10 to 30 m. wide and 620 m. long; it is bordered
+ on the west by the precipitous eastern side of the interior plateau of
+ Central Africa. This plateau, considerably tilted from its horizontal
+ position, attains its highest elevation north of Lake Nyasa (see
+ LIVINGSTONE MOUNTAINS), where several peaks rise over 7000 ft., one to
+ 9600, while its mean altitude is about 3000 to 4000 ft. From this
+ region the country slopes towards the north-west, and is not
+ distinguished by any considerable mountain ranges. A deep narrow
+ gorge, the so-called "eastern rift-valley," traverses the middle of
+ the plateau in a meridional direction. In the northern part of the
+ country it spreads into several side valleys, from one of which rises
+ the extinct volcano Kilimanjaro (q.v.), the highest mountain in Africa
+ (19,321 ft.). Its glaciers send down a thousand rills which combine to
+ form the Pangani river. About 40 m. west of Kilimanjaro is Mount Meru
+ (14,955 ft.), another volcanic peak, with a double crater. The greater
+ steepness of its sides makes Meru in some aspects a more striking
+ object than its taller neighbour. South-east of Mount Kilimanjaro are
+ the Pare Mountains and Usambara highlands, separated from the coast by
+ a comparatively narrow strip of plain. To the south of the Usambara
+ hills, and on the eastern edge of the plateau, are the mountainous
+ regions of Nguru (otherwise Unguru), Useguha and Usagara. As already
+ indicated, the southern half of Victoria Nyanza and the eastern
+ shores, in whole or in part, of Lakes Kivu, Tanganyika and Nyasa, are
+ in German territory. (The lakes are separately described.) Several
+ smaller lakes occur in parts of the eastern rift-valley. Lake Rukwa
+ (q.v.) north-west of Nyasa is presumably only the remnant of a much
+ larger lake. Its extent varies with the rainfall of each year.
+ North-west of Kilimanjaro is a sheet of water known as the Natron Lake
+ from the mineral alkali it contains. In the northern part of the
+ colony the Victoria Nyanza is the dominant physical feature. The
+ western frontier coincides with part of the eastern wall of another
+ depression, the Central African or Albertine rift-valley, in which lie
+ Tanganyika, Kivu and other lakes. Along the north-west frontier north
+ of Kivu are volcanic peaks (see MFUMBIRO).
+
+ The country is well watered, but with the exception of the Rufiji the
+ rivers, save for a few miles from their mouths, are unnavigable. The
+ largest streams are the Rovuma and Rufiji (q.v.), both rising in the
+ central plateau and flowing to the Indian Ocean. Next in importance is
+ the Pangani river, which, as stated above, has its head springs on the
+ slopes of Kilimanjaro. Flowing in a south-easterly direction it
+ reaches the sea after a course of some 250 m. The Wami and Kingani,
+ smaller streams, have their origin in the mountainous region fringing
+ the central plateau, and reach the ocean opposite the island of
+ Zanzibar. Of inland river systems there are four--one draining to
+ Victoria Nyanza, another to Tanganyika, a third to Nyasa and a fourth
+ to Rukwa. Into Victoria Nyanza are emptied, on the east, the waters of
+ the Mori and many smaller streams; on the west, the Kagera (q.v.),
+ besides smaller rivers. Into Tanganyika flows the Malagarasi, a
+ considerable river with many affluents, draining the west-central part
+ of the plateau. The Kalambo river, a comparatively small stream near
+ the southern end of Tanganyika, flows in a south-westerly direction.
+ Not far from its mouth there is a magnificent fall, a large volume of
+ water falling 600 ft. sheer over a rocky ledge of horse-shoe shape. Of
+ the streams entering Nyasa the Songwe has been mentioned. The Ruhuhu,
+ which enters Nyasa in 10° 30' S., and its tributaries drain a
+ considerable area west of 36° E. The chief feeders of Lake Rukwa are
+ the Saisi and the Rupa-Songwe.
+
+ Mafia Island lies off the coast immediately north of 8° N. It has an
+ area of 200 sq. m. The island is low and fertile, and extensively
+ planted with coco-nut palms. It is continued southwards by an
+ extensive reef, on which stands the chief village, Chobe, the
+ residence of a few Arabs and Banyan traders. Chobe stands on a shallow
+ creek almost inaccessible to shipping.
+
+ _Geology._--The narrow foot-plateau of British East Africa broadens
+ out to the south of Bagamoyo to a width of over 100 m. This is covered
+ to a considerable extent by rocks of recent and late Tertiary ages.
+ Older Tertiary rocks form the bluffs of Lindi. Cretaceous marls and
+ limestones appear at intervals, extending in places to the edge of the
+ upper plateau, and are extensively developed on the Makonde plateau.
+ They are underlain by Jurassic rocks, from beneath which sandstones
+ and shales yielding _Glossopteris browniana_ var. _indica_, and
+ therefore of Lower Karroo age, appear in the south but are overlapped
+ on the north by Jurassic strata. The central plateau consists almost
+ entirely of metamorphic rocks with extensive tracts of granite in
+ Unyamwezi. In the vicinity of Lakes Nyasa and Tanganyika, sandstones
+ and shales of Lower Karroo age and yielding seams of coal are
+ considered to owe their position and preservation to being let down by
+ rift faults into hollows of the crystalline rocks. In Karagwe certain
+ quartzites, slates and schistose sandstones resemble the ancient
+ gold-bearing rocks of South Africa.
+
+ The volcanic plateau of British East Africa extends over the boundary
+ in the region of Kilimanjaro. Of the sister peaks, Kibo and Mawenzi,
+ the latter is far the oldest and has been greatly denuded, while Kibo
+ retains its crateriform shape intact. The rift-valley faults continue
+ down the depression, marked by numerous volcanoes, in the region of
+ the Natron Lake and Lake Manyara; while the steep walls of the deep
+ depression of Tanganyika and Nyasa represent the western rift system
+ at its maximum development.
+
+ Fossil remains of saurians of gigantic size have been found; one thigh
+ bone measures 6 ft. 10 in., the same bone in the _Diplodocus Carnegii_
+ measuring only 4 ft. 11 in.
+
+ _Climate._--The warm currents setting landwards from the Indian Ocean
+ bring both moisture and heat, so that the Swahili coast has a higher
+ temperature and heavier rainfall than the Atlantic seaboard under the
+ same parallels of latitude. The mean temperature on the west and east
+ coasts of Africa is 72° and 80° Fahr. respectively, the average
+ rainfall in Angola 36 in., in Dar-es-Salaam 60 in. On the Swahili
+ coast the south-east monsoon begins in April and the north-east
+ monsoon in November. In the interior April brings south-east winds,
+ which continue until about the beginning of October. During the rest
+ of the year changing winds prevail. These winds are charged with
+ moisture, which they part with on ascending the precipitous side of
+ the plateau. Rain comes with the south-east monsoon, and on the
+ northern part of the coast the rainy season is divided into two parts,
+ the great and the little Masika: the former falls in the months of
+ September, October, November; the latter in February and March. In the
+ interior the climate has a more continental character, and is subject
+ to considerable changes of temperature; the rainy season sets in a
+ little earlier the farther west and north the region, and is well
+ marked, the rain beginning in November and ending in April; the rest
+ of the year is dry. On the highest parts of the plateau the climate is
+ almost European, the nights being sometimes exceedingly cold.
+ Kilimanjaro has a climate of its own; the west and south sides of the
+ mountain receive the greatest rainfall, while the east and north sides
+ are dry nearly all the year. Malarial diseases are rather frequent,
+ more so on the coast than farther inland. The Kilimanjaro region is
+ said to enjoy immunity. Smallpox is frequent on the coast, but is
+ diminishing before vaccination; other epidemic diseases are extremely
+ rare.
+
+ _Flora and Fauna._--The character of the vegetation varies with and
+ depends on moisture, temperature and soil. On the low littoral zone
+ the coast produced a rich tropical bush, in which the mangrove is very
+ prominent. Coco-palms and mango trees have been planted in great
+ numbers, and also many varieties of bananas. The bush is grouped in
+ copses on meadows, which produce a coarse tall grass. The river banks
+ are lined with belts of dense forest, in which useful timber occurs.
+ The _Hyphaene_ palm is frequent, as well as various kinds of
+ gum-producing mimosas. The slopes of the plateau which face the
+ rain-bringing monsoon are in some places covered with primeval forest,
+ in which timber is plentiful. The silk-cotton tree (_Bombax ceiba_),
+ miomba, tamarisk, copal tree (_Hymenaea courbaril_) are frequent,
+ besides sycamores, banyan trees (_Ficus indica_) and the deleb palm
+ (_Borassus aethiopum_). It is here we find the _Landolphia florida_,
+ which yields the best rubber. The plateau is partly grass land without
+ bush and forest, partly steppe covered with mimosa bush, which
+ sometimes is almost impenetrable. Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Meru
+ exhibit on a vertical scale the various forms of vegetation which
+ characterize East Africa (see KILIMANJARO).
+
+ East Africa is rich in all kinds of antelope, and the elephant,
+ rhinoceros and hippopotamus are still plentiful in parts.
+ Characteristic are the giraffe, the chimpanzee and the ostrich.
+ Buffaloes and zebras occur in two or three varieties. Lions and
+ leopards are found throughout the country. Crocodiles are numerous in
+ all the larger rivers. Snakes, many venomous, abound. Of birds there
+ are comparatively few on the steppe, but by rivers, lakes and swamps
+ they are found in thousands. Locusts occasion much damage, and ants of
+ various kinds are often a plague. The tsetse fly (_Glossina
+ morsitans_) infests several districts; the sand-flea has been imported
+ from the west coast. Land and water turtles are numerous.
+
+_Inhabitants._--On the coast and at the chief settlements inland are
+Arab and Indian immigrants, who are merchants and agriculturists. The
+Swahili (q.v.) are a mixed Bantu and Semitic race inhabiting the
+seaboard. The inhabitants of the interior may be divided into two
+classes, those namely of Bantu and those of Hamitic stock. What may be
+called the indigenous population consists of the older Bantu races.
+These tribes have been subject to the intrusion from the south of more
+recent Bantu folk, such as the Yao, belonging to the Ama-Zulu branch of
+the race, while from the north there has been an immigration of
+Hamito-Negroid peoples. Of these the Masai and Wakuafi are found in the
+region between Victoria Nyanza and Kilimanjaro. The Masai (q.v.) and
+allied tribes are nomads and cattle raisers. They are warlike, and live
+in square mud-plastered houses called _tembe_ which can be easily
+fortified and defended. The Bantu tribes are in general peaceful
+agriculturists, though the Bantus of recent immigration retain the
+warlike instincts of the Zulus. The most important group of the Bantus
+is the Wanyamwezi (see UNYAMWEZI), divided into many tribes. They are
+spread over the central plains, and have for neighbours on the
+south-east, between Nyasa and the Rufiji, the warlike Wahehe. The
+Wangoni (Angoni), a branch of the Ama-Zulu, are widely spread over the
+central and Nyasa regions. Other well-known tribes are the Wasambara,
+who have given their name to the highlands between Kilimanjaro and the
+coast, and the Warundi, inhabiting the district between Tanganyika and
+the Kagera. In Karagwe, a region adjoining the south-west shores of
+Victoria Nyanza, the Bahima are the ruling caste. Formerly Karagwe under
+its Bahima kings was a powerful state. Many different dialects are
+spoken by the Bantu tribes, Swahili being the most widely known (see
+BANTU LANGUAGES). Their religion is the worship of spirits, ancestral
+and otherwise, accompanied by a vague and undefined belief in a Supreme
+Being, generally regarded as indifferent to the doings of the people.
+
+The task of civilizing the natives is undertaken in various ways by the
+numerous Protestant and Roman Catholic missions established in the
+colony, and by the government. The slave trade has been abolished, and
+though domestic slavery is allowed, all children of slaves born after
+the 31st of December 1905 are free. For certain public works the Germans
+enforce a system of compulsory labour. Efforts are made by instruction
+in government and mission schools to spread a knowledge of the German
+language among the natives, in order to fit them for subordinate posts
+in administrative offices, such as the customs. Native chiefs in the
+interior are permitted to help in the administration of justice. The
+Mission du Sacré Coeur in Bagamoyo, the oldest mission in the colony,
+has trained many young negroes to be useful mechanics. The number of
+native Christians is small. The Moslems have vigorous and successful
+missions.
+
+ _Chief Towns._--The seaports of the colony are Tanga (pop. about
+ 6000), Bagamoyo 5000 (with surrounding district some 18,000),
+ Dar-es-Salaam 24,000, Kilwa 5000, (these have separate notices),
+ Pangani, Sadani, Lindi and Mikindani. Pangani (pop. about 3500) is
+ situated at the mouth of the river of the same name; it serves a
+ district rich in tropical products, and does a thriving trade with
+ Zanzibar and Pemba. Sadani is a smaller port midway between Pangani
+ and Bagamoyo. Lindi (10° 0' S., 39° 40' E.) is 80 m. north of Cape
+ Delgado. Lindi (Swahili for The Deep Below) Bay runs inland 6 m. and
+ is 3 m. across, affording deep anchorage. Hills to the west of the bay
+ rise over 1000 ft. The town (pop. about 4000) is picturesquely
+ situated on the north side of the bay. The Arab _boma_, constructed in
+ 1800, has been rebuilt by the Germans, who have retained the fine
+ sculptured gateway. Formerly a rendezvous for slave caravans Lindi now
+ has a more legitimate trade in white ivory. Mikindani is the most
+ southern port in the colony. Owing to the prevalence of malaria there,
+ few Europeans live at the town, and trade is almost entirely in the
+ hands of Banyans.
+
+ Inland the principal settlements are Korogwe, Mrogoro, Kilossa, Mpapua
+ and Tabora. Korogwe is in the Usambara hills, on the north bank of the
+ Pangani river, and is reached by railway from Tanga. Mrogoro is some
+ 140 m. due west of Dar-es-Salaam, and is the first important station
+ on the road to Tanganyika. Kilossa and Mpapua are farther inland on
+ the same caravan route. Tabora (pop. about 37,000), the chief town of
+ the Wanyamwezi tribes, occupies an important position on the central
+ plateau, being the meeting-place of the trade routes from Tanganyika,
+ Victoria Nyanza and the coast. In the railway development of the
+ colony Tabora is destined to become the central junction of lines
+ going north, south, east and west.
+
+ On Victoria Nyanza there are various settlements. Mwanza, on the
+ southern shore, is the lake terminus of the route from Bagamoyo:
+ Bukoba is on the western shore, and Schirati on the eastern shore;
+ both situated a little south of the British frontier. On the German
+ coast of Tanganyika are Ujiji (q.v.), pop. about 14,000, occupying a
+ central position; Usumbura, at the northern end of the lake where is a
+ fort built by the Germans; and Bismarckburg, near the southern end. On
+ the shores of the lake between Ujiji and Bismarckburg are four
+ stations of the Algerian "White Fathers," all possessing churches,
+ schools and other stone buildings. Langenburg is a settlement on the
+ north-east side of Lake Nyasa. The government station, called New
+ Langenburg, occupies a higher and more healthy site north-west of the
+ lake. Wiedhafen is on the east side of Nyasa at the mouth of the
+ Ruhuhu, and is the terminus of the caravan route from Kilwa.
+
+ _Productions._--The chief wealth of the country is derived from
+ agriculture and the produce of the forests. From the forests are
+ obtained rubber, copal, bark, various kinds of fibre, and timber
+ (teak, mahogany, &c.). The cultivated products include coffee, the
+ coco-nut palm, tobacco, sugar-cane, cotton, vanilla, sorghum,
+ earth-nuts, sesame, maize, rice, beans, peas, bananas (in large
+ quantities), yams, manioc and hemp. Animal products are ivory, hides,
+ tortoise-shell and pearls. On the plateaus large numbers of cattle,
+ goats and sheep are reared. The natives have many small smithies.
+ Gold, coal, iron, graphite, copper and salt have been found. Garnets
+ are plentiful in the Lindi district, and agates, topaz, moonstone and
+ other precious stones are found in the colony. The chief gold and iron
+ deposits are near Victoria Nyanza. In the Mwanza district are
+ conglomerate reefs of great extent. Mining began in 1905, Mica is
+ mined near Mrogoro. The chief exports are sisal fibre, rubber, hides
+ and skins, wax, ivory, copra, coffee, ground-nuts and cotton. The
+ imports are chiefly articles of food, textiles, and metals and
+ hardware. More than half the entire trade, both export and import, is
+ with Zanzibar. Germany takes about 30% of the trade. In the ten years
+ 1896-1905 the value of the external trade increased from about
+ Ł600,000 to over Ł1,100,000. In 1907 the imports were valued at
+ Ł1,190,000, the exports at Ł625,000.
+
+ Numerous companies are engaged in developing the resources of the
+ country by trading, planting and mining. The most important is the
+ _Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Gesellschaft_, founded in 1885, which has
+ trading stations in each seaport, and flourishing plantations in
+ various parts of the country. It is the owner of vast tracts of land.
+ From 1890 to 1903 this company was in possession of extensive mining,
+ railway, banking and coining rights, but in the last-named year, by
+ agreement with the German government, it became a land company purely.
+ The company has a right to a fifth part of the land within a zone of
+ 10 m. on either side of any railway built in the colony previously to
+ 1935. In addition to the companies a comparatively large number of
+ private individuals have laid out plantations, Usambara and Pare
+ having become favourite districts for agricultural enterprise. In the
+ delta of the Rufiji and in the Kilwa district cotton-growing was begun
+ in 1901. The plantations are all worked by native labour. The
+ government possesses large forest reserves.
+
+ _Communications._--Good roads for foot traffic have been made from the
+ seaports to the trading stations on Lakes Nyasa, Tanganyika and
+ Victoria. Caravans from Dar-es-Salaam to Tanganyika take 60 days to do
+ the journey. The lack of more rapid means of communication hindered
+ the development of the colony and led to economic crises (1898-1902),
+ which were intensified, and in part created, by the building of a
+ railway in the adjacent British protectorate from Mombasa to Victoria
+ Nyanza, the British line securing the trade with the lake. At that
+ time the only railway in the country was a line from Tanga to the
+ Usambara highlands. This railway passes through Korogwe (52 m. from
+ Tanga) and is continued via Mombo to Wilhelmstal, a farther distance
+ of 56 m. The building of a trunk line from Dar-es-Salaam to Mrogoro
+ (140 m.), and ultimately to Ujiji by way of Tabora, was begun in 1905.
+ Another proposed line would run from Kilwa to Wiedhafen on Lake Nyasa.
+ This railway would give the quickest means of access to British
+ Central Africa and the southern part of Belgian Congo. On each of the
+ three lakes is a government steamer. British steamers on Victoria
+ Nyanza maintain communication between the German stations and the take
+ terminus of the Uganda railway. The German East Africa Line of Hamburg
+ runs a fleet of first-class steamers to East Africa, which touch at
+ Tanga, Dar-es-Salaam and Zanzibar. There is a submarine cable from
+ Dar-es-Salaam to Zanzibar, and an overland line connecting all the
+ coast stations.
+
+ _Administration, Revenue, &c._--For administrative purposes the
+ country is divided into districts (_Bezirksämter_), and stations
+ (_Stationsbezirke_). Each station has a chief, who is subordinate to
+ the official of his district, these in their turn being under the
+ governor, who resides in Dar-es-Salaam. The governor is commander of
+ the colonial force, which consists of natives under white officers.
+ District councils are constituted, on which the European merchants and
+ planters are represented. Revenue is raised by taxes on imports and
+ exports, on licences for the sale of land and spirituous liquors, and
+ for wood-cutting, by harbour and other dues, and a hut tax on natives.
+ The deficiency between revenue and expenditure is met by a subsidy
+ from the imperial government. In no case during the first twenty-one
+ years' existence of the colony had the local revenue reached 60% of
+ the local expenditure, which in normal years amounted to about
+ Ł500,000. In 1909, however, only the expenditure necessary for
+ military purposes (Ł183,500) was received by way of subsidy.
+
+_History._--Until nearly the middle of the 19th century only the coast
+lands of the territory now forming German East Africa were known either
+to Europeans or to the Arabs. When at the beginning of the 16th century
+the Portuguese obtained possession of the towns along the East African
+coast, they had been, for periods extending in some cases fully five
+hundred years, under Arab dominion. After the final withdrawal of the
+Portuguese in the early years of the 18th century, the coast towns north
+of Cape Delgado fell under the sway of the Muscat Arabs, passing from
+them to the sultan of Zanzibar. From about 1830, or a little earlier,
+the Zanzibar Arabs began to penetrate inland, and by 1850 had
+established themselves at Ujiji on the eastern shore of Lake Tanganyika.
+The Arabs also made their way south to Nyasa. This extension of Arab
+influence was accompanied by vague claims on the part of the sultan of
+Zanzibar to include all these newly opened countries in his empire. How
+far from the coast the real authority of the sultan extended was never
+demonstrated. Zanzibar at this time was in semi-dependence on India, and
+British influence was strong at the court of Bargash, who succeeded to
+the sultanate in 1870. Bargash in 1877 offered to Sir (then Mr) William
+Mackinnon a lease of all his mainland territory. The offer, made in the
+year in which H.M. Stanley's discovery of the course of the Congo
+initiated the movement for the partition of the continent, was declined.
+British influence was, however, still so powerful in Zanzibar that the
+agents of the German Colonization Society, who in 1884 sought to secure
+for their country territory on the east coast, deemed it prudent to act
+secretly, so that both Great Britain and Zanzibar might be confronted
+with accomplished facts. Making their way inland, three young Germans,
+Karl Peters, Joachim Count Pfeil and Dr Jühlke, concluded a "treaty" in
+November 1884 with a chieftain in Usambara who was declared to be
+independent of Zanzibar. Other treaties followed, and on the 17th of
+February 1885, the German emperor granted a charter of protection to the
+Colonization Society. The German acquisitions were resented by Zanzibar,
+but were acquiesced in by the British government (the second Gladstone
+administration). The sultan was forced to acknowledge their validity,
+and to grant a German company a lease of his mainland territories south
+of the mouth of the Umba river, a British company formed by Mackinnon
+taking a lease of the territories north of that point. The story of the
+negotiations between Great Britain, Germany and France which led to this
+result is told elsewhere (see AFRICA, section 5). By the agreement of
+the 1st of July 1890, between the British and German governments, and by
+agreements concluded between Germany and Portugal in 1886 and 1894, and
+Germany and the Congo Free State in 1884 and later dates, the German
+sphere of influence attained its present area. On the 28th of October
+1890 the sultan of Zanzibar ceded absolutely to Germany the mainland
+territories already leased to a German company, receiving as
+compensation Ł200,000.
+
+While these negotiations were going on, various German companies had set
+to work to exploit the country, and on the 16th of August 1888 the
+German East African Company, the lessee of the Zanzibar mainland strip,
+took over the administration from the Arabs. This was followed, five
+days later, by a revolt of all the coast Arabs against German rule--the
+Germans, raw hands at the task of managing Orientals, having aroused
+intense hostility by their brusque treatment of the dispossessed rulers.
+The company being unable to quell the revolt, Captain Hermann
+Wissmann--subsequently Major Hermann von Wissmann (1853-1905)--was sent
+out by Prince Bismarck as imperial commissioner. Wissmann, with 1000
+soldiers, chiefly Sudanese officered by Germans, and a German naval
+contingent, succeeded by the end of 1889 in crushing the power of the
+Arabs. Wissmann remained in the country until 1891 as commissioner, and
+later (1895-1896) was for eighteen months governor of the colony--as the
+German sphere had been constituted by proclamation (1st of January
+1897). Towards the native population Wissmann's attitude was
+conciliatory, and under his rule the development of the resources of the
+country was pushed on. Equal success did not attend the efforts of other
+administrators; in 1891-1892 Karl Peters had great trouble with the
+tribes in the Kilimanjaro district and resorted to very harsh methods,
+such as the execution of women, to maintain his authority. In 1896
+Peters was condemned by a disciplinary court for a misuse of official
+power, and lost his commission. After 1891, in which year the Wahehe
+tribe ambushed and almost completely annihilated a German military force
+of 350 men under Baron von Zelewski, there were for many years no
+serious risings against German authority, which by the end of 1898 had
+been established over almost the whole of the hinterland. The
+development of the country was, however, slow, due in part to the
+disinclination of the Reichstag to vote supplies sufficient for the
+building of railways to the fertile lake regions. Count von Götzen
+(governor 1901-1906) adopted the policy of maintaining the authority of
+native rulers as far as possible, but as over the greater part of the
+colony the natives have no political organizations of any size, the
+chief burden of government rests on the German authorities. In August
+1905 serious disturbances broke out among the Bantu tribes in the
+colony. The revolt was due largely to resentment against the
+restrictions enforced by the Germans in their efforts at civilization,
+including compulsory work on European plantations in certain districts.
+Moreover, it is stated that the Herero in rebellion in German South-west
+Africa sent word to the east coast natives to follow their example, an
+instance of the growing solidarity of the black races of Africa. Though
+the revolt spread over a very large area, the chief centre of
+disturbance was the region between Nyasa and the coast at Kilwa and
+Lindi. Besides a number of settlers a Roman Catholic bishop and a party
+of four missionaries and nuns were murdered in the Kilwa hinterland,
+while nearer Nyasa the warlike Wangoni held possession of the country.
+The Germans raised levies of Masai and Sudanese, and brought natives
+from New Guinea to help in suppressing the rising, besides sending naval
+and military contingents from Germany. In general, the natives, when
+encountered, were easily dispersed, but it was not until March 1906 that
+the coast regions were again quiet. In July following the Wangoni were
+beaten in a decisive engagement. It was officially stated that the
+death-roll for the whole war was not below 120,000 men, women and
+children. In 1907 a visit was paid to the colony by Herr B. Dernburg,
+the colonial secretary. As a result of this visit more humane methods in
+the treatment of the natives were introduced, and measures taken to
+develop more fully the economic resources of the country.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--S. Passarge and others, _Das deutsche Kolonialreich_,
+ Erster Band (Leipzig, 1909); P. Reichard, _Deutsch Ostafrika, das Land
+ und seine Bewohner_ (Leipzig, 1892); F. Stuhlmann, _Mit Emin Pasha im
+ Herzen von Afrika_ (Berlin, 1894); Brix Foerster, _Deutsch-Ostafrika;
+ Geographie und Geschichte_ (Leipzig, 1890); Oscar Baumann, In
+ _Deutsch-Ostafrika während des Aufstands_ (Vienna, 1890), _Usambara
+ und seine Nachbargebiete_ (Berlin, 1891), and _Durch Massailand zur
+ Nilquelle_ (Berlin, 1894). For special studies see P. Samassa, _Die
+ Besiedelung Deutsch-Ostafrikas_ (Leipzig, 1909); A. Engler, _Die
+ Pflanzenwelt Ost-Afrikas und der Nachbargebiete_ (Berlin, 1895-1896)
+ and other works by the same author; Stromer von Reichenbach, _Die
+ Geologie der deutschen Schutzgebiete in Afrika_ (Munich and Leipzig,
+ 1896); W. Bornhardt, _Deutsch-Ostafrika_ (Berlin, 1898); F.
+ Fullerborn, _Beiträge zur physischen Anthropologie der
+ Nord-Nyassaländer_ (Berlin, 1902), a fine series of pictures of native
+ types, and _Das Deutsche Nyassa- und Ruwuma-gebiet, Land und Leute_
+ (Berlin, 1906); K. Weule, _Native Life in East Africa_ (London, 1909);
+ Hans Meyer, _Der Kilimandjaro_ (Berlin, 1900) and _Die Eisenbahnen im
+ tropischen Afrika_ (Leipzig, 1902); J. Strandes, _Die Portugiesenzeit
+ von Deutsch- u. Englisch-Ostafrika_ (Berlin, 1899), a valuable
+ monograph on the Portuguese period. See also British Official Reports
+ on East Africa (specially No. 4221 ann. ser.), the German White Books
+ and annual reports, the _Mitteilungen aus den deutschen
+ Schutzgebiete_, and the _Deutsches Kolonialblatt_, published
+ fortnightly at Berlin since 1890. The _Deutscher Kolonial-Atlas_ has
+ maps on the 1:1,000,000 scale. (F. R. C.)
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN EVANGELICAL SYNOD OF NORTH AMERICA, a Protestant church dating
+from October 1840, and known, in its early years, as the German
+Evangelical Association of the West. It was formed by six German
+ministers who had been ordained in Prussia and were engaged in
+missionary and pioneer work in Missouri and Illinois. The original
+organization was strengthened in 1858 by amalgamation with the German
+Evangelical Church Association of Ohio, and later by the inclusion of
+the German United Evangelical Synod of the East (1860), the Evangelical
+Synod of the North-West (1872) and the United Evangelical Synod of the
+East (1872). The church bases its position on the Bible as interpreted
+by the symbols of the Lutheran and Reformed churches so far as they are
+in agreement, points of difference being left to "that liberty of
+conscience which, as a component part of the basis of man's ultimate
+responsibility to God himself, is the inalienable privilege of every
+believer." The church, which has (1909) 985 ministers and some 238,000
+communicant members, is divided into seventeen districts, with officers
+responsible to the General Synod, which meets every four years. There
+are boards for home and foreign missions, the latter operating chiefly
+in the Central Provinces of India. The literature of the church is
+mainly in German, though English is rapidly gaining ground.
+
+
+
+
+GERMANIC LAWS, EARLY. Of those Germanic laws of the early middle ages
+which are known as _leges barbarorum_, we here deal with the principal
+examples other than Frankish, viz. (1) _Leges Wisigothorum_, (2) _Lex
+Burgundionum_, (3) _Pactus Alamannorum_ and _Lex Alamannorum_, (4) _Lex
+Bajuvariorum_, (5) _Lex Saxonum_, (6) _Lex Frisionum_, (7) _Lex
+Angliorum et Werinorum, hoc est, Thuringorum_, and (8) _Leges
+Langobardorum_. All these laws may in general be described as codes of
+procedure and tariffs of compositions. They present somewhat similar
+features with the Salic law, but often differ from it in the date of
+compilation, the amount of fines, the number and nature of the crimes,
+the number, rank, duties and titles of the officers, &c. For the Salic
+law and other Frankish laws, see SALIC LAW, and for the edict of
+Theodoric I., which was applicable to the Ostrogoths and Romans, see
+ROMAN LAW.
+
+ For the whole body of the Germanic laws see P. Canciani, _Barbarorum
+ leges antiquae_ (Venice, 1781-1789); F. Walter, _Corpus juris
+ germanici antiqui_ (Berlin, 1824); _Monumenta Germaniae historica,
+ Leges_. For further information on the codes in general, see H.M.
+ Zöpfl, _Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte_ (4th ed., Heidelberg, 1871-1876);
+ J.E.O. Stobbe, _Geschichte der deutschen Rechtsquellen_ (Brunswick,
+ 1860-1864); Paul Viollet, _Histoire du droit civil français_ (2nd ed.,
+ Paris, 1893); H. Brunner, _Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte_ (2nd ed.,
+ Leipzig, 1906).
+
+1. _Leges Wisigothorum._--Karl Zeumer's edition of these laws in the 4to
+series of the _Mon. Germ. Hist._ throws new light on all questions
+relating to their date and composition. It is now certain that the
+earliest written code of the Visigoths dates back to King Euric
+(466-485). Besides his own constitutions, Euric included in this
+collection constitutions of his predecessors, Theodoric I. (419-451),
+Thorismund (451-453), and Theodoric II. (453-466), and he arranged the
+whole in a logical order. Of this code fragments of chapters cclxxvi. to
+cccxxxvi.[1] have been discovered in a palimpsest MS. in the
+Bibliothčque Nationale at Paris (Latin coll., No. 12161), a fact which
+proves that the code ran over a large area. Euric's code was used for
+all cases between Goths, and between them and Romans; in cases between
+Romans, Roman law was used. At the instance of Euric's son, Alaric II.,
+an examination was made of the Roman laws in use among Romans in his
+dominions, and the resulting compilation was approved in 506 at an
+assembly at Aire, in Gascony, and is known as the Breviary of Alaric,
+and sometimes as the _Liber Aniani_, from the fact that the authentic
+copies bear the signature of the _referendarius_ Anian.
+
+Euric's code remained in force among the Visigoths of Spain until the
+reign of Leovigild (568-586), who made a new one, improving upon that of
+his predecessor. This work is lost, and we have no direct knowledge of
+any fragment of it. In the 3rd codification, however, many provisions
+have been taken from the 2nd, and these are designated by the word
+"_antiqua_"; by means of these "_antiqua_" we are enabled in a certain
+measure to reconstruct the work of Leovigild.
+
+After the reign of Leovigild the legislation of the Visigoths underwent
+a transformation. The new laws made by the kings were declared to be
+applicable to all the subjects in the kingdom, of whatever race--in
+other words, they became territorial; and this principle of
+territoriality was gradually extended to the ancient code. Moreover, the
+conversion of Reccared I. (586-601) to orthodoxy effaced the religious
+differences among his subjects, and all subjects, _qua_ Christians, had
+to submit to the canons of the councils, which were made obligatory by
+the kings. After this change had been accepted, Recceswinth (649-672)
+made a new code, which was applicable to Visigoths and Romans alike.
+This code, known as the _Liber judiciorum_, is divided into 12 books,
+which are subdivided into _tituli_ and chapters (_aerae_). It comprises
+324 constitutions taken from Leovigild's collection, a few of the laws
+of Reccared and Sisebut, 99 laws of Chindaswinth (642-653), and 87 of
+Recceswinth. A recension of this code of Recceswinth was made in 681 by
+King Erwig (680-687), and is known as the _Lex Wisigothorum renovata_;
+and, finally, some additamenta were made by Egica (687-702). In Zeumer's
+edition of the _Leges Wisigothorum_ the versions of Recceswinth and
+Erwig, where they differ from each other, are shown in parallel columns,
+and the laws later than Erwig are denoted by the sign "_nov_."
+
+ For further information see the preface to Zeumer's edition; H.
+ Brunner, _Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte_ (2nd ed., Leipzig, 1906); Ureńa y
+ Smenyaud, _La Legislacion Gotico-hispana_ (Madrid, 1905).
+
+2. _Lex Burgundionum._--This code was compiled by King Gundobald
+(474-516), very probably after his defeat by Clovis in 500. Some
+additamenta were subsequently introduced either by Gundobald himself or
+by his son Sigismund. This law bears the title of _Liber
+Constitutionum_, which shows that it emanated from the king; it is also
+known as the _Lex Gundobada_ or _Lex Gombata_. It was used for cases
+between Burgundians, but was also applicable to cases between
+Burgundians and Romans. For cases between Romans, however, Gundobald
+compiled the _Lex Romana Burgundionum_, called sometimes, through a
+misreading of the MSS., the _Liber Papiani_ or simply _Papianus_. The
+barbarian law of the Burgundians shows strong traces of Roman influence.
+It recognizes the will and attaches great importance to written deeds,
+but on the other hand sanctions the judicial duel and the _cojuratores_
+(sworn witnesses). The vehement protest made in the 9th century by
+Agobard, bishop of Lyons, against the _Lex Gundobada_ shows that it was
+still in use at that period. So late as the 10th and even the 11th
+centuries we find the law of the Burgundians invoked as personal law in
+Cluny charters, but doubtless these passages refer to accretions of
+local customs rather than to actual paragraphs of the ancient code.
+
+ The text of the _Lex Burgundionum_ has been published by F. Bluhme in
+ the _Mon. Germ. hist._, _Leges_, iii. 525; by Karl Binding in the
+ _Fontes rerum Bernensium_ (vol. i., 1880); by J.E. Valentin Smith
+ (Paris, 1889 seq.); and by von Salis (1892) in the 4to series of the
+ _Mon. Germ. hist._ Cf. R. Dareste, "La Loi Gombette," in the _Journal
+ des savants_ (July 1891).
+
+3. _Pactus Alamannorum_ and _Lex Alamannorum._--Of the laws of the
+Alamanni, who dwelt between the Rhine and the Lech, and spread over
+Alsace and what is now Switzerland to the south of Lake Constance, we
+possess two different texts. The earlier text, of which five short
+fragments have come down to us, is known as the _Pactus Alamannorum_,
+and from the persistent recurrence of the expression "et sic convenit"
+was most probably drawn up by an official commission. The reference to
+affranchisement _in ecclesia_ shows that it was composed at a period
+subsequent to the conversion of the Alamanni to Christianity. There is
+no doubt that the text dates back to the reign of Dagobert I., i.e. to
+the first half of the 7th century. The later text, known as the _Lex
+Alamannorum_, dates from a period when Alamannia was independent under
+national dukes, but recognized the theoretical suzerainty of the
+Frankish kings. There seems no reason to doubt the St Gall MS., which
+states that the law had its origin in an agreement between the great
+Alamannic lords and Duke Landfrid, who ruled the duchy from 709 to 730.
+
+ The two texts have been published by J. Merkel in the _Mon. Germ.
+ hist._, _Leges_, iii., and by Karl Lehmann in the 4to series of the
+ same collection.
+
+4. _Lex Bajuvariorum._--We possess an important law of the Bavarians,
+whose duchy was situated in the region east of the Lech, and was an
+outpost of Germany against the Huns, known later as Avars. Parts of this
+law have been taken directly from the Visigothic law of Euric and from
+the law of the Alamanni. The Bavarian law, therefore, is later than that
+of the Alamanni. It dates unquestionably from a period when the Frankish
+authority was very strong in Bavaria, when the dukes were vassals of the
+Frankish kings. Immediately after the revolt of Bavaria in 743 the
+Bavarian duke Odilo was forced to submit to Pippin and Carloman, the
+sons of Charles Martel, and to recognize the Frankish suzerainty. About
+the same period, too, the church of Bavaria was organized by St
+Boniface, and the country divided into several bishoprics; and we find
+frequent references to these bishops (in the plural) in the law of the
+Bavarians. On the other hand, we know that the law is anterior to the
+reign of Duke Tassilo III. (749-788). The date of compilation must,
+therefore, be placed between 743 and 749.
+
+ There is an edition of the _Lex Bajuvariorum_ by J. Merkel in the
+ _Mon. Germ. hist._, _Leges_, iii. 183, and another was undertaken by
+ E. von Schwind for the 4to series of the same collection. Cf. von
+ Schwind's article in the _Neues Archiv_, vol. xxxi.
+
+5. _Lex Saxonum._--Germany comprised two other duchies, Saxony and
+Frisia, of each of which we possess a text of law. The _Lex Saxonum_ has
+come down to us in two MSS. and two old editions (those of B.J. Herold
+and du Tillet), and the text has been edited by Karl von Richthofen in
+the _Mon. Germ. hist._, _Leges_, v. The law contains ancient customary
+enactments of Saxony, and, in the form in which it has reached us, is
+later than the conquest of Saxony by Charlemagne. It is preceded by two
+capitularies of Charlemagne for Saxony--the _Capitulatio de partibus
+Saxoniae_ (A. Boretius i. 68), which dates undoubtedly from 782, and is
+characterized by great severity, death being the penalty for every
+offence against the Christian religion; and the _Capitulare Saxonicum_
+(A. Boretius i. 71), of the 28th of October 797, in which Charlemagne
+shows less brutality and pronounces simple compositions for misdeeds
+which formerly entailed death. The _Lex Saxonum_ apparently dates from
+803, since it contains provisions which are in the _Capitulare legi
+Ribuariae additum_ of that year. The law established the ancient
+customs, at the same time eliminating anything that was contrary to the
+spirit of Christianity; it proclaimed the peace of the churches, whose
+possessions it guaranteed and whose right of asylum it recognized.
+
+6. _Lex Frisionum._--This consists of a medley of documents of the most
+heterogeneous character. Some of its enactments are purely pagan--thus
+one paragraph allows the mother to kill her new-born child, and another
+prescribes the immolation to the gods of the defiler of their temple;
+others are purely Christian, such as those which prohibit incestuous
+marriages and working on Sunday. The law abounds in contradictions and
+repetitions, and the compositions are calculated in different moneys.
+From this it would appear that the documents were merely materials
+collected from various sources and possibly with a view to the
+compilation of a homogeneous law. These materials were apparently
+brought together at the beginning of the 9th century, at a time of
+intense legislative activity at the court of Charlemagne.
+
+ There are no MSS. of the document extant; our knowledge of it is based
+ upon B.J. Herold's edition (_Originum ac Germanicarum antiquitatum
+ libri_, Basel, 1557), which has been reproduced by Karl von Richthofen
+ in the _Mon. Germ. hist._, _Leges_, iii. 631.
+
+7. _Lex Angliorum el Werinorum, hoc est, Thuringorum._--In early times
+there dwelt in Thuringia, south of the river Unstrut, the Angli, who
+gave their name to the _pagus Engili_, and to the east, between the
+Saale and the Elster, the Warni (Werini, or Varini), whose name is seen
+in Werenofeld. In the 9th century, however, this region (then called
+Werenofeld) was occupied by the Sorabi, and the Warni and Angli either
+coalesced with the Thuringi or sought an asylum in the north of Germany.
+A collection of laws has come down to us bearing the name of these two
+peoples, the _Lex Angliorum et Werinorum, hoc est, Thuringorum_. This
+text is a collection of local customs arranged in the same order as the
+law of the Ripuarians. Parts of it are based on the _Capitulare legi
+Ribuariae additum_ of 803, and it seems to have been drawn up in the
+same conditions and circumstances as the law of the Saxons. There is an
+edition of this code by Karl von Richthofen in the _Mon. Germ. hist._,
+_Leges_, v. 103. The old opinion that the law originated in south
+Holland is entirely without foundation.
+
+8. _Leges Langobardorum._--We possess a fair amount of information on
+the origin of the last barbarian code, the laws of the Lombards. The
+first part, consisting of 388 chapters, is known as the _Edictus
+Langobardorum_, and was promulgated by King Rothar at a diet held at
+Pavia on the 22nd of November 643. This work, composed at one time and
+arranged on a systematic plan, is very remarkable. The compilers knew
+Roman law, but drew upon it only for their method of presentation and
+for their terminology; and the document presents Germanic law in its
+purity. Rothar's edict was augmented by his successors; Grimoald (668)
+added nine chapters; Liutprand (713-735), fifteen volumes, containing a
+great number of ecclesiastical enactments; Ratchis (746), eight
+chapters; and Aistulf (755), thirteen chapters. After the union of the
+Lombards to the Frankish kingdom, the capitularies made for the entire
+kingdom were applicable to Italy. There were also special capitularies
+for Italy, called _Capitula Italica_, some of which were appended to the
+edict of Rothar.
+
+At an early date compilations were formed in Italy for the use of legal
+practitioners and jurists. Eberhard, duke and margrave of Rhaetia and
+Friuli, arranged the contents of the edict with its successive
+additamenta into a _Concordia de singulis causis_ (829-832). In the 10th
+century a collection was made of the capitularies in use in Italy, and
+this was known as the _Capitulare Langobardorum_. Then appeared, under
+the influence of the school of law at Pavia, the _Liber legis
+Langobardorum_, also called _Liber Papiensis_ (beginning of 11th
+century), and the _Lombarda_ (end of 11th century) in two forms--that
+given in a Monte Cassino MS. and known as the _Lombarda Casinensis_, and
+the _Lombarda Vulgata_.
+
+ There are editions of the _Edictus_, the _Concordia_, and the _Liber
+ Papiensis_ by F. Bluhme and A. Boretius in the _Mon. Germ. hist.,
+ Leges_, iv. Bluhme also gives the rubrics of the _Lombardae_, which
+ were published by F. Lindenberg in his _Codex legum antiquarum_ in
+ 1613. For further information on the laws of the Lombards see J.
+ Merkel, _Geschichte des Langobardenrechts_ (1850); A. Boretius, _Die
+ Kapitularien im Langobardenreich_ (1864); and C. Kier, _Edictus
+ Rotari_ (Copenhagen, 1898). Cf. R. Dareste in the _Nouvelle Revue
+ historique de droit français et étranger_ (1900, p. 143). (C. Pf.)
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] The lacunae in these fragments have been filled in by the aid of
+ the law of the Bavarians, where the chief provisions are reproduced.
+
+
+
+
+GERMANICUS CAESAR (15 B.C.-A.D. 19), a Roman general and provincial
+governor in the reign of Tiberius. The name Germanicus, the only one by
+which he is known in history, he inherited from his father, Nero
+Claudius Drusus, the famous general, brother of Tiberius and stepson of
+Augustus. His mother was the younger Antonia, daughter of Marcus
+Antonius and niece of Augustus, and he married Agrippina, the
+granddaughter of the same emperor. It was natural, therefore, that he
+should be regarded as a candidate for the purple. Augustus, it would
+seem, long hesitated whether he should name him as his successor, and as
+a compromise required his uncle Tiberius to adopt him, though Tiberius
+had a son of his own. Of his early years and education little is known.
+That he possessed considerable literary abilities, and that these were
+carefully trained, we gather, both from the speeches which Tacitus puts
+into his mouth, and from the reputation he left as an orator, as
+attested by Suetonius and Ovid, and from the extant fragments of his
+works.
+
+At the age of twenty he served his apprenticeship as a soldier under
+Tiberius, and was rewarded with the triumphal insignia for his services
+in crushing the revolt in Dalmatia and Pannonia. In A.D. 11 he
+accompanied Tiberius in his campaign on the Rhine, undertaken, in
+consequence of the defeat of Varus, with the object of securing the
+German frontier. In 12 he was made consul, and increased his popularity
+by appearing as an advocate in the courts of justice, and by the
+celebration of brilliant games. Soon afterwards he was appointed by
+Augustus to the important command of the eight legions on the Rhine. The
+news of the emperor's death (14) found Germanicus at Lugdunum (Lyons),
+where he was superintending the census of Gaul. Close upon this came the
+report that a mutiny had broken out among his legions on the lower
+Rhine. Germanicus hurried back to the camp, which was now in open
+insurrection. The tumult was with difficulty quelled, partly by
+well-timed concessions, for which the authority of the emperor was
+forged, but chiefly owing to his personal popularity. Some of the
+insurgents actually proposed that he should put himself at their head
+and secure the empire for himself, but their offer was rejected with
+indignation. In order to calm the excitement Germanicus determined at
+once on an active campaign. Crossing the Rhine, he attacked and routed
+the Marsi, and laid waste the valley of the Ems. In the following year
+he marched against Arminius, the conqueror of Varus, and performed the
+last rites over the remains of the Roman soldiers that still lay there
+unburied, erecting a barrow to mark the spot. Arminius, however,
+favoured by the marshy ground, was able to hold his own, and it required
+another campaign before he was finally defeated. A masterly combined
+movement by land and water enabled Germanicus to concentrate his forces
+against the main body of the Germans encamped on the Weser, and to crush
+them in two obstinately contested battles. A monument erected on the
+field proclaimed that the army of Tiberius had conquered every tribe
+between the Rhine and the Elbe. Great, however, as the success of the
+Roman arms had been, it was not such as to justify this boastful
+inscription; we read of renewed attacks from the barbarians, and plans
+of a fourth campaign for the next summer.
+
+But the success of Germanicus had already stirred the jealousy and fears
+of Tiberius, and he was reluctantly compelled to return to Rome. On the
+26th of May 17 he celebrated a triumph. The enthusiasm with which he was
+welcomed, not only by the populace, but by the emperor's own
+praetorians, was so great that the earliest pretext was seized to remove
+him from the capital. He was sent to the East with extraordinary powers
+to settle a disputed succession in Parthia and Armenia. At the same time
+Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso, one of the most violent and ambitious of the old
+nobility, was sent as governor of Syria to watch his movements.
+Germanicus proceeded by easy stages to his province, halting on his way
+in Dalmatia, and visiting the battlefield of Actium, Athens, Ilium, and
+other places of historic interest. At Rhodes he met his coadjutor Piso,
+who was seeking everywhere to thwart and malign him. When at last he
+reached his destination, he found little difficulty in effecting the
+settlement of the disturbed provinces, notwithstanding Piso's violent
+and persistent opposition. At Artaxata Zeno, the popular candidate for
+the throne, was crowned king of Armenia. To the provinces of Cappadocia
+and Commagene Roman governors were assigned; Parthia was conciliated by
+the banishment of the dethroned king Vonones.
+
+After wintering in Syria Germanicus started for a tour in Egypt. The
+chief motive for his journey was love of travel and antiquarian study,
+and it seems never to have occurred to him, till he was warned by
+Tiberius, that he was thereby transgressing an unwritten law which
+forbade any Roman of rank to set foot in Egypt without express
+permission. On his return to Syria he found that all his arrangements
+had been upset by Piso. Violent recriminations followed, the result of
+which, it would seem, was a promise on the part of Piso to quit the
+province. But at this juncture Germanicus was suddenly attacked at
+Epidaphne near Antioch by a violent illness, which he himself and his
+friends attributed to poison administered by Plancina, the wife of Piso,
+at the instigation of Tiberius. Whether these suspicions were true is
+open to question; it seems more probable that his death was due to
+natural causes. His ashes were brought to Rome in the following year
+(20) by his wife Agrippina, and deposited in the grave of Augustus. He
+had nine children, six of whom, three sons and three daughters, survived
+him, amongst them the future emperor Gaius and the notorious Agrippina,
+the mother of Nero. The news of his death cast a gloom over the whole
+empire. Nor was Germanicus unworthy of this passionate devotion. He had
+wiped out a great national disgrace; he had quelled the most formidable
+foe of Rome. His private life had been stainless, and he possessed a
+singularly attractive personality. Yet there were elements of weakness
+in his character which his short life only half revealed: an impetuosity
+which made him twice threaten to take his own life; a superstitious vein
+which impelled him to consult oracles and shrink from bad omens; an
+amiable dilettantism which led him to travel in Egypt while his enemy
+was plotting his ruin; a want of nerve and resolution which prevented
+him from coming to an open rupture with Piso till it was too late.
+
+He possessed considerable literary abilities; his speeches and Greek
+comedies were highly spoken of by his contemporaries. But the only
+specimen of his work that has come down to us is the translation in
+Latin hexameters (generally attributed to him, although some consider
+Domitian the author), together with scholia, of the _Phaenomena_ of
+Aratus, which is superior to those of Cicero and Avienus (best edition
+by A. Breysig, 1867; 1899, without the scholia). A few extant Greek and
+Latin epigrams also bear the name Germanicus.
+
+ In addition to monographs by A. Zingerle (Trent, 1867) and A. Breysig
+ (Erfurt, 1892), there are treatises on the German campaigns by E. von
+ Wietersheim (1850), P. Höfer (1884), F. Knoke (1887, 1889), W. Fricke
+ (1889), A. Taramelli (1891), Dahm (1902).
+
+ See Tacitus, _Annals_, i.-iv. (ed. Furneaux); Suetonius, _Augustus,
+ Tiberius_; J.C. Tarver, _Tiberius_ (1902); Merivale, _Hist. of the
+ Romans under the Empire_, chs. 42, 43; H. Schiller, _Geschichte der
+ römischen Kaiserzeit_, i. 1 (1883), pp. 227, 258, 261-266, 270-276; M.
+ Schanz, _Geschichte der römischen Litteratur_, pt. ii. (2nd ed.,
+ 1901), and Teuffel-Schwabe, _Hist. of Roman Literature_ (Eng. tr.,
+ 1900), 275.
+
+
+
+
+GERMANIUM (symbol Ge, atomic weight 72.5); one of the metallic elements
+included in the same natural family as carbon, silicon, tin and lead. It
+was discovered in 1886 by C. Winkler in argyrodite, a mineral found at
+Freiberg in Saxony. On examination of the metal and its salts it was
+shown to be identical with the hypothetical element _ekasilicon_, whose
+properties had been predicted by D. Mendeléeff many years previously.
+The element is of extremely rare occurrence, being met with only in
+argyrodite and, to a very small extent, in euxenite. It may be obtained
+from argyrodite by heating the mineral in a current of hydrogen; or by
+heating the dioxide to redness with carbon. It forms grey coloured
+octahedra of specific gravity 5.496 at 20° C., melting at 900° C.; it
+burns at a red heat, is insoluble in hydrochloric acid, but dissolves in
+_aqua regia_, and is also soluble in molten alkalis. Two oxides of
+germanium are known, the _dioxide_, GeO2, being obtained by roasting the
+sulphide and treatment with nitric acid. It is a white powder, very
+slightly soluble in water, and possesses acid properties. By heating
+with a small quantity of magnesium it is converted into _germanious
+oxide_, GeO. By heating the metal with chlorine, _germanic chloride_,
+GeCl4, is obtained as a colourless fuming liquid boiling at 86-87° C.,
+it is decomposed by water forming a hydrated germanium dioxide.
+_Germanium dichloride_, GeCl2, and _germanium chloroform_, GeHCl3, have
+also been described.
+
+Germanium compounds on fusion with alkaline carbonates and sulphur form
+salts known as _thiogermanates_. If excess of a mineral acid be added to
+a solution of an alkaline thiogermanate a white precipitate of
+_germanium disulphide_, GeS2, is obtained. It can also be obtained by
+passing sulphuretted hydrogen through a solution of the dioxide in
+hydrochloric acid. It is appreciably soluble in water, and also in
+solutions of the caustic alkalis and alkaline sulphides. By heating the
+disulphide in a current of hydrogen, _germanious sulphide_, GeS, is
+formed. It sublimes in thin plates of a dark colour and metallic lustre,
+and is soluble in solutions of the caustic alkalis. Alkyl compounds of
+germanium such as _germanium tetra-ethyl_, Ge(C2H5)4, a liquid boiling
+at 160° C., have been obtained. The germanium salts are most readily
+recognized by the white precipitate of the disulphide, formed in acid
+solutions, on passing sulphuretted hydrogen. The atomic weight of the
+element was determined by C. Winkler by analysis of the pure chloride
+GeCl4, the value obtained being 72.32, whilst Lecoq de Boisbaudran
+(_Comptes rendus_, 1886, 103, 452), by a comparison of the lines in the
+spark spectrum of the element, deduced the value 72.3.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN LANGUAGE. Together with English and Frisian, the German language
+forms part of the West Germanic group of languages. To this group
+belongs also Langobardian, a dialect which died out in the 9th or 10th
+century, while Burgundian, traces of which are not met with later than
+the 5th century, is usually classed with the East Germanic group. Both
+these tongues were at an early stage crushed out by Romance dialects, a
+fate which also overtook the idiom of the Western Franks, who, in the
+so-called _Strassburg Oaths_[1] of 842, use the Romance tongue, and are
+addressed in that tongue by Louis the German.
+
+Leaving English and Frisian aside, we understand by _Deutsche_
+_Sprache_ the language of those West Germanic tribes, who, at their
+earliest appearance in history, spoke a Germanic tongue, and still speak
+it at the present day. The chief of these tribes are: the Saxons, the
+Franks (but with the restriction noted above), the Chatti (Hessians),
+Thuringians, Alemannians and Bavarians. This definition naturally
+includes the languages spoken in the Low Countries, Flemish and Dutch,
+which are offsprings of the Low Franconian dialect, mixed with Frisian
+and Saxon elements; but, as the literary development of these languages
+has been in its later stages entirely independent of that of the German
+language, they are excluded from the present survey.
+
+The German language, which is spoken by about seventy-one millions, and
+consequently occupies in this respect the third place among European
+languages, borders, in the west and south, on Romance languages (French,
+Italian), and also to some extent on Slavonic. On Italian and Slovenian
+territory there are several German-speaking "islands," notably the Sette
+and Tredici Communi, east and north-east of the Lake of Garda, and the
+"Gottschee Ländchen" to the south of Laibach. The former of these is,
+however, on the point of dying out. Neighbours on the east, where the
+boundary line runs by no means as straight as on the west or south, are
+the Magyars and again Slavonic races. Here, too, there are numerous
+"islands" on Hungarian and Slavonic territory. Danes and Frisians join
+hands with the Germans in the north.[2]
+
+In the west and south the German language has, compared with its status
+in earlier periods, undoubtedly lost ground, having been encroached upon
+by Romance tongues. This is the case in French Flanders, in Alsace and
+Lorraine, at any rate before the war of 1870, in the valleys south of
+Monte Rosa and in southern Tirol; in Styria and Carinthia the
+encroachment is less marked, but quite perceptible. On the east, on the
+other hand, German steadily spread from the days of Charles the Great
+down to recent times, when it has again lost considerable ground in
+Bohemia, Moravia and Livonia. At the time of Charles the Great the
+eastern frontier extended very little beyond the lower Elbe, following
+this river beyond Magdeburg, whence it passed over to the Saale, the
+Bohemian forest and the river Enns (cf. the map in F. Dahn,
+_Urgeschichte der germanischen und romanischen Völker_, vol. iii.).
+Partly as a result of victories gained by the Germans over the Avars and
+Slavs, partly owing to peaceful colonization, the eastern boundary was
+pushed forward in subsequent centuries; Bohemia was in this way won for
+the German tongue by German colonists in the 13th century, Silesia even
+a little earlier; in Livonia German gained the upper hand during the
+13th century, while about the same time the country of the Prussians was
+conquered and colonized by the knights of the Teutonic order. The
+dialect which these colonists and knights introduced bore the Middle
+German character; and this, in various modifications, combined with Low
+German and even Dutch elements, formed the German spoken in these
+newly-won territories. In the north (Schleswig), where at the time of
+Charles the Great the river Eider formed the linguistic boundary, German
+has gained and is still gaining on Danish.
+
+Before considering the development of the language spoken within these
+boundaries, a word of explanation is perhaps necessary with regard to
+the word _deutsch_. As applied to the language, _deutsch_ first appears
+in the Latin form _theotiscus_, _lingua theotisca_, _teutisca_, in
+certain Latin writings of the 8th and 9th centuries, whereas the
+original Old High German word _thiudisc_, _tiutisc_ (from _thiot_,
+_diot_, "people," and the suffix _-isc_) signified only "appertaining to
+the people," "in the manner of the people." Cf. also Gothic
+_[thorn]iudisko_ as a translation of [Greek: ethnikôs] (Gal. ii. 14).
+It, therefore, seems probable that if the application of the word to the
+language (_lingua theotisca_) was not exactly an invention of Latin
+authors of German nationality, its use in this sense was at least
+encouraged by them in order to distinguish their own vernacular
+(_lingua vulgaris_) from Latin as well as from the _lingua romana_.[3]
+
+In the 8th and 9th centuries German or "Deutsch" first appears as a
+written language in the dialects of Old High German and Old Low German.
+Of an "Urdeutsch" or primitive German, i.e. the common language from
+which these sharply distinguished dialects of the earliest historical
+period must have developed, we have no record; we can only infer its
+character--and it was itself certainly not free from dialectic
+variations--by a study of the above-named and other Germanic dialects. It
+is usual to divide the history of the German language from this earliest
+period, when it appears only in the form of proper names and isolated
+words as glosses to a Latin text, down to the present day, into three
+great sections: (1) Old High German (_Althochdeutsch_) and Old Low German
+(Old Saxon; _Altniederdeutsch_, _Altsächsisch_); (2) Middle High German
+(_Mittelhochdeutsch_) and Middle Low German (Mittelniederdeutsch); and
+(3) Modern High German and Modern Low German (_Neuhochdeutsch_ and
+_Neuniederdeutsch_). It is more difficult to determine the duration of
+the different periods, for it is obvious that the transition from one
+stage of a language to another takes place slowly and gradually.
+
+The first or Old High German period is commonly regarded as extending to
+about the year 1100. The principal characteristic of the change from Old
+High German to Middle High German is the weakening of the unaccented
+vowels in final syllables (cf. O.H.G. _taga_, _gesti_, _geban_, _gabum_
+and M.H.G. _tage_, _geste_, _geben_, _gaben_). But it must be remembered
+that this process began tentatively as early as the 10th century in Low
+German, and also that long, unaccented vowels are preserved in the
+Alemannic dialect as late as the 14th century and even later. Opinion is
+more at variance with regard to the division between the second and
+third periods. Some would date Modern High German from the time of
+Luther, that is to say, from about 1500. But it must be noted that
+certain characteristics attributed to the Modern German vowel system,
+such as lengthening of Middle High German short vowels, the change from
+Middle High German _i_, _u_, _iu_ to Modern High German _ei_, _au_, _eu_
+(_öu_), of Middle High German _ie_, _uo_, _üe_ to Modern High German
+_i_, _u_, _ü_, made their appearance long before 1500. Taking this fact
+into consideration, others distinguish a period of classical Middle High
+German extending to about 1250, and a period of transition (sometimes
+called _Frühneuhochdeutsch_, or Early Modern High German) from 1250 to
+1650. The principal characteristics of Modern High German would then
+consist in a greater stability of the grammatical and syntactical rules,
+due to the efforts of earlier grammarians, such as Schottelius,
+Gottsched and others, and the substitution of a single vowel sound for
+the varying vowels of the singular and plural of the preterite of strong
+verbs (cf. Middle High German _schreib_, _schriben_, and Modern High
+German _schrieb_, _schrieben_, &c.). The much debated question of the
+origins of Modern High German has been recently reopened by O. Behaghel
+(_Geschichte der deutschen Sprache, l.c._ 661), who hopes that a more
+satisfactory solution may be arrived at by the study of certain
+syntactical peculiarities to be seen in the dialects of more recent
+periods.
+
+As the middle ages did not produce a German _Schriftsprache_ or literary
+language in the modern sense of the word, which--as is undoubtedly the
+case in Modern German--might have influenced the spoken language
+(_Umgangssprache_), the history of the language in its earlier stages is
+a history of different dialects. These dialects will, therefore, claim
+our attention at some length.
+
+It may be assumed that the languages of the different West Germanic
+tribes enumerated above were, before the appearance of the tribes in
+history, distinguished by many dialectic variations; this was certainly
+the case immediately after the Migrations, when the various races began
+to settle down. But these differences, consisting presumably in matters
+of phonology and vocabulary, were nowhere so pronounced as to exclude a
+mutual understanding of individuals belonging to different tribes. One
+might compare the case of the Poles and Czechs of the present day.
+During the 6th century, however, a phonological process set in, which
+ultimately resulted in the separation of Germany into two great
+linguistic divisions, south and north, or, as the languages are called,
+High and Low German. This fundamental change, which is known as the
+second or High German Soundshifting (_Lautverschiebung_), spread
+northward from the mountainous districts in the south, and, whatever its
+cause may have been,[4] left behind it clear and easily recognizable
+effects on the Germanic voiced stop _d_, which became changed to _t_,
+and more especially on the voiceless stops _t_, _p_ and _k_. Dialects
+which have shifted initial _t_ and _tt_ in the middle of a word to the
+affricate _tz_ (written _z_, _tz_) and _p_ and _k_ in corresponding
+positions to the affricates _pf_ and _k[chi]_ (written _ch_), further,
+_t_, _p_ and _k_ in the middle of words between vowels, to the double
+spirant _zz_ (now written _ss_, _sz_), _ff_, _hh_ (written _ch_), are
+called High German; those in which these changes have not taken place
+form the Low German group, this group agreeing in this respect with
+English and Frisian.
+
+Of these sound changes, that of _t_ to _tz_ and _zz_ (_ss_) is the most
+universal, extending over the whole region in which shifting occurs;
+that of _k_ to _k[chi]_ (_ch_), the most restricted, being only found in
+Old Bavarian, and in the Swiss pronunciation, e.g. in _chind_. The
+remaining dialects occupy positions between the two extremes of complete
+shifting and the absence of shifting. Some Franconian dialects, for
+instance, leave _p_ unchanged under certain conditions, and in one
+dialect at least, Middle Franconian, _t_ has remained after vowels in
+certain pronominal forms (_dat_, _wat_, _allet_, &c.). On this ground a
+subdivision has been made in the High German dialects into (a) an Upper
+German (_Oberdeutsch_) and (b) a Middle German (_Mitteldeutsch_) group;
+and this subdivision practically holds good for all periods of the
+language, although in Old High German times the Middle German group is
+only represented, as far as the written language is concerned, by
+Franconian dialects.
+
+As the scientific study of the German language advanced there arose a
+keen revival of interest--and that not merely on the part of
+scholars--in the dialects which were so long held in contempt as a mere
+corruption of the _Schriftsprache_.[5] We are still in the midst of a
+movement which, under the guidance of scholars, has, during the last
+three decades, bestowed great care on many of the existing dialects;
+phonological questions have received most attention, but problems of
+syntax have also not been neglected. Monumental works like Wenker's
+_Sprachatlas des deutschen Reiches_ and dialect dictionaries are either
+in course of publication or preparing;[6] while the difficult questions
+concerned with defining the boundaries of the various dialects and
+explaining the reasons for them form the subject of many monographs.[7]
+
+Beginning in the north we shall now pass briefly in review the dialects
+spoken throughout the German-speaking area.
+
+
+ A. THE LOW GERMAN DIALECTS
+
+ The Low German dialects, as we have seen, stand nearest to the English
+ and Frisian languages, owing to the total absence of the consonantal
+ shifting which characterizes High German, as well as to other
+ peculiarities of sounds and inflections, e.g. the loss of the nasals
+ _m_ and _n_ before the spirants _f_, _s_ and _p_. Cf. Old Saxon _fif_
+ (five), _us_ (us), _kup_ (cf. uncouth). The boundary-line between Low
+ and High German, the so-called _Benrather Linie_, may roughly be
+ indicated by the following place-names, on the understanding, however,
+ that the Ripuarian dialect (see below) is to be classed with High
+ German: Montjoie (French border-town), Eupen, Aachen, Benrath,
+ Düsseldorf, north of Siegen, Cassel, Heiligenstadt, Harzgerode, to the
+ Elbe south of Magdeburg; this river forms the boundary as far as
+ Wittenberg, whence the line passes to Lübben on the Spree, Fürstenwald
+ on the Oder and Birnbaum near the river Warthe. Beyond this point the
+ Low Germans have Slavs as their neighbours. Compared with the
+ conditions in the 13th century, it appears that Low German has lost
+ ground; down to the 14th and 15th centuries several towns, such as
+ Mansfeld, Eisleben, Merseburg, Halle, Dessau and Wittenberg, spoke Low
+ German.
+
+ Low German falls into two divisions, a western division, namely, Low
+ Franconian, the parent, as we have already said, of Flemish and Dutch,
+ and an eastern division, Low Saxon (_Plattdeutsch_, or, as it is often
+ simply called, Low German). The chief characteristic of the division
+ is to be sought in the ending of the first and third person plural of
+ the present indicative of verbs, this being in the former case _-en_,
+ in the latter _-et_. Inasmuch as the south-eastern part of Low
+ Franconian--inclusive of Gelderland and Cleves--shifts final _k_ to
+ _ch_ (e.g. _ich_, _mich_, _auch_, _-lich_), it must obviously be
+ separated from the rest, and in this respect be grouped with High
+ German. Low Saxon is usually divided into Westphalian (to the west of
+ the Weser) and Low Saxon proper, between Weser and Elbe. The
+ south-eastern part of the latter has the verbal ending -en and further
+ shows the peculiarity that the personal pronoun has the same form in
+ the dative and accusative (_mik_, _dick_), whereas the remainder, as
+ well as the Westphalian, has _mi_, _di_ in the dative, and _mi_, _di_
+ or _mik_, _dik_ in the accusative. To these Low German dialects must
+ also be added those spoken east of the Elbe on what was originally
+ Slavonic territory; they have the ending _-en_ in the first and third
+ person plural of verbs.[8]
+
+
+ B. THE HIGH GERMAN DIALECTS
+
+ 1. _The Middle German Group._--This group, which comprises the
+ dialects of the Middle Rhine, of Hesse, Thuringia, Upper Saxony
+ (Meissen), Silesia and East Prussia to the east of the lower Vistula
+ between Bischofswerder, Marienburg, Elbing, Wormditt and Wartenberg--a
+ district originally colonized from Silesia--may be most conveniently
+ divided into an East and a West Middle German group. A common
+ characteristic of all these dialects is the diminutive suffix _-chen_,
+ as compared with the Low German form _-ken_ and the Upper German
+ _-lein_ (O.H.G. _lin_). East Middle German consists of Silesian, Upper
+ Saxon and Thuringian,[9] together with the linguistic colony in East
+ Prussia. While these dialects have shifted initial Germanic _p_ to
+ _ph_, or even to _f_ (_fert_ = _Pferd_), the West Middle German
+ dialects (roughly speaking to the west of the watershed of Werra and
+ Fulda) have retained it. If, following a convincing article in the
+ _Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum_ (37, 288 ff.) by F. Wrede, we
+ class East and South Franconian--both together may be called High
+ Franconian--with the Upper German dialects, there only remain in the
+ West Middle German group:[10] (a) Middle Franconian and (b) Rhenish
+ Franconian. The former of these,[11] which with its _dat_, _wat_,
+ _allet_, &c. (cf. above) and its retention of the voiced spirant _b_
+ (written _v_) represents a kind of transition dialect to Low German,
+ is itself divided into ([alpha]) Ripuarian or Low Rhenish with Cologne
+ and Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) as centres, and ([beta]) Moselle
+ Franconian[12] with Trier (Treves) as principal town. The latter is
+ distinguished by the fact that in the Middle High German period it
+ shifts Germanic _-rp-_ and _-rd-_, which are retained in (a), to
+ _-rf-_ and _-rt-_ (cf. _werfen_, _hirtin_ with _werpen_,
+ _hirdin_).[13] The Rhenish Franconian dialect is spoken in the Rhenish
+ palatinate, in the northern part of Baden (Heidelberg), Hesse[14] and
+ Nassau, and in the German-speaking part of Lorraine. A line drawn from
+ Falkenberg at the French frontier to Siegen on the Lahn, touching the
+ Rhine near Boppard, roughly indicates the division between Middle and
+ Rhenish Franconian.
+
+ 2. _The Upper German Group._--The Upper German dialects, which played
+ the most important part in the literature of the early periods, may be
+ divided into (a) a Bavarian-Austrian group and (b) a High
+ Franconian-Alemannic group. Of all the German dialects the
+ Bavarian-Austrian has carried the soundshifting to its furthest
+ extreme; here only do we find the labial voiced stop _b_ written _p_
+ in the middle of a word, viz. old Bavarian _kapames_, old Alemannic
+ _kabames_ ("we gave"); here too, in the 12th century, we find the
+ first traces of that broadening of _i_, _u_, _iu_ (_ü_) to _ei_, _au_,
+ _eu_, a change which, even at the present day, is still foreign to the
+ greater part of the Alemannic dialects. Only in Bavarian do we still
+ find the old pronominal dual forms _es_ and _enk_ (for _ihr_ and
+ _euch_). Finally, Bavarian forms diminutives in _-el_ and _-erl_
+ (_Mädel_, _Mäderl_), while the Franconian-Alemannic forms are _-la_
+ and _-le_ (_Mädle_). On the other hand, the pronunciation of _-s_ as
+ _-sch_, especially _-st_ as _-scht_ (cf. _Last_, _Haspel_, pronounced
+ _Lascht_, _Haschpel_), may be mentioned as characteristic of the
+ Alemannic, just as the _fortis_ pronunciation of initial _t_ is
+ characteristic of High Franconian, while the other Franconian and
+ Upper German dialects employ the _lenis_.
+
+ The Alemannic dialect which, roughly speaking, is separated from
+ Bavarian by the Lech and borders on Italian territory in the south and
+ on French in the west, is subdivided into: (a) Swabian, the dialect of
+ the kingdom of Württemberg and the north-western part of Tirol (cf. H.
+ Fischer, _Geographie der schwäbischen Mundart_, 1895); (b) High
+ Alemannic (Swiss), including the German dialects of Switzerland, of
+ the southern part of the Black Forest (the Basel-Breisgau dialect),
+ and that of Vorarlberg; (c) Low Alemannic, comprising the dialects of
+ Alsace and part of Baden (to the north of the Feldberg and south of
+ Rastatt), also, at the present day, the town of Basel. Only Swabian
+ has taken part in the change of _i_ to _ei_, &c., mentioned above,
+ while initial Germanic _k_ has been shifted to _ch_ ([chi]) only in
+ High Alemannic (cf. _chalt_, _chind_, _chorn_, for _kalt_, _kind_,
+ _korn_). The pronunciation of _u_ as _ü_, _ü_ (_Hüs_ for _Haus_) is
+ peculiar to Alsatian.
+
+ The High Franconian dialects, that is to say, east and south (or
+ south-Rhenish) Franconian, which are separated broadly speaking by the
+ river Neckar, comprise the language spoken in a part of Baden, the
+ dialects of the Main valley from Würzburg upwards to Bamberg, the
+ dialect of Nuremberg and probably of the Vogtland (Plauen) and
+ Egerland. During the older historical period the principal difference
+ between East and South Franconian consisted in the fact that initial
+ Germanic _d_ was retained in the latter dialect, while East Franconian
+ shifted it to _t_. Both, like Bavarian and Alemannic, shift initial
+ German _p_ to the affricate _pf_.
+
+ Finally, the Bavarian-Austrian dialect is spoken throughout the
+ greater part of the kingdom of Bavaria (i.e. east of the Lech and a
+ fine drawn from the point where the Lech joins the Danube to the
+ sources of the rivers Elster and Mulde, this being the East Franconian
+ border-line), in Austria, western Bohemia, and in the German
+ linguistic "islands" embedded in Hungary, in Gottschee and the Sette
+ and Tredici Communi (cf. above).[15]
+
+
+ THE OLD HIGH GERMAN PERIOD
+
+ The language spoken during the Old High German period, that is to say,
+ down to about the year 1050, is remarkable for the fulness and
+ richness of its vowel-sounds in word-stems as well as in inflections.
+ Cf. _elilenti_, _Elend_; _luginari_, _Lügner_; _karkari_, _Kerker_;
+ _menniskono slahta_, _Menschengeschlecht_; _herzono_, _Herzen_ (gen.
+ pl.); _furisto_, _vorderste_; _hartost_, (_am_) _härtesten_;
+ _sibunzug_, _siebzig_; _ziohemes_, (_wir_) _ziehen_; _salbota_, (_er_)
+ _salbte_; _gaworahtos_, (_du_) _wirktest_, &c. Of the consonantal
+ changes which took place during this period that of the spirant th
+ (preserved only in English) to d (_werthan_, _werdan_; _theob_,
+ _deob_) deserves mention. It spread from Upper Germany, where it is
+ noticeable as early as the 8th century to Middle and finally, in the
+ 11th and 12th centuries, to Low Germany. Further, the initial _h_ in
+ _hl_, _hn_, _hr_, _hw_ (cf. _hwer_, _wer_; _hreini_, _rein_;
+ _hlahhan_, _lachen_) and _w_ in _wr_ (_wrecceo_, _Recke_) disappeared,
+ this change also starting in Upper Germany and spreading slowly north.
+ The most important vowel-change is the so-called mutation
+ (_Umlaut_),[16] that is to say, the qualitative change of a vowel
+ (except _i_) in a stem-syllable, owing to the influence of an _i_ or
+ _j_ in the following syllable. This process commenced in the north
+ where it seems to have been already fully developed in Low German as
+ early as the 8th century. It is to be found, it may be noted, in
+ Anglo-Saxon, as early as the 6th century. It gradually worked its way
+ southwards to Middle and Upper Germany where, however, certain
+ consonants seem to have protected the stem syllable from the influence
+ of _i_ in a following syllable. Cf., for instance, Modern High German
+ _drucken_ and _drücken_; _glauben_, _kaufen_, _Haupt_, words which in
+ Middle German dialects show mutation. Orthographically, however, this
+ process is, during the first period, only to be seen in the change of
+ _a_ to _e_; from the 10th century onwards there are, it is true, some
+ traces of other changes, and vowels like _u_, _o_, _ou_ must have
+ already been affected, otherwise we could not account for the mutation
+ of these vowels at a period when the cause of it, the _i_ or _j_, no
+ longer existed. A no less important change, for it helped to
+ differentiate High from Low German, was that of Germanic _e_2 (a
+ closed _e_-sound) and _o_ diphthongs in Old High German, while they
+ were retained in Old Low German. Cf. O.H.G. _her_, _hear_, _hiar_,
+ O.L.G. _her_; O.H.G. _fuoz_, O.L.G. _fot_. The final result was that
+ in the 10th century ie (older forms, _ia_, _ea_) and _uo_ (older _ua_,
+ _oa_ in Alemannic, _ua_ in South Franconian) had asserted themselves
+ throughout all the High German dialects. Again while in Old High
+ German the older diphthongs _ai_ and _au_ were preserved as _ei_ and
+ _ou_, unless they happened to stand at the end of a word or were
+ followed by certain consonants (_h_, _w_, _r_ in the one case, and
+ _h_, _r_, _l_, _n_, _th_, _d_, _t_, _z_, _s_ in the other; cf. _zeh_
+ from _zihan_, _zoh_ from _ziohan_, _verlôs_, &c.), the Old Low German
+ shows throughout the monophthongs _e_ (in Middle Low German a closed
+ sound) and _o_ (cf. O.L.G. _sten_, _oga_). These monophthongs are also
+ to be heard in Rhenish Franconian, the greater part of East Franconian
+ and the Upper Saxon and Silesian dialects of modern times (cf.
+ _Stein_: _Steen_ or _Stan_; _laufen_: _lofen_ or _lopen_).
+
+ Of the dialects enumerated above, Bavarian and Alemannic, High and
+ Rhenish Franconian as well as Old Saxon are more or less represented
+ in the literature of the first period. But this literature, the chief
+ monuments of which are Otfrid's _Evangelienbuch_ (in South
+ Franconian), the Old Saxon _Heliand_ (a life of Christ in alliterative
+ verse), the translation of Tatian's _Gospel Harmony_ (East Franconian)
+ and that of a theological tract by Bishop Isidore of Seville and of
+ parts of the Bible (Rhenish Franconian), is almost exclusively
+ theological and didactic in character. One is consequently inclined to
+ attach more value to the scanty remains of the _Hildebrandslied_ and
+ some interesting and ancient charms. The didactic spirit again
+ pervades the translations and commentaries of Notker of St Gall in the
+ early part of the 11th century, as well as a paraphrase of the _Song
+ of Songs_ by an abbot Williram of Ebersberg a little later. Latin,
+ however, reigned supreme throughout this period, it being the language
+ of the charters, the lawbooks (there is nothing in Germany to compare
+ with the laws of the Anglo-Saxons), of science, medicine, and even
+ poetry. It is thus needless to say that there was no recognized
+ literary language (_Schriftsprache_) during this period, nor even any
+ attempt to form one; at most, we might speak of schools in the large
+ monasteries, such as Reichenau, St Gall, Fulda, which contributed to
+ the spread and acceptance of certain orthographical rules.
+
+
+ THE MIDDLE HIGH GERMAN PERIOD
+
+ The following are the chief changes in sounds and forms which mark the
+ development of the language in the Middle High German period. The
+ orthography of the MSS. reveals a much more extensive employment of
+ mutation (_Umlaut_) than was the case in the first period; we find,
+ for instance, as the mutation of _o_, _ö_, of _o_, _oe_, _of u_, _iu_
+ (_ü_), of _uo_, _üe_, of _ou_, _öu_, and _eu_ (cf. _höler_, _boese_,
+ _hiuser_, _güete_, _böume_), although many scribes, and more
+ especially those of Middle and Low German districts, have no special
+ signs for the mutation of _u_, _u_, and _o_. Of special interest is
+ the so-called "later (or weaker) mutation" (_jüngerer oder
+ schwächerer Umlaut_) of _a_ to a very open _e_ sound, which is often
+ written _ä_. Cf. _mähte_ (O.H.G. _mahti_), _mägede_ (O.H.G. _magadi_).
+ The earlier mutation of this sound produced an _e_(_é_), a closed
+ sound (i.e. nearer _i_). Cf. _geste_ (O.H.G. _gesti_).
+
+ The various Old High German vowels in unstressed syllables were either
+ weakened to an indifferent _e_ sound (_geben_, O.H.G. _geban_; _bote_,
+ O.H.G. _boto_; _sige_, O.H.G. _sigu_) or disappeared altogether. The
+ latter phenomenon is to be observed after _l_ and _r_, and partly
+ after _n_ and _m_ (cf. _ar(e)_, O.H.G. _aro_; _zal_, O.H.G. _zala_;
+ _wundern_, O.H.G. _wuntaron_, &c.); but it by no means took place
+ everywhere in the same degree and at the same time. It has been
+ already noted that the Alemannic dialect (as well as the archaic poets
+ of the German national epic) retained at least the long unstressed
+ vowels until as late as the 14th century (_gemarterot_, _gekriuzegot_,
+ &c., and Low and Middle German preserved the weakened _e_ sound in
+ many cases where Upper German dropped it. In this period the
+ beginnings are also to be seen in Low and Middle German (Heinrich von
+ Veldeke shows the first traces of it) of a process which became of
+ great importance for the formation of the Modern German literary
+ language. This is the lengthening of originally short vowels in open
+ syllables,[17] for example, in Modern High German _Tages_, _Weges_,
+ _lobe_ (Middle High German _tages_, _weges_, _lobe_). In Austria, on
+ the other hand, there began as far back as the first half of the 12th
+ century another movement of equal importance for Modern High German,
+ namely, the conversion of the long vowels, _i_, _u_, _ü_, into _ei_
+ (_ou_), _au_, _eu_ (_äu_).[18] It is, therefore, in MSS. written in
+ the south-east that we find forms like _zeit_, _lauter_ (_löter_),
+ _heute_, &c., for the first time. With the exception of Low German and
+ Alemannic--Swabian, however, follows in this respect the majority--all
+ the German dialects participated in this change between the 14th and
+ 16th centuries, although not all to the same degree. The change was
+ perhaps assisted by the influence of the literary language which had
+ recognized the new sounds. In England the same process has led to the
+ modern pronunciation of _time_, _house_, &c., and in Holland to that
+ of _tijd_, _huis_, &c. F. Wrede (_Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum_
+ xxxix. 257 ff.) has suggested that the explanation of the change is to
+ be sought in the apocope and syncope of the final _e_, and the greater
+ stress which was in consequence put on the stem-syllable. The tendency
+ to a change in the opposite direction, namely, the narrowing of
+ diphthongs to monophthongs, is to be noticed in Middle German
+ dialects, i.e. in dialects which resisted the apocope of the final
+ _e_, where _ie_, _uo_, _üe_ become _i_, _u_, _ü_; thus we have for
+ _Brief_, _brif_, for _huon_, _hun_, for _brüeder_, _brüder_, and this
+ too was taken over into the Modern High German literary language.[19]
+
+ No consonantal change was so widespread during this period as that of
+ initial _s_ to _sch_ before _l_, _n_, _m_, _w_, _p_ and _t_. Cf.
+ _slingen_, _schlingen_; _swer_ (_e_) _n_, _schwören_, &c. The forms
+ _scht_- and _schp_- are often to be met with in Alemannic MSS., but
+ they were discarded again, although modern German recognizes the
+ pronunciation _schp_, _scht_.[20] With regard to changes affecting the
+ inflections of verbs and nouns, it must suffice here to point out that
+ the weakening or disappearance of vowels in unstressed syllables
+ necessarily affected the characteristic endings of the older language;
+ groups of verbs and substantives which in Old High German were
+ distinct now become confused. This is best seen in the case of the
+ weak verbs, where the three Old High German classes (cf. _nerien_,
+ _salbon_, _dagen_) were fused into one. Similarly in the declensions
+ we find an increasing tendency of certain forms to influence
+ substantives belonging to other classes; there is, for instance, an
+ increase in the number of neuter nouns taking _-er_ (_-ir_) in the
+ plural, and of those which show mutation in the plural on the model of
+ the _i-_ stems (O.H.G. _gast_, pl. _gesti_; cf. forms like _ban_,
+ _benne_; _hals_, _helse_; _wald_, _welde_). Of changes in syntax the
+ gradual decay in the use of the genitive case dependent on a noun or
+ governed by a verb (cf. constructions like _eine brünne rotes goldes_,
+ or _des todes wünschen_) towards the end of the period, and also the
+ disappearance of the Old High German sequence of tenses ought at least
+ to be mentioned.
+
+ In the Middle High German period, the first classical period of German
+ poetry, the German language made great advances as a vehicle of
+ literary expression; its power of expression was increased and it
+ acquired a beauty of style hitherto unknown. This was the period of
+ the _Minnesang_ and the great popular and court epics, of Walther von
+ der Vogelweide, Hartmann von Aue, Wolfram von Eschenbach and Gottfried
+ von Strassburg; it was a period when literature enjoyed the fostering
+ care of the courts and the nobility. At the same time German prose
+ celebrated its first triumphs in the sermons of Berthold von
+ Regensburg, and in the mystic writings and sermons of Meister Eckhart,
+ Tauler and others. History (Eike von Repkow's _Weltchronik_) and law
+ (_Sachsenspiegel_, _Schwabenspiegel_) no longer despised the
+ vernacular, and from about the middle of the 13th century German
+ becomes, in an ever-increasing percentage, the language of deeds and
+ charters.
+
+ It has been a much debated question how far Germany in Middle High
+ German times possessed or aspired to possess a _Schriftsprache_ or
+ literary language.[21] About the year 1200 there was undoubtedly a
+ marked tendency towards a unification of the literary language on the
+ part of the more careful poets like Walther von der Vogelweide,
+ Hartmann von Aue and Gottfried von Strassburg; they avoid, more
+ particularly in their rhymes, dialectic peculiarities, such as the
+ Bavarian dual forms _es_ and _enk_, or the long vowels in unstressed
+ syllables, retained in Alemannic, and they do not make use of archaic
+ words or forms. We have thus a right to speak, if not of a Middle High
+ German literary language in the widest sense of the word, at least of
+ a Middle High German _Dichtersprache_ or poetic language, on an
+ Alemannic-Franconian basis. Whether, or in how far, this may have
+ affected the ordinary speech of the nobility or courts, is a matter of
+ conjecture; but it had an undeniable influence on Middle and Low
+ German poets, who endeavoured at least to use High German forms in
+ their rhymes. Attempts were also made in Low German districts, though
+ at a later stage of this period, to unify the dialects and raise them
+ to the level of an accepted literary language. It will be shown later
+ why these attempts were unsuccessful. Unfortunately, however, the
+ efforts of the High German poets to form a uniform language were also
+ shortlived; by the end of the 13th century the _Dichtersprache_ had
+ disappeared, and the dialects again reigned supreme.
+
+
+ MODERN HIGH GERMAN
+
+ Although the Middle High German period had thus not succeeded in
+ effecting any permanent advance in the direction of a uniform literary
+ language, the desire for a certain degree of uniformity was never
+ again entirely lost. At the close of the 13th century literature had
+ passed from the hands of the nobility to those of the middle classes
+ of the towns; the number of writers who used the German tongue rapidly
+ increased; later the invention of printing, the increased efficiency
+ of the schools, and above all the religious movement of the
+ Reformation, contributed to awakening the desire of being understood
+ by those who stood outside the dialectic community of the individual.
+ A single authoritative form of writing and spelling was felt on all
+ sides to be particularly necessary. This was found in the language
+ used officially by the various chanceries (_Kanzleien_), and more
+ especially the imperial chancery. Since the days of Charles IV.
+ (1347-1378) the latter had striven after a certain uniform language in
+ the documents it issued, and by the time of Maximilian I. (1493-1519)
+ all its official documents were characterized by pretty much the same
+ phonology, forms and vocabulary, in whatever part of Germany they
+ originated. And under Maximilian's successor, Charles V., the
+ conditions remained pretty much the same. The fact that the seat of
+ the imperial chancery had for a long time been in Prague, led to a
+ mingling of Upper and Middle German sounds and inflections; but when
+ the crown came with Frederick III. (1440-1493) to the Habsburgs, the
+ Upper German elements were considerably increased. The chancery of the
+ Saxon electorate, whose territory was exclusively Middle German, had
+ to some extent, under the influence of the imperial chancery, allowed
+ Upper German characteristics to influence its official language. This
+ is clearly marked in the second half of the 15th century, and about
+ the year 1500 there was no essential difference between the languages
+ of the two chanceries. Thuringia, Silesia and Brandenburg soon
+ followed suit, and even Low German could not ultimately resist the
+ accepted High German notation (_ö_, _o_, _ü_, _u_, _ou_, _ie_, &c.).
+ We have here very favourable conditions for the creation of a uniform
+ literary language, and, as has already been said, the tendency to
+ follow these authorities is clearly marked.
+
+ In the midst of this development arose the imposing figure of Luther,
+ who, although by no means the originator of a common High German
+ speech, helped very materially to establish it. He deliberately chose
+ (cf. the often quoted passage in his _Tischreden_, ch. 69) the
+ language of the Saxon chancery as the vehicle of his Bible translation
+ and subsequently of his own writings. The differences between Luther's
+ usage and that of the chancery, in phonology and inflection, are
+ small; still he shows, in his writings subsequent to 1524, a somewhat
+ more pronounced tendency towards Middle German. But it is noteworthy
+ that he, like the chancery, retained the old vowel-change in the
+ singular and plural of the preterite of the strong verbs (i.e.
+ _steig_, _stigen_; _starb_, _sturben_), although before Luther's time
+ the uniformity of the modern preterite had already begun to show
+ itself here and there. The adoption of the language of the chancery
+ gave rise to the mixed character of sounds and forms which is still a
+ feature of the literary language of Germany. Thus the use of the
+ monophthongs _i_, _ü_, and _u_, instead of the old diphthongs _ie_,
+ _uo_ and _üe_, comes from Middle Germany; the forms of the words and
+ the gender of the nouns follow Middle rather than Upper German usage,
+ whereas, on the other hand, the consonantal system (_p_ to _pf_; _d_
+ to _t_) betrays in its main features its Upper German
+ (Bavarian-Austrian) origin.
+
+ The language of Luther no doubt shows greater originality in its style
+ and vocabulary (cf. its influence on Goethe and the writers of the
+ _Sturm und Drang_), for in this respect the chancery could obviously
+ afford him but scanty help. His vocabulary is drawn to a great extent
+ from his own native Middle German dialect, and the fact that, since
+ the 14th century, Middle German literature (cf. for instance, the
+ writings of the German mystics, at the time of and subsequent to
+ Eckhart) had exercised a strong influence over Upper Germany, stood
+ him in good stead. Luther is, therefore, strictly speaking, not the
+ father of the modern German literary language, but he forms the most
+ important link in a chain of development which began long before him,
+ and did not reach its final stage until long after him. To infer that
+ Luther's language made any rapid conquest of Germany would not be
+ correct. It was, of course, immediately acceptable to the eastern part
+ of the Middle German district (Thuringia and Silesia), and it did not
+ find any great difficulty in penetrating into Low Germany, at least
+ into the towns and districts lying to the east of the Saale and Elbe
+ (Magdeburg, Hamburg). One may say that about the middle of the 16th
+ century Luther's High German was the language of the chanceries, about
+ 1600 the language of the pulpit (the last Bible in Low German was
+ printed at Goslar in 1621) and the printing presses. Thus the
+ aspirations of Low Germany to have a literary language of its own were
+ at an early stage crushed. Protestant Switzerland, on the other hand,
+ resisted the "uncommon new German" until well into the 17th century.
+ It was also natural that the Catholic Lower Rhine (Cologne) and
+ Catholic South Germany held out against it, for to adopt the language
+ of the reformer would have seemed tantamount to offering a helping
+ hand to Protestant ideas. At the same time, geographical and political
+ conditions, as well as the pronounced character of the Upper German
+ dialects, formed an important obstacle to a speedy unification. South
+ German grammarians of the 16th century, such as Laurentius Albertus,
+ raise a warning voice against those who, although far distant from the
+ proper use of words and the true pronunciation, venture to teach _nos
+ puriores Germanos_, namely, the Upper Germans.
+
+ In 1593 J. Helber, a Swiss schoolmaster and notary, spoke of three
+ separate dialects as being in use by the printing presses:[22] (1)
+ _Mitteldeutsch_ (the language of the printers in Leipzig, Erfurt,
+ Nuremberg, Würzburg, Frankfort, Mainz, Spires, Strassburg and Cologne;
+ at the last mentioned place in the event of their attempting to print
+ _Ober-Teutsch_); (2) _Donauisch_ (the printers' language in South
+ Germany, but limited to Bavaria and Swabia proper--here more
+ particularly the Augsburg idiom, which was considered to be
+ particularly _zierlich_);[23] (3) _Höchst Reinisch_, which corresponds
+ to Swiss German. Thus in the 16th century Germany was still far from
+ real unity in its language; but to judge from the number and the
+ geographical position of the towns which printed in _Mitteldeutsch_ it
+ is pretty clear which idiom would ultimately predominate. During the
+ 17th century men like M. Opitz (_Buch von der deutschen Poeterey_) and
+ J.G. Schottelius (_Teutsche Sprachkunst_, 1641, and _Von der teutschen
+ Sprachkunst_, 1663), together with linguistic societies like the
+ _Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft_ and the Nuremberg _Pegnitzorden_, did a
+ great deal to purify the German language from foreign (especially
+ French) elements; they insisted on the claims of the vernacular to a
+ place beside and even above Latin (in 1687 Christian Thomasius held
+ for the first time lectures in the German language at the university
+ of Leipzig), and they established a firm grammatical basis for
+ Luther's common language, which especially in the hymnals had become
+ modernized and more uniform. About the middle of the 17th century the
+ disparity between the vowels of the singular and plural of the
+ preterite of the strong verbs practically ceases; under East Middle
+ German influence the final _e_ is restored to words like _Knabe_,
+ _Jude_, _Pfaffe_, which in South German had been _Knab_, &c.; the
+ mixed declension (_Ehre_, _Ehren_; _Schmerz_, _Schmerzen_) was
+ established, and the plural in -_er_ was extended to some masculine
+ nouns (_Wald_, _Wälder_);[24] the use of the mutated sound has now
+ become the rule as a plural sign (Väter, Bäume). How difficult, even
+ in the first half of the 18th century, it was for a Swiss to write the
+ literary language which Luther had established is to be seen from the
+ often quoted words of Haller (1708-1777): "I am a Swiss, the German
+ language is strange to me, and its choice of words was almost unknown
+ to me." The Catholic south clung firmly to its own literary language,
+ based on the idiom of the imperial chancery, which was still an
+ influential force in the 17th century or on local dialects. This is
+ apparent in the writings of Abraham a Sancta Clara,[25] who died in
+ 1709, or in the attacks of the Benedictine monk, Augustin Dornblüth,
+ on the _Meissner Schriftsprache_ in 1755.
+
+ In the 18th century, to which these names have introduced us, the
+ grammatical writings of J.C. Gottsched (_Deutsche Sprachkunst_, 1748)
+ and J.C. Adelung (_Grammatisch-kritisches Wörterbuch der hochdeutschen
+ Mundart_, 1774-1786) exercised a decisive and far-reaching influence.
+ Gottsched took as his basis the spoken language (_Umgangssprache_) of
+ the educated classes of Upper Saxony (Meissen), which at this time
+ approximated as nearly as possible to the literary language. His
+ _Grammar_ did enormous services to the cause of unification,
+ ultimately winning over the resisting south; but he carried his purism
+ to pedantic lengths, he would tolerate no archaic or dialectical
+ words, no unusual forms or constructions, and consequently made the
+ language unsuited for poetry. Meanwhile an interest in Old German
+ literature was being awakened by Bodmer; Herder set forth better ideas
+ on the nature of language, and insisted on the value of native idioms;
+ and the _Sturm und Drang_ led by Goethe encouraged all individualistic
+ tendencies. All this gave rise to a movement counter to Gottsched's
+ absolutism, which resulted in the revival of many obsolete German
+ words and forms, these being drawn partly from Luther's Bible
+ translation (cf. V. Hehn, "Goethe und die Sprache der Bibel," in the
+ _Goethe-Jahrbuch_, viii. p. 187 ff.), partly from the older language
+ and partly from the vocabulary peculiar to different social ranks and
+ trades.[26] The latter is still a source of linguistic innovations.
+ German literary style underwent a similar rejuvenation, for we are on
+ the threshold of the second classical period of German literature. It
+ had strengthened Gottsched's hand as a linguistic reformer that the
+ earlier leaders of German literature, such as Gellert, Klopstock and
+ Lessing, were Middle Germans; now Wieland's influence, which was
+ particularly strong in South Germany, helped materially towards the
+ establishment of one accepted literary language throughout all
+ German-speaking countries; and the movement reaches its culmination
+ with Goethe and Schiller. At the same time this unification did not
+ imply the creation of an unalterable standard; for, just as the
+ language of Opitz and Schottelius differed from that of Luther,
+ so--although naturally in a lesser degree--the literary language of
+ our day differs from that of the classic writers of the 18th century.
+ Local peculiarities are still to be met with, as is to be seen in the
+ modern German literature that emanates from Switzerland or Austria.
+
+ But this unity, imperfect as it is, is limited to the literary
+ language. The differences are much more sharply accentuated in the
+ _Umgangssprache_,[27] whereby we understand the language as it is
+ spoken by educated people throughout Germany; this is not only the
+ case with regard to pronunciation, although it is naturally most
+ noticeable here, but also with regard to the choice of words and the
+ construction of sentences. Compared with the times of Goethe and
+ Schiller a certain advance towards unification has undoubtedly been
+ made, but the differences between north and south are still very
+ great. This is particularly noticeable in the pronunciation of
+ _r_--either the uvular _r_ or the _r_ produced by the tip of the
+ tongue; of the voiced and voiceless stops, _b_, _p_, _d_, _t_, _g_ and
+ _k_; of the _s_ sounds; of the diphthongs; of the long vowels _e_ and
+ _oe_, &c. (cf. W. Vietor, _German Pronunciation_, 2nd ed., 1890). The
+ question as to whether a unified pronunciation (_Einheitaussprache_)
+ is desirable or even possible has occupied the attention of academies,
+ scholars and the educated public during recent years, and in 1898 a
+ commission made up of scholars and theatre directors drew up a scheme
+ of pronunciation for use in the royal theatres of Prussia.[28] This
+ scheme has since been recommended to all German theatres by the German
+ _Bühnenverein_. Desirable as such a uniform pronunciation is for the
+ national theatre, it is a much debated question how far it should be
+ adopted in the ordinary speech of everyday life. Some scholars, such
+ as W. Braune, declared themselves strongly in favour of its
+ adoption;[29] Braune's argument being that the system of modern
+ pronunciation is based on the spelling, not on the sounds produced in
+ speaking. The latter, he holds, is only responsible for the
+ pronunciation of _-chs-_ as _-ks-_ in _wachsen_, _Ochse_, &c., or for
+ that of _sp-_ and _st-_ in _spielen_, _stehen_, &c. Other scholars,
+ again, such as K. Luick and O. Brenner, warn against any such attempts
+ to create a living language on an artificial basis;[30] the
+ _Bühnendeutsch_ or "stage-German" they regard as little more than an
+ abstract ideal. Thus the decision must be left to time.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--_General Literature_: J. Grimm, _Geschichte der
+ deutschen Sprache_ (Leipzig, 1848; 4th ed., 1880); W. Scherer, _Zur
+ Geschichte der deutschen Sprache_ (Berlin, 1868; 2nd ed., 1878); E.
+ Förstemann, _Geschichte des deutschen Sprachstammes_ (Nordhausen,
+ 1874-1875); O. Behaghel, _Die deutsche Sprache_ (Leipzig, 1886; 2nd
+ ed., 1902); the same, "Geschichte der deutschen Sprache," in Paul's
+ _Grundriss der germanischen Philologie_ (2nd ed.), i. pp. 650 ff.; O.
+ Weise, _Unsere deutsche Sprache, ihr Werden und ihr Wesen_ (Leipzig,
+ 1898); K. von Raumer, _Geschichte der germanischen Philologie_
+ (Munich, 1870); J. Grimm, _Deutsche Grammatik_ (4 vols., vols. i.-iii.
+ in new edition, 1870-1890); Dieter, _Laut- und Formenlehre der
+ altgermanischen Dialekte_ (2 vols., Leipzig, 1898-1900); F. Kauffmann,
+ _Deutsche Grammatik_ (2nd ed., 1895); W. Wilmanns, _Deutsche
+ Grammatik_, so far, vols, i., ii. and iii., 1 (Strassburg, 1893-1906,
+ vol. i., 2nd ed., 1897); O. Brenner, _Grundzüge der geschichtlichen
+ Grammatik der deutschen Sprache_ (Munich, 1896); H. Lichtenberger,
+ _Histoire de la langue allemande_ (Paris, 1895).
+
+ _Old and Middle High German Period_: W. Braune, _Althochdeutsche
+ Grammatik_ (2nd ed., Halle, 1891); the same, _Abriss der
+ althochdeutschen Grammatik_ (3rd ed., 1900); F. Holthausen,
+ _Altsächsisches Elementarbuch_ (Heidelberg, 1899); W. Schlüter,
+ _Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der altsächsichen Sprache_, i.
+ (Göttingen, 1892); O. Schade, _Altdeutsches Wörterbuch_ (2nd ed.,
+ Halle, 1872-1882); G.E. Graff, _Althochdeutscher Sprachschatz_ (6
+ vols., Berlin, 1834-1842) (Index by Massmann, 1846); E. Steinmeyer and
+ E. Sievers, _Althochdeutsche Glossen_ (4 vols., Berlin, 1879-1898);
+ J.A. Schmeller, _Glossarium Saxonicum_ (Munich, 1840); K. Weinhold,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsche Grammatik_ (3rd ed., Paderborn, 1892); H. Paul,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsche Grammatik_ (5th ed., Halle, 1900); V. Michels,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsches Elementarbuch_ (Heidelberg, 1900); O. Brenner,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsche Grammatik_ (3rd ed., Munich, 1894); K. Zwierzina,
+ "Mittelhochdeutsche Studien," in _Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum_,
+ vols. xliv. and xlv.; A. Lübben, _Mittelniederdeutsche Grammatik_
+ (Leipzig, 1882); W. Müller and F. Zarncke, _Mittelhochdeutsches
+ Wörterbuch_ (4 vols., Leipzig, 1854-1866); M. Lexer,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsches Handwörterbuch_ (3 vols., 1872-1878); the same,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsches Taschenwörterbuch_ (8th ed., 1906); K. Schiller
+ and A. Lübben, _Mittelniederdeutsches Wörterbuch_ (6 vols., Bremen,
+ 1875-1881); A. Lübben, _Mittelniederdeutsches Handwörterbuch_ (Norden,
+ 1888); F. Seiler, _Die Entwicklung der deutsch. Kultur im Spiegel des
+ deutschen Lehnworts_ (Halle, i., 1895, 2nd ed., 1905, ii., 1900).
+
+ _Modern High German Period_: E. Wülcker, "Die Entstehung der
+ kursächsischen Kanzleisprache" (in the _Zeitschrift des Vereins für
+ kursächsische Geschichte_, ix. p. 349); the same, "Luthers Stellung
+ zur kursächsischen Kanzleisprache" (in _Germania_, xxviii. pp. 191
+ ff.); P. Pietsch, _Martin Luther und die hochdeutsche Schriftsprache_
+ (Breslau, 1883); K. Burdach, _Die Einigung der neuhochdeutschen
+ Schriftsprache_, (1883); E. Opitz, _Die Sprache Luthers_ (Halle,
+ 1869); J. Luther, _Die Sprache Luthers in der Septemberbibel_ (Halle,
+ 1887); F. Kluge, _Von Luther bis Lessing_ (Strassburg, 1888) (cf. E.
+ Schröder's review in the _Göttinger gelehrte Anzeiger_, 1888, 249); H.
+ Rückert, _Geschichte der neuhochdeutschen Schriftsprache bis zur Mitte
+ des 18. Jahrhunderts_ (1875): J. Kehrein, _Grammatik der deutschen
+ Sprache des 15. bis 17. Jahrhunderts_ (Leipzig, 2nd ed., 1863); K. von
+ Bahder, _Grundlagen des neuhochdeutschen Lautsystems_ (Strassburg,
+ 1890); R. Meyer, _Einführung in das ältere Neuhochdeutsche_ (Leipzig,
+ 1894); W. Scheel, _Beiträge zur Geschichte der neuhochdeutschen
+ Gemeinsprache in Köln_ (Marburg, 1892); R. Brandstetter, _Die
+ Rezeption der neuhochdeutschen Schriftsprache in Stadt und Landschaft
+ Luzern_ (1892); K. Burdach, "Zur Geschichte der neuhochdeutschen
+ Schriftsprache" (_Forschungen zur deutschen Philologie_, 1894); the
+ same, "Die Sprache des jungen Goethe" (_Verhandlungen der Dessauer
+ Philologenversammlung_, 1884, p. 164 ff.); F. Kasch, _Die Sprache des
+ jungen Schiller_ (Dissertation, 1900); F. Kluge, "Über die Entstehung
+ unserer Schriftsprache" (Beihefte zur _Zeitschrift des allgemeinen
+ Sprachvereins_, Heft 6, 1894); A. Waag, _Bedeutungsentwickelung
+ unseres Wortschatzes_ (Lahr, 1901).
+
+ Mention must also be made of the work of the German commission of the
+ Royal Prussian Academy, which in 1904 drew up plans for making an
+ inventory of all German literary MSS. dating from before the year 1600
+ and for the publication of Middle High German and early Modern High
+ German texts. This undertaking, which has made considerable progress,
+ provides rich material for the study of the somewhat neglected period
+ between the 14th and 16th centuries; at the same time it provides a
+ basis on which a monumental history of Modern High German may be built
+ up, as well as for a _Thesaurus linguae germanicae_. (R. Pr.)
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] K. Müllenhoff and W. Scherer, _Denkmäler deutscher Poesie und
+ Prosa_, 3rd ed., by E. Steinmeyer, 1892, No. lxvii.
+
+ [2] For a detailed description of the boundary line cf. O. Behaghel's
+ article in Paul's _Grundriss_, 2nd ed., pp. 652-657, where there is
+ also a map, and a very full bibliography relative to the changes in
+ the boundary.
+
+ [3] Cf. J. Grimm, _Deutsche Grammatik_, 3rd ed., i. p. 13; F. Kluge,
+ _Etymologisches Wörterbuch_, 6th ed., pp. 75 ff.; K. Luick, "Zur
+ Geschichte des Wortes 'deutsch,'" in _Anzeiger für deutsches
+ Altertum_, xv., pp. 135, 248; H. Fischer, "Theotiscus, Deutsch," in
+ Paul and Braune's _Beiträge_, xviii. p. 203; H. Paul, _Deutsches
+ Wörterbuch_ (1897), p. 93.
+
+ [4] Cf. P. Kretschmer, _Einleitung in die Geschichte der griechischen
+ Sprache_ (Göttingen, 1896), who holds the mingling of Celtic and
+ Germanic elements in southern and south-western Germany responsible
+ for the change. It might also be mentioned here that H. Meyer
+ (_Zeitschrift f. deut. Altertum_, xlv. pp. 101 ff.) endeavours to
+ explain the first soundshifting by the change of abode of the
+ Germanic tribes from the lowlands to the highlands of the Carpathian
+ Mountains.
+
+ [5] Of writers who have made extensive use of dialects, it must
+ suffice to mention here the names of J.H. Voss, Hebel, Klaus Groth,
+ Fritz Reuter, Usteri, G.D. Arnold, Holtei, Castelli, J.G. Seidl and
+ Anzengruber, and in our own days G. Hauptmann.
+
+ [6] Cf. F. Staub and L. Tobler, _Schweizerisches Idiotikon_ (1881
+ ff.); E. Martin and F. Lienhart, _Wörterbuch der elsässischen
+ Mundarten_ (Strassburg, 1899 ff.); H. Fischer, _Schwäbisches
+ Wörterbuch_ (Tübingen, 1901 ff.). Earlier works, which are already
+ completed, are J.A. Schmeller, _Bayrisches Wörterbuch_ (2nd ed., 2
+ vols., Munich, 1872-1877); J.B. Schöpf, _Tiroler Idiotikon_
+ (Innsbruck, 1886); M. Lexer, _Kärntisches Wörterbuch_ (1862); H.
+ Gradl, _Egerländer Wörterbuch_, i. (Eger, 1883); A.F.C. Vilmar,
+ _Idiotikon von Kurhessen_ (Marburg, 1883) (with supplements by H. von
+ Pfister); W. Crecelius, _Oberhessisches Wörterbuch_ (Darmstadt,
+ 1890-1898). Professor J. Franck is responsible for a _Rheinisches
+ Wörterbuch_ for the Prussian Academy.
+
+ [7] Cf. the article "Mundarten" by R. Loewe in R. Bethge, _Ergebnisse
+ und Fortschritte der germanistischen Wissenschaft_ (Leipzig, 1902),
+ pp. 75-88; and F. Mentz, _Bibliographie der deutschen
+ Mundartforschung_ (Leipzig, 1892). Of periodicals may be mentioned
+ Deutsche Mundarten, by J.W. Nagl (Vienna, 1896 ff.); _Zeitschrift für
+ hochdeutsche Mundarten_, by O. Heilig and Ph. Lenz (Heidelberg, 1900
+ ff.), continued as _Zeitschrift f. deutsche Mundarten_, Verlag des
+ Allgemeinen Deutschen Sprachvereins. Owing to its importance as a
+ model for subsequent monographs J. Kinteler's _Die Kerenzer Mundart
+ des Kantons Glarus_ (Leipzig, 1876) should not be passed unnoticed.
+
+ [8] Cf. especially H. Tümpel, "Die Mundarten des alten
+ niedersächsischen Gebietes zwischen 1300 und 1500" (Paul und Braune's
+ Beiträge, vii. pp. 1-104); _Niederdeutsche Studien_, by the same
+ writer (Bielefeld, 1898); Bahnke, "Über Sprach- und Gaugrenzen
+ zwischen Elbe und Weser" (_Jahrbuch des Vereins für niederdeutsche
+ Sprachforschung_, vii. p. 77).
+
+ [9] Upper Saxon and Thuringian are sometimes taken as a separate
+ group.
+
+ [10] Cf. W. Braune, "Zur Kenntnis des Fränkischen" (_Beiträge_, i.
+ pp. 1-56); O. Böhme, _Zur Kenntnis des Oberfränkischen im 13., 14.
+ und 15. Jahrh._ (Dissertation) (Leipzig, 1893), where a good account
+ of the differences between the Rhenish Franconian and South
+ Franconian dialects will be found.
+
+ [11] Cf. C. Nörrenberg, "Lautverschiebungsstufe des
+ Mittelfränkischen" (_Beiträge_, ix. 371 ff.); R. Heinzel, _Geschichte
+ der niederfränkischen Geschäftssprache_ (Paderborn, 1874).
+
+ [12] This is also the dialect of the so-called Siebenbürger Sachsen.
+
+ [13] Cf. E. Sievers, _Oxforder Benediktinerregel_ (Halle, 1887), p.
+ xvi.; J. Meier, Jolande (1887), pp. vii. ff.; O. Böhme, l.c. p. 60.
+
+ [14] Lower Hesse (the northern and eastern parts) goes, however, in
+ many respects its own way.
+
+ [15] On the High German dialects cf. K. Weinhold, _Alemannische
+ Grammatik_ (Berlin, 1863); F. Kauffmann, _Geschichte der schwäbischen
+ Mundart_ (Strassburg, 1870); E. Haendcke, _Die mundartlichen Elemente
+ in den elsässischen Urkunden_ (Strassburg, 1894); K. Weinhold,
+ _Bairische Grammatik_ (1867); J.A. Schmeller, _Die Mundarten Baierns_
+ (Munich, 1821); J.N. Schwäbl, _Die altbairischen Mundarten_ (München,
+ 1903); O. Brenner, _Mundarten und Schriftsprache in Bayern_ (Bamberg,
+ 1890); J. Schatz, _Die Mundart von Imst_ (Strassburg, 1897); J.W.
+ Nagl, _Der Vocalismus der bairisch-österreichischen Mundarten_
+ (1890-1891); W. Gradl, _Die Mundarten Westböhmens_ (Munich, 1896); P.
+ Lessiak, "Die Mundart von Pernegg in Kärnten" (Paul and Braune,
+ _Beiträge_, vol. xxviii.).
+
+ [16] Cf., for a hypothesis of two _Umlautsperioden_ during the Old
+ High German time, F. Kauffmann, _Geschichte der schwäbischen Mundart_
+ (Strassburg, 1890), S. 152.
+
+ [17] Cf. W. Wilmanns, _Deutsche Grammatik_, i. (2nd edition) pp.
+ 300-304.
+
+ [18] Wilmanns, l.c. pp. 273-280. It might be mentioned that, in
+ Modern High German, these new diphthongs are neither in spelling nor
+ in educated pronunciation distinguished from the older ones.
+
+ [19] Cf. Wilmanns, pp. 280-284.
+
+ [20] Ibid. pp. 129-132.
+
+ [21] Cf. K. Lachmann, _Kleinere Schriften_, i. p. 161 ff.; Müllenhoff
+ and Scherer's _Denkmäler_ (3rd ed.), i. p. xxvii.; H. Paul, _Gab es
+ eine mhd. Schriftsprache?_ (Halle, 1873); O. Behaghel, _Zur Frage
+ nach einer mhd. Schriftsprache_ (Basel, 1886) (Cf. Paul and Braune's
+ _Beiträge_, xiii. p. 464 ff.); A. Socin, _Schriftsprache und
+ Dialekte_ (Heilbronn, 1888); H. Fischer, _Zur Geschichte des
+ Mittelhochdeutschen_ (Tübingen, 1889); O. Behaghel, _Schriftsprache
+ und Mundart_ (Giessen, 1896); K. Zwierzina, _Beobachtungen zum
+ Reimgebrauch Hartmanns und Wolframs_ (Haile, 1898); S. Singer, _Die
+ mhd. Schriftsprache_ (1900); C. Kraus, _Heinrich von Veldeke und die
+ mhd. Dichtersprache_ (Halle, 1899); G. Roethe, _Die Reimvorreden des
+ Sachsenspiegels_ (Berlin, 1899); H. Tümpel, _Niederdeutsche Studien_
+ (1898).
+
+ [22] For literature bearing on the complicated question of the
+ _Druckersprachen_, readers are referred to the article
+ "Neuhochdeutsche Schriftsprache," by W. Scheel, in Bethge's
+ _Ergebnisse ... der germanistischen Wissenschaft_ (1902), pp. 47, 50
+ f. Cf. also K. von Bahder, _Grundlagen des nhd. Lautsystems_ (1890),
+ pp. 15 ff.
+
+ [23] A German _Priamel_ mentions as an essential quality in a
+ beautiful woman: "die red dort her von Swaben."
+
+ [24] Cf. for a detailed discussion of the noun declension, K.
+ Boiunga, _Die Entwicklung der mhd. Substantivflexion_ (Leipzig,
+ 1890); and, more particularly for the masculine and neuter nouns, two
+ articles by H. Molz, "Die Substantivflexion seit mhd. Zeit," in Paul
+ and Braune's _Beiträge_, xxvii. p. 209 ff. and xxxi. 277 ff. For the
+ changes in the gender of nouns, A. Polzin, _Geschlechtswandel der
+ Substantiva im Deutschen_ (Hildesheim, 1903).
+
+ [25] Cf. C. Blanckenburg, _Studien über die Sprache Abrahams a S.
+ Clara_ (Halle, 1897); H. Strigl, "Einiges über die Sprache des P.
+ Abraham a Sancta Clara" (_Zeitschr. f. deutsche Wortforschung_, viii.
+ 206 ff.).
+
+ [26] Cf. F. Kluge, _Etymologisches Wörterbuch_ (6th ed.), pp. 508 ff.
+ One can speak of: _Studenten-, Soldaten-, Weidmanns-, Bergmanns-,
+ Drucker-, Juristen-, und Zigeunersprache, und Rotwelsch_. Cf. F.
+ Kluge, _Die deutsche Studentensprache_ (Strassburg, 1894);
+ _Rotwelsch_ i. (Strassburg, 1901); R. Bethge, _Ergebnisse_, &c., p.
+ 55 f.
+
+ [27] Cf. H. Wunderlich, _Unsere Umgangssprache_ (Weimar, 1894).
+
+ [28] Cf. Th. Siebs, _Deutsche Bühnenaussprache_ (2nd ed., Berlin,
+ 1901), and the same writer's _Grundzüge der Bühnensprache_ (1900).
+
+ [29] W. Braune, _Über die Einigung der deutschen Aussprache_ (Halle,
+ 1905); and the review by O. Brenner, in the _Zeitschrift des
+ allgemeinen deutschen Sprachvereins_, Beihefte iv. 27, pp. 228-232.
+
+ [30] Cf. K. Luick, _Deutsche Lautlehre mit besonderer
+ Berücksichtigung der Sprechweise Wiens und der österreichischen
+ Alpenländer_ (1904); O. Brenner, "Zur Aussprache des Hochdeutschen"
+ l.c., pp. 218-228.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN LITERATURE. Compared with other literatures, that of the
+German-speaking peoples presents a strangely broken and interrupted
+course; it falls into more or less isolated groups, separated from each
+other by periods which in intellectual darkness and ineptitude are
+virtually without a parallel in other European lands. The explanation of
+this irregularity of development is to be sought less in the chequered
+political history of the German people--although this was often reason
+enough--than in the strongly marked, one might almost say, provocative
+character of the national mind as expressed in literature. The Germans
+were not able, like their partially latinized English cousins--or even
+their Scandinavian neighbours--to adapt themselves to the various waves
+of literary influence which emanated from Italy and France and spread
+with irresistible power over all Europe; their literary history has been
+rather a struggle for independent expression, a constant warring against
+outside forces, even when the latter--like the influence of English
+literature in the 18th century and of Scandinavian at the close of the
+19th--were hailed as friendly and not hostile. It is a peculiarity of
+German literature that in those ages when, owing to its own poverty and
+impotence, it was reduced to borrowing its ideas and its poetic forms
+from other lands, it sank to the most servile imitation; while the first
+sign of returning health has invariably been the repudiation of foreign
+influence and the assertion of the right of genius to untrammelled
+expression. Thus Germany's periods of literary efflorescence rarely
+coincide with those of other nations, and great European movements, like
+the Renaissance, passed over her without producing a single great poet.
+
+This chequered course, however, renders the grouping of German
+literature and the task of the historian the easier. The first and
+simplest classification is that afforded by the various stages of
+linguistic development. In accordance with the three divisions in the
+history of the High German language, there is an Old High German, a
+Middle High German and a New High German or Modern High German literary
+epoch. It is obvious, however, that the last of these divisions covers
+too enormous a period of literary history to be regarded as analogous to
+the first two. The present survey is consequently divided into six main
+sections:
+
+I. The Old High German Period, including the literature of the Old Saxon
+dialect, from the earliest times to the middle of the 11th century.
+
+II. The Middle High German Period, from the middle of the 11th to the
+middle of the 14th century.
+
+III. The Transition Period, from the middle of the 14th century to the
+Reformation in the 16th century.
+
+IV. The Period of Renaissance and Pseudo-classicism, from the end of the
+16th century to the middle of the 18th.
+
+V. The Classical Period of Modern German literature, from the middle of
+the 18th century to Goethe's death in 1832.
+
+VI. The Period from Goethe's death to the present day.
+
+
+I. THE OLD HIGH GERMAN PERIOD (c. 750-1050)
+
+Of all the Germanic races, the tribes with which we have more
+particularly to deal here were the latest to attain intellectual
+maturity. The Goths had, centuries earlier, under their famous bishop
+Ulfilas or Wulfila, possessed the Bible in their vernacular, the
+northern races could point to their _Edda_, the Germanic tribes in
+England to a rich and virile Old English poetry, before a written German
+literature of any consequence existed at all. At the same time, these
+continental tribes, in the epoch that lay between the Migrations of the
+5th century and the age of Charles the Great, were not without poetic
+literature of a kind, but it was not committed to writing, or, at least,
+no record of such a poetry has come down to us. Its existence is vouched
+for by indirect historical evidence, and by the fact that the sagas, out
+of which the German national epic was welded at a later date, originated
+in the great upheaval of the 5th century. When the vernacular literature
+began to emerge from an unwritten state in the 8th century, it proved to
+be merely a weak reflection of the ecclesiastical writings of the
+monasteries; and this, with very few exceptions, Old High German
+literature remained. Translations of the liturgy, of Tatian's _Gospel
+Harmony_ (c. 835), of fragments of sermons, form a large proportion of
+it. Occasionally, as in the so-called _Monsee Fragments_, and at the end
+of the period, in the prose of Notker Labeo (d. 1022), this
+ecclesiastical literature attains a surprising maturity of style and
+expression. But it had no vitality of its own; it virtually sprang into
+existence at the command of Charlemagne, whose policy with regard to the
+use of the vernacular in place of Latin was liberal and far-seeing; and
+it docilely obeyed the tastes of the rulers that followed, becoming
+severely orthodox under Louis the Pious, and consenting to immediate
+extinction when the Saxon emperors withdrew their favour from it. Apart
+from a few shorter poetic fragments of interest, such as the _Merseburg
+Charms_ (_Zaubersprüche_), an undoubted relic of pre-Christian times,
+the _Wessobrunn Prayer_ (c. 780), the _Muspilli_, an imaginative
+description of the Day of Judgment, and the _Ludwigslied_ (881), which
+may be regarded as the starting point for the German historical ballad,
+the only High German poem of importance in this early period was the
+_Gospel Book_ (_Liber evangeliorum_) of Otfrid of Weissenburg (c.
+800-870). Even this work is more interesting as the earliest attempt to
+supersede alliteration in German poetry by rhyme, than for such poetic
+life as the monk of Weissenburg was able to instil into his narrative.
+In fact, for the only genuine poetry of this epoch we have to look, not
+to the High German but to the Low German races. They alone seemed able
+to give literary expression to the memories handed down in oral
+tradition from the 5th century; to Saxon tradition we owe the earliest
+extant fragment of a national saga, the _Lay of Hildebrand_
+(_Hildebrandslied_, c. 800), and a Saxon poet was the author of a
+vigorous alliterative version of the Gospel story, the _Heliand_ (c.
+830), and also of part of the Old Testament (_Genesis_). This
+alliterative epic--for epic it may be called--is the one poem of this
+age in which the Christian tradition has been adapted to German poetic
+needs. Of the existence of a lyric poetry we only know by hearsay; and
+the drama had nowhere in Europe yet emerged from its earliest purely
+liturgic condition. Such as it was, the vernacular literature of the Old
+High German period enjoyed but a brief existence, and in the 10th and
+11th centuries darkness again closed over it. The dominant "German"
+literature in these centuries is in Latin; but that literature is not
+without national interest, for it shows in what direction the German
+mind was moving. The _Lay of Walter_ (_Waltharilied_, c. 930), written
+in elegant hexameters by Ekkehard of St Gall, the moralizing dramas of
+Hrosvitha (Roswitha) of Gandersheim, the _Ecbasis captivi_ (c. 940),
+earliest of all the Beast epics, and the romantic adventures of
+_Ruodlieb_ (c. 1030), form a literature which, Latin although it is,
+foreshadows the future developments of German poetry.
+
+
+II. THE MIDDLE HIGH GERMAN PERIOD (1050-1350)
+
+(a) _Early Middle High German Poetry._--The beginnings of Middle High
+German literature were hardly less tentative than those of the preceding
+period. The Saxon emperors, with their Latin and even Byzantine tastes,
+had made it extremely difficult to take up the thread where Notker let
+it drop. Williram of Ebersberg, the commentator of the _Song of Songs_
+(c. 1063), did certainly profit by Notker's example, but he stands
+alone. The Church had no helping hand to offer poetry, as in the more
+liberal epoch of the great Charles; for, at the middle of the 11th
+century, when the linguistic change from Old to Middle High German was
+taking place, a movement of religious asceticism, originating in the
+Burgundian monastery of Cluny, spread across Europe, and before long all
+the German peoples fell under its influence. For a century there was no
+room for any literature that did not place itself unreservedly at the
+service of the Church, a service which meant the complete abnegation of
+the brighter side of life. Repellent in their asceticism are, for
+instance, poems like _Memento mori_ (c. 1050), _Vom Glauben_, a verse
+commentary on the creed by a monk Hartmann (c. 1120), and a poem on "the
+remembrance of death" (_Von des todes gehugede_) by Heinreich von Melk
+(c. 1150); only rarely, as in a few narrative Poems on Old Testament
+subjects, are the poets of this time able to forget for a time their
+lugubrious faith. In the _Ezzolied_ (c. 1060), a spirited lay by a monk
+of Bamberg on the life, miracles and death of Christ, and in the
+_Annolied_ (c. 1080), a poem in praise of the archbishop Anno of
+Cologne, we find, however, some traces of a higher poetic imagination.
+
+The transition from this rigid ecclesiastic spirit to a freer, more
+imaginative literature is to be seen in the lyric poetry inspired by the
+Virgin, in the legends of the saints which bulk so largely in the poetry
+of the 12th century, and in the general trend towards mysticism.
+Andreas, Pilatus, Aegidius, Albanius are the heroes of monkish romances
+of that age, and the stories of Sylvester and Crescentia form the most
+attractive parts of the _Kaiserchronik_ (c. 1130-1150), a long, confused
+chronicle of the world which contains many elements common to later
+Middle High German poetry. The national sagas, of which the poet of the
+_Kaiserchronik_ had not been oblivious, soon began to assert themselves
+in the popular literature. The wandering _Spielleute_, the lineal
+descendants of the jesters and minstrels of the dark ages, who were now
+rapidly becoming a factor of importance in literature, were here the
+innovators; to them we owe the romance of _König Rother_ (c. 1160), and
+the kindred stories of _Orendel_, _Oswald_ and _Salomon und Markolf_
+(_Salman und Morolf_). All these poems bear witness to a new element,
+which in these years kindled the German imagination and helped to
+counteract the austerity of the religious faith--the Crusades. With what
+alacrity the Germans revelled in the wonderland of the East is to be
+seen especially in the _Alexanderlied_ (c. 1130), and in _Herzog Ernst_
+(c. 1180), romances which point out the way to another important
+development of German medieval literature, the Court epic. The latter
+type of romance was the immediate product of the social conditions
+created by chivalry and, like chivalry itself, was determined and
+influenced by its French origin; so also was the version of the _Chanson
+de Roland_ (_Rolandslied_, c. 1135), which we owe to another priest,
+Konrad of Regensburg, who, with considerable probability, has been
+identified with the author of the _Kaiserchronik_.
+
+The Court epic was, however, more immediately ushered in by Eilhart von
+Oberge, a native of the neighbourhood of Hildesheim who, in his
+_Tristant_ (c. 1170), chose that Arthurian type of romance which from
+now on was especially cultivated by the poets of the Court epic; and of
+equally early origin is a knightly romance of _Floris und Blancheflur_,
+another of the favourite love stories of the middle ages. In these
+years, too, the Beast epic, which had been represented by the Latin
+_Ecbasis captivi_, was reintroduced into Germany by an Alsatian monk,
+Heinrich der Glichezćre, who based his _Reinhart Fuchs_ (c. 1180) on the
+French _Roman de Renart_. Lastly, we have to consider the beginning of
+the _Minnesang_, or lyric, which in the last decades of the 12th century
+burst out with extraordinary vigour in Austria and South Germany. The
+origins are obscure, and it is still debatable how much in the German
+Minnesang is indigenous and national, how much due to French and
+Provençal influence; for even in its earliest phases the Minnesang
+reveals correspondences with the contemporary lyric of the south of
+France. The freshness and originality of the early South German singers,
+such as Kürenberg, Dietmar von Eist, the Burggraf of Rietenburg and
+Meinloh von Sevelingen, are not, however, to be questioned; in spite of
+foreign influence, their verses make the impression of having been a
+spontaneous expression of German lyric feeling in the 12th century. The
+_Spruchdichtung_, a form of poetry which in this period is represented
+by at least two poets who call themselves Herger and "Der Spervogel,"
+was less dependent on foreign models; the pointed and satirical strophes
+of these poets were the forerunners of a vast literature which did not
+reach its highest development until after literature had passed from the
+hands of the noble-born knight to those of the burgher of the towns.
+
+(b) _The Flourishing of Middle High German Poetry._--Such was the
+preparation for the extraordinarily brilliant, although brief epoch of
+German medieval poetry, which corresponded to the reigns of the
+Hohenstaufen emperors, Frederick I. Barbarossa, Henry VI. and Frederick
+II. These rulers, by their ambitious political aspirations and
+achievements, filled the German peoples with a sense of "world-mission,"
+as the leading political power in medieval Europe. Docile pupils of
+French chivalry, the Germans had no sooner learned their lesson than
+they found themselves in the position of being able to dictate to the
+world of chivalry. In the same way, the German poets, who, in the 12th
+century, had been little better than clumsy translators of French
+romances, were able, at the beginning of the 13th, to substitute for
+French _chansons de geste_ epics based on national sagas, to put a
+completely German imprint on the French Arthurian romance, and to sing
+German songs before which even the lyric of Provence paled. National
+epic, Court epic and Minnesang--these three types of medieval German
+literature, to which may be added as a subordinate group didactic
+poetry, comprise virtually all that has come down to us in the Middle
+High German tongue. A Middle High German prose hardly existed, and the
+drama, such as it was, was still essentially Latin.
+
+The first place among the National or Popular epics belongs to the
+_Nibelungenlied_, which received its present form in Austria about the
+turn of the 12th and 13th centuries. Combining, as it does, elements
+from various cycles of sagas--the lower Rhenish legend of Siegfried, the
+Burgundian saga of Gunther and Hagen, the Gothic saga of Dietrich and
+Etzel--it stands out as the most representative epic of German medieval
+life. And in literary power, dramatic intensity and singleness of
+purpose its eminence is no less unique. The vestiges of gradual
+growth--of irreconcilable elements imperfectly welded together--may not
+have been entirely effaced, but they in no way lessen the impression of
+unity which the poem leaves behind it; whoever the welder of the sagas
+may have been, he was clearly a poet of lofty imagination and high epic
+gifts (see NIBELUNGENLIED). Less imposing as a whole, but in parts no
+less powerful in its appeal to the modern mind, is the second of the
+German national epics, _Gudrun_, which was written early in the 13th
+century. This poem, as it has come down to us, is the work of an
+Austrian, but the subject belongs to a cycle of sagas which have their
+home on the shores of the North Sea. It seems almost a freak of chance
+that Siegfried, the hero of the Rhineland, should occupy so prominent a
+position in the _Nibelungenlied_, whereas Dietrich von Bern (i.e. of
+Verona), the name under which Theodoric the Great had been looked up to
+for centuries by the German people as their national hero, should have
+left the stamp of his personality on no single epic of the intrinsic
+worth of the _Nibelungenlied_. He appears, however, more or less in the
+background of a number of romances--_Die Rabenschlacht_, _Dietrichs
+Flucht_, _Alpharts Tod_, _Biterolf und Dietlieb_, _Laurin_, &c.--which
+make up what is usually called the _Heldenbuch_. It is tempting, indeed,
+to see in this very unequal collection the basis for what, under more
+favourable circumstances, might have developed into an epic even more
+completely representative of the German nation than the
+_Nibelungenlied_.
+
+While the influence of the romance of chivalry is to be traced on all
+these popular epics, something of the manlier, more primitive ideals
+that animated German national poetry passed over to the second great
+group of German medieval poetry, the Court epic. The poet who, following
+Eilhart von Oberge's tentative beginnings, established the Court epic in
+Germany was Heinrich von Veldeke, a native of the district of the lower
+Rhine; his _Eneit_, written between 1173 and 1186, is based on a French
+original. Other poets of the time, such as Herbort von Fritzlar, the
+author of a _Liet von Troye_, followed Heinrich's example, and selected
+French models for German poems on antique themes; while Albrecht von
+Halberstadt translated about the year 1210 the _Metamorphoses_ of Ovid
+into German verse. With the three masters of the Court epic, Hartmann
+von Aue, Wolfram von Eschenbach and Gottfried von Strassburg--all of
+them contemporaries--the Arthurian cycle became the recognized theme of
+this type of romance, and the accepted embodiment of the ideals of the
+knightly classes. Hartmann was a Swabian, Wolfram a Bavarian, Gottfried
+presumably a native of Strassburg. Hartmann, who in his _Erec_ and
+_Iwein_, _Gregorius_ and _Der arme Heinrich_ combined a tendency towards
+religious asceticism with a desire to imbue the worldly life of the
+knight with a moral and religious spirit, provided the Court epic of the
+age with its best models; he had, of all the medieval court poets, the
+most delicate sense for the formal beauty of poetry, for language, verse
+and style. Wolfram and Gottfried, on the other hand, represent two
+extremes of poetic temperament. Wolfram's _Parzival_ is filled with
+mysticism and obscure spiritual significance; its flashes of humour
+irradiate, although they can hardly be said to illumine, the gloom; its
+hero is, unconsciously, a symbol and allegory of much which to the poet
+himself must have been mysterious and inexplicable; in other words,
+_Parzival_--and Wolfram's other writings, _Willehalm_ and _Titurel_,
+point in the same direction--is an instinctive or, to use Schiller's
+word, a "naďve" work of genius. Gottfried, again, is hardly less gifted
+and original, but he is a poet of a wholly different type. His _Tristan_
+is even more lucid than Hartmann's _Iwein_, his art is more objective;
+his delight in it is that of the conscious artist who sees his work
+growing under his hands. Gottfried's poem, in other words, is free from
+the obtrusion of those subjective elements which are in so high a degree
+characteristic of _Parzival_; in spite of the tragic character of the
+story, _Tristan_ is radiant and serene, and yet uncontaminated by that
+tone of frivolity which the Renaissance introduced into love stories of
+this kind.
+
+_Parzival_ and _Tristan_ are the two poles of the German Court epic, and
+the subsequent development of that epic stands under the influence of
+the three poets, Hartmann, Wolfram and Gottfried; according as the poets
+of the 13th century tend to imitate one or other of these, they fall
+into three classes. To the followers and imitators of Hartmann belong
+Ulrich von Zatzikhoven, the author of a _Lanzelet_ (c. 1195); Wirnt von
+Gravenberg, a Bavarian, whose _Wigalois_ (c. 1205) shows considerable
+imaginative power; the versatile Spielmann, known as "Der Stricker"; and
+Heinrich von dem Türlin, author of an unwieldy epic, _Die Krone_ ("the
+crown of all adventures," c. 1220). The fascination of Wolfram's
+mysticism is to be seen in _Der jüngere Titurel_ of a Bavarian poet,
+Albrecht von Scharfenberg (c. 1270), and in the still later _Lohengrin_
+of an unknown poet; whereas Gottfried von Strassburg dominates the
+_Flore und Blanscheflur_ of Konrad Fleck (c. 1220) and the voluminous
+romances of the two chief poets of the later 13th century, Rudolf von
+Ems, who died in 1254, and Konrad von Würzburg, who lived till 1287. Of
+these, Konrad alone carried on worthily the traditions of the great age,
+and even his art, which excels within the narrow limits of romances like
+_Die Herzemoere_ and _Engelhard_, becomes diffuse and wearisome on the
+unlimited canvas of _Der Trojanerkrieg_ and _Partonopier und Meliur_.
+
+The most conspicuous changes which came over the narrative poetry of the
+13th century were, on the one hand, a steady encroachment of realism on
+the matter and treatment of the epic, and, on the other, a leaning to
+didacticism. The substitution of the "history" of the chronicle for the
+confessedly imaginative stories of the earlier poets is to be seen in
+the work of Rudolf von Ems, and of a number of minor chroniclers like
+Ulrich von Eschenbach, Berthold von Holle and Jans Enikel; while for the
+growth of realism we may look to the _Pfaffe Amis_, a collection of
+comic anecdotes by "Der Stricker," the admirable peasant romance _Meier
+Helmbrecht_, written between 1236 and 1250 by Wernher der Gartenaere in
+Bavaria, and to the adventures of Ulrich von Lichtenstein, as described
+in his _Frauendienst_ (1255) and _Frauenbuch_ (1257).
+
+More than any single poet of the Court epic, more even than the poet of
+the _Nibelungenlied_, Walther von der Vogelweide summed up in himself
+all that was best in the group of poetic literature with which he was
+associated--the Minnesang. The early Austrian singers already mentioned,
+poets like Heinrich von Veldeke, who in his lyrics, as in his epic,
+introduced the French conception of _Minne_, or like the manly Friedrich
+von Hausen, and the Swiss imitator of Provençal measures, Rudolf von
+Fenis appear only in the light of forerunners. Even more original
+poets, like Heinrich von Morungen and Walther's own master, Reinmar von
+Hagenau, the author of harmonious but monotonously elegiac verses, or
+among immediate contemporaries, Hartmann von Aue and Wolfram von
+Eschenbach, whose few lyric strophes are as deeply stamped with his
+individuality as his epics--seem only tributary to the full rich stream
+of Walther's genius. There was not a form of the German Minnesang which
+Walther did not amplify and deepen; songs of courtly love and lowly
+love, of religious faith and delight in nature, patriotic songs and
+political _Sprüche_--in all he was a master. Of Walther's life we are
+somewhat better informed than in the case of his contemporaries: he was
+born about 1170 and died about 1230; his art he learned in Austria,
+whereupon he wandered through South Germany, a welcome guest wherever he
+went, although his vigorous championship of what he regarded as the
+national cause in the political struggles of the day won him foes as
+well as friends. For centuries he remained the accepted exemplar of
+German lyric poetry; not merely the Minnesänger who followed him, but
+also the Meistersinger of the 15th and 16th centuries looked up to him
+as one of the founders and lawgivers of their art. He was the most
+influential of all Germany's lyric poets, and in the breadth,
+originality and purity of his inspiration one of her greatest (see
+WALTHER VON DER VOGELWEIDE).
+
+The development of the German Minnesang after Walther's death and under
+his influence is easily summed up. Contemporaries had been impressed by
+the dual character of Walther's lyric; they distinguished a higher
+courtly lyric, and a lower more outspoken form of song, free from the
+constraint of social or literary conventions. The later Minnesang
+emphasized this dualism. Amongst Walther's immediate contemporaries,
+high-born poets, whose lives were passed at courts, naturally cultivated
+the higher lyric; but the more gifted and original singers of the time
+rejoiced in the freedom of Walther's poetry of _niedere Minne_. It was,
+in fact, in accordance with the spirit of the age that the latter should
+have been Walther's most valuable legacy to his successors; and the
+greatest of these, Neidhart von Reuental (c. 1180-c. 1250), certainly
+did not allow himself to be hampered by aristocratic prejudices.
+Neidhart sought the themes of his _höfische Dorfpoesie_ in the village,
+and, as the mood happened to dictate, depicted the peasant with humorous
+banter or biting satire. The lyric poets of the later 13th century were
+either, like Burkart von Hohenfels, Ulrich von Winterstetten and
+Gottfried von Neifen, echoes of Walther von der Vogelweide and of
+Neidhart, or their originality was confined to some particular form of
+lyric poetry in which they excelled. Thus the singer known as "Der
+Tannhäuser" distinguished himself as an imitator of the French
+_pastourelle_; Reinmar von Zweter was purely a _Spruchdichter_. More or
+less common to all is the consciousness that their own ideas and
+surroundings were no longer in harmony with the aristocratic world of
+chivalry, which the poets of the previous generation had glorified. The
+solid advantages, material prosperity and increasing comfort of life in
+the German towns appealed to poets like Steinmar von Klingenau more than
+the unworldly ideals of self-effacing knighthood which Ulrich von
+Lichtenstein and Johann Hadlaub of Zürich clung to so tenaciously and
+extolled so warmly. On the whole, the Spruchdichter came best out of
+this ordeal of changing fashions; and the increasing interest in the
+moral and didactic applications of literature favoured the development
+of this form of verse. The confusion of didactic purpose with the lyric
+is common to all the later poetry, to that of the learned Marner, of
+Boppe, Rumezland and Heinrich von Meissen, who was known to later
+generations as "Frauenlob." The _Spruchdichtung_, in fact, was one of
+the connecting links between the Minnesang of the 13th and the lyric and
+satiric poetry of the 15th and 16th centuries.
+
+The disturbing and disintegrating element in the literature of the 13th
+century was thus the substitution of a utilitarian didacticism for the
+idealism of chivalry. In the early decades of that century, poems like
+_Der Winsbeke_, by a Bavarian, and _Der welsche Gast_, written in
+1215-1216 by Thomasin von Zirclaere (Zirclaria), a native of Friuli,
+still teach with uncompromising idealism the duties and virtues of the
+knightly life. But in the _Bescheidenheit_ (c. 1215-1230) of a wandering
+singer, who called himself Freidank, we find for the first time an
+active antagonism to the unworldly code of chivalry and an unmistakable
+reflection of the changing social order, brought about by the rise of
+what we should now call the middle class. Freidank is the spokesman of
+the _Bürger_, and in his terse, witty verses may be traced the germs of
+German intellectual and literary development in the coming
+centuries--even of the Reformation itself. From the advent of Freidank
+onwards, the satiric and didactic poetry went the way of the epic; what
+it gained in quantity it lost in quality and concentration. The satires
+associated with the name of Seifried Helbling, an Austrian who wrote in
+the last fifteen years of the 13th century, and _Der Renner_ by Hugo von
+Trimberg, written at the very end of the century, may be taken as
+characteristic of the later period, where terseness and incisive wit
+have given place to diffuse moralizing and allegory.
+
+There is practically no Middle High German literature in prose; such
+prose as has come down to us--the tracts of David of Augsburg, the
+powerful sermons of Berthold von Regensburg (d. 1272), Germany's
+greatest medieval preacher, and several legal codes, as the
+_Sachsenspiegel_ and _Schwabenspiegel_--only prove that the Germans of
+the 13th century had not yet realized the possibilities of prose as a
+medium of literary expression.
+
+
+III. THE TRANSITION PERIOD (1350-1600)
+
+(a) _The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries._--As is the case with all
+transitional periods of literary history, this epoch of German
+literature may be considered under two aspects: on the one hand, we may
+follow in it the decadence and disintegration of the literature of the
+Middle High German period; on the other, we may study the beginnings of
+modern forms of poetry and the preparation of that spiritual revolution,
+which meant hardly less to the Germanic peoples than the Renaissance to
+the Latin races--the Protestant Reformation.
+
+By the middle of the 14th century, knighthood with its chivalric ideals
+was rapidly declining, and the conditions under which medieval poetry
+had flourished were passing away. The social change rendered the courtly
+epic of Arthur's Round Table in great measure incomprehensible to the
+younger generation, and made it difficult for them to understand the
+spirit that actuated the heroes of the national epic; the tastes to
+which the lyrics of the great Minnesingers had appealed were vitiated by
+the more practical demands of the rising middle classes. But the stories
+of chivalry still appealed as stories to the people, although the old
+way of telling them was no longer appreciated. The feeling for beauty of
+form and expression was lost; the craving for a moral purpose and
+didactic aim had to be satisfied at the cost of artistic beauty; and
+sensational incident was valued more highly than fine character-drawing
+or inspired poetic thought. Signs of the decadence are to be seen in the
+_Karlmeinet_ of this period, stories from the youth of Charlemagne, in a
+continuation of _Parzival_ by two Alsatians, Claus Wisse and Philipp
+Colin (c. 1335), in an _Apollonius von Tyrus_ by Heinrich von Neuenstadt
+(c. 1315), and a _Königstochter von Frankreich_ by Hans von Bühel (c.
+1400). The story of Siegfried was retold in a rough ballad, _Das Lied
+von hürnen Seyfried_, the _Heldenbuch_ was recast in _Knittelvers_ or
+doggerel (1472), and even the Arthurian epic was parodied. A no less
+marked symptom of decadence is to be seen in a large body of allegorical
+poetry analogous to the _Roman de la rose_ in France; Heinzelein of
+Constance, at the end of the 13th, and Hadamar von Laber and Hermann von
+Sachsenheim, about the middle of the 15th century, were representatives
+of this movement. As time went on, prose versions of the old stories
+became more general, and out of these developed the _Volksbücher_, such
+as _Loher und Maller_, _Die Haimonskinder_, _Die schöne Magelone_,
+_Melusine_, which formed the favourite reading of the German people for
+centuries. As the last monuments of the decadent narrative literature of
+the middle ages, we may regard the _Buch der Abenteuer_ of Ulrich
+Füetrer, written at the end of the 15th century, and _Der Weisskönig_
+and _Teuerdank_ by the emperor Maximilian I. (1459-1519) printed in the
+early years of the 16th. At the beginning of the new epoch the Minnesang
+could still point to two masters able to maintain the great traditions
+of the 13th century, Hugo von Montfort (1357-1423) and Oswald von
+Wolkenstein (1367-1445); but as the lyric passed into the hands of the
+middle-class poets of the German towns, it was rapidly shorn of its
+essentially lyric qualities; _die Minne_ gave place to moral and
+religious dogmatism, emphasis was laid on strict adherence to the rules
+of composition, and the simple forms of the older lyric were superseded
+by ingenious metrical distortions. Under the influence of writers like
+Heinrich von Meissen ("Frauenlob," c. 1250-1318) and Heinrich von Mügeln
+in the 14th century, like Muskatblut and Michael Beheim (1416-c. 1480)
+in the 15th, the Minnesang thus passed over into the Meistergesang. In
+the later 15th and in the 16th centuries all the south German towns
+possessed flourishing Meistersinger schools in which the art of writing
+verse was taught and practised according to complicated rules, and it
+was the ambition of every gifted citizen to rise through the various
+grades from _Schüler_ to _Meister_ and to distinguish himself in the
+"singing contests" instituted by the schools.
+
+Such are the decadent aspects of the once rich literature of the Middle
+High German period in the 14th and 15th centuries. Turning now to the
+more positive side of the literary movement, we have to note a revival
+of a popular lyric poetry--the Volkslied--which made the futility and
+artificiality of the Meistergesang more apparent. Never before or since
+has Germany been able to point to such a rich harvest of popular poetry
+as is to be seen in the Volkslieder of these two centuries. Every form
+of popular poetry is to be found here--songs of love and war, hymns and
+drinking-songs, songs of spring and winter, historical ballads, as well
+as lyrics in which the old motives of the Minnesang reappear stripped of
+all artificiality. More obvious ties with the literature of the
+preceding age are to be seen in the development of the _Schwank_ or
+comic anecdote. Collections of such stories, which range from the
+practical jokes of _Till Eulenspiegel_ (1515), and the coarse witticisms
+of the _Pfaffe vom Kalenberg_ (end of 14th century) and _Peter Leu_
+(1550), to the religious and didactic anecdotes of J. Pauli's _Schimpf
+und Ernst_ (1522) or the more literary _Rollwagenbüchlein_ (1555) of
+Jörg Wickram and the _Wendunmut_ (1563 ff.) of H.W. Kirchhoff--these
+dominate in large measure the literature of the 15th and 16th centuries;
+they are the literary descendants of the medieval _Pfaffe Amis_,
+_Markolf_ and _Reinhart Fuchs_. An important development of this type of
+popular literature is to be seen in the _Narrenschiff_ of Sebastian
+Brant (1457-1521), where the humorous anecdote became a vehicle of the
+bitterest satire; Brant's own contempt for the vulgarity of the
+ignorant, and the deep, unsatisfied craving of all strata of society for
+a wider intellectual horizon and a more humane and dignified life, to
+which Brant gave voice, make the _Narrenschiff_, which appeared in 1494,
+a landmark on the way that led to the Reformation. Another form--the
+Beast fable and Beast epic--which is but sparingly represented in
+earlier times, appealed with peculiar force to the new generation. At
+the very close of the Middle High German period, Ulrich Boner had
+revived the Aesopic fable in his _Edelstein_ (1349), translations of
+Aesop in the following century added to the popularity of the fable
+(q.v.), and in the century of the Reformation it became, in the hands of
+Burkard Waldis (_Esopus_, 1548) and Erasmus Alberus (_Buch von der
+Tugend und Weisheit_, 1550), a favourite instrument of satire and
+polemic. A still more attractive form of the Beast fable was the epic of
+_Reinke de Vos_, which had been cultivated by Flemish poets in the 13th
+and 14th centuries and has come down to us in a Low Saxon translation,
+published at Lübeck in 1498. This, too, like Brant's poem, is a powerful
+satire on human folly, and is also, like the _Narrenschiff_, a harbinger
+of the coming Reformation.
+
+A complete innovation was the drama (q.v.), which, as we have seen, had
+practically no existence in Middle High German times. As in all European
+literatures, it emerged slowly and with difficulty from its original
+subservience to the church liturgy. As time went on, the vernacular was
+substituted for the original Latin, and with increasing demands for
+pageantry, the scene of the play was removed to the churchyard or the
+market-place; thus the opportunity arose in the 14th and 15th centuries
+for developing the _Weihnachtsspiel_, _Osterspiel_ and _Passionsspiel_
+on secular lines. The enlargement of the scope of the religious play to
+include legends of the saints implied a further step in the direction of
+a complete separation of the drama from ecclesiastical ceremony. The
+most interesting example of this encroachment of the secular spirit is
+the _Spiel von Frau Jutten_--Jutta being the notorious Pope Joan--by an
+Alsatian, Dietrich Schernberg, in 1480. Meanwhile, in the 15th century,
+a beginning had been made of a drama entirely independent of the church.
+The mimic representations--originally allegorical in character--with
+which the people amused themselves at the great festivals of the year,
+and more especially in spring, were interspersed with dialogue, and
+performed on an improvised stage. This was the beginning of the
+_Fastnachtsspiel_ or Shrovetide-play, the subject of which was a comic
+anecdote similar to those of the many collections of _Schwänke_. Amongst
+the earliest cultivators of the _Fastnachtsspiel_ were Hans Rosenplüt
+(fl. c. 1460) and Hans Folz (fl. c. 1510), both of whom were associated
+with Nuremberg.
+
+(b) _The Age of the Reformation._--Promising as were these literary
+beginnings of the 15th century, the real significance of the period in
+Germany's intellectual history is to be sought outside literature,
+namely, in two forces which immediately prepared the way for the
+Reformation--mysticism and humanism. The former of these had been a more
+or less constant factor in German religious thought throughout the
+middle ages, but with Meister Eckhart (? 1260-1327), the most powerful
+and original of all the German mystics, with Heinrich Seuse or Suso (c.
+1300-1366), and Johannes Tauler (c. 1300-1361), it became a clearly
+defined mental attitude towards religion; it was an essentially personal
+interpretation of Christianity, and, as such, was naturally conducive to
+the individual freedom which Protestantism ultimately realized. It is
+thus not to be wondered at that we should owe the early translations of
+the Bible into German--one was printed at Strassburg in 1466--to the
+mystics. Johann Geiler von Kaisersberg (1445-1510), a pupil of the
+humanists and a friend of Sebastian Brant, may be regarded as a link
+between Eckhart and the earlier mysticists and Luther. Humanism was
+transplanted to German soil with the foundation of the university of
+Prague in 1348, and it made even greater strides than mysticism. Its
+immediate influence, however, was restricted to the educated classes;
+the pre-Reformation humanists despised the vernacular and wrote and
+thought only in Latin. Thus although neither Johann Reuchlin of
+Pforzheim (1455-1522), nor even the patriotic Alsatian, Jakob Wimpfeling
+(or Wimpheling) (1450-1528)--not to mention the great Dutch humanist
+Erasmus of Rotterdam (1466-1536)--has a place in the history of German
+literature, their battle for liberalism in thought and scholarship
+against the narrow orthodoxy of the Church cleared the way for a healthy
+national literature among the German-speaking peoples. The incisive wit
+and irony of humanistic satire--we need only instance the _Epistolae
+obscurorum virorum_ (1515-1517)--prevented the German satirists of the
+Reformation age from sinking entirely into that coarse brutality to
+which they were only too prone. To the influence of the humanists we
+also owe many translations from the Latin and Italian dating from the
+15th century. Prominent among the writers who contributed to the group
+of literature were Niklas von Wyl, chancellor of Württemberg, and his
+immediate contemporary Albrecht von Eyb (1420-1475).
+
+Martin Luther (1483-1546), Germany's greatest man in this age of
+intellectual new-birth, demands a larger share of attention in a survey
+of literature than his religious and ecclesiastical activity would in
+itself justify, if only because the literary activity of the age cannot
+be regarded apart from him. From the Volkslied and the popular _Schwank_
+to satire and drama, literature turned exclusively round the Reformation
+which had been inaugurated on the 31st of October 1517 by Luther's
+publication of the _Theses against Indulgences_ in Wittenberg. In his
+three tracts, _An den christlichen Adel deutscher Nation_, _De
+captivitate Babylonica ecclesiae_, and _Von der Freiheit eines
+Christenmenschen_ (1520), Luther laid down his principles of reform, and
+in the following year resolutely refused to recant his heresies in a
+dramatic scene before the Council of Worms. Luther's Bible (1522-1534)
+had unique importance not merely for the religious and intellectual
+welfare of the German people, but also for their literature. It is in
+itself a literary monument, a German classic, and the culmination and
+justification of that movement which had supplanted the medieval knight
+by the burgher and swept away Middle High German poetry. Luther, well
+aware that his translation of the Bible must be the keystone to his
+work, gave himself endless pains to produce a thoroughly German
+work--German both in language and in spirit. It was important that the
+dialect into which the Bible was translated should be comprehensible
+over as wide an area as possible of the German-speaking world, and for
+this reason he took all possible care in choosing the vocabulary and
+forms of his _Gemeindeutsch_. The language of the Saxon chancery thus
+became, thanks to Luther's initiative, the basis of the modern High
+German literary language. As a hymn-writer (_Geistliche Lieder_, 1564),
+Luther was equally mindful of the importance of adapting himself to the
+popular tradition; and his hymns form the starting-point for a vast
+development of German religious poetry which did not reach its highest
+point until the following century.
+
+The most powerful and virile literature of this age was the satire with
+which the losing side retaliated on the Protestant leaders. Amongst
+Luther's henchmen, Philipp Melanchthon (1497-1560), the "praeceptor
+Germaniae," and Ulrich von Hutten (1488-1523) were powerful allies in
+the cause, but their intellectual sympathies were with the Latin
+humanists; and with the exception of some vigorous German prose and
+still more vigorous German verse by Hutten, both wrote in Latin. The
+satirical dramas of Niklas Manuel, a Swiss writer and the polemical
+fables of Erasmus Alberus (c. 1500-1553), on the other hand, were
+insignificant compared with the fierce assault on Protestantism by the
+Alsatian monk, Thomas Murner (1475-1537). The most unscrupulous of all
+German satirists, Murner shrank from no extremes of scurrility, his
+attacks on Luther reaching their culmination in the gross personalities
+of _Von dem lutherischen Narren_ (1522). It was not until the following
+generation that the Protestant party could point to a satirist who in
+genius and power was at all comparable to Murner, namely, to Johann
+Fischart (c. 1550-c. 1591); but when Fischart's Rabelaisian humour is
+placed by the side of his predecessor's work, we see that, in spite of
+counter-reformations, the Protestant cause stood in a very different
+position in Fischart's day from that which it had occupied fifty years
+before. Fischart took his stand on the now firm union between humanism
+and Protestantism. His chief work, the _Affentheuerlich
+Naupengeheurliche Geschichtklitterung_ (1575), a Germanization of the
+first book of Rabelais' satire, is a witty and ingenious monstrosity, a
+satirical comment on the life of the 16th century, not the virulent
+expression of party strife. The day of a personal and brutal type of
+satire was clearly over, and the writers of the later 16th century
+reverted more and more to the finer methods of the humanists. The satire
+of Bartholomaeus Ringwaldt (1530-1599) and of Georg Rollenhagen
+(1542-1609), author of the _Froschmeuseler_ (1595), was more "literary"
+and less actual than even Fischart's.
+
+On the whole, the form of literature which succeeded best in
+emancipating itself from the trammels of religious controversy in the
+16th century was the drama. Protestantism proved favourable to its
+intellectual and literary development, and the humanists, who had always
+prided themselves on their imitations of Latin comedy, introduced into
+it a sense for form and proportion. The Latin school comedy in Germany
+was founded by J. Wimpfeling with his _Stylpho_ (1470) and by J.
+Reuchlin with his witty adaptation of _Maître Patelin_ in his _Henno_
+(1498). In the 16th century the chief writers of Latin dramas were
+Thomas Kirchmair or Naogeorgus (1511-1563), Caspar Brülow (1585-1627),
+and Nikodemus Frischlin (1547-1590), who also wrote dramas in the
+vernacular. The work of these men bears testimony in its form and its
+choice of subjects to the close relationship between Latin and German
+drama in the 16th century. One of the earliest focusses for a German
+drama inspired by the Reformation was Switzerland. In Basel, Pamphilus
+Gengenbach produced moralizing _Fastnachtsspiele_ in 1515-1516; Niklas
+Manuel of Bern (1484-1530)--who has just been mentioned--employed the
+same type of play as a vehicle of pungent satire against the Mass and
+the sale of indulgences. But it was not long before the German drama
+benefited by the humanistic example: the _Parabell vam vorlorn Szohn_ by
+Burkard Waldis (1527), the many dramas on the subject of
+_Susanna_--notably those of Sixt Birck (1532) and Paul Rebhun(1535)--and
+Frischlin's German plays are attempts to treat Biblical themes according
+to classic methods. In another of the important literary centres of the
+16th century, however, in Nuremberg, the drama developed on indigenous
+lines. Hans Sachs (1494-1576), the Nuremberg cobbler and Meistersinger,
+the most productive writer of the age, went his own way; a voracious
+reader and an unwearied storyteller, he left behind him a vast literary
+legacy, embracing every form of popular literature from _Spruch_ and
+_Schwank_ to complicated _Meistergesang_ and lengthy drama. He laid
+under contribution the rich Renaissance literature with which the
+humanistic translators had flooded Germany, and he became himself an
+ardent champion of the "Wittembergisch Nachtigall" Luther. But in the
+progressive movement of the German drama he played an even smaller role
+than his Swiss and Saxon contemporaries; for his tragedies and comedies
+are deficient in all dramatic qualities; they are only stories in
+dialogue. In the _Fastnachtsspiele_, where dramatic form is less
+essential than anecdotal point and brevity, he is to be seen at his
+best. Rich as the 16th century was in promise, the conditions for the
+development of a national drama were unfavourable. At the close of the
+century the influence of the English drama--brought to Germany by
+English actors--introduced the deficient dramatic and theatrical force
+into the humanistic and "narrative" drama which has just been
+considered. This is to be seen in the work of Jakob Ayrer (d. 1605) and
+Duke Henry Julius of Brunswick (1564-1613). But unfortunately these
+beginnings had hardly made themselves felt when the full current of the
+Renaissance was diverted across Germany, bringing in its train the
+Senecan tragedy. Then came the Thirty Years' War, which completely
+destroyed the social conditions indispensable for the establishment of a
+theatre at once popular and national.
+
+The novel was less successful than the drama in extricating itself from
+satire and religious controversy. Fischart was too dependent on foreign
+models and too erratic--at one time adapting Rabelais, at another
+translating the old heroic romance of _Amadis de Gaula_--to create a
+national form of German fiction in the 16th century; the most important
+novelist was a much less talented writer, the Alsatian Meistersinger and
+dramatist Jörg Wickram (d. c. 1560), who has been already mentioned as
+the author of a popular collection of anecdotes, the _Rollwagenbüchlein_.
+His longer novels, _Der Knabenspiegel_ (1554) and Der Goldfaden (1557),
+are in form, and especially in the importance they attach to
+psychological developments, the forerunners of the movement to which we
+owe the best works of German fiction in the 18th century. But Wickram
+stands alone. So inconsiderable, in fact, is the fiction of the
+Reformation age in Germany that we have to regard the old _Volksbücher_
+as its equivalent; and it is significant that of all the prose writings
+of this age, the book which affords the best insight into the temper and
+spirit of the Reformation was just one of these crude _Volksbücher_,
+namely, the famous story of the magician _Doctor Johann Faust_, published
+at Frankfort in 1587.
+
+
+IV. THE RENAISSANCE (1600-1740)
+
+The 17th century in Germany presents a complete contrast to its
+predecessor; the fact that it was the century of the Thirty Years' War,
+which devastated the country, crippled the prosperity of the towns, and
+threw back by many generations the social development of the people,
+explains much, but it can hardly be held entirely responsible for the
+intellectual apathy, the slavery to foreign customs and foreign ideas,
+which stunted the growth of the nation. The freedom of Lutheranism
+degenerated into a paralyzing Lutheran orthodoxy which was as hostile to
+the "Freiheit eines Christenmenschen" as that Catholicism it had
+superseded; the idealism of the humanists degenerated in the same way
+into a dry, pedantic scholasticism which held the German mind in fetters
+until, at the very close of the century, Leibnitz set it free. Most
+disheartening of all, literature which in the 16th century had been so
+full of promise and had conformed with such aptitude to the new ideas,
+was in all its higher manifestations blighted by the dead hand of
+pseudo-classicism. The unkempt literature of the Reformation age
+admittedly stood in need of guidance and discipline, but the 17th
+century made the fatal mistake of trying to impose the laws and rules of
+Romance literatures on a people of a purely Germanic stock.
+
+There were, however, some branches of German poetry which escaped this
+foreign influence. The church hymn, continuing the great Lutheran
+traditions, rose in the 17th century to extraordinary richness both in
+quality and quantity. Paul Gerhardt (1607-1676), the greatest German
+hymn-writer, was only one of many Lutheran pastors who in this age
+contributed to the German hymnal. On the Catholic side, Angelus
+Silesius, or Johann Scheffler (1624-1677) showed what a wealth of poetry
+lay in the mystic speculations of Jakob Boehme, the gifted shoemaker of
+Görlitz (1575-1624), and author of the famous _Aurora, oder Morgenröte
+im Aufgang_ (1612); while Friedrich von Spee (1591-1635), another
+leading Catholic poet of the century, cultivated the pastoral allegory
+of the Renaissance. The revival of mysticism associated with Boehme
+gradually spread through the whole religious life of the 17th century,
+Protestant as well as Catholic, and in the more specifically Protestant
+form of pietism, it became, at the close of the period, a force of
+moment in the literary revival. Besides the hymn, the Volkslied, which
+amidst the struggles and confusion of the great war bore witness to a
+steadily growing sense of patriotism, lay outside the domain of the
+literary theorists and dictators, and developed in its own way. But all
+else--if we except certain forms of fiction, which towards the end of
+the 17th century rose into prominence--stood completely under the sway
+of the Latin Renaissance.
+
+The first focus of the movement was Heidelberg, which had been a centre
+of humanistic learning in the sixteenth century. Here, under the
+leadership of J.W. Zincgref (1591-1635), a number of scholarly writers
+carried into practice that interest in the vernacular which had been
+shown a little earlier by the German translator of Marot, Paul Schede or
+Melissus, librarian in Heidelberg. The most important forerunner of
+Opitz was G.R. Weckherlin (1584-1653), a native of Württemberg who had
+spent the best part of his life in England; his _Oden und Gesänge_
+(1618-1619) ushered in the era of Renaissance poetry in Germany with a
+promise that was but indifferently fulfilled by his successors. Of these
+the greatest, or at least the most influential, was Martin Opitz
+(1597-1639). He was a native of Silesia and, as a student in Heidelberg,
+came into touch with Zincgref's circle; subsequently, in the course of a
+visit to Holland, a more definite trend was given to his ideas by the
+example of the Dutch poet and scholar, Daniel Heinsius. As a poet, Opitz
+experimented with every form of recognized Renaissance poetry from ode
+and epic to pastoral romance and Senecan drama; but his poetry is for
+the most part devoid of inspiration; and his extraordinary fame among
+his contemporaries would be hard to understand, were it not that in his
+_Buch von der deutschen Poeterey_ (1624) he gave the German Renaissance
+its theoretical textbook. In this tract, in which Opitz virtually
+reproduced in German the accepted dogmas of Renaissance theorists like
+Scaliger and Ronsard, he not merely justified his own mechanical
+verse-making, but also gave Germany a law-book which regulated her
+literature for a hundred years.
+
+The work of Opitz as a reformer was furthered by another institution of
+Latin origin, namely, literary societies modelled on the _Accademia
+della Crusca_ in Florence. These societies, of which the chief were the
+_Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft_ or _Palmenorden_ (founded 1617), the
+_Elbschwanenorden_ in Hamburg and the _Gekrönter Blumenorden an der
+Pegnitz or Gesellschaft der Pegnitzschäfer_ in Nuremberg, were the
+centres of literary activity during the unsettled years of the war.
+Although they produced much that was trivial--such as the extraordinary
+_Nürnberger Trichter_ (1647-1653) by G.P. Harsdörffer (1607-1658), a
+treatise which professed to turn out a fully equipped German poet in the
+space of six hours--these societies also did German letters an
+invaluable service by their attention to the language, one of their
+chief objects having been to purify the German language from foreign and
+un-German ingredients. J.G. Schottelius (1612-1676), for instance, wrote
+his epoch-making grammatical works with the avowed purpose of furthering
+the objects of the _Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft_. Meanwhile the poetic
+centre of gravity in Germany had shifted from Heidelberg to the extreme
+north-east, to Königsberg, where a group of academic poets gave
+practical expression to the Opitzian theory. Chief among them was Simon
+Dach (1605-1659), a gentle, elegiac writer on whom the laws of the _Buch
+von der deutschen Poeterey_ did not lie too heavily. He, like his more
+manly and vigorous contemporary Paul Fleming (1609-1640), showed, one
+might say, that it was possible to write good and sincere poetry
+notwithstanding Opitz's mechanical rules.
+
+In the previous century the most advanced form of literature had been
+satire, and under the new conditions the satiric vein still proved most
+productive; but it was no longer the full-blooded satire of the
+Reformation, or even the rich and luxuriant satiric fancy of Fischart,
+which found expression in the 17th century. Satire pure and simple was
+virtually only cultivated by two Low German poets, J. Lauremberg
+(1590-1658) and J. Rachel (1618-1669), of whom at least the latter was
+accepted by the Opitzian school; but the satiric spirit rose to higher
+things in the powerful and scathing sermons of J.B. Schupp (1610-1661),
+an outspoken Hamburg preacher, and in the scurrilous wit of the Viennese
+monk Abraham a Sancta Clara (1644-1709), who had inherited some of his
+predecessor Murner's intellectual gifts. Best of all are the epigrams of
+the most gifted of all the Silesian group of writers, Friedrich von
+Logau (1604-1655). Logau's three thousand epigrams (_Deutsche
+Sinngedichte_, 1654) afford a key to the intellectual temper of the 17th
+century; they are the epitome of their age. Here are to be seen
+reflected the vices of the time, its aping of French customs and its
+contempt for what was national and German; Logau held up to ridicule the
+vain bloodshed of the war in the interest of Christianity, and, although
+he praised Opitz, he was far from prostrating himself at the dictator's
+feet. Logau is an epigrammatist of the first rank, and perhaps the most
+remarkable product of the Renaissance movement in Germany.
+
+Opitz found difficulty in providing Germany with a drama according to
+the classic canon. He had not himself ventured beyond translations of
+Sophocles and Seneca, and Johann Rist (1607-1667) in Hamburg, one of the
+few contemporary dramatists, had written plays more in the manner of
+Duke Heinrich Julius of Brunswick than of Opitz. It was not until after
+the latter's death that the chief dramatist of the Renaissance movement
+came forward in the person of Andreas Gryphius (1616-1664). Like Opitz,
+Gryphius also was a Silesian, and a poet of no mean ability, as is to be
+seen from his lyric poetry; but his tragedies, modelled on the stiff
+Senecan pattern, suffered from the lack of a theatre, and from his
+ignorance of the existence of a more highly developed drama in France,
+not to speak of England. As it was, he was content with Dutch models. In
+the field of comedy, where he was less hampered by theories of dramatic
+propriety, he allowed himself to benefit by the freedom of the Dutch
+farce and the comic effects of the English actors in Germany; in his
+_Horribilicribrifax_ and _Herr Peter Squentz_--the latter an adaptation
+of the comic scenes of the _Midsummer Night's Dream_--Gryphius has
+produced the best German plays of the 17th century.
+
+The German novel of the 17th century was, as has been already indicated,
+less hampered by Renaissance laws than other forms of literature, and
+although it was none the less at the mercy of foreign influence, that
+influence was more varied and manifold in its character. _Don Quixote_
+had been partly translated early in the 17th century, the picaresque
+romance had found its way to Germany at a still earlier date; while H.M.
+Moscherosch (1601-1669) in his _Gesichte Philanders von Sittewald_
+(1642-1643) made the _Sueńos_ of Quevedo the basis for vivid pictures of
+the life of the time, interspersed with satire. The best German novel of
+the 17th century, _Der abenteurliche Simplicissimus_ (1669) by H.J.
+Christoffel von Grimmelshausen (c. 1625-1676), is a picaresque novel,
+but one that owed little more than its form to the Spaniards. It is in
+great measure the autobiography of its author, and describes with
+uncompromising realism the social disintegration and the horrors of the
+Thirty Years' War. But this remarkable book stands alone;
+Grimmelshausen's other writings are but further contributions to the
+same theme, and he left no disciples worthy of carrying on the tradition
+he had created. Christian Weise (1642-1708), rector of the Zittau
+gymnasium, wrote a few satirical novels, but his realism and satire are
+too obviously didactic. He is seen to better advantage in his dramas, of
+which he wrote more than fifty for performance by his scholars.
+
+The real successor of _Simplicissimus_ in Germany was the English
+_Robinson Crusoe_, a novel which, on its appearance, was immediately
+translated into German (1721); it called forth an extraordinary flood of
+imitations, the so-called "Robinsonaden," the vogue of which is even
+still kept alive by _Der schweizerische Robinson_ of J.R. Wyss (1812
+ff.). With the exception of J.G. Schnabel's _Insel Felsenburg_
+(1731-1743), the literary value of these imitations is slight. They
+represented, however, a healthier and more natural development of
+fiction than the "galant" romances which were introduced in the train of
+the Renaissance movement, and cultivated by writers like Philipp von
+Zesen (1619-1689), Duke Anton Ulrich of Brunswick (1633-1714), A.H.
+Buchholtz (1607-1671), H.A. von Ziegler (1653-1697)--author of the
+famous _Asiatische Banise_ (1688)--and D.C. von Lohenstein (1635-1683),
+whose _Arminius_ (1689-1690) is on the whole the most promising novel of
+this group. The last mentioned writer and Christian Hofmann von
+Hofmannswaldau (1617-1679) are sometimes regarded as the leaders of a
+"second Silesian school," as opposed to the first school of Opitz. As
+the cultivators of the bombastic and Euphuistic style of the Italians
+Guarini and Marini, and of the Spanish writer Gongora, Lohenstein and
+Hofmannswaldau touched the lowest point to which German poetry ever
+sank.
+
+But this aberration of taste was happily of short duration. Although
+socially the recovery of the German people from the desolation of the
+war was slow and laborious, the intellectual life of Germany was rapidly
+recuperating under the influence of foreign thinkers. Samuel Pufendorf
+(1632-1694), Christian Thomasius (1655-1728), Christian von Wolff
+(1679-1754) and, above all, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibnitz (1646-1716), the
+first of the great German philosophers, laid the foundations of that
+system of rationalism which dominated Germany for the better part of the
+18th century; while German religious life was strengthened and enriched
+by a revival of pietism, under mystic thinkers like Philipp Jakob Spener
+(1635-1705), a revival which also left its traces on religious poetry.
+Such hopeful signs of convalescence could not but be accompanied by an
+improvement in literary taste, and this is seen in the first instance in
+a substitution for the bombast and conceits of Lohehstein and
+Hofmannswaldau, of poetry on the stricter and soberer lines laid down by
+Boileau. The so-called "court poets" who opposed the second Silesian
+school, men like Rudolf von Canitz (1654-1699), Johann von Besser
+(1654-1729) and Benjamin Neukirch (1665-1729), were not inspired, but
+they had at least a certain "correctness" of taste; and from their midst
+sprang one gifted lyric genius, Johann Christian Günther (1695-1723),
+who wrote love-songs such as had not been heard in Germany since the
+days of the Minnesang. The methods of Hofmannswaldau had obtained
+considerable vogue in Hamburg, where the Italian opera kept the decadent
+Renaissance poetry alive. Here, however, the incisive wit of Christian
+Wernigke's (1661-1725) epigrams was an effective antidote, and Barthold
+Heinrich Brockes (1680-1747), a native of Hamburg, who had been deeply
+impressed by the appreciation of nature in English poetry, gave the
+artificialities of the Silesians their death-blow. But the influence of
+English literature was not merely destructive in these years; in the
+translations and imitations of the English _Spectator_, _Tatler_ and
+_Guardian_--the so-called _moralische Wochenschriften_--it helped to
+regenerate literary taste, and to implant healthy moral ideas in the
+German middle classes.
+
+The chief representative of the literary movement inaugurated by the
+Silesian "court poets" was Johann Christoph Gottsched (1700-1766), who
+between 1724 and 1740 succeeded in establishing in Leipzig, the
+metropolis of German taste, literary reforms modelled on the principles
+of French 17th-century classicism. He reformed and purified the stage
+according to French ideas, and provided it with a repertory of French
+origin; in his _Kritische Dichtkunst_ (1730) he laid down the principles
+according to which good literature was to be produced and judged. As
+Opitz had reformed German letters with the help of Ronsard, so now
+Gottsched took his standpoint on the principles of Boileau as
+interpreted by contemporary French critics and theorists. With
+Gottsched, whose services in purifying the German language have stood
+the test of time better than his literary or dramatic reforms, the
+period of German Renaissance literature reaches its culmination and at
+the same time its close. The movement of the age advanced too rapidly
+for the Leipzig dictator; in 1740 a new epoch opened in German poetry
+and he was soon left hopelessly behind.
+
+
+V. THE CLASSICAL PERIOD OF MODERN GERMAN LITERATURE (1740-1832)
+
+(a) _From the Swiss Controversy to the "Sturm und Drang."_--Between
+Opitz and Gottsched German literature passed successively through the
+various stages characteristic of all Renaissance literatures--from that
+represented by Trissino and the French Pléiade, by way of the
+aberrations of Marini and the _estilo culto_, to the _art poétique_ of
+Boileau. And precisely as in France, the next advance was achieved in a
+battle between the "ancients" and the "moderns," the German "ancients"
+being represented by Gottsched, the "moderns" by the Swiss literary
+reformers, J.J. Bodmer (1698-1783) and J.J. Breitinger (1701-1776). The
+latter in his _Kritische Dichtkunst_ (1739) maintained doctrines which
+were in opposition to Gottsched's standpoint in his treatise of the same
+name, and Bodmer supported his friend's initiative; a pamphlet war
+ensued between Leipzig and Zürich, with which in 1740-1741 the classical
+period of modern German literature may be said to open. The Swiss, men
+of little originality, found their theories in the writings of Italian
+and English critics; and from these they learned how literature might be
+freed from the fetters of pseudo-classicism. Basing their arguments on
+Milton's _Paradise Lost_, which Bodmer had translated into prose (1732),
+they demanded room for the play of genius and inspiration; they insisted
+that the imagination should not be hindered in its attempts to rise
+above the world of reason and common sense. Their victory was due, not
+to the skill with which they presented their arguments, but to the fact
+that literature itself was in need of greater freedom. It was in fact a
+triumph, not of personalities or of leaders, but of ideas. The effects
+of the controversy are to be seen in a group of Leipzig writers of
+Gottsched's own school, the _Bremer Beiträger_ as they were called after
+their literary organ. These men--C.F. Gellert (1715-1769), the author of
+graceful fables and tales in verse, G.W. Rabener (1714-1771), the mild
+satirist of Saxon provinciality, the dramatist J. Elias Schlegel
+(1719-1749), who in more ways than one was Lessing's forerunner, and a
+number of minor writers--did not set themselves up in active opposition
+to their master, but they tacitly adopted many of the principles which
+the Swiss had advocated. And in the _Bremer Beiträge_ there appeared in
+1748 the first instalment of an epic by F.G. Klopstock (1724-1803), _Der
+Messias_, which was the best illustration of that lawlessness against
+which Gottsched had protested. More effectively than Bodmer's dry and
+uninspired theorizing, Klopstock's _Messias_, and in a still higher
+degree, his _Odes_, laid the foundations of modern German literature in
+the 18th century. His immediate followers, it is true, did not help to
+advance matters; Bodmer and J.K. Lavater (1741-1801), whose
+"physiognomic" investigations interested Goethe at a later date, wrote
+dreary and now long forgotten epics on religious themes. Klopstock's
+rhapsodic dramas, together with Macpherson's _Ossian_, which in the
+'sixties awakened a widespread enthusiasm throughout Germany, were
+responsible for the so-called "bardic" movement; but the noisy
+rhapsodies of the leaders of this movement, the "bards" H.W. von
+Gerstenberg (1737-1823), K.F. Kretschmann (1738-1809) and Michael Denis
+(1729-1800), had little of the poetic inspiration of Klopstock's _Odes_.
+
+The indirect influence of Klopstock as the first inspired poet of modern
+Germany and as the realization of Bodmer's theories can, however, hardly
+be over-estimated. Under Frederick the Great, who, as the docile pupil
+of French culture, had little sympathy for unregulated displays of
+feeling, neither Klopstock nor his imitators were in favour in Berlin,
+but at the university of Halle considerable interest was taken in the
+movement inaugurated by Bodmer. Here, before Klopstock's name was known
+at all, two young poets, J.I. Pyra (1715-1744) and S.G. Lange
+(1711-1781), wrote _Freundschaftliche Lieder_ (1737), which were direct
+forerunners of Klopstock's rhymeless lyric poetry; and although the
+later Prussian poets, J.W.L. Gleim (1719-1803), J.P. Uz (1720-1796) and
+J.N. Götz (1721-1781), who were associated with Halle, and K.W. Ramler
+(1725-1798) in Berlin, cultivated mainly the Anacreontic and the
+Horatian ode--artificial forms, which kept strictly within the classic
+canon--yet Friedrich von Hagedorn (1708-1754) in Hamburg showed to what
+perfection even the Anacreontic and the lighter _vers de société_ could
+be brought. The Swiss physiologist Albrecht von Haller (1708-1777) was
+the first German poet to give expression to the beauty and sublimity of
+Alpine scenery (_Die Alpen_, 1734), and a Prussian officer, Ewald
+Christian von Kleist (1715-1759), author of _Der Frühling_ (1749), wrote
+the most inspired nature-poetry of this period. Klopstock's supreme
+importance lay, however, in the fact that he was a forerunner of the
+movement of _Sturm und Drang_. But before turning to that movement we
+must consider two writers who, strictly speaking, also belong to the age
+under consideration--Lessing and Wieland.
+
+As Klopstock had been the first of modern Germany's inspired poets, so
+Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729-1781) was the first critic who brought
+credit to the German name throughout Europe. He was the most
+liberal-minded exponent of 18th-century rationalism. Like his
+predecessor Gottsched, whom he vanquished more effectually than Bodmer
+had done, he had unwavering faith in the classic canon, but "classic"
+meant for him, as for his contemporary, J.J. Winckelmann (1717-1768),
+Greek art and literature, and not the products of French
+pseudo-classicism, which it had been Gottsched's object to foist on
+Germany. He went, indeed, still further, and asserted that Shakespeare,
+with all his irregularities, was a more faithful observer of the spirit
+of Aristotle's laws, and consequently a greater poet, than were the
+French classic writers. He looked to England and not to France for the
+regeneration of the German theatre, and his own dramas were pioneer-work
+in this direction. _Miss Sara Sampson_ (1755) is a _bürgerliche
+Tragödie_ on the lines of Lillo's _Merchant of London, Minna von
+Barnhelm_ (1767), a comedy in the spirit of Farquhar; in _Emilia
+Galotti_ (1772), again with English models in view, he remoulded the
+"tragedy of common life" in a form acceptable to the _Sturm und Drang_;
+and finally in _Nathan der Weise_ (1779) he won acceptance for iambic
+blank verse as the medium of the higher drama. His two most promising
+disciples--J.F. von Cronegk (1731-1758), and J.W. von Brawe
+(1738-1758)--unfortunately died young, and C.F. Weisse (1726-1804) was
+not gifted enough to advance the drama in its literary aspects.
+Lessing's name is associated with Winckelmann's in _Laokoon_ (1766), a
+treatise in which he set about defining the boundaries between painting,
+sculpture and poetry, and with those of the Jewish philosopher, Moses
+Mendelssohn (1729-1786) and the Berlin bookseller C.F. Nicolai
+(1733-1811) in the famous _Literaturbriefe_. Here Lessing identified
+himself with the best critical principles of the rationalistic
+movement--principles which, in the later years of his life, he employed
+in a fierce onslaught on Lutheran orthodoxy and intolerance.
+
+To the widening and deepening of the German imagination C.M. Wieland
+(1733-1813) also contributed, but in a different way. Although no enemy
+of pseudo-classicism, he broke with the stiff dogmatism of Gottsched and
+his friends, and tempered the pietism of Klopstock by introducing the
+Germans to the lighter poetry of the south of Europe. With the exception
+of his fairy epic _Oberon_ (1780), Wieland's work has fallen into
+neglect; he did, however, excellent service to the development of German
+prose fiction with his psychological novel, _Agathon_ (1766-1767), which
+may be regarded as a forerunner of Goethe's _Wilhelm Meister_, and with
+his humorous satire _Die Abderiten_ (1774). Wieland had a considerable
+following, both among poets and prose writers; he was particularly
+looked up to in Austria, towards the end of the 18th century, where the
+literary movement advanced more slowly than in the north. Here Aloys
+Blumauer (1755-1789) and J.B. von Alxinger (1755-1797) wrote their
+travesties and epics under his influence. In Saxony, M.A. von Thümmel
+(1738-1817) showed his adherence to Wieland's school in his comic epic
+in prose, _Wilhelmine_ (1764), and in the general tone of his prose
+writings; on the other hand, K.A. Kortum (1745-1824), author of the most
+popular comic epic of the time, _Die Jobsiade_ (1784), was but little
+influenced by Wieland. The German novel owed much to the example of
+_Agathon_, but the groundwork and form were borrowed from English
+models; Gellert had begun by imitating Richardson in his _Schwedische
+Gräfin_ (1747-1748), and he was followed by J.T. Hermes (1738-1821), by
+Wieland's friend Sophie von Laroche (1730-1807), by A. von Knigge
+(1752-1796) and J.K.A. Musäus (1735-1787), the last mentioned being,
+however, best known as the author of a collection of _Volksmärchen_
+(1782-1786). Meanwhile a rationalism, less materialistic and strict than
+that of Wolff, was spreading rapidly through educated middle-class
+society in Germany. Men like Knigge, Moses Mendelssohn, J.G. Zimmermann
+(1728-1795), T.G. von Hippel (1741-1796), Christian Garve (1742-1798),
+J.J. Engel (1741-1802), as well as the educational theorists J.B.
+Basedow (1723-1790) and J.H. Pestalozzi (1746-1827), wrote books and
+essays on "popular philosophy" which were as eagerly read as the
+_moralische Wochenschriften_ of the preceding epoch; and with this group
+of writers must also be associated the most brilliant of German
+18th-century satirists, G.C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799).
+
+Such was the _milieu_ from which sprang the most advanced pioneer of the
+classical epoch of modern German literature, J.G. Herder (1744-1803).
+The transition from the popular philosophers of the _Aufklärung_ to
+Herder was due in the first instance to the influence of Rousseau; and
+in Germany itself that transition is represented by men like Thomas Abbt
+(1738-1766) and J.G. Hamann (1730-1788). The revolutionary nature of
+Herder's thought lay in that writer's antipathy to hard and fast
+systems, to laws imposed upon genius; he grasped, as no thinker before
+him, the idea of historical evolution. By regarding the human race as
+the product of a slow evolution from primitive conditions, he
+revolutionized the methods and standpoint of historical science and
+awakened an interest--for which, of course, Rousseau had prepared the
+way--in the early history of mankind. He himself collected and published
+the _Volkslieder_ of all nations (1778-1779), and drew attention to
+those elements in German life and art which were, in the best and most
+precious sense, national--elements which his predecessors had despised
+as inconsistent with classic formulae and systems. Herder is thus not
+merely the forerunner, but the actual founder of the literary movement
+known as _Sturm und Drang_. New ground was broken in a similar way by a
+group of poets, who show the results of Klopstock's influence on the new
+literary movement: the Göttingen "Bund" or "Hain," a number of young
+students who met together in 1772, and for several years published their
+poetry in the _Göttinger Musenalmanach_. With the exception of the two
+brothers, Ch. zu Stolberg (1748-1821) and F.L. zu Stolberg (1750-1819),
+who occupied a somewhat peculiar position in the "Bund," the members of
+this coterie were drawn from the peasant class of the lower
+_bourgeoisie_; J.H. Voss (1751-1826), the leader of the "Bund," was a
+typical North German peasant, and his idyll, _Luise_ (1784), gives a
+realistic picture of German provincial life. L.H.C. Hölty (1748-1776)
+and J.M. Miller (1750-1814), again, excelled in simple lyrics in the
+tone of the _Volkslied_. Closely associated with the Göttingen group
+were M. Claudius (1740-1815), the _Wandsbecker Bote_--as he was called
+after the journal he edited--an even more unassuming and homely
+representative of the German peasant in literature than Voss, and G.A.
+Bürger (1748-1794) who contributed to the _Göttinger Musenalmanach_
+ballads, such as the famous Lenore (1774), of the very first rank. These
+ballads were the best products of the Göttingen school, and, together
+with Goethe's Strassburg and Frankfort songs, represent the highest
+point touched by the lyric and ballad poetry of the period.
+
+But the Göttingen "Bund" stood somewhat aside from the main movement of
+literary development in Germany; it was only a phase of _Sturm und
+Drang_, and quieter, less turbulent than that on which Goethe had set
+the stamp of his personality. Johann Wolfgang Goethe (1749-1832) had, as
+a student in Leipzig (1765-1768), written lyrics in the Anacreontic vein
+and dramas in alexandrines. But in Strassburg, where he went to continue
+his studies in 1770-1771, he made the personal acquaintance of Herder,
+who won his interest for the new literary movement. Herder imbued him
+with his own ideas of the importance of primitive history and Gothic
+architecture and inspired him with a pride in German nationality; Herder
+convinced him that there was more genuine poetry in a simple Volkslied
+than in all the ingenuity of the German imitators of Horace or Anacreon;
+above all, he awakened his enthusiasm for Shakespeare. The pamphlet _Von
+deutscher Art und Kunst_ (1773), to which, besides Goethe and Herder,
+the historian Justus Möser (1720-1794) also contributed, may be regarded
+as the manifesto of the _Sturm und Drang_. The effect on Goethe of the
+new ideas was instantaneous; they seemed at once to set his genius free,
+and from 1771 to 1775 he was extraordinarily fertile in poetic ideas and
+creations. His _Götz von Berlichingen_ (1771-1773), the first drama of
+the _Sturm und Drang_, was followed within a year by the first novel of
+the movement, _Werthers Leiden_ (1774); he dashed off _Clavigo_ and
+_Stella_ in a few weeks in 1774 and 1775, and wrote a large number of
+_Singspiele_, dramatic satires and fragments--including _Faust_ in its
+earliest form (the so-called _Urfaust_)--not to mention love-songs which
+at last fulfilled the promise of Klopstock. Goethe's lyrics were no less
+epoch-making than his first drama and novel, for they put an end to the
+artificiality which for centuries had fettered German lyric expression.
+In all forms of literature he set the fashion to his time; the
+Shakespearian restlessness of _Götz von Berlichingen_ found enthusiastic
+imitators in J.M.R. Lenz (1751-1792), whose _Anmerkungen übers Theater_
+(1774) formulated theoretically the laws, or defiance of laws, of the
+new drama, in F.M. von Klinger (1752-1831), J.A. Leisewitz (1752-1806),
+H.L. Wagner (1747-1779) and Friedrich Müller, better known as Maler
+Müller (1749-1825): The dramatic literature of the _Sturm und Drang_ was
+its most characteristic product--indeed, the very name of the movement
+was borrowed from a play by Klinger; it was inspired, as _Götz von
+Berlichingen_ had been, by the desire to present upon the stage figures
+of Shakespearian grandeur impelled and tortured by gigantic passions,
+all considerations of plot, construction and form being regarded as
+subordinate to the development of character. The fiction of the _Sturm
+und Drang_, again, was in its earlier stages dominated by _Werthers
+Leiden_, as may be seen in the novels of F.H. Jacobi (1743-1819) and
+J.M. Miller, who has been already mentioned. Later, in the hands of
+J.J.W. Heinse (1749-1803), author of _Ardinghello_ (1787), Klinger, K.
+Ph. Moritz (1757-1793), whose _Anton Reiser_ (1785) clearly foreshadows
+_Wilhelm Meister_, it reflected not merely the sentimentalism, but also
+the philosophic and artistic ideas of the period.
+
+With the production of _Die Räuber_ (1781) by Johann Friedrich Schiller
+(1759-1805), the drama of the _Sturm und Drang_ entered upon a new
+development. Although hardly less turbulent in spirit than the work of
+Klinger and Leisewitz, Schiller's tragedy was more skilfully adapted to
+the exigencies of the theatre; his succeeding dramas, _Fiesco_ and
+_Kabale und Liebe_, were also admirable stage-plays, and in _Don Carlos_
+(1787) he abandoned prose for the iambic blank verse which Lessing had
+made acceptable in _Nathan der Weise_. The "practical" character of the
+new drama is also to be seen in the work of Schiller's contemporary, O.
+von Gemmingen (1755-1836), the imitator of Diderot, in the excellent
+domestic dramas of the actors F.L. Schröder (1744-1816) and A.W. Iffland
+(1759-1814), and even in the popular medieval plays, the so-called
+_Ritterdramen_ of which _Götz von Berlichingen_ was the model. Germany
+owes to the _Sturm und Drang_ her national theatre; permanent theatres
+were established in these years at Hamburg, Mannheim, Gotha, and even at
+Vienna, which, as may be seen from the dramas of C.H. von Ayrenhoff
+(1733-1819), had hardly then advanced beyond Gottsched's ideal of a
+national literature. The Hofburgtheater of Vienna, the greatest of all
+the German stages, was virtually founded in 1776.
+
+(b) _German Classical Literature._--The energy of the _Sturm und Drang_,
+which was essentially iconoclastic in its methods, soon exhausted
+itself. For Goethe this phase in his development came to an end with his
+departure for Weimar in 1775, while, after writing _Don Carlos_ (1787),
+Schiller turned from poetry to the study of history and philosophy.
+These subjects occupied his attention almost exclusively for several
+years, and not until the very close of the century did he, under the
+stimulus of Goethe's friendship, return to the drama. The first ten
+years of Goethe's life in Weimar were comparatively unproductive; he had
+left the _Sturm und Drang_ behind him; its developments, for which he
+himself had been primarily responsible, were distasteful to him; and he
+had not yet formed a new creed. Under the influence of the Weimar court,
+where classic or even pseudo-classic tastes prevailed, he was gradually
+finding his way to a form of literary art which should reconcile the
+humanistic ideals of the 18th century with the poetic models of ancient
+Greece. But he did not arrive at clearness in his ideas until after his
+sojourn in Italy (1786-1788), an episode of the first importance for his
+mental development. Italy was, in the first instance, a revelation to
+Goethe of the antique; he had gone to Italy to find realized what
+Winckelmann had taught, and here he conceived that ideal of a classic
+literature, which for the next twenty years dominated German literature
+and made Weimar its metropolis. In Italy he gave _Iphigenie auf Tauris_
+(1787) its final form, he completed _Egmont_ (1788)--like the exactly
+contemporary _Don Carlos_ of Schiller, a kind of bridge from _Sturm und
+Drang_ to classicism--and all but finished _Torquato Tasso_ (1790).
+_Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre_ (1795-1796) bears testimony to the clear
+and decisive views which he had acquired on all questions of art and of
+the practical conduct of life.
+
+Long before _Wilhelm Meister_ appeared, however, German thought and
+literature had arrived at that stability and self-confidence which are
+the most essential elements in a great literary period. In the year of
+Lessing's death, 1781, Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), the great philosopher,
+had published his _Kritik der reinen Vernunft_, and this, together with
+the two later treatises, _Kritik der praktischen Vernunft_ (1788) and
+_Kritik der Urteilskraft_ (1790), placed the Germans in the front rank
+of thinking nations. Under the influence of Kant, Schiller turned from
+the study of history to that of philosophy and more especially
+aesthetics. His philosophic lyrics, his treatises on _Anmut und Würde_,
+on the _Ästhetische Erziehung des Menschen_ (1795), and _Über naive und
+sentimentalische Dichtung_ (1795) show, on the philosophic and the
+critical side, the movement of the century from the irresponsible
+subjectivity of _Sturm und Drang_ to the calm idealism of classic
+attainment. In the same way, German historical writing had in these
+years, under the leadership of men like Justus Möser, Thomas Abbt, I.
+Iselin, F.C. Schlosser, Schiller himself and, greatest of all, Johannes
+von Müller (1752-1809), advanced from disconnected, unsystematic
+chronicling to a clearly thought-out philosophic and scientific method.
+J.G.A. Forster (1754-1794), who had accompanied Cook round the world,
+and Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859), gave Germany models of clear and
+lucid descriptive writing. In practical politics and economics, when
+once the unbalanced vagaries of undiluted Rousseauism had fallen into
+discredit, Germany produced much wise and temperate thinking which
+prevented the spread of the French Revolution to Germany, and provided a
+practical basis on which the social and political fabric could be built
+up anew, after the Revolution had made the old régime impossible in
+Europe. Men like Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767-1835) and the philosopher
+J.G. Fichte (1762-1814) were, in two widely different spheres,
+representative of this type of intellectual eminence.
+
+Meanwhile, in 1794, that friendship between Goethe and Schiller had
+begun, which lasted, unbroken, until the younger poet's death in 1805.
+These years mark the summit of Goethe and Schiller's classicism, and the
+great epoch of Weimar's history as a literary focus. Schiller's
+treatises had provided a theoretical basis; his new journal, _Die
+Horen_, might be called the literary organ of the movement--although in
+this respect the subsequent _Musenalmanach_, in which the two poets
+published their magnificent ballad poetry, had more value. Goethe, as
+director of the ducal theatre, could to a great extent control dramatic
+production in Germany. Under his encouragement, Schiller turned from
+philosophy to poetry and wrote the splendid series of classic dramas
+beginning with the trilogy of _Wallenstein_ and closing with _Wilhelm
+Tell_ and the fragment of _Demetrius_; while to Goethe we owe, above
+all, the epic of _Hermann und Dorothea_. Less important were the
+latter's severely classical plays _Die natürliche Tochter_ and
+_Pandora_; but it must not be forgotten that it was chiefly owing to
+Schiller's stimulus that in those years Goethe brought the first part of
+_Faust_ (1808) to a conclusion.
+
+Although acknowledged leaders of German letters, Goethe and Schiller had
+considerable opposition to contend with. The _Sturm und Drang_ had by no
+means exhausted itself, and the representatives of the once dominant
+rationalistic movement were particularly arrogant and overbearing. The
+literature associated with both _Sturm und Drang_ and rationalism was at
+this period palpably decadent; no comparison could be made between the
+magnificent achievements of Goethe and Schiller, or even of Herder and
+Wieland with the "family" dramas of Iffland, still less with the
+extraordinarily popular plays of A. von Kotzebue (1761-1819), or with
+those bustling medieval _Ritterdramen_, which were especially cultivated
+in south Germany. There is a wide gap between Moritz's _Anton Reiser_ or
+the philosophic novels which Klinger wrote in his later years, and
+Goethe's _Meister_; nor can the once so fervently admired novels of Jean
+Paul Richter (1763-1825) take a very high place. Neither the fantastic
+humour nor the penetrating thoughts with which Richter's books are
+strewn make up for their lack of artistic form and interest; they are
+essentially products of _Sturm und Drang_. Lastly, in the province of
+lyric and epic poetry, it is impossible to regard poets like the gentle
+F. von Matthisson (1761-1831), or the less inspired G.L. Kosegarten
+(1758-1818) and C.A. Tiedge (1752-1841), as worthily seconding the
+masterpieces of Goethe and Schiller. Thus when we speak of the greatness
+of Germany's classical period, we think mainly of the work of her two
+chief poets; the distance that separated them from their immediate
+contemporaries was enormous. Moreover, at the very close of the 18th
+century a new literary movement arose in admitted opposition to the
+classicism of Weimar, and to this movement, which first took definite
+form in the Romantic school, the sympathies of the younger generation
+turned. Just as in the previous generation the _Sturm und Drang_ had
+been obliged to make way for a return to classic and impersonal
+principles of literary composition, so now the classicism of Goethe and
+Schiller, which had produced masterpieces like _Wallenstein_ and
+_Hermann und Dorothea_, had to yield to a revival of individualism and
+subjectivity, which, in the form of Romanticism, profoundly influenced
+the literature of the whole 19th century.
+
+(c) _The Romantic Movement._--The first Romantic school, however, was
+founded, not as a protest against the classicism of Weimar, with which
+its leaders were in essential sympathy, but against the shallow,
+utilitarian rationalism of Berlin. Ludwig Tieck (1773-1853), a leading
+member of the school, was in reality a belated _Stürmer und Dränger_, who
+in his early years had chafed under the unimaginative tastes of the
+Prussian capital, and sought for a positive faith to put in their place.
+Friedrich Hölderlin (1770-1843), one of the most gifted poets of this
+age, demonstrates no less clearly than Tieck the essential affinity
+between _Sturm und Drang_ and Romanticism; he, too, forms a bridge from
+the one individualistic movement to the other. The theoretic basis of
+Romanticism was, however, established by the two brothers, August Wilhelm
+and Friedrich Schlegel (1767-1845 and 1772-1829), who, accepting, in
+great measure, Schiller's aesthetic conclusions, adapted them to the
+needs of their own more subjective attitude towards literature. While
+Schiller, like Lessing before him, insisted on the critic's right to sit
+in judgment according to a definite code of principles, these Romantic
+critics maintained that the first duty of criticism was to understand and
+appreciate; the right of genius to follow its natural bent was sacred.
+The _Herzensergiessungen eines kunstliebenden Klosterbruders_ by Tieck's
+school-friend W.H. Wackenroder (1773-1798) contained the Romantic
+art-theory, while the hymns and fragmentary novels of Friedrich von
+Hardenberg (known as Novalis, 1772-1801), and the dramas and fairy tales
+of Tieck, were the characteristic products of Romantic literature. The
+universal sympathies of the movement were exemplified by the many
+admirable translations--greatest of all, Schlegel's _Shakespeare_
+(1797-1810)--which were produced under its auspices. Romanticism was
+essentially conciliatory in its tendencies, that is to say, it aimed at a
+reconciliation of poetry with other provinces of social and intellectual
+life; the hard and fast boundaries which the older critics had set up as
+to what poetry might and might not do, were put aside, and the domain of
+literature was regarded as co-extensive with life itself; painting and
+music, philosophy and ethics, were all accepted as constituent elements
+of or aids to Romantic poetry. Fichte, and to a much greater extent,
+F.W.J. von Schelling (1775-1854) were the exponents of the Romantic
+doctrine in philosophy, while the theologian F.E.D. Schleiermacher
+(1768-1834) demonstrated how vital the revival of individualism was for
+religious thought.
+
+The Romantic school, whose chief members were the brothers Schlegel,
+Tieck, Wackenroder and Novalis, was virtually founded in 1798, when the
+Schlegels began to publish their journal the _Athenaeum_; but the actual
+existence of the school was of very short duration. Wackenroder and
+Novalis died young, and by the year 1804 the other members were widely
+separated. Two years later, however, another phase of Romanticism became
+associated with the town of Heidelberg. The leaders of this second or
+younger Romantic school were K. Brentano (1778-1842), L.A. von Arnim
+(1781-1831) and J.J. von Görres (1776-1848), their organ, corresponding
+to the _Athenaeum_, was the _Zeitung für Einsiedler_, or
+_Tröst-Einsamkeit_, and their most characteristic production the
+collection of _Volkslieder_, published under the title _Des Knaben
+Wunderhorn_ (1805-1808). Compared with the earlier school the Heidelberg
+writers were more practical and realistic, more faithful to nature and
+the commonplace life of everyday. They, too, were interested in the
+German past and in the middle ages, but they put aside the idealizing
+glasses of their predecessors and kept to historic truth; they wrote
+historical novels, not stories of an imaginary medieval world as Novalis
+had done, and when they collected _Volkslieder_ and _Volksbücher_, they
+refrained from decking out the simple tradition with musical effects, or
+from heightening the poetic situation by "Romantic irony." Their
+immediate influence on German intellectual life was consequently
+greater; they stimulated and deepened the interest of the German people
+in their own past; and we owe to them the foundations of the study of
+German philology and medieval literature, both the brothers Jakob and
+Wilhelm Grimm (1785-1863 and 1786-1859) having been in touch with this
+circle in their early days. Again, the Heidelberg poets strengthened the
+national and patriotic spirit of their people; they prepared the way
+for the rising against Napoleon, which culminated in the year 1813, and
+produced that outburst of patriotic song, associated with E.M. Arndt
+(1769-1860), K. Th. Körner (1791-1813) and M. von Schenkendorf
+(1783-1817).
+
+The subsequent history of Romanticism stands in close relation to the
+Heidelberg school, and when, about 1809, the latter broke up, and Arnim
+and Brentano settled in Berlin, the Romantic movement followed two
+clearly marked lines of development, one north German, the other
+associated with Württemberg. The Prussian capital, hotbed of rationalism
+as it was, had, from the first, been intimately associated with
+Romanticism; the first school had virtually been founded there, and
+north Germans, like Heinrich von Kleist (1777-1811) and Zacharias Werner
+(1768-1823)had done more for the development of the Romantic drama than
+had the members of either Romantic school. These men, and more
+especially Kleist, Prussia's greatest dramatic poet, showed how the
+capricious Romantic ideas could be brought into harmony with the classic
+tradition established by Schiller, how they could be rendered
+serviceable to the national theatre. At the same time, Berlin was not a
+favourable soil for the development of Romantic ideas, and the circle of
+poets which gathered round Arnim and Brentano there, either themselves
+demonstrated the decadence of these ideas, or their work contained
+elements which in subsequent years hastened the downfall of the
+movement. Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué (1777-1843), for instance, shows
+how easy it was for the medieval tastes of the Romanticists to
+degenerate into mediocre novels and plays, hardly richer in genuine
+poetry than were the productions of the later _Sturm und Drang_; and
+E.T.A. Hoffmann (1776-1822), powerful genius though he was, cultivated
+with preference in his stories, a morbid super-naturalism, which was
+only a decadent form of the early Romantic delight in the world of
+fairies and spirits. The lyric was less sensitive to baleful influences,
+but even here the north German Romantic circle could only point to one
+lyric poet of the first rank, J. von Eichendorff (1788-1857); while in
+the poetry of A. von Chamisso (1781-1838) the volatile Romantic
+spirituality is too often wanting. Others again, like Friedrich Rückert
+(1788-1866), sought the inspiration which Romanticism was no longer able
+to give, in the East; still another group, of which Wilhelm Müller
+(1794-1827) is the chief representative, followed Byron's example and
+awakened German sympathy for the oppressed Greeks and Poles.
+
+Apart from Eichendorff, the vital lyric poetry of the third and last
+phase of Romanticism must be looked for in the Swabian school, which
+gathered round Uhland. Ludwig Uhland (1787-1862) was himself a disciple
+of the Heidelberg poets, and, in his lyrics and especially in his
+ballads, he succeeded in grafting the lyricism of the Romantic school on
+to the traditions of German ballad poetry which had been handed down
+from Bürger, Schiller and Goethe. But, as was the case with so many
+other disciples of the Heidelberg Romanticists, Uhland's interest in the
+German past was the serious interest of the scholar rather than the
+purely poetic interest of the earlier Romantic poets. The merit of the
+Swabian circle, the chief members of which were J. Kerner (1786-1862),
+G. Schwab (1792-1850), W. Waiblinger (1804-1830), W. Hauff (1802-1827)
+and, most gifted of all, E. Mörike (1804-1875) was that these writers
+preserved the Romantic traditions from the disintegrating influences to
+which their north German contemporaries were exposed. They introduced
+few new notes into lyric poetry, but they maintained the best traditions
+intact, and when, a generation later, the anti-Romantic movement of
+"Young Germany" had run its course, it was to Württemberg Germany looked
+for a revival of the old Romantic ideas.
+
+Meanwhile, in the background of all these phases of Romantic evolution,
+through which Germany passed between 1798 and 1832, stands the majestic
+and imposing figure of Goethe. Personally he had in the early stages of
+the movement been opposed to that reversion to subjectivity and
+lawlessness which the first Romantic school seemed to him to represent;
+to the end of his life he regarded himself as a "classic," not a
+"romantic" poet. But, on the other hand, he was too liberal-minded a
+thinker and critic to be oblivious to the fruitful influence of the new
+movement. Almost without exception he judged the young poets of the new
+century fairly, and treated them sympathetically and kindly; he was
+keenly alive to the new--and for the most part "unclassical"--development
+of literature in England, France and Italy; and his own published work,
+above all, the first part of _Faust_ (1808), _Die Wahlverwandtschaften_
+(1809), _Dichtung und Wahrheit_ (1811-1814, a final volume in 1833),
+_Westöstlicher Divan_ (1819), _Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre_ (1821-1829)
+and the second part of _Faust_ (published in 1832 after the poet's
+death), stood in no antagonism to the Romantic ideas of their time. One
+might rather say that Goethe was the bond between the two fundamental
+literary movements of the German classical age; that his work achieved
+that reconciliation of "classic" and "romantic" which, rightly regarded,
+was the supreme aim of the Romantic school itself.
+
+
+VI. GERMAN LITERATURE SINCE GOETHE (1832-1906)
+
+(a) _Young Germany._--With Goethe's death a great age in German poetry
+came to a close. Long before 1832 Romanticism had, as we have seen,
+begun to lose ground, and the July revolution of 1830, the effects of
+which were almost as keenly felt in Germany as in France, gave the
+movement its death-blow. Meanwhile the march of ideas in Germany itself
+had not been favourable to Romanticism. Schelling had given place to G.
+W.F. Hegel (1770-1831), now the dominant force in German philosophy, and
+the Hegelian metaphysics proved as unfruitful an influence on literature
+as that of Fichte and Schelling had been fruitful. The transference of
+Romantic ideas to the domain of practical religion and politics had
+proved reactionary in its effects; Romanticism became the cloak for a
+kind of Neo-catholicism, and Romantic politics, as enunciated by men
+like F. von Gentz (1764-1832) and Adam Müller (1779-1829), served as an
+apology for the Metternich régime in Austria. Only at the
+universities--in Göttingen, Heidelberg and Berlin--did the movement
+continue, in the best sense, to be productive; German philology, German
+historical science and German jurisprudence benefited by Romantic ideas,
+long after Romantic poetry had fallen into decay. The day of Romanticism
+was clearly over; but a return to the classic and humanitarian spirit of
+the 18th century was impossible. The social condition of Europe had been
+profoundly altered by the French Revolution; the rise of industrialism
+had created new economic problems, the march of science had overturned
+old prejudices. And in a still higher degree were the ideas which lay
+behind the social upheaval of the July revolution incompatible with a
+reversion in Germany to the conditions of Weimar classicism. There was,
+moreover, no disguising the fact that Goethe himself did not stand high
+with the younger generation of German writers who came into power after
+his death.
+
+"Young Germany" did not form a school in the sense in which the word was
+used by the early Romanticists; the bond of union was rather the
+consequence of political persecution. In December 1835 the German "Bund"
+issued a decree suppressing the writings of the "literary school" known
+as "Young Germany," and mentioned by name Heinrich Heine, Karl Gutzkow,
+Ludolf Wienbarg, Theodor Mundt and Heinrich Laube. Of these men, Heine
+(1797-1856) was by far the most famous. He had made his reputation in
+1826 and 1827 with _Die Harzreise_ and _Das Buch der Lieder_, both of
+which books show how deeply he was immersed in the Romantic traditions.
+But Heine felt perhaps more acutely than any other man of his time how
+the ground was slipping away from beneath his feet; he repudiated the
+Romantic movement and hailed the July revolution as the first stage in
+the "liberation of humanity"; while ultimately he sought in France the
+freedom and intellectual stimulus which Germany withheld from him. Heine
+suffered from having been born in an age of transition; he was unable to
+realize in a wholehearted way all that was good in the new movement,
+which he had embraced so warmly; his optimism was counteracted by doubts
+as to whether, after all, life had not been better in that old Romantic
+Germany of his childhood for which, to the last, he retained so warm an
+affection. Personal disappointments and unhappiness added to the
+bitterness of Heine's nature, and the supremely gifted lyric poet and
+the hardly less gifted satirist were overshadowed by the cynic from
+whose biting wit nothing was safe.
+
+Heine's contemporary and--although he was not mentioned in the decree
+against the school--fellow-fighter, Ludwig Börne (1786-1837), was a more
+characteristic representative of the "Young German" point of view; for
+he was free from Romantic prejudices. Börne gave vent to his enthusiasm
+for France in eloquent _Briefe aus Paris_ (1830-1833), which form a
+landmark of importance in the development of German prose style. With
+Karl Gutzkow (1811-1878), who was considerably younger than either Heine
+or Börne, the more positive aspects of the "Young German" movement begin
+to be apparent. He, too, had become a man of letters under the influence
+of the July revolution, and with an early novel, _Wally, die Zweiflerin_
+(1835), which was then regarded as atheistic and immoral, he fought in
+the battle for the new ideas. His best literary work, however, was the
+comedies with which he enriched the German stage of the 'forties, and
+novels like _Die Ritter vom Geiste_ (1850-1851), and _Der Zauberer von
+Rom_ (1858-1861), which have to be considered in connexion with the
+later development of German fiction. Heinrich Laube (1806-1884), who, as
+the author of lengthy social novels, and _Reisenovellen_ in the style of
+Heine's _Reisebilder_, was one of the leaders of the new movement, is
+now only remembered as Germany's greatest theatre-director. Laube's
+connexion (1850-1867) with the Burgtheater of Vienna forms one of the
+most brilliant periods in the history of the modern stage. Heine and
+Börne, Gutzkow and Laube--these were the leading spirits of "Young
+Germany"; in their train followed a host of lesser men, who to the
+present generation are hardly even names. In the domain of scholarship
+and learning the "Young German" movement was associated with the
+supremacy of Hegelianism, the leading spirits being D.F. Strauss
+(1808-1874), author of the _Leben Jesu_ (1835), the historians G.G.
+Gervinus (1805-1871) and W. Menzel (1798-1873), and the philosopher L.A.
+Feuerbach (1804-1872), who, although a disciple of Hegel, ultimately
+helped to destroy the latter's influence.
+
+Outside the immediate circle of "Young Germany," other tentative efforts
+were made to provide a substitute for the discredited literature of
+Romanticism. The historical novel, for instance, which Romanticists like
+Arnim had cultivated, fell at an early date under the influence of Sir
+Walter Scott; Wilhelm Hauff, Heinrich Zschokke (1771-1848) and K.
+Spindler (1796-1855) were the most prominent amidst the many imitators
+of the Scottish novelist. The drama, again, which since Kleist and
+Werner had been without definite principles, was, partly under Austrian
+influence, finding its way back to a condition of stability. In Germany
+proper, the men into whose hands it fell were, on the one hand,
+undisciplined geniuses such as C.D. Grabbe (1801-1836), or, on the
+other, poets with too little theatrical blood in their veins like K.L.
+Immermann (1796-1840), or with too much, like E. von Raupach
+(1784-1852), K. von Holtei (1798-1880) and Adolf Müllner
+(1774-1829)--the last named being the chief representative of the
+so-called _Schicksalstragödie_. In those years the Germans were more
+seriously interested in their opera, which, under C.M. Weber, H.A.
+Marschner, A. Lortzing and O. Nicolai, remained faithful to the Romantic
+spirit. In Austria, however, the drama followed lines of its own; here,
+at the very beginning of the century, H.J. von Collin (1771-1811)
+attempted in _Regulus_ and other works to substitute for the lifeless
+pseudo-classic tragedy of Ayrenhoff the classic style of Schiller. His
+attempt is the more interesting, as the long development that had taken
+place in Germany between Gottsched and Schiller was virtually
+unrepresented in Austrian literature. M. von Collin (1779-1824), a
+younger brother of H.J. von Collin, did a similar service for the
+Romantic drama. Franz Grillparzer (1791-1872), Austria's greatest poet,
+began in the school of Müllner with a "fate drama," but soon won an
+independent place for himself; more successfully than any other
+dramatist of the century, he carried out that task which Kleist had
+first seriously faced, the reconciliation of the classicism of Goethe
+and Schiller with the Romantic and modern spirit of the 19th century. It
+is from this point of view that works like _Das goldene Vliess_ (1820),
+_König Ottokars Glück und Ende_ (1825), _Der Traum, ein Leben_ (1834)
+and _Des Meeres und der Liebe Wellen_ (1831) must be regarded. As far as
+the poetic drama was concerned, Grillparzer stood alone, for E.F.J. von
+Münch-Bellinghausen (1806-1871), his most promising contemporary, once
+so popular under the pseudonym of Friedrich Halm, soon fell back into
+the trivial sentimentality of the later Romanticists. In other forms of
+dramatic literature Austria could point to many distinguished writers,
+notably the comedy-writer, E. von Bauernfeld (1802-1890), while a host
+of playwrights, chief of whom were F. Raimund (1790-1836) and J. Nestroy
+(1801-1862), cultivated the popular Viennese farce and fairy-play. Thus,
+in spite of Metternich's censorship of the drama, the Viennese theatre
+was, in the first half of the 19th century, in closer touch with
+literature than that of any other German centre.
+
+The transitional character of the age is best illustrated by two eminent
+writers whom outward circumstances rather than any similarity of
+character and aim have classed together. These were K.L. Immermann, who
+has been already mentioned, and A. von Platen-Hallermund (1796-1835).
+Immermann's dramas were of little practical value to the theatre, but
+one at least, _Merlin_ (1832), is a dramatic poem of great beauty. In
+his novels, however, _Die Epigonen_ (1836) and _Münchhausen_
+(1838-1839), Immermann was the spokesman of his time. He looked
+backwards rather than forwards; he saw himself as the belated follower
+of a great literary age rather than as the pioneer of a new one. The
+bankruptcy of Romanticism and the poetically arid era of "Young Germany"
+left him little confidence in the future. Platen, on the other hand,
+went his own way; he, too, was the antagonist both of Romanticism and
+"Young Germany," and with Immermann himself he came into sharp conflict.
+But in his poetry he showed himself indifferent to the strife of
+contending literary schools. He began as an imitator of the German
+oriental poets--the only Romanticists with whom he had any personal
+sympathy--and with his matchless _Sonette aus Venedig_ (1825) he stands
+out as a master in the art of verse-writing and as the least subjective
+of all German lyric poets. In the imitation of Romance metres he sought
+a refuge from the extravagances and excesses of the Romantic decadence.
+
+Meanwhile the political side of the "Young German" movement, which the
+German Bund aimed at stamping out, gained rapidly in importance under
+the influence of the unsettled political conditions between the
+revolutions of 1830 and 1848. The early 'forties were in German
+literature marked by an extraordinary outburst of political poetry,
+which may be aptly compared with the national and patriotic lyric evoked
+by the year 1813. The principles which triumphed in France at the
+revolution of 1848 were, to a great extent, fought out by the German
+singers of 1841 and 1842. Begun by mediocre talents like N. Becker
+(1809-1845) and R.E. Prutz (1816-1872), the movement found a vigorous
+champion in Georg Herwegh (1817-1875), who in his turn succeeded in
+winning Ferdinand Freiligrath (1810-1876) for the revolutionary cause.
+Others joined in the cry for freedom--F. Dingelstedt (1814-1881), A.H.
+Hoffmann von Fallersleben (1798-1874), and a number of Austrians, who
+had even more reason for rebellion and discontent than the north
+Germans. But the best Austrian political poetry, the _Spaziergänge eines
+Wiener Poeten_, 1831, by "Anastasius Grün" (Graf A.A. von Auersperg,
+1806-1876), belonged to a decade earlier. The political lyric culminated
+in and ended with the year 1848; the revolutionists of the 'forties
+were, if not appeased, at least silenced by the revolution which in
+their eyes had effected so little. If Freiligrath be excepted, the chief
+lyric poets of this epoch stood aside from the revolutionary movement;
+even E. Geibel (1815-1884), the representative poet of the succeeding
+age, was only temporarily interested in the political movement, and his
+best work is of a purely lyric character. M. von Strachwitz's
+(1822-1847) promising talent did not flourish in the political
+atmosphere; Annette von Droste-Hülshoff (1797-1848), and the Austrian,
+Nikolaus Lenau (1802-1850), both stand far removed from the world of
+politics; they are imbued with that pessimistic resignation which is,
+more or less, characteristic of all German literature between 1850 and
+1870.
+
+(b) _Mid-Century Literature._--When once the revolution of 1848 was
+over, a spirit of tranquillity came over German letters; but it was due
+rather to the absence of confidence in the future than to any
+hopefulness or real content. The literature of the middle of the century
+was not wanting in achievement, but there was nothing buoyant or
+youthful about it; most significant of all, the generation between 1848
+and 1880 was either oblivious or indifferent to the good work and to the
+new and germinating ideas which it produced. Hegel, who held the earlier
+half of the 19th century in his ban, was still all-powerful in the
+universities, but his power was on the wane in literature and public
+life. The so-called "Hegelian Left" had advanced so far as to have
+become incompatible with the original Hegelianism; the new social and
+economic theories did not fit into the scheme of Hegelian collectivism;
+the interest in natural science--fostered by the popular books of J.
+Moleschott (1822-1893), Karl Vogt (1817-1895) and Ludwig Büchner
+(1824-1899)--created a healthy antidote to the Hegelian metaphysics. In
+literature and art, on which Hegel, as we have seen, had exerted so
+blighting an influence, his place was taken by the chief exponent of
+philosophic pessimism, Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860). Schopenhauer's
+antagonism to Hegelianism was of old standing, for his chief work, _Die
+Welt als Wille und Vorstellung_, had appeared as far back as 1819; but
+the century was more than half over before the movement of ideas had, as
+it were, caught up with him, before pessimism became a dominant force in
+intellectual life.
+
+The literature produced between 1850 and 1870 was preeminently one of
+prose fiction. The beginnings which the "Young German" school had made
+to a type of novel dealing with social problems--the best example is
+Gutzkow's _Ritter vom Geiste_--developed rapidly in this succeeding
+epoch. Friedrich Spielhagen (born 1829) followed immediately in
+Gutzkow's footsteps, and in a series of romances from _Problematische
+Naturen_ (1860) to _Sturmflut_ (1876), discussed in a militant spirit
+that recalls Laube and Gutzkow the social problems which agitated German
+life in these decades. Gustav Freytag (1816-1895), although an older
+man, freed himself more successfully from the "Young German" tradition;
+his romance of German commercialism, _Soll und Haben_ (1855), is the
+masterpiece of mid-century fiction of this class. Less successful was
+Freytag's subsequent attempt to transfer his method to the _milieu_ of
+German academic life in _Die verlorene Handschrift_ (1864). As was
+perhaps only natural in an age of social and political interests, the
+historical novel occupies a subordinate place. The influence of Scott,
+which in the earlier period had been strong, produced only one writer,
+Wilhelm Häring ("Willibald Alexis," 1798-1871), who was more than a mere
+imitator of the Scottish master. In the series of six novels, from _Der
+Roland von Berlin_ to _Dorothe_, which Alexis published between 1840 and
+1856, he gave Germany, and more particularly Prussia, a historical
+fiction which might not unworthily be compared with the _Waverley
+Novels_. But Alexis had no successor, and the historical novel soon made
+way for a type of fiction in which the accurate reproduction of remote
+conditions was held of more account than poetic inspiration or artistic
+power. Such are the "antiquarian" novels of ancient Egyptian life by
+Georg Ebers (1837-1898), and those from primitive German history by
+Felix Dahn (born 1834). The vogue of historical fiction was also
+transferred to some extent, as in English literature, to novels of
+American life and adventure, of which the chief German cultivators were
+K.A. Postl, who wrote under the pseudonym of Charles Sealsfield
+(1793-1864) and Friedrich Gerstäcker (1816-1872).
+
+Of greater importance was the fiction which owed its inspiration to the
+Romantic traditions that survived the "Young German" age. To this group
+belongs the novel of peasant and provincial life, of which Immermann had
+given an excellent example in _Der Oberhof_, a story included in the
+arabesque of _Münchhausen_. A Swiss pastor, Albrecht Bitzius, better
+known by his pseudonym "Jeremias Gotthelf" (1797-1854), was, however,
+the real founder of this class of romance; and his simple, unvarnished
+and naďvely didactic stories of the Swiss peasant were followed not long
+afterwards by the more famous _Schwarzwälder Dorfgeschichten_
+(1843-1854) of Berthold Auerbach (1812-1882). Auerbach is not by any
+means so naďve and realistic as Gotthelf, nor is his work free from
+tendencies and ideas which recall "Young German" rationalism rather than
+the unsophisticated life of the Black Forest; but the _Schwarzwälder
+Dorfgeschichten_ exerted a decisive influence; they were the forerunners
+of a large body of peasant literature which described with affectionate
+sympathy and with a liberal admixture of dialect, south German village
+life. With this group of writers may also be associated the German
+Bohemian, A. Stifter (1805-1868), who has called up unforgettable
+pictures and impressions of the life and scenery of his home.
+
+Meanwhile, the Low German peoples also benefited by the revival of an
+interest in dialect and peasant life; it is to the credit of Fritz
+Reuter (1810-1874) that he brought honour to the Plattdeutsch of the
+north, the dialects of which had played a fitful, but by no means
+negligible rôle in the earlier history of German letters. His
+Mecklenburg novels, especially _Ut de Franzosentid_ (1860), _Ut mine
+Festungstid_ (1863) and _Ut mine Stromtid_ (1862-1864), are a faithful
+reflection of Mecklenburg life and temperament, and hold their place
+beside the best German fiction of the period. What Reuter did for
+Plattdeutsch prose, his contemporary, Klaus Groth (1819-1899), the
+author of _Quickborn_ (1852), did for its verse. We owe, however, the
+best German prose fiction of these years to two writers, whose affinity
+with the older Romanticists was closer. The north German, Theodor Storm
+(1817-1888) is the author of a series of short stories of delicate,
+lyric inspiration, steeped in that elegiac Romanticism which harmonized
+so well with mid-century pessimism in Germany. Gottfried Keller
+(1819-1890), on the other hand, a native of Zürich, was a modern
+Romanticist of a robuster type; his magnificent autobiographical novel,
+_Der grüne Heinrich_ (1854-1855), might be described as the last in the
+great line of Romantic fiction that had begun with _Wilhelm Meister_,
+and the short stories, _Die Leute von Seldwyla_ (1856-1874) and
+_Züricher Novellen_ (1878) are masterpieces of the first rank.
+
+In the dramatic literature of these decades, at least as it was
+reflected in the repertories of the German theatres, there was little
+promise. French influence was, in general, predominant; French
+translations formed the mainstay of the theatre-directors, while
+successful German playwrights, such as R. Benedix (1811-1873) and
+Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer (1800-1868), have little claim to consideration
+in a literary survey. Gustav Freytag's admirable comedy, _Die
+Journalisten_ (1852), was one of the rare exceptions. But the German
+drama of this epoch is not to be judged solely by the theatres. At the
+middle of the century Germany could point to two writers who, each in
+his way, contributed very materially to the development of the modern
+drama. These were Friedrich Hebbel (1813-1863) and Otto Ludwig
+(1813-1865). Both of these men, as a later generation discovered, were
+the pioneers of that dramatic literature which at the close of the
+century accepted the canons of realism and aimed at superseding outward
+effects by psychological conflicts and problems of social life. Hebbel,
+especially, must be regarded as the most original and revolutionary
+German dramatist of the 19th century. Unlike his contemporary
+Grillparzer, whose aim had been to reconcile the "classic" and the
+"romantic" drama with the help of Spanish models, Hebbel laid the
+foundations of a psychological and social drama, of which the most
+modern interpreter has been Henrik Ibsen. Hebbel's first tragedy,
+_Judith_, appeared in 1840, his masterpieces, _Herodes und Marianne_,
+_Agnes Bernauer_, _Gyges und sein Ring_, and the trilogy of _Die
+Nibelungen_ between 1850 and 1862.
+
+In this period of somewhat confused literary striving, there is,
+however, one body of writers who might be grouped together as a school,
+although the designation must be regarded rather as an outward accident
+of union than as implying conformity of aims. This is the group which
+Maximilian II. of Bavaria gathered round him in Munich between 1852 and
+1860. A leading spirit of the group was Emanuel Geibel, who, as we have
+seen, set a model to the German lyric in this age; F. von Bodenstedt
+(1819-1892), the popular author of _Mirza Schaffy_; and J.V. von
+Scheffel (1826-1886), who, in his verse-romance, _Der Trompeter von
+Säckingen_ (1854), broke a lance for a type of literature which had been
+cultivated somewhat earlier, but with no very conspicuous success, by
+men like O. von Redwitz (1823-1891) and G. Kinkel (1815-1882). The
+romance was, in fact, one of the favourite vehicles of poetic expression
+of the Munich school, its most successful exponents being J. Wolff (b.
+1834) and R. Baumbach (1840-1905); while others, such as H. Lingg
+(1820-1905) and R. Hamerling (1830-1889) devoted themselves to the more
+ambitious epic. The general tone of the literary movement was
+pessimistic, the hopelessness of the spiritual outlook being most deeply
+engrained in the verse of H. Lorm (pseudonym for Heinrich Landesmann,
+1821-1902) and H. Leuthold (1827-1879). On the whole, the most important
+member of the Munich group is Paul Heyse (b. 1830), who, as a writer of
+"Novellen" or short stories, may be classed with Storm and Keller. An
+essentially Latin genius, Heyse excels in stories of Italian life, where
+his lightness of touch and sense of form are shown to best advantage;
+but he has also written several long novels. Of these, _Kinder der Welt_
+(1873) and, in a lesser degree, _Im Paradiese_ (1875), sum up the spirit
+and tendency of their time, just as, in earlier decades, _Die Ritter vom
+Geiste_, _Problematische Naturen_ and _Soll und Haben_ were
+characteristic of the periods which produced them.
+
+(c) _German Literature after 1870._--In the years immediately following
+the Franco-German War, the prevailing conditions were unfavourable to
+literary production in Germany, and the re-establishment of the empire
+left comparatively little trace on the national literature. All minds
+were for a time engrossed by the _Kulturkampf_, by the financial
+difficulties--the so-called _Gründertum_--due to unscrupulous
+speculation, and, finally, by the rapid rise of social democracy as a
+political force. The intellectual basis of the latter movement was laid
+by Ferdinand Lassalle (1825-1864) and Karl Marx (1818-1883), author of
+_Das Kapital_ (vol. i, 1867). But even had such disturbing elements been
+wanting, the general tone of German intellectual life at that time was
+not buoyant enough to inspire a vigorous literary revival. The influence
+of Hegel was still strong, and the "historical" method, as enunciated in
+_Der alte und der neue Glaube_ (1872) by the Hegelian D.F. Strauss, was
+generally accepted at the German universities. To many the compromise
+which H. Lotze (1817-1881) had attempted to establish between science
+and metaphysics, came as a relief from the Hegelian tradition, but in
+literature and art the dominant force was still, as before the war, the
+philosophy of Schopenhauer. In his _Philosophie des Unbewussten_ (1869),
+E. von Hartmann (1842-1906) endeavoured to bring pessimism into harmony
+with idealism. In lyric poetry, the dull monotony was broken by the
+excitement of the war, and the singers of the revolution of 1848 were
+among the first to welcome the triumph and unification of Germany. At
+the same time, men of the older generation, like Herwegh, Freiligrath
+and Geibel could ill conceal a certain disappointment with the new
+régime; the united Germany of 1871 was not what they had dreamed of in
+their youth, when all hopes were set on the Frankfort parliament.
+
+The novel continued to be what it was before 1870, the most vigorous
+form of German literature, but the novelists who were popular in the
+early 'seventies were all older men. Laube, Gutzkow and Auerbach were
+still writing; Fritz Reuter was a universal favourite; while among the
+writers of short stories, Storm, who, between 1877 and 1888, put the
+crown to his work with his _Chroniknovellen_, and Paul Heyse were the
+acknowledged masters. It was not until at least a decade later that the
+genius of Gottfried Keller was generally recognized. The historical
+novel seemed, in those days, beyond hope of revival. Gustav Freytag, it
+is true, had made the attempt in _Die Ahnen_ (1872-1881), a number of
+independent historical romances linked together to form an ambitious
+prose epic; but there was more of the spirit of Ebers and Dahn in
+Freytag's work than of the spacious art of Scott, or of Scott's
+disciple, Willibald Alexis.
+
+The drama of the 'seventies was in an even less hopeful condition than
+during the preceding period. The classical iambic tragedy was cultivated
+by the Munich school, by A. Wilbrandt (b. 1837), A. Lindner (1831-1888),
+H. Kruse (1815-1902), by the Austrian F. Nissel (1831-1893), and A.
+Fitger (b. 1840); but it was characteristic of the time that Halm was
+popular, while Hebbel and Grillparzer were neglected, it might even be
+said ignored. The most gifted German dramatist belonging exclusively to
+the decade between 1870 and 1880 was an Austrian, Ludwig Anzengruber
+(1839-1889), whose _Pfarrer von Kirchfeld_ (1870) recalled the
+controversies of the _Kulturkampf_. This was Anzengruber's first drama,
+and it was followed by a series of powerful plays dealing with the life
+of the Austrian peasant; Anzengruber was, indeed, one of the ablest
+exponents of that village life, which had attracted so many gifted
+writers since the days of Gotthelf and Auerbach. But the really popular
+dramatists of this epoch were either writers who, like Benedix in the
+older generation, cultivated the _bourgeoise_ comedy--A. L'Arronge (b.
+1838), G. von Moser (1825-1903), F. von Schönthan (b. 1849) and O.
+Blumenthal (b. 1852)--or playwrights, of whom P. Lindau (b. 1839) may be
+regarded as representative, who imitated French models. The only sign of
+progress in the dramatic history of this period was the marked
+improvement of the German stage, an improvement due, on the one hand, to
+the artistic reforms introduced by the duke of Meiningen in the Court
+theatre at Meiningen, and, on the other hand, to the ideals of a
+national theatre realized at Bayreuth by Richard Wagner (1813-1883). The
+greatest composer of the later 19th century is also one of Germany's
+leading dramatists; and the first performance of the trilogy _Der Ring
+der Nibelungen_ at Bayreuth in the summer of 1876 may be said to have
+inaugurated the latest epoch in the history of the German drama.
+
+The last fifteen or twenty years of the 19th century were distinguished
+in Germany by a remarkable literary activity. Among the younger
+generation, which was growing up as citizens of the united German
+empire, a more hopeful and optimistic spirit prevailed. The influence of
+Schopenhauer was on the wane, and at the universities Hegelianism had
+lost its former hold. The sponsor of the new philosophic movement was
+Kant, the master of 18th-century "enlightenment," and under the
+influence of the "neo-Kantian" movement, not merely German school
+philosophy, but theology also, was imbued with a healthier spirit. L.
+von Ranke (1795-1886) was still the dominant force in German historical
+science, and between 1881 and 1888 nine volumes appeared of his last
+great work, _Weltgeschichte_. Other historians of the period were H. von
+Sybel (1817-1895) and H. von Treitschke (1834-1896), the latter a
+vigorous and inspiring spokesman of the new political conditions; while
+J. Burckhardt (1818-1897), author of the masterly _Kultur der
+Renaissance in Italien_ (1860) and the friend of Nietzsche, exerted an
+influence on German thought which was not confined to academic circles.
+Literary criticism perhaps benefited most of all by the dethronement of
+Hegel and the more objective attitude towards Schopenhauer; it seemed as
+if in this epoch the Germans first formed definite ideas--and ideas
+which were acceptable and accepted outside Germany--as to the rank and
+merits of their great poets. A marked change came over the nation's
+attitude towards Goethe, a poet to whom, as we have seen, neither the
+era of Hegel nor that of Schopenhauer had been favourable; Schiller was
+regarded with less national prejudice, and--most important of
+all--amends were made by the new generation for the earlier neglect of
+Kleist, Grillparzer, Hebbel and Keller.
+
+The thinker and poet who most completely embodies the spirit of this
+period--who dealt the Hegelian metaphysics its death-blow as far as its
+wider influence was concerned--was Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900).
+Nietzsche had begun as a disciple of Schopenhauer and a friend of
+Wagner, and he ultimately became the champion of an individualistic and
+optimistic philosophy which formed the sharpest possible contrast to
+mid-century pessimism. The individual, not the race, the _Herrenmensch_,
+not the slave, self-assertion, not self-denying renunciation--these are
+some of the ideas round which this new optimistic ethics turns.
+Nietzsche looked forward to the human race emerging from an effete
+culture, burdened and clogged by tradition, and re-establishing itself
+on a basis that is in harmony with man's primitive instincts. Like
+Schopenhauer before him, Nietzsche was a stylist of the first rank, and
+his literary masterpiece, _Also sprach Zarathustra_ (1883-1891), is to
+be regarded as the most important imaginative work of its epoch.
+
+Nietzschean individualism was only one of many factors which contributed
+to the new literary development. The realistic movement, as it had
+manifested itself in France under Flaubert, the Goncourts, Zola and
+Maupassant, in Russia under Dostoievsky and Tolstoi, and in Norway under
+Ibsen and Björnson, was, for a time, the dominant force in Germany, and
+the younger generation of critics hailed it with undisguised
+satisfaction; most characteristic and significant of all, the centre of
+this revival was Berlin, which, since it had become the imperial
+capital, was rapidly establishing its claim to be also the literary
+metropolis. It was the best testimony to the vitality of the movement
+that it rarely descended to slavish imitation of the realistic
+masterpieces of other literatures; realism in Germany was, in fact, only
+an episode of the 'eighties, a stimulating influence rather than an
+accepted principle or dogma. And its suggestive character is to be seen
+not merely in the writings of the young _Stürmer und Dränger_ of this
+time, but also in those of the older generation who, in temperament,
+were naturally more inclined to the ideals of a past age.
+
+Of the novelists of the latter class, A. Wilbrandt, who has already been
+mentioned as a dramatist, has shown, since about 1890, a remarkable
+power of adapting himself, if not to the style and artistic methods of
+the younger school, at least to the ideas by which it was agitated; F.
+Spielhagen's attitude towards the realistic movement has been invariably
+sympathetic, while a still older writer, Theodor Fontane (1819-1898),
+wrote between 1880 and 1898 a series of works in which the finer
+elements of French realism were grafted on the German novel. To the
+older school belong Wilhelm Jensen (b. 1837), and that fine humorist,
+Wilhelm Raabe (b. 1831), with whom may be associated as other humorists
+of this period, H. Seidel (1842-1906) and W. Busch (1832-1908). Some of
+the most interesting examples of recent German fiction come, however,
+from Austria and Switzerland. The two most eminent Austrian authors,
+Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach (b. 1830), and Ferdinand, von Saar
+(1833-1906), both excel as writers of Novellen or short stories--the
+latter especially being an exponent of that pessimism which is Austria's
+peculiar heritage from the previous generation of her poets. Austrians
+too, are Peter Rosegger (b. 1843), who has won popularity with his
+novels of peasant life, K.E. Franzos (1848-1904) and L. von
+Sacher-Masoch (1835-1895). German prose fiction is, in Switzerland,
+represented by two writers of the first rank: one of these, Gottfried
+Keller, has already been mentioned; the other, Konrad Ferdinand Meyer
+(1825-1898), turned to literature or, at least, made his reputation,
+comparatively late in life. Although, like Keller, a writer of virile,
+original verse, Meyer is best known as a novelist; he, too, was a master
+of the short story. His themes are drawn by preference from the epoch of
+the Renaissance, and his method is characterized by an objectivity of
+standpoint and a purity of style exceptional in German writers.
+
+The realistic novels of the period were written by H. Conradi
+(1862-1890), Max Kretzer (b. 1854), M.G. Conrad (b. 1846), H. Heiberg
+(b. 1840), K. Bleibtreu (b. 1859), K. Alberti (pseudonym for Konrad
+Sittenfeld, b. 1862) and Hermann Sudermann (b. 1857). A want of
+stability was, however, as has been already indicated, characteristic
+of the realistic movement in Germany; the idealistic trend of the German
+mind proved itself ill-adapted to the uncompromising realism of the
+French school, and the German realists, whether in fiction or in drama,
+ultimately sought to escape from the logical consequences of their
+theories. Even Sudermann, whose _Frau Sorge_ (1887), _Der Katzensteg_
+(1889), and the brilliant, if somewhat sensational romance, _Es war_
+(1894), are among the best novels of this period, has never been a
+consistent realist. It is consequently not surprising to find that,
+before long, German fiction returned to psychological and emotional
+problems, to the poetical or symbolical presentation of life, which was
+more in harmony with the German temperament than was the robuster
+realism of Flaubert or Zola. This trend is noticeable in the work of
+Gustav Frenssen (b. 1863), whose novel _Jörn Uhl_ (1901) was
+extraordinarily popular; it is also to be seen in the studies of child
+life and educational problems which have proved so attractive to the
+younger writers of the present day, such as Hermann Hesse (b. 1877),
+Emil Strauss (b. 1866), Rudolf Huch (b. 1862) and Friedrich Huch (b.
+1873). One might say, indeed, that at the beginning of the 20th century
+the traditional form of German fiction, the _Bildungsroman_, had come
+into its ancient rights again. Mention ought also to be made of J.J.
+David (1859-1907), E. von Keyserling (b. 1858), W. Hegeler (b. 1870), G.
+von Ompteda (b. 1863), J. Wassermann (b. 1873), Heinrich Mann (b. 1871)
+and Thomas Mann (b. 1875). _Buddenbrooks_ (1902) by the last mentioned
+is one of the outstanding novels of the period. Some of the best fiction
+of the most recent period is the work of women, the most distinguished
+being Helene Böhlau (b. 1859), Gabriele Reuter (b. 1859), Clara Viebig
+(C. Cohn-Viebig, b. 1860) and Ricarda Huch (b. 1864). Whether the latest
+movement in German poetry and fiction, which, under the catchword
+_Heimatkunst_, has favoured the province rather than the city, the
+dialect in preference to the language of the educated classes, will
+prove a permanent gain, it is still too soon to say, but the movement is
+at least a protest against the decadent tendencies of naturalism.
+
+At no period of German letters were literature and the theatre in closer
+touch than at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th
+centuries; more than at any previous time has the theatre become the
+arena in which the literary battles of the day are fought out. The
+general improvement in the artistic, technical and economic conditions
+of the German stage have already been indicated; but it was not until
+1889 that the effects of these improvements became apparent in dramatic
+literature. Before that date, it is true, Ernst von Wildenbruch
+(1845-1909) had attempted to revive the historical tragedy, but the
+purely literary qualities of his work were handicapped by a too effusive
+patriotism and a Schillerian pathos; nor did the talent of Richard Voss
+(b. 1851) prove strong enough to effect any lasting reform. In October
+1889, however, Gerhart Hauptmann's play, _Vor Sonnenaufgang_, was
+produced on the then recently founded _Freie Bühne_ in Berlin; and a
+month later, _Die Ehre_ by Hermann Sudermann met with a more
+enthusiastic reception in Berlin than had fallen to the lot of any
+German play for more than a generation.
+
+Hauptmann (b. 1862), the most original of contemporary German writers,
+stands, more or less, alone. His early plays, the most powerful of which
+is _Die Weber_ (1892), were written under the influence either of an
+uncompromising realism, or of that modified form of realism introduced
+from Scandinavia; but in _Hanneles Himmelfahrt_ (1893) he combined
+realism with the poetic mysticism of a child's dream, in _Florian Geyer_
+(1895) he adapted the methods of realism to an historical subject, and
+in the year 1896 he, to all appearance, abandoned realism to write an
+allegorical dramatic poem, _Die versunkene Glocke_. Hauptmann's
+subsequent work has oscillated between the extremes marked out by these
+works--from the frank naturalism of _Fuhrmann Henschel_ (1898) and _Rose
+Berndt_ (1903), to the fantastic mysticism of _Der arme Heinrich_ (1902)
+and _Und Pippa tanzt!_ (1906).
+
+The dramatic talent of Hermann Sudermann has developed on more even
+lines; the success of _Die Ehre_ was due in the first instance to the
+ability which Sudermann had shown in adapting the ideas of his time and
+the new methods of dramatic presentation to the traditional German
+_bürgerliches Drama_. This is the characteristic of the majority of the
+many plays which followed of which _Heimat_ (1893), _Das Glück im
+Winkel_ (1896) and _Es lebe das Leben!_ (1902) may be mentioned as
+typical. With less success Sudermann attempted in _Johannes_ (1898) a
+tragedy on lines suggested by Hebbel. A keen observer, a writer of
+brilliant and suggestive ideas, Sudermann is, above all, the practical
+playwright; but it is unfortunate that the theatrical element in his
+work too often overshadows its literary qualities.
+
+Since 1889, the drama has occupied the foreground of interest in
+Germany. The permanent repertory of the German theatre has not, it is
+true, been much enriched, but it is at least to the credit of
+contemporary German playwrights that they are unwilling to rest content
+with their successes and are constantly experimenting with new forms.
+Besides Hauptmann and Sudermann, the most talented dramatists of the day
+are Max Halbe (b. 1865), O.E. Hartleben (1864-1905), G. Hirschfeld (b.
+1873), E. Rosmer (pseudonym for Elsa Bernstein, b. 1866), Ludwig Fulda
+(b. 1862), Max Dreyer (b. 1862), Otto Ernst (pseudonym for O.E. Schmidt,
+b. 1862) and Frank Wedekind (b. 1864). In Austria, notwithstanding the
+preponderant influence of Berlin, the drama has retained its national
+characteristics, and writers like Arthur Schnitzler (b. 1862), Hermann
+Bahr (b. 1863), Hugo von Hofmannsthal (b. 1874) and R. Beer-Hofmann (b.
+1866) have introduced symbolistic elements and peculiarly Austrian
+problems, which are foreign to the theatre of north Germany.
+
+The German lyric of recent years shows a remarkable variety of new tones
+and pregnant poetic ideas; it has, as is natural, been more influenced
+by the optimism of Nietzsche--himself a lyric poet of considerable
+gifts--than has either novel or drama. Detlev von Liliencron (1844-1909)
+was one of the first to break with the traditions of the lyric as handed
+down from the Romantic epoch and cultivated with such facility by the
+Munich poets. An anthology of specifically modern lyrics, _Moderne
+Dichtercharaktere_ (1885) by W. Arent (b. 1864), may be regarded as the
+manifesto of the movement in lyric poetry corresponding to the period of
+realism in fiction and the drama. Representative poets of this movement
+are Richard Dehmel (b. 1863), K. Henckell (b. 1864), J.H. Mackay (b.
+1864 at Greenock), G. Falke (b. 1853), F. Avenarius (b. 1856), F. Evers
+(b. 1871), F. Dörmann (b. 1870) and K. Busse (b. 1872). A later
+development of the lyric--a return to mysticism and symbolism--is to be
+seen in the poetry of Hofmannsthal, already mentioned as a dramatist,
+and especially in Stefan George (b. 1868). Epic poetry, although little
+in harmony with the spirit of a realistic age, has not been altogether
+neglected. Heinrich Hart (1855-1906), one of the leading critics of the
+most advanced school, is also the author of an ambitious _Lied der
+Menschheit_ (vols. 1-3, 1888-1896); more conservative, on the other
+hand, is _Robespierre_ (1894), an epic in the style of Hamerling by an
+Austrian, Marie delle Grazie (b. 1864). Attention may also be drawn to
+the popularity which, for a few years, the so-called _Überbrettl_ or
+cabaret enjoyed, a popularity which has left its mark on the latest
+developments of the lyric. Associated with this movement are O.J.
+Bierbaum (1865-1910), whose lyrics, collected in _Der Irrgarten der
+Liebe_ (1901), have been extraordinarily popular, E. von Wolzogen (b.
+1855) and the dramatist F. Wedekind, who has been already mentioned.
+
+Whether or not the work that has been produced in such rich measure
+since the year 1889--or however much of it--is to be regarded as a
+permanent addition to the storehouse of German national literature,
+there can be no question of the serious artistic earnestness of the
+writers; the conditions for the production of literature in the German
+empire in the early years of the 20th century were eminently healthy,
+and herein lies the best promise for the future.
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY.--(a) _General Histories_, _Anthologies_, &c.: A.
+ Koberstein, _Grundriss der Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur_
+ (1827; 5th ed. by K. Bartsch, 5 vols., 1872-1874; 6th ed., vol. i.,
+ 1884); G.G. Gervinus, _Geschichte der poetischen Nationalliteratur
+ der Deutschen_ (5 vols., 1835-1842; 5th ed. by K. Bartsch, 1871-1874);
+ A.F.C. Vilmar, _Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur_ (1848;
+ 25th ed., 2 vols., 1900, with a continuation by A. Stern); W.
+ Wackernagel, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_ (1851-1855; 2nd ed.
+ by E. Martin, 1879-1894); K. Goedeke, _Grundriss zur Geschichte der
+ deutschen Dichtung_ (3 vols., 1857-1881; 2nd ed. by E. Goetze and
+ others, in 9 vols., 1884 ff.); W. Menzel, _Deutsche Dichtung von der
+ ältesten bis auf die neueste Zeit_ (1858-1859); H. Kurz, _Geschichte
+ der deutschen Literatur mit ausgewählten Stücken_ (3 vols., 1857-1859;
+ 7th ed., 4 vols., 1876-1882); O. Roquette, _Geschichte der deutschen
+ Dichtung_ (2 vols., 1862; 3rd ed., 1878-1879); W. Scherer, _Geschichte
+ der deutschen Literatur_ (1883; 10th ed., 1905). English translation
+ by Mrs F.C. Conybeare (2 vols., 1885; new ed., 1906); Kuno Francke,
+ _German Literature as determined by Social Forces_ (1896; 6th ed.,
+ 1903); F. Vogt and M. Koch, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_
+ (1897; 2nd ed., 2 vols., 1903); J.G. Robertson, _History of German
+ Literature_ (1902); A. Bartels, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_
+ (2 vols., 1901-1902), with the accompanying bibliographical summary,
+ _Handbuch zur Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_ (1906). There are
+ also histories of the literature of separate countries and districts,
+ such as J. Bächtold, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur in der
+ Schweiz_ (1887); R. Krauss, _Schwäbische Literaturgeschichte_ (2
+ vols., 1897-1899); J.W. Nagl and J. Zeidler, _Deutsch-Österreichische
+ Literaturgeschichte_ (2 vols., 1899 ff.). The most comprehensive
+ collection of German literature in selections is J. Kürschner,
+ _Deutsche Nationalliteratur_ (222 vols., 1882-1898). Of general
+ anthologies mention may be made of W. Wackernagel, _Deutsches
+ Lesebuch_ (4 vols., 1835-1872; new ed., 1882 ff.), and F. Max Müller,
+ _The German Classics from the Fourth to the Nineteenth Century_ (1858;
+ ed. by F. Lichtenstein, 2 vols., 1886; new ed., 1906). For
+ illustrations to the history of German literature, see G. Könnecke,
+ _Bilderatlas zur Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur_ (1887;
+ 2nd ed., 1895).
+
+ (b) _Special Periods_: i. _Old High German and Middle High German
+ Periods_: R. Kögel and W. Bruckner, "Geschichte der althochdeutschen
+ Literatur," and F. Vogt, "Geschichte der mittelhochdeutschen
+ Literatur," in H. Paul's _Grundriss der germanischen Philologie_ (2nd
+ ed., vol. ii. pt. i., 1901); F. Khull, _Geschichte der altdeutschen
+ Dichtung_ (1886); J. Kelle, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_,
+ i.-ii. (1892-1896); R. Kögel, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur bis
+ zum Ausgang des Mittelalters_, i. (1894-1897); W. Golther, _Geschichte
+ der deutschen Literatur von den ersten Anfängen bis zum Ausgang des
+ Mittelalters_ (in Kürschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur, vol. 163,
+ pt. i., 1892); W. Scherer, _Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung im 11.
+ und 12. Jahrhundert_, and by the same author, _Geistliche Poeten der
+ deutschen Kaiserzeit_ (both works in _Quellen und Forschungen_,
+ 1874-1875); O. Lyon, _Minne- und Meistersang_ (1882). There are
+ numerous series of editions of medieval texts: K. Müllenhoff and W.
+ Scherer, _Denkmäler deutscher Poesie und Prosa aus den 8.-12.
+ Jahrhundert_ (2 vols., 3rd ed., 1892); M. Heyne, _Bibliothek der
+ ältesten deutschen Literaturdenkmäler_ (14 vols., begun 1858); F.
+ Pfeiffer, _Deutsche Klassiker des Mittelalters_ (12 vols., begun
+ 1865), with the supplementary _Deutsche Dichtungen des Mittelalters_,
+ edited by K. Bartsch (7 vols., 1872 ff.); K. Goedeke, _Deutsche
+ Dichtung im Mittelalter_ (2nd ed., 1871); J. Zacher, _Germanistische
+ Handbibliothek_ (9 vols., begun 1869); H. Paul, _Altdeutsche
+ Textbibliothek_ (16 vols., begun 1882); _Deutsche Texte des
+ Mittelalters_, ed. by the Berlin Academy (1904 ff.). Convenient
+ editions of the Minnesang are K. Lachmann and M. Haupt, _Des
+ Minnesangs Frühling_ (4th ed. by F. Vogt, 1888), and K. Bartsch,
+ _Deutsche Liederdichter des 12. bis 14. Jahrh._ (4th ed. by W.
+ Golther, 1903).
+
+ ii. _From 1350-1700._--L. Geiger, _Renaissance und Humanismus in
+ Italien und Deutschland_ (1882; 2nd ed. 1899); K. Borinski,
+ _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters_
+ (in Kürschner's _Deutsche Nationalliteratur_, vol. 163, ii., 1898); H.
+ Palm, _Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Literatur des 16. und 17.
+ Jahrhunderts_ (1877); C.H. Herford, _Studies in the Literary Relations
+ of England and Germany in the Sixteenth Century_ (1886); C. Lemcke,
+ _Von Opitz bis Klopstock_, i. (1871; 2nd ed. 1882); M. von Waldberg,
+ _Deutsche Renaissance-Lyrik_ (1888), and _Die galante Lyrik_ (1885);
+ F. Bobertag, _Geschichte des Romans in Deutschland_, i. (to 1700)
+ (1877-1884); K. Borinski, _Die Poetik der Renaissance und die Anfänge
+ der literarischen Kritik in Deutschland_ (1886). A vast quantity of
+ the literature of these centuries has been republished by the
+ Stuttgarter literarischer Verein (founded in 1839), whose publications
+ now number considerably over two hundred volumes; further, W. Braune,
+ _Neudrucke deutscher Literaturwerke des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts_
+ (begun 1882); K. Goedeke and J. Tittmann, _Deutsche Dichter des 16.
+ Jahrhunderts_ (18 vols., 1867 ff.), and _Deutsche Dichter des 17.
+ Jahrhunderts_ (15 vols., 1869 ff.). A valuable anthology is K.
+ Goedeke's _Elf Bücher deutscher Dichtung von Sebastian Brant bis auf
+ die Gegenwart_ (2 vols., 1849). Since 1890 the _Jahresberichte für
+ neuere deutsche Literaturgeschichte_ have provided an exhaustive
+ survey of all publications dealing with modern German literature. A
+ useful practical bibliography for English readers, covering this and
+ the succeeding periods, is J.S. Nollen, _A Chronology and Practical
+ Bibliography of Modern German Literature_ (1903).
+
+ iii. _The Eighteenth Century._--J. Schmidt, _Geschichte der deutschen
+ Literatur von Leibniz bis auf unsere Zeit_ (4 vols., 1862-1867; 2nd
+ ed. 1886-1890); J. Hillebrand, _Die deutsche Nationalliteratur im 18.
+ und 19. Jahrhundert_ (3 vols., 1845-1846; 3rd ed. 1875); H. Hettner,
+ _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur im 18. Jahrhundert_ (4 vols.,
+ 1862-1870; 4th ed. by O. Harnack, 1893-1895); J.W. Schäfer,
+ _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur des 18. Jahrhunderts_ (1855-1860;
+ 2nd ed. by F. Muncker, 1881); J.K. Mörikofer, _Die schweizerische
+ Literatur des 18. Jahrhunderts_ (1861); J.W. Löbell, _Entwickelung der
+ deutschen Poesie von Klopstock bis zu Goethes Tod_ (3 vols.,
+ 1856-1865). There are also innumerable more special treatises, such as
+ A. Eloesser, _Das bürgerliche Drama_ (1898); O. Brahm, _Das deutsche
+ Ritterdrama des 18. Jahrhunderts_ (1880), &c. Of collections of the
+ literature of this and the following century, reference need only be
+ made to the _Bibliothek der deutschen Nationalliteratur des 18. und
+ 19. Jahrhunderts_, published by Brockhaus (44 vols., 1868-1891), and
+ _Deutsche Literaturdenkmale des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts_, edited
+ first by B. Seuffert (1882-1894), and subsequently by A. Sauer.
+
+ iv. _The Nineteenth Century._--Th. Ziegler, _Die geistigen und
+ sozialen Strömungen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts_ (1899; 2nd ed.
+ 1901); R. von Gottschall, _Die deutsche Nationalliteratur des 19.
+ Jahrhunderts_ (1854; 7th ed., 4 vols., 1900-1902); R.M. Meyer, _Die
+ deutsche Literatur des 19. Jahrhunderts_ (1899; 4th ed. 1910); R.M.
+ Meyer, _Grundriss der neueren deutschen Literaturgeschichte_ (1902);
+ C. Busse, _Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung im neunzehnten
+ Jahrhundert_ (1901); R. Haym, _Die romantische Schule_ (1870; 2nd ed.
+ 1906); G. Brandes, "Den romantiske Skole i Tyskland" (1873), and "Det
+ unge Tyskland" (1890), in _Hovedströmninger i det 19de Aarhundredes
+ Litteratur_, vols. ii. and vi. (German translations, 1887 and 1891;
+ several subsequent editions, Danish and German; English translations,
+ ii. 1903, and vi. 1905); R. Huch, _Die Blütezeit der Romantik (2nd ed.
+ 1901), and Ausbreitung und Verfall der Romantik_ (1902); F. Wehl, _Das
+ junge Deutschland_ (1886); J. Proelss, _Das junge Deutschland_ (1892);
+ A. Bartels, _Die deutsche Dichtung der Gegenwart_ (7th ed., 1907); A.
+ von Hanstein, _Das jüngste Deutschland_ (2nd ed., 1901); J.F. Coar,
+ _Studies in German Literature in the Nineteenth Century_ (1903); Ch.
+ Petzet, _Die Blütezeit der deutschen politischen Lyrik_ (1903); H.
+ Mielke, _Der deutsche Roman des 19. Jahrhunderts_ (4th ed., 1900); S.
+ Friedmann, _Das deutsche Drama des 19. Jahrhunderts_ (2 vols.,
+ 1900-1903); B. Litzmann, _Das deutsche Drama in den literarischen
+ Bewegungen der Gegenwart_ (4th ed., 1898). (J. G. R.)
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN REED ENTERTAINMENT. The dramatic and musical entertainment which
+for many years was known in London by the title of "German Reed" was a
+form of theatrical enterprise deserving of commemoration in connexion
+with those who made it successful. Mr THOMAS GERMAN REED (born in
+Bristol in 1817, died 1888) married in 1844 Miss PRISCILLA HORTON
+(1818-1895), and in 1855 they started their entertainment at the
+"Gallery of Illustration," in Waterloo Place, London. From 1860 to 1877
+they were assisted by JOHN ORLANDO PARRY (1810-1879), an accomplished
+pianoforte player, mimic, parodist and humorous singer; and the latter
+created a new type of musical and dramatic monologue which became very
+popular. His tradition was carried on after 1870 by MR CORNEY GRAIN
+(1844-1895), who, as a clever, refined, and yet highly humorous society
+entertainer (originally a barrister), was one of the best-known figures
+of his day. After the retirement of the elder German Reeds, their son,
+ALFRED GERMAN REED (1846-1895), himself a capital actor, carried on the
+business in partnership with Corney Grain. The "German Reed
+Entertainment"--which was always patronized by a large class of people,
+many of whom objected on principle to going or taking their children to
+a regular theatre or a music-hall--retained its vogue for forty years at
+Waterloo Place and at the St George's Hall, Regent Street. But the death
+of Mr Corney Grain almost simultaneously with Mr Alfred German Reed, in
+1895, together with the changed public attitude towards the regular
+theatre, ended its career.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN SILVER or NICKEL SILVER, an alloy of copper, nickel and zinc,
+prepared either by melting the copper and nickel together in a crucible,
+and adding piece by piece the previously heated zinc, or by heating the
+finely divided metals under a layer of charcoal. To destroy its
+crystalline structure and so render it fit for working, it is heated to
+dull redness, and then allowed to cool. German silver is harder than
+silver; it resembles that metal in colour, but is of a greyer tinge.
+Exposed to the air it tarnishes slightly yellow, and with vinegar
+affords a crust of verdigris. At a bright red heat it melts, losing its
+zinc by oxidation unless protected from the atmosphere. At a heat above
+dull redness it becomes exceedingly brittle. German silver in various
+modifications of composition is much used in the arts. Alloys, of which
+about 50% is copper and the residue zinc and nickel in about equal
+proportions take a fine polish, and are used as imitation silver for
+knives and forks. With a somewhat higher proportion of copper an alloy
+is formed suitable for rolling and for wire. In Chinese _white silver_
+or _packfong_ (paktong) the amount of copper is smaller, about 40%, with
+about 32% of nickel, 25 of zinc, and 2 or 3 of iron. German silver for
+casting contains 2 or 3% of lead, which like iron increases the
+whiteness of the alloy. German silver, having a high specific resistance
+and a low temperature coefficient, has been used for electrical
+resistance coils, and these qualities are possessed in a still greater
+degree in _manganin_, which contains manganese in place of zinc, its
+composition being 84% of copper, 12 of manganese and 4 of nickel. The
+addition of a trace of tungsten to German silver, as in _platinoid_,
+also largely increases the resistance.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN SOUTH-WEST AFRICA. This German possession is bounded W. by the
+Atlantic, N. by Angola, S. by the Cape province, E. by Bechuanaland and
+Rhodesia, and is the only German dependency in Africa suited to white
+colonization. It has an area of about 322,450 sq. m., and a population
+of Bantu Negroes and Hottentots estimated in 1903 at 200,000.[1] The
+European inhabitants, in addition to the military, numbered 7110 in
+1907, of whom the majority were German.
+
+ _Area and Boundaries._--The boundary separating the German
+ protectorate from the Portuguese possessions of Angola is the lower
+ Kunene, from its mouth in 17° 18' S., 11° 40' E. to the limit of
+ navigability from the sea, thence in a direct line, corresponding
+ roughly to the lat. of 17° 20' S., to the river Okavango, which it
+ follows eastwards until the stream turns abruptly south (towards Lake
+ Ngami). From this point a strip of German territory 300 m. long and
+ about 50 m. broad, projects eastward until it reaches the Zambezi a
+ little above the Victoria Falls. On the south this narrow strip of
+ land (known as the Caprivi enclave) is separated from southern
+ Rhodesia by the Kwando or Chobe river. On the east the frontier
+ between British and German territory is in its northern half the 21st
+ degree of E. longitude, in its southern half the 20th degree. This
+ frontier is drawn through desert country. The southern frontier is the
+ Orange river from its mouth to the 20° E. The coast-line between the
+ Kunene and Orange rivers is not wholly German. Just north of the
+ tropic of Capricorn is the British enclave of Walfish Bay (q.v.). The
+ northern part of the protectorate is known as Ovampoland, the central
+ portion as Damara (or Herero) land; the southern regions as Great
+ Namaqualand. These names are derived from those of the dominant native
+ races inhabiting the country.
+
+ _Physical Features._--The coast-line is generally low and little
+ broken by bays or promontories. In its entire length of about 800 m.
+ it has no good natural harbour, and its bays--Angra Pequena, otherwise
+ Lüderitz Bay, Sierra Bay, Sandwich Harbour--are in danger of being
+ filled with sand by the strong, cold, northerly coast current.
+ Swakopmund is an artificial harbour at the mouth of the river Swakop.
+ The small islands which stud the coast north and south of Angra
+ Pequena belong to Great Britain. The coast-line is bordered by a belt
+ of sand-dunes and desert, which, about 35 m. wide in the south,
+ narrows towards the north. This coast belt is flanked by a mountain
+ range, which attains its highest elevation in Mount Omatako (8972
+ ft.), in about 21° 15' S., 16° 40' E. N. E. of Omatako is the Omboroko
+ range, otherwise known as the Waterberg. South of Omboroko, occupying
+ the centre of the country, the range attains its highest average
+ altitude. The following massifs with their highest points may be
+ distinguished: Gans (7664 ft.), Nu-uibeb (7480 ft.), Onyati (7201
+ ft.), Awas (6988 ft.), Komas (5331 ft.) and Ganab (4002 ft.). In the
+ S.E. are the Karas mountains, which attain an elevation of 6570 ft.
+ The mountains for the main part form the escarpment of the great
+ Kalahari plateau, which, gently rising from the interior towards the
+ west, slopes again towards the south and north from the point of its
+ highest elevation. The Kalahari plateau changes the undulating
+ character it has in the west to a perfect plain in the far east, where
+ the watered and habitable country merges into the sterile Kalahari
+ desert. In the northern half of the country the central plateau
+ contains much rich grass-land, while in the north-eastern region the
+ Omaheke desert has all the characteristics of the Kalahari.
+
+ There are no rivers of importance wholly within German South-West
+ Africa. The Kunene (q.v.) has but a small portion of the southern bank
+ in the colony, and similarly only part of the northern bank of the
+ Orange river (q.v.) is in German territory. Several streams run south
+ into the Orange; of those the chief is the Great Fish river, which has
+ a course of nearly 500 m. Both the Kunene and the Orange carry water
+ all the year round, but are not navigable. Neither is the Great Fish
+ river, which, however, is rarely dry. The Okavango, which comes from
+ the north and runs towards Ngami (q.v.), is perennial, but like the
+ Kunene and Orange, belongs only partly to the hydrographic system of
+ the country. From the inner slopes of the coast chain many streams go
+ N.E. to join the Okavango. They cross the Omaheke waste and are
+ usually dry. Ovampoland has a hydrographic system connected with the
+ Kunene, and, in seasons of great flood, with that of Ngami. Before the
+ Kunene breaks through the outer edge of the plateau, it sends
+ divergent channels south-east to a large marsh or lake called Etosha,
+ which is cut by 17° E. and 19° S. Of these channels the Kwamatuo or
+ Okipoko, which is perennial, enters Etosha at its N.W. corner. The
+ lake when full extends about 80 m. W. to E. and 50 m. N. to S. From
+ its S.E. corner issues the Omuramba, which divides into two branches,
+ known respectively as the Omaheke and the Ovampo. These streams have
+ an easterly direction, their beds, often dry, joining the Okavango.
+ The other rivers of the protectorate have as a rule plenty of water in
+ their upper courses in the rainy season, though some river beds are
+ dry for years together. After a heavy thunderstorm such a river bed
+ will be suddenly filled with a turbid current half a mile wide. The
+ water is, however, before long absorbed by the thirsty land. Only in
+ exceptionally rainy years do the streams which cross the sand belt
+ carry water to the ocean. But in the sand which fills the river beds
+ water may be obtained by digging. Of rivers running direct to the
+ Atlantic the Little Fish river enters the sea at Angra Pequena and the
+ Kuisip in Walfish Bay. The Swakop rises in the hills near the
+ Waterberg, and north of it is the Omaruru, which carries water for the
+ greater part of the year. Hot springs are numerous, and it is
+ remarkable that those of Windhoek flow more copiously during the dry
+ than the rainy season. There are also many cold springs, and wells
+ which contain water all the year.
+
+ _Geology._--Gneiss and schist, with intrusive granites and porphyries,
+ overlain to a great extent by sand and lateritic deposits, occupy the
+ coast belt, coast mountains and the plateau of Damaraland. In the Huib
+ and Han-ami plateaus of Great Namaqualand the crystalline rocks are
+ overlain by sandstones, slates, quartzites and jasper rocks, and these
+ in turn by dolomites. They are probably equivalent to the Transvaal
+ and Pretoria series (see TRANSVAAL: _Geology_). The next oldest rocks
+ are of recent geological date. The Kalahari Kalk, which extends over
+ large areas to the south-east of Ovampoland, may be of Miocene age,
+ but it has not yielded fossils. Extensive tracts of alluvium occur in
+ the basin of the Ovampo, while the dunes and sand-tracts of the
+ Kalahari occupy the eastern regions.
+
+ _Climate._--On the coast the mean temperature is low, and there is
+ little rainfall. Moisture is supplied by dense fogs, which rise almost
+ daily. South-west winds prevail. Inland the climate is temperate
+ rather than tropical, with bracing, clear atmosphere. There are
+ considerable differences of temperature between day and night, and two
+ well-marked seasons, one cold and dry from May to September, the other
+ hot and rainy from October to April. In winter ice frequently forms
+ during the night on open water on the plateau, but it never remains
+ all day. The yearly rainfall is about 20 in. in the Damara Hills;
+ there is more rain in the north than in the south, and in the east
+ than in the west. In the greater part of the colony the climate is
+ favourable for European settlement.
+
+ _Flora and Fauna._--The vegetation corresponds exactly with the
+ climate. In the dry littoral region are plants able to exist with the
+ minimum of moisture they derive from the daily fog--_Amarantaceae_,
+ _Sarcocaula_, _Aloe dichotoma_, _Aristida subacaulis_ and the
+ wonderful _Welwitschia_. Farther inland are plants which spring up and
+ disappear with the rain, and others whose roots reach permanent water.
+ The former are chiefly grasses, the latter exist almost solely in or
+ near river-beds. Amongst the fine trees often seen here, the ana tree
+ (_Acacia albida_) is the most noteworthy, its seeds being favourite
+ fodder for all domestic animals. _Acacia giraffae_, _Ac. horrida_,
+ _Adansonia sterculia_, near the Kunene the _Hyphaene ventricosa_,
+ deserve special notice. The vegetation in the mountain valleys is
+ luxuriant, and towards the north is of a tropical character. The palm
+ zone extends a considerable distance south of the Kunene, and here
+ vegetation spreads over the sand-dunes of the coast plain, which are
+ covered with grasses.
+
+ Large game, formerly abundant, especially pachyderms, is scarce. Of
+ antelopes the following species are plentiful in parts: springbok,
+ steenbok, kudu, rietbok, pallah; of monkeys, the _Cynocephalus
+ porcarius_ is frequent. Various kinds of hyenas and jackals with fine
+ fur (_Canis mesomelas_), also _Felis caracal_, abound. The spring-hare
+ (_Pedestea caffer_) and rock-rabbit (_Hyrax capensis_) may often be
+ observed. Of birds there are 728 species. Crocodiles, turtles and
+ snakes are numerous.
+
+_Inhabitants._--Among the natives of German South-West Africa three
+classes may be distinguished. In the first class are the Namaqua
+(Hottentots) and Bushmen. The Namaqua probably came from the south,
+while the Bushmen may be looked upon as an indigenous race. The
+Hottentots, the purest existing types of that race, are divided into
+numerous tribes, independent of one another, such as the Witbois,
+Swartzbois, Bondelzwarts. The Bushmen are found scattered over the
+eastern parts of the country (see HOTTENTOTS and BUSHMEN). The second
+class consists of the mountain Damara (Hau-Khoin), a race of doubtful
+affinities, probably of Bantu-Negro origin, but speaking the Hottentot
+language. The third class belongs to the Bantu-Negro stock, and came
+from the north-east, expelling and enslaving the mountain Damara, and
+settling in various parts of the country under different names. The most
+prominent are the Herero, thorough nomads and cattle-breeders; while the
+Ovampo (Ovambo or Ambo), in the northern part of the protectorate, are
+agriculturists. The Herero (q.v.) are also known by the Hottentot name
+Damara, and by this name their country is generally called. The
+Bastaards, who live in Namaqualand, are a small tribe originating from a
+mingling of Cape Boers with Hottentots. They are Christians, and able to
+read and write. The other natives are spirit-worshippers, save for the
+comparatively few converts of the Protestant missions established in the
+country. Of white races represented the chief are Germans and Boers. In
+the S.E. Boer settlers form the bulk of the white population. There are
+also numbers of British colonists in this region--emigrants from the
+Cape. The immigration of Germans is encouraged by subsidies and in other
+ways.
+
+ _Towns._--The chief port is Swakopmund, built on the northern bank of
+ the Swakop river (the southern bank belonging to the British territory
+ of Walfish Bay). The harbour is partially protected by a breakwater.
+ There are also settlements at Lüderitz Bay (white pop. 1909, over
+ 1000) and at Sandwich Harbour. Swakopmund is connected by a narrow
+ gauge railway with Windhoek, the administrative capital of the colony,
+ situated in a hilly district 180 m. due east of the port, but 237 m.
+ by the railway. Karibib is the only place of consequence on the line.
+ Otyimbingue is a government station 70 m. W.N.W. of Windhoek, and
+ Tsumeb a mining centre 240 m. N.N.E. of the same place. Olukonda is a
+ government post in Ovampoland. In the S.E. corner of the colony, 30 m.
+ N. of the Orange river, is the town of Warmbad. Keetmanshoop, 100 m.
+ N. of Warmbad and 180 m. E. of Lüderitz Bay, is the centre of a small
+ mining industry. Gibeon is a government station and missionary
+ settlement about midway between Keetmanshoop and Windhoek. Besides
+ these places there are numbers of small native towns at which live a
+ few white traders and missionaries. The missionaries have given
+ Biblical names to several of their stations, such as Bethany and
+ Beersheba in Namaqualand, and Rehoboth in Damaraland. In the Caprivi
+ enclave are a German residency and the site of the town of Linyante,
+ once the capital of the Makololo dynasty of Barotseland (see BAROTSE).
+
+ _Industries._--Agriculture is followed by the natives in the northern
+ districts, but the chief industry is stock-raising. The scarcity of
+ water in the southern parts is not favourable for agricultural
+ pursuits, while the good grazing lands offer splendid pasturage for
+ cattle, which the Herero raise in numbers amounting to many hundred
+ thousands. Sheep and goats thrive well. Horses have been imported from
+ the Cape. Unfortunately the climate does not suit them everywhere, and
+ they are subject to a virulent distemper. Cattle and sheep also suffer
+ from the diseases which are common in the Cape Colony. Camels have
+ been imported, and are doing well. Wheat, maize and sorghum are the
+ chief crops raised, though not enough is grown to meet even local
+ requirements. Near the coast the natives collect the kernels of the
+ nara, a wild-growing pumpkin which, in the words of an early
+ traveller, C.J. Andersson, "are eaten by oxen, mice, men, ostriches
+ and lions." About half the European settlers are engaged in
+ agriculture. They raise maize, wheat, tobacco, fruit and vegetables.
+ Cotton cultivation and viticulture are carried on in some districts.
+
+ Minerals, especially copper, are plentiful in the country. The chief
+ copper deposits are at Tsumeb, which is 4230 ft. above the sea, in the
+ Otavi district. Diamonds are found on and near the surface of the soil
+ in the Lüderitz Bay district, and diamonds have also been found in the
+ neighbourhood of Gibeon. A little pottery is made, and the Hottentot
+ women are clever in making fur cloths. In the north the Ovampo do a
+ little smith-work and grass-plaiting. The external trade of the
+ country was of slow growth. The exports, previous to the opening up of
+ the Otavi mines, consisted chiefly of live stock--sent mainly to Cape
+ Colony--guano, ivory, horns, hides and ostrich feathers. The chief
+ imports are food stuffs, textiles and metals, and hardware. In 1903
+ the value of the exports was Ł168,560, that of the imports Ł388,210.
+ The war which followed (see below, _History_) led to a great shrinking
+ of exports, rendering the figures for the period 1904-1907 useless for
+ purposes of comparison. About 85% of the imports are from Germany.
+
+ _Communications._--The economic development of the country is largely
+ dependent on transport facilities. The railway from Swakopmund to
+ Windhoek, mentioned above, was begun in 1897, and was opened for
+ traffic in July 1902. It cost nearly Ł700,000 to build. Another narrow
+ gauge railway, to serve the Otavi copper mines, was begun in 1904 and
+ completed in 1908. It starts from Swakopmund and is 400 m. long, the
+ terminus being at Grootfontein, 40 m. S.E. of Tsumeb. The highest
+ point on this line is 5213 ft. above the sea. In 1906-1908 a railway,
+ 180 m. long, was built from Lüderitz Bay to Keetmanshoop. This line is
+ of the standard South African gauge (3 ft. 6 in.), that gauge being
+ adopted in view of the eventual linking up of the line with the
+ British railway systems at Kimberley. A branch from Seeheim on the
+ Keetmanshoop line runs S.E. to Kalkfontein.
+
+ Besides railways, roads have been made between the chief centres of
+ population. Along these, in the desert districts, wells have been dug.
+ Across the Awas Mountains, separating Windhoek from the central
+ plateau, a wide road has been cut. In 1903 the colony was placed in
+ telegraphic communication with Europe and Cape Colony by the laying of
+ submarine cables having their terminus at Swakopmund. There is a
+ fairly complete inland telegraphic service.
+
+ There is regular steamship communication between Hamburg and
+ Swakopmund, Walfish Bay and Lüderitz Bay. Regular communication is
+ also maintained between Cape Town and the ports of the colony.
+
+ _Administration._--At the head of the administration is an imperial
+ governor, responsible to the colonial office in Berlin, who is
+ assisted by a council consisting of chiefs of departments. The country
+ is divided into various administrative districts. In each of these
+ there is a _Bezirksamtmann_, with his staff of officials and police
+ force. In each district is a law court, to whose jurisdiction not
+ alone the whites, but also the Bastaards are subject. As in all German
+ colonies, there is a court of appeal at the residence of the governor.
+ The government maintains schools at the chief towns, but education is
+ principally in the hands of missionaries. The armed force consists of
+ regular troops from Germany and a militia formed of Bastaards. The
+ local revenue for some years before 1903 was about Ł130,000 per annum,
+ the expenditure about Ł400,000, the difference between local receipts
+ and expenditure being made good by imperial subsidies. In 1908 local
+ revenue had risen to Ł250,000, but the imperial authorities incurred
+ an expenditure of over Ł2,000,000, largely for military purposes. On
+ articles of export, such as feathers and hides, 5% _ad valorem_ duty
+ has to be paid; on cattle and horses an export tax per head. There is
+ a 10% _ad valorem_ duty on all imports, no difference being made
+ between German and foreign goods. The sale of spirituous liquors is
+ subject to a licence.
+
+_History._--The coast of south-west Africa was discovered by Bartholomew
+Diaz in 1487, whilst endeavouring to find his way to the Indies. He
+anchored in a bay which by reason of its smallness he named Angra
+Pequena. Portugal, however, took no steps to acquire possession of this
+inhospitable region, which remained almost unvisited by Europeans until
+the early years of the 19th century. At this time the country was
+devastated by a Hottentot chief known as Afrikander, who had fled
+thither with a band of outlaws after murdering his master, a Boer farmer
+by whom he had been ill-treated, in 1796. In 1805 some missionaries (of
+German nationality) went into Namaqualand in the service of the London
+Missionary Society, which society subsequently transferred its missions
+in this region to the Rhenish mission, which had had agents in the
+country since about 1840. The chief station of the missionaries was at a
+Hottentot settlement renamed Bethany (1820), a place 125 m. E. by Angra
+Pequena. The missionaries had the satisfaction of stopping Afrikander's
+career of bloodshed. He became a convert, a great friend of the mission,
+and took the name of Christian. The proximity of Great Namaqualand to
+Cape Colony led to visits from British and Dutch farmers and hunters, a
+few of whom settled in the country, which thus became in some sense a
+dependency of the Cape.
+
+In 1867 the islands along the coast north and south of Angra Pequena, on
+which were valuable guano deposits, were annexed to Great Britain. At
+this time a small trade between the natives and the outside world was
+developed at Angra Pequena, the merchants engaged in it being British
+and German. The political influence of the Cape spread meantime
+northward to the land of the Herero (Damara). The Herero had been
+subjugated by Jonker Afrikander, a son of Christian Afrikander, who
+followed the early footsteps of his sire and had renounced Christianity,
+but in 1865 they had recovered their independence. The Rhenish
+missionaries appealed (1868) to the British government for protection,
+and asked for the annexation of the country. This request, although
+supported by the Prussian government, was refused. In 1876, however, a
+special commissioner (W. Coates Palgrave) was sent by the Cape
+government "to the tribes north of the Orange river." The commissioner
+concluded treaties with the Namaqua and Damara which fixed the limits of
+the territories of the two races and placed the whole country now
+forming German South-West Africa within the sphere of British influence.
+In the central part of Damaraland an area of some 35,000 sq. m. was
+marked out as a British reservation. The instrument by which this
+arrangement was made was known as the treaty of Okahandya. Neither it
+nor the treaty relating to Great Namaqualand was ratified by the British
+government, but at the request of Sir Bartle Frere, then high
+commissioner for South Africa, Walfish Bay (the best harbour along the
+coast) was in 1878 annexed to Great Britain.
+
+
+ German rule established.
+
+In 1880 fighting between the Namaqua, who were led by Jan Afrikander,
+son of Jonker and grandson of Christian Afrikander, and the Damara broke
+out afresh, and was not ended until the establishment of European rule.
+In 1883 F.A.E. Lüderitz (1834-1886), a Bremen merchant, with the
+approval of Prince Bismarck, established a trading station at Angra
+Pequena. This step led to the annexation of the whole country to Germany
+(see AFRICA, § 5) with the exception of Walfish Bay and the islands
+actually British territory. On the establishment of German rule Jonker
+Afrikander's old headquarters were made the seat of administration and
+renamed Windhoek. The Hottentots, under a chieftain named Hendrik
+Witboi, offered a determined opposition to the Germans, but after a
+protracted war peace was concluded in 1894 and Hendrik became the ally
+of the Germans. Thereafter, notwithstanding various local risings, the
+country enjoyed a measure of prosperity, although, largely owing to
+economic conditions, its development was very slow.
+
+
+ Herero war.
+
+In October 1903 the Bondelzwarts, who occupy the district immediately
+north of the Orange river, rose in revolt. This act was the beginning of
+a struggle between the Germans and the natives which lasted over four
+years, and cost Germany the lives of some 5000 soldiers and settlers,
+and entailed an expenditure of Ł15,000,000. Abuses committed by white
+traders, the brutal methods of certain officials and the occupation of
+tribal lands were among the causes of the war, but impatience of white
+rule was believed to be the chief reason for the revolt of the Herero,
+the most formidable of the opponents of the Germans. The Herero had
+accepted the German protectorate by treaty--without fully comprehending
+that to which they had agreed. To crush the Bondelzwarts, an object
+attained by January 1904, the governor, Colonel Theodor Leutwein, had
+denuded Damaraland of troops, and advantage was taken of this fact by
+the Herero to begin a long-planned and well-prepared revolt. On the 12th
+of January 1904 most of the German farmers in Damaraland were attacked,
+and settlers and their families murdered and the farms devastated.
+Reinforcements were sent from Germany, and in June General von Trotha
+arrived and took command of the troops. On the 11th of August von Trotha
+attacked the Herero in their stronghold, the Waterberg, about 200 m. N.
+of Windhoek, and inflicted upon them a severe defeat. The main body of
+the enemy escaped, however, from the encircling columns of the Germans,
+and thereafter the Herero, who were under the leadership of Samuel
+Maherero, maintained a guerrilla warfare, rendering the whole
+countryside unsafe. The Germans found pursuit almost hopeless, being
+crippled by the lack of water and the absence of means of transport. To
+add to their troubles a Herero bastard named Morenga, with a following
+of Hottentots, had, in July, recommenced hostilities in the south. On
+the 2nd of October 1904 von Trotha, exasperated at his want of success
+in crushing the enemy, issued a proclamation in which he said: "Within
+the German frontier every Herero with or without a rifle, with or
+without cattle, will be shot. I will not take over any more women and
+children. But I will either drive them back to your people or have them
+fired on." In a later order von Trotha instructed his soldiers not to
+fire into, but to fire over the heads of the women and children, and
+Prince Bülow ordered the general to repeal the whole proclamation.
+Whenever they had the chance, however, the Germans hunted down the
+Herero, and thousands perished in the Omaheke desert, across which
+numbers succeeded in passing to British territory near Ngami.
+
+On the day following the issue of von Trotha's proclamation to the
+Herero, i.e. on the 3rd of October 1904, Hendrik Witboi sent a formal
+declaration of war to the Germans. Hendrik had helped to suppress the
+Bondelzwarts rising, and had received a German decoration for his
+services, and his hostility is said to have been kindled by the
+supersession of Colonel Leutwein, for whom he entertained a great
+admiration. The Witbois were joined by other Hottentot tribes, and their
+first act was to murder some sixty German settlers in the Gibeon
+district. Both British and Boer farmers were spared--the Hottentots in
+this matter following the example of the Herero. In November,
+considerable reinforcements having come from Germany, the Witbois were
+attacked, and Hendrik's headquarters, Reitmont, captured. Another defeat
+was inflicted on Hendrik in January 1905, but, lacking ammunition and
+water, the Germans could not follow up their victory. As in Damaraland,
+the warfare in Namaqualand now assumed a guerrilla character, and the
+Germans found it almost impossible to meet their elusive enemy, while
+small detachments were often surprised and sometimes annihilated. In May
+1905 von Trotha tried the effect on the Hottentots of another of his
+proclamations. He invited them to surrender, adding that in the contrary
+event all rebels would be exterminated. A price was at the same time put
+on the heads of Hendrik Witboi and other chiefs. This proclamation was
+unheeded by the Hottentots, who were in fact continuing the war with
+rifles and ammunition seized from the Germans, and replenishing their
+stock with cattle taken from the same source. In the north, however,
+Samuel Maherero had fled to British territory, and the resistance of the
+Herero was beginning to collapse. Concentration camps were established
+in which some thousands of Herero women and children were cared for.
+Meanwhile, the administration of von Trotha, who had assumed the
+governorship as well as the command of the troops, was severely
+criticized by the civilian population, and the non-success of the
+operations against the Hottentots provoked strong military criticism. In
+August 1905 Colonel (afterwards General) Leutwein, who had returned to
+Germany, formally resigned the governorship of the protectorate, and
+Herr von Lindequist, late German consul-general at Cape Town, was
+nominated as his successor. Von Trotha, who had publicly criticized
+Prince Bülow's order to repeal the Herero proclamation, was superseded.
+He had in the summer of 1905 instituted a series of "drives" against the
+Witbois, with no particular results. Hendrik always evaded the columns
+and frequently attacked them in the rear.
+
+In November 1905 von Lindequist arrived at Windhoek. The new governor
+issued a general amnesty to the Herero, and set aside two large reserves
+for those who surrendered. His conciliatory policy was in the end
+successful, and the Ovampo, who threatened to give trouble, were kept in
+hand. The task of pacifying Damaraland was continued throughout 1906,
+and by the close of that year about 16,000 Herero had been established
+in the reserves. Some 3000 had sought refuge in British territory, while
+the number who had perished may be estimated at between 20,000 and
+30,000.
+
+
+ The Hottentots subdued.
+
+In Namaqualand von Lindequist found an enemy still unbroken. On the 3rd
+of November, however, Hendrik Witboi died, aged seventy-five, and his
+son and successor Samuel Isaac Witboi shortly afterwards surrendered,
+and the hostility of the tribe ceased. Morenga now became the chief of
+the rebel Hottentots, and "drives" against him were organized. Early in
+May 1906 an encounter between Morenga and a German column was fought
+close to the British frontier of the Bechuanaland protectorate. Morenga
+fled, was pursued across the frontier, and wounded, but escaped. On the
+16th of May he was found hiding by British patrols and interned. Other
+Hottentot chiefs continued the conflict, greatly aided by the immense
+difficulty the Germans had in transporting supplies; to remedy which
+defect the building of a railway from Lüderitz Bay to Kubub was begun
+early in 1906. A camel transport corps was also organized, and Boer
+auxiliaries engaged. Throughout the later half of 1906 the Hottentots
+maintained the struggle, the Karas mountains forming a stronghold from
+which their dislodgment was extremely difficult. Many of their leaders
+and numbers of the tribesmen had a considerable strain of white (chiefly
+Dutch) blood and were fairly educated men, with a knowledge not only of
+native, but European ways; facts which helped to make them formidable
+opponents. Gradually the resistance of the Hottentots was overcome, and
+in December 1906 the Bondelzwarts again surrendered. Other tribes
+continued the fight for months longer, but by March 1907 it was found
+possible to reduce the troops in the protectorate to about 5000 men. At
+the height of the campaign the Germans had 19,000 men in the field.
+
+In August 1907 renewed alarm was created by the escape of Morenga from
+British territory. The Cape government, regarding the chief as a
+political refugee, had refused to extradite him and he had been assigned
+a residence near Upington. This place he left early in August and,
+eluding the frontier guards, re-entered German territory. In September,
+however, he was again on the British side of the border. Meantime a
+force of the Cape Mounted Police under Major F.A.H. Eliott had been
+organized to effect his arrest. Summoned to surrender, Morenga fled into
+the Kalahari Desert. Eliott's force of sixty men pursued him through a
+waterless country, covering 80 m. in 24 hours. When overtaken (September
+21st), Morenga, with ten followers, was holding a kopje and fired on the
+advancing troops. After a sharp engagement the chief and five of his men
+were killed, the British casualties being one killed and one wounded.
+The death of Morenga removed a serious obstacle to the complete
+pacification of the protectorate. Military operations continued,
+however, during 1908. Herr von Lindequist, being recalled to Berlin to
+become under-secretary in the colonial office, was succeeded as governor
+(May 1907) by Herr von Schuckmann. In 1908 steps were taken to establish
+German authority in the Caprivi enclave, which up to that time had been
+neglected by the colonial authorities.
+
+
+ Discovery of diamonds.
+
+The discovery of diamonds in the Lüderitz Bay district in July 1908
+caused a rush of treasure-seekers. The diamonds were found mostly on the
+surface in a sandy soil and were of small size. The stones resemble
+Brazilian diamonds. By the end of the year the total yield was over
+39,000 carats. One of the difficulties encountered in developing the
+field was the great scarcity of fresh water. During 1909 various
+companies were formed to exploit the diamondiferous area. The first
+considerable packet of diamonds from the colony reached Germany in April
+1909. The output for the year was valued at over Ł1,000,000.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--Karl Dove, _Deutsch-Südwestafrika_ (Berlin, 1903); W.
+ Külz, _Deutsch-Südafrika_ ... (Berlin, 1909); T. Leutwein, _Elf Jahre
+ Gouverneur in Deutsch-Südwestafrika_ (Berlin, 1908), an authoritative
+ work, largely historical; P. Rohrbach, _Deutsche Kolonialwirtschaft_,
+ Band 1: _Südwestafrika_ (Berlin, 1907), a comprehensive economic
+ study; I. Irle, _Die Herero, ein Beitrag zur Landes-, Volks- und
+ Missionskunde_ (Gütersloh, 1906), a valuable summary of information
+ concerning Damaraland; Major K. Schwabe, _Im deutschen Diamantenlande_
+ (Berlin, 1909); T. Rehbock, _Deutsch-Südwestafrika, seine
+ wirtschaftliche Erschliessung unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der
+ Nutzbarmachung des Wassers_ (Berlin, 1898); C. von François,
+ _Deutsch-Südwestafrika: Geschichte der Kolonisation bis zum Ausbruch
+ des Krieges mit Witbooi_, April 1893 (Berlin, 1899), a history of the
+ protectorate up to 1893; H. Schintz, _Deutsch-Südwestafrika,
+ Forschungsreisen durch die deutschen Schutzgebiete Gross-Nama und
+ Hereroland, nach dem Kunene, &c., 1884-1887_ (Oldenburg, N.D. [1891]);
+ H. von François, _Nama und Damara_ (Magdeburg, N.D. [1896]). See also
+ for Ethnology, "Die Eingeborenen Deutsch-Südwestafrikas nach
+ Geschichte, Charakter, Sitten, Gebräuchen und Sprachen," in
+ _Mitteilungen des Seminars für orientalische Sprachen_ (Berlin and
+ Stuttgart) for 1899 and 1900; and G.W. Stow, _The Native Races of
+ South Africa_ (London, 1905); ch. xvii. contains an account of the
+ Afrikander family. For geology consult A. Schenk, "Die geologische
+ Entwicklung Südafrikas (mit Karte)," _Peterm. Mitt._ (1888); Stromer
+ von Reichenbach, _Die Geologie der deutschen Schutzgebiete in Afrika_
+ (Munich and Leipzig, 1896). Of early books of travel the most valuable
+ are: F. Galton, _Tropical South Africa_ (1853; new ed. 1889); Charles
+ J. Andersson, _Lake Ngami_ (1856), _The Okavango River_ (1861) and
+ _Notes of Travel_ (1875). See also Sir J.E. Alexander, _An Expedition
+ of Discovery into the Interior of Africa_ (London, 1838). Reports on
+ the German colonies are published by the British foreign office. The
+ _Kriegskarte von Deutsch-Südwestafrika_ (Berlin, 1904), in nine sheets
+ on a scale of 1 : 800,000, will be found useful. (F. R. C.)
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] As the result of wars with the natives, the population greatly
+ decreased. The number of adult (native) males in the colony at the
+ beginning of 1908 was officially estimated at 19,900, a figure
+ indicating a total population of little more than 100,000.
+
+
+
+
+GERMANTOWN, a residential district and former suburb, now the
+Twenty-second Ward, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., on
+Wissahickon Creek, in the N. part of the city. It is served by the
+Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia & Reading railways. There are many old
+colonial houses and handsome modern residences along Main Street (the
+old Germantown Road or Avenue). Prominent among the historic houses is
+Cliveden, or the "Chew House," built about 1761 by Benjamin Chew
+(1722-1810), who was chief-justice of Pennsylvania in 1774-1777 and was
+imprisoned as a Loyalist in 1777, and whose home during the battle of
+Germantown (see below) was occupied by British troops. The
+well-preserved Morris House (1772) was the headquarters of General Howe
+at the close of the battle, and in 1793, when Germantown, owing to the
+yellow fever in Philadelphia, was the temporary capital of the United
+States, it was occupied by President Washington. Three doors above stood
+until 1904 the Ashmead House, used for a time by Count Nicholas Lewis
+Zinzendorf and his daughters for their Moravian school, which was
+removed to Bethlehem. In the same street, opposite Indian Queen Lane, is
+the old Wister Mansion, built as a country-seat in 1744 and occupied by
+British officers during the War of Independence. In another old house
+(now Nos. 5275-5277), John Fanning Watson (1779-1860), the annalist of
+Philadelphia, did most of his literary work. Just outside the ward
+limits, in what has since become a part of Fairmont Park, is the house
+in which David Rittenhouse, the astronomer, was born; it stands on
+Monoshore Creek or Paper Mill Run, in what was long called Roxborough
+(now the 21st ward of Philadelphia). In this vicinity the first paper
+mill in America was erected in 1690 by a company of which William
+Rittenhouse, David's great-grandfather, was the leading member. The King
+of Prussia Inn, built about 1740, and the Mermaid Hotel, as old or
+older, are interesting survivals of the inns and taverns of old
+Germantown. The Germantown Academy was built in 1760, and after the
+battle of Germantown was used by the British as a hospital. In
+Germantown are also a Friends' (orthodox) school, a Friends' free
+library, and the Germantown branch of the Philadelphia public library.
+The first school in Germantown was established about 1701, and for the
+first eighteen years was under the mastership of Francis Daniel
+Pastorius (1651-1719), the leader in founding the town, who lived in a
+house that stood on the site of the present First Methodist Episcopal
+church, High Street and Main Street. He compiled a primer which was the
+first school book produced in the state; with three others he drafted
+and signed in 1688 what seems to have been the first public protest made
+in America against slavery; and he is celebrated in Whittier's
+_Pennsylvania Pilgrim_. Later the same school passed to Christopher Dock
+(d. 1771), who in 1770 published an essay on teaching (written in 1750),
+which is said to have been the first book on pedagogy published in
+America. The first Bible printed in America in any European language was
+published in Germantown in 1743 by Christopher Sauer (d. 1758), a
+preacher of the German Baptist Brethren, who in 1739 established
+Germantown's first newspaper, _The High German Pennsylvania Historian,
+or Collection of Important News from the Kingdom of Nature and of the
+Church_. His grandsons are said to have cast about 1772 the first
+American printing type. The Friends were the first sect to erect a
+meeting-house of their own (about 1693). The Mennonites built a log
+meeting-house in 1709, and their present stone church was built in 1770.
+The town hall of Germantown was used as a hospital during the last three
+years of the Civil War. In Market Square a soldiers' monument was
+erected in 1883. The Site and Relic Society of Germantown maintains a
+museum of relics. Many of the early settlers were linen weavers, and
+Germantown still manufactures textiles, knit goods and yarns.
+
+Germantown was founded in October 1683 by thirteen families from
+Crefeld, Germany, under the leadership of Francis Daniel Pastorius. The
+township, as originally laid out, contained four distinct villages known
+as Germantown, Cresheim, Sommerhousen and Crefield. Cresheim was later
+known as Mount Airy, and Sommerhousen and Crefield became known as
+Chestnut Hill. The borough of Germantown was incorporated in 1689. For
+many years it was a straggling village extending about 2 m. along Main
+Street. Its growth was more rapid from the middle of the 18th century.
+In 1789 a motion for the permanent location of the national capital at
+Germantown was carried in the Senate, and the same measure passed the
+House, amended only with respect to the temporary government of the
+ceded district; but the Senate killed the bill by voting to postpone
+further consideration of it until the next session. Germantown was
+annexed to Philadelphia in 1854.
+
+_Battle of Germantown._--This famous encounter in the American War of
+Independence was fought on the 4th of October 1777. After the battle of
+Brandywine (q.v.) and the occupation of Philadelphia, the British force
+commanded by Sir W. Howe encamped at Germantown, where Washington
+determined to attack them. The Americans advanced by two roads, General
+Sullivan leading the column on the right and General Greene that on the
+left. Washington himself accompanied Sullivan, with whom were Stirling
+(an officer who claimed to be earl of that name) and Anthony Wayne. The
+right at first met with success, driving the British advanced troops
+back on the main body near the Chew House. Colonel Musgrave, of the 40th
+Foot, threw a portion of his regiment into this house, and General Agnew
+came up with his command. The Americans under Stirling attempted to
+dislodge Musgrave, thus losing time and alarming part of Sullivan's
+advance who had pushed farther forward in the fog. General Greene on the
+left was even less fortunate. Meeting with unexpected opposition at the
+first point of attack his troops were thrown into confusion and
+compelled to retreat. One of his brigades extended itself to the right
+wing, and by opening fire on the Chew House caused Wayne to retreat, and
+presently both of the American columns retired rapidly in the direction
+of their camp. The surprise had failed, with the loss to Washington's
+army of 673 men as against 500 on the side of the British. The British
+General Agnew and the American General Nash were both mortally wounded.
+In December Washington went into winter quarters at Valley Forge, 40 m.
+west of Philadelphia. The British wintered in and around the city.
+
+ See N.H. Keyser, "Old Historic Germantown," in the _Proceedings and
+ Addresses of the Pennsylvania-German Society_ (Lancaster, 1906); S.W.
+ Pennypacker, _The Settlement of Germantown, Pennsylvania, and the
+ Beginning of German Emigration to North America_ (Philadelphia, 1899),
+ and S.F. Hotchkin, _Ancient and Modern Germantown, Mount Airy and
+ Chestnut Hill_ (Philadelphia, 1889).
+
+
+
+
+GERMANY (Ger. _Deutschland_), or, more properly, THE GERMAN EMPIRE
+(_Deutsches Reich_), a country of central Europe. The territories
+occupied by peoples of distinctively Teutonic race and language are
+commonly designated as German, and in this sense may be taken to
+include, besides Germany proper (the subject of the present article),
+the German-speaking sections of Austria, Switzerland and Holland. But
+Germany, or the German empire, as it is now understood, was formed in
+1871 by virtue of treaties between the North German Confederation and
+the South German states, and by the acquisition, in the peace of
+Frankfort (May 10, 1871), of Alsace-Lorraine, and embraces all the
+countries of the former German Confederation, with the exception of
+Austria, Luxemburg, Limburg and Liechtenstein. The sole addition to the
+empire proper since that date is the island of Heligoland, ceded by
+Great Britain in 1890, but Germany has acquired extensive colonies in
+Africa and the Pacific (see below, _Colonies_).
+
+The German empire extends from 47° 16' to 55° 53' N., and from 5° 52' to
+22° 52' E. The eastern provinces project so far that the extent of
+German territory is much greater from south-west to north-east than in
+any other direction. Tilsit is 815 m. from Metz, whereas Hadersleben, in
+Schleswig, is only 540 m. from the Lake of Constance. The actual
+difference in time between the eastern and western points is 1 hour and
+8 minutes, but the empire observes but one time--1 hour E. of
+Greenwich. The empire is bounded on the S.E. and S. by Austria and
+Switzerland (for 1659 m.), on the S.W. by France (242 m.), on the W. by
+Luxemburg, Belgium and Holland (together 558 m.). The length of German
+coast on the North Sea or German Ocean is 293 m., and on the Baltic 927
+m., the intervening land boundary on the north of Schleswig being only
+47 m. The eastern boundary is with Russia 843 m. The total length of the
+frontiers is thus 4569 m. The area, including rivers and lakes but not
+the _haffs_ or lagoons on the Baltic coast, is 208,830 sq. m., and the
+population (1905) 60,641,278. In respect of its area, the German empire
+occupied in 1909 the third place among European countries, and in point
+of population the second, coming in point of area immediately after
+Russia and Austria-Hungary, and in population next to Russia.
+
+_Political Divisions._--The empire is composed of the following
+twenty-six states and divisions: the kingdoms of Prussia, Bavaria,
+Saxony and Württemberg; the grand-duchies of Baden, Hesse,
+Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Oldenburg and Saxe-Weimar;
+the duchies of Anhalt, Brunswick, Saxe-Altenburg, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and
+Saxe-Meiningen; the principalities of Lippe-Detmold, Reuss-Greiz,
+Reuss-Schleiz, Schaumburg-Lippe, Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt,
+Schwarzburg-Sondershausen and Waldeck-Pyrmont; the free towns of Bremen,
+Hamburg and Lübeck, and the imperial territory of Alsace-Lorraine.
+
+Besides these political divisions there are certain parts of Germany
+which, not conterminous with political boundaries, retain appellations
+derived either from former tribal settlements or from divisions of the
+old Holy Roman Empire. These are Franconia (Franken), which embraces the
+districts of Bamberg, Schweinfurt and Würzburg on the upper Main; Swabia
+(Schwaben), in which is included Württemberg, parts of Bavaria and Baden
+and Hohenzollern; the Palatinate (Pfalz), embracing Bavaria west of the
+Rhine and the contiguous portion of Baden; Rhineland, applied to Rhenish
+Prussia, Nassau, Hesse-Darmstadt and parts of Bavaria and Baden;
+Vogtland,[1] the mountainous country lying in the south-west corner of
+the kingdom of Saxony; Lusatia (Lausitz), the eastern portion of the
+kingdom of Saxony and the adjacent portion of Prussia watered by the
+upper Spree; Thuringia (Thüringen), the country lying south of the Harz
+Mountains and including the Saxon duchies; East Friesland (Ost
+Friesland), the country lying between the lower course of the Weser and
+the Ems, and Westphalia (Westfalen), the fertile plain lying north and
+west of the Harz Mountains and extending to the North Sea and the Dutch
+frontier.
+
+_Coast and Islands._--The length of the coast-line is considerably less
+than the third part of the whole frontier. The coasts are shallow, and
+deficient in natural ports, except on the east of Schleswig-Holstein,
+where wide bays encroach upon the land, giving access to the largest
+vessels, so that the great naval harbour could be constructed at Kiel.
+With the exception of those on the east coast of Schleswig-Holstein, all
+the important trading ports of Germany are river ports, such as Emden,
+Bremen, Hamburg, Lübeck, Stettin, Danzig, Königsberg, Memel. A great
+difference, however, is to be remarked between the coasts of the North
+Sea and those of the Baltic. On the former, where the sea has broken up
+the ranges of dunes formed in bygone times, and divided them into
+separate islands, the mainland has to be protected by massive dikes,
+while the Frisian Islands are being gradually washed away by the waters.
+On the coast of East Friesland there are now only seven of these
+islands, of which Norderney is best known, while of the North Frisian
+Islands, on the western coast of Schleswig, Sylt is the most
+considerable. Besides the ordinary waste of the shores, there have been
+extensive inundations by the sea within the historic period, the gulf of
+the Dollart having been so caused in the year 1276. Sands surround the
+whole coast of the North Sea to such an extent that the entrance to the
+ports is not practicable without the aid of pilots. Heligoland is a
+rocky island, but it also has been considerably reduced by the sea. The
+tides rise to the height of 12 or 13 ft. in the Jade Bay and at
+Bremerhaven, and 6 or 7 ft. at Hamburg. The coast of the Baltic, on the
+other hand, possesses few islands, the chief being Alsen and Fehmarn off
+the coast of Schleswig-Holstein, and Rügen off Pomerania. It has no
+extensive sands, though on the whole very flat. The Baltic has no
+perceptible tides; and a great part of its coast-line is in winter
+covered with ice, which also so blocks up the harbours that navigation
+is interrupted for several months every year. Its _haffs_ fronting the
+mouths of the large rivers must be regarded as lagoons or extensions of
+the river beds, not as bays. The Pommersche or Oder Haff is separated
+from the sea by two islands, so that the river flows out by three
+mouths, the middle one (Swine) being the most considerable. The Frische
+Haff is formed by the Nogat, a branch of the Vistula, and by the Pregel,
+and communicates with the sea by means of the Pillauer Tief. The
+Kurische Haff receives the Memel, called Niemen in Russia, and has its
+outlet in the extreme north at Memel. Long narrow alluvial strips called
+_Nehrungen_, lie between the last two haffs and the Baltic. The Baltic
+coast is further marked by large indentations, the Gulf of Lübeck, that
+of Pomerania, east of Rügen, and the semicircular Bay of Danzig between
+the promontories of Rixhöft and Brüsterort. The German coasts are well
+provided with lighthouses.
+
+ _Surface._--In respect of physical structure Germany is divided into
+ two entirely distinct portions, which bear to one another a ratio of
+ about 3 to 4. The northern and larger part may be described as a
+ uniform plain. South and central Germany, on the other hand, is very
+ much diversified in scenery. It possesses large plateaus, such as that
+ of Bavaria, which stretches away from the foot of the Alps, fertile
+ low plains like that intersected by the Rhine, mountain chains and
+ isolated groups of mountains, comparatively low in height, and so
+ situated as not seriously to interfere with communication either by
+ road or by railway.
+
+
+ Mountains and plateaus.
+
+ Bavaria is the only division of the country that includes within it
+ any part of the Alps, the Austro-Bavarian frontier running along the
+ ridge of the Northern Tirolese or Bavarian Alps. The loftiest peak of
+ this group, the Zugspitze (57 m. S. of Munich), is 9738 ft. in height,
+ being the highest summit in the empire. The upper German plain sloping
+ northwards from the Bavarian Alps is watered by the Lech, the Isar and
+ the Inn, tributaries of the Danube, all three rising beyond the limits
+ of German territory. This plain is separated on the west from the
+ Swiss plain by the Lake of Constance (Bodensee, 1306 ft. above
+ sea-level), and on the east from the undulating grounds of Austria by
+ the Inn. The average height of the plain may be estimated at about
+ 1800 ft., the valley of the Danube on its north border being from 1540
+ ft. (at Ulm) to 920 ft. (at Passau). The plain is not very fertile. In
+ the upper part of the plain, towards the Alps, there are several
+ lakes, the largest being the Ammersee, the Würmsee or Starnberger See
+ and the Chiemsee. Many portions of the plain are covered by moors and
+ swamps of large extent, called _Moose_. The left or northern bank of
+ the Danube from Regensburg downwards presents a series of granitic
+ rocks called the Bavarian Forest (Bayrischer Wald), which must be
+ regarded as a branch of the Bohemian Forest (Böhmer Wald). The latter
+ is a range of wooded heights on the frontier of Bavaria and Bohemia,
+ occupying the least known and least frequented regions of Germany. The
+ summits of the Bayrischer Wald rise to the height of about 4000 ft.,
+ and those of the Böhmer Wald to 4800 ft., Arber being 4872 ft. The
+ valley of the Danube above Regensburg is flanked by plateaus sloping
+ gently to the Danube, but precipitous towards the valley of the
+ Neckar. The centre of this elevated tract is the Rauhe Alb, so named
+ on account of the harshness of the climate. The plateau continuing to
+ the north-east and then to the north, under the name of the Franconian
+ Jura, is crossed by the valley of the winding Altmühl, and extends to
+ the Main. To the west extensive undulating grounds or low plateaus
+ occupy the area between the Main and the Neckar.
+
+ The south-western corner of the empire contains a series of better
+ defined hill-ranges. Beginning with the Black Forest (Schwarzwald), we
+ find its southern heights decline to the valley of the Rhine, above
+ Basel, and to the Jura. The summits are rounded and covered with wood,
+ the highest being the Feldberg (10 m. S.E. of Freiburg, 4898 ft.).
+ Northwards the Black Forest passes into the plateau of the
+ Neckarbergland (average height, 1000 ft.). The heights between the
+ lower Neckar and the Main form the Odenwald (about 1700 ft.); and the
+ Spessart, which is watered by the Main on three sides, is nothing but
+ a continuation of the Odenwald. West of this range of hills lies the
+ valley of the upper Rhine, extending about 180 m. from south to north,
+ and with a width of only 20 to 25 m. In the upper parts the Rhine is
+ rapid, and therefore navigable with difficulty; this explains why the
+ towns there are not along the banks of the river, but some 5 to 10 m.
+ off. But from Spires (Speyer) town succeeds town as far down as
+ Düsseldorf. The western boundary of this valley is formed in the first
+ instance by the Vosges, where granite summits rise from under the
+ surrounding red Triassic rocks (Sulzer Belchen, 4669 ft.). To the
+ south the range is not continuous with the Swiss Jura, the valley of
+ the Rhine being connected here with the Rhone system by low ground
+ known as the Gate of Mülhausen. The crest of the Vosges is pretty high
+ and unbroken, the first convenient pass being near Zabern, which is
+ followed by the railway from Strassburg to Paris. On the northern side
+ the Vosges are connected with the Hardt sandstone plateau (Kalmit,
+ 2241 ft.), which rises abruptly from the plain of the Rhine. The
+ mountains south of Mainz, which are mostly covered by vineyards, are
+ lower, the Donnersberg, however, raising its head to 2254 ft. These
+ hills are bordered on the west by the high plain of Lorraine and the
+ coal-fields of Saarbrücken, the former being traversed by the river
+ Mosel. The larger part of Lorraine belongs to France, but the German
+ part possesses great mineral wealth in its rich layers of ironstone
+ (siderite) and in the coal-fields of the Saar. The tract of the
+ Hunsrück, Taunus and Eifel is an extended plateau, divided into
+ separate sections by the river valleys. Among these the Rhine valley
+ from Bingen to Bonn, and that of the Mosel from Trier to Coblenz, are
+ winding gorges excavated by the rivers. The Eifel presents a sterile,
+ thinly-peopled plateau, covered by extensive moors in several places.
+ It passes westwards imperceptibly into the Ardennes. The hills on the
+ right bank of the Rhine also are in part of a like barren character,
+ without wood; the Westerwald (about 2000 ft.), which separates the
+ valleys of the Sieg and Lahn, is particularly so. The northern and
+ southern limits of the Niederrheinische Gebirge present a striking
+ contrast to the central region. In the south the declivities of the
+ Taunus (2890 ft.) are marked by the occurrence of mineral springs, as
+ at Ems on the Lahn, Nauheim, Homburg, Soden, Wiesbaden, &c., and by
+ the vineyards which produce the best Rhine wines. To the north of this
+ system, on the other hand, lies the great coal basin of Westphalia,
+ the largest in Germany. In the south of the hilly duchy of Hesse rise
+ the isolated mountain groups of the Vogelsberg (2530 ft.) and the Rhön
+ (3117 ft.), separated by the valley of the Fulda, which uniting
+ farther north with the Werra forms the Weser. To the east of Hesse
+ lies Thuringia, a province consisting of the far-stretching wooded
+ ridge of the Thuringian Forest (Thüringerwald; with three peaks
+ upwards of 3000 ft. high), and an extensive elevated plain to the
+ north. Its rivers are the Saale and Unstrut. The plateau is bounded on
+ the north by the Harz, an isolated group of mountains, rich in
+ minerals, with its highest elevation in the bare summit of the Brocken
+ (3747 ft.). To the west of the Harz a series of hilly tracts is
+ comprised under the name of the Weser Mountains, out of which above
+ Minden the river Weser bursts by the Porta Westphalica. A narrow
+ ridge, the Teutoburger Wald (1300 ft.), extends between the Weser and
+ the Ems as far as the neighbourhood of Osnabrück.
+
+ To the east the Thuringian Forest is connected by the plateau of the
+ Frankenwald with the Fichtelgebirge. This group of mountains,
+ occupying what may be regarded as ethnologically the centre of
+ Germany, forms a hydrographical centre, whence the Naab flows
+ southward to the Danube, the Main westward to the Rhine, the Eger
+ eastward to the Elbe, and the Saale northward, also into the Elbe. In
+ the north-east the Fichtelgebirge connects itself directly with the
+ Erzgebirge, which forms the northern boundary of Bohemia. The southern
+ sides of this range are comparatively steep; on the north it slopes
+ gently down to the plains of Leipzig, but is intersected by the deep
+ valleys of the Elster and Mulde. Although by no means fertile, the
+ Erzgebirge is very thickly peopled, as various branches of industry
+ have taken root there in numerous small places. Around Zwickau there
+ are productive coal-fields, and mining for metals is carried on near
+ Freiberg. In the east a tableland of sandstone, called Saxon
+ Switzerland, from the picturesque outlines into which it has been
+ eroded, adjoins the Erzgebirge; one of its most notable features is
+ the deep ravine by which the Elbe escapes from it. Numerous quarries,
+ which supply the North German cities with stone for buildings and
+ monuments, have been opened along the valley. The sandstone range of
+ the Elbe unites in the east with the low Lusatian group, along the
+ east of which runs the best road from northern Germany to Bohemia.
+ Then comes a range of lesser hills clustering together to form the
+ frontier between Silesia and Bohemia. The most western group is the
+ Isergebirge, and the next the Riesengebirge, a narrow ridge of about
+ 20 miles' length, with bare summits. Excluding the Alps, the
+ Schneekoppe (5266 ft.) is the highest peak in Germany; and the
+ southern declivities of this range contain the sources of the Elbe.
+ The hills north and north-east of it are termed the Silesian
+ Mountains. Here one of the minor coal-fields gives employment to a
+ population grouped round a number of comparatively small centres. One
+ of the main roads into Bohemia (the pass of Landshut) runs along the
+ eastern base of the Riesengebirge. Still farther to the east the
+ mountains are grouped around the hollow of Glatz, whence the Neisse
+ forces its way towards the north. This hollow is shut in on the east
+ by the Sudetic group, in which the Altvater rises to almost 4900 ft.
+ The eastern portion of the group, called the Gesenke, slopes gently
+ away to the valley of the Oder, which affords an open route for the
+ international traffic, like that through the Mülhausen Gate in Alsace.
+ Geographers style this the Moravian Gate.
+
+ The North German plain presents little variety, yet is not absolutely
+ uniform. A row of low hills runs generally parallel to the mountain
+ ranges already noticed, at a distance of 20 to 30 m. to the north. To
+ these belongs the upper Silesian coal-basin, which occupies a
+ considerable area in south-eastern Silesia. North of the middle
+ districts of the Elbe country the heights are called the Fläming
+ hills. Westward lies as the last link of this series the Lüneburger
+ Heide or Heath, between the Weser and Elbe, north of Hanover. A second
+ tract, of moderate elevation, sweeps round the Baltic, without,
+ however, approaching its shores. This plateau contains a considerable
+ number of lakes, and is divided into three portions by the Vistula and
+ the Oder. The most eastward is the so-called Prussian Seenplatte.
+ Spirdingsee (430 ft. above sea-level and 46 sq. m. in area) and
+ Mauersee are the largest lakes; they are situated in the centre of the
+ plateau, and give rise to the Pregel. Some peaks near the Russian
+ frontier attain to 1000 ft. The Pomeranian Seenplatte, between the
+ Vistula and the Oder, extends from S.W. to N.E., its greatest
+ elevation being in the neighbourhood of Danzig (Turmberg, 1086 ft.).
+ The Seenplatte of Mecklenburg, on the other hand, stretches from S.E.
+ to N.W., and most of its lakes, of which the Müritz is the largest,
+ send their waters towards the Elbe. The finely wooded heights which
+ surround the bays of the east coast of Holstein and Schleswig may be
+ regarded as a continuation of these Baltic elevations. The lowest
+ parts, therefore, of the North German plain, excluding the sea-coasts,
+ are the central districts from about 52° to 53° N. lat., where the
+ Vistula, Netze, Warthe, Oder, Spree and Havel form vast swampy
+ lowlands (in German called _Brüche_), which have been considerably
+ reduced by the construction of canals and by cultivation, improvements
+ due in large measure to Frederick the Great. The Spreewald, to the
+ S.E. of Berlin, is one of the most remarkable districts of Germany. As
+ the Spree divides itself there into innumerable branches, enclosing
+ thickly wooded islands, boats form the only means of communication.
+ West of Berlin the Havel widens into what are called the Havel lakes,
+ to which the environs of Potsdam owe their charms. In general the soil
+ of the North German plain cannot be termed fertile, the cultivation
+ nearly everywhere requiring severe and constant labour. Long stretches
+ of ground are covered by moors, and there turf-cutting forms the
+ principal occupation of the inhabitants. The greatest extent of
+ moorland is found in the westernmost parts of the plain, in Oldenburg
+ and East Frisia. The plain contains, however, a few districts of the
+ utmost fertility, particularly the tracts on the central Elbe, and the
+ marsh lands on the west coast of Holstein and the north coast of
+ Hanover, Oldenburg and East Frisia, which, within the last two
+ centuries, the inhabitants have reclaimed from the sea by means of
+ immense dikes.
+
+ _Rivers._--Nine independent river-systems may be distinguished: those
+ of the Memel, Pregel, Vistula (Weichsel), Oder, Elbe, Weser, Ems,
+ Rhine and Danube. Of these the Pregel, Weser and Ems belong entirely,
+ and the Oder mostly, to the German empire. The Danube has its sources
+ on German soil; but only a fifth part of its course is German. Its
+ total length is 1750 m., and the Bavarian frontier at Passau, where
+ the Inn joins it, is only 350 m. distant from its sources. It is
+ navigable as far as Ulm, 220 m. above Passau; and its tributaries the
+ Lech, Isar, Inn and Altmühl are also navigable. The Rhine is the most
+ important river of Germany, although neither its sources nor its
+ mouths are within the limits of the empire. From the Lake of Constance
+ to Basel (122 m.) the Rhine forms the boundary between the German
+ empire and Switzerland; the canton of Schaffhausen, however, is
+ situated on the northern bank of the river. From Basel to below
+ Emmerich the Rhine belongs to the German empire--about 470 m. or
+ four-sevenths of its whole course. It is navigable all this distance
+ as are also the Neckar from Esslingen, the Main from Bamberg, the
+ Lahn, the Lippe, the Ruhr, the Mosel from Metz, with its affluents the
+ Saar and Sauer. Sea-going vessels sail up the Ems as far as Halte, and
+ river craft as far as Greven, and the river is connected with a widely
+ branching system of canals, as the Ems-Jade and Dortmund-Ems canals.
+ The Fulda, navigable for 63 m., and the Werra, 38 m., above the point
+ where they unite, form by their junction the Weser, which has a course
+ of 271 m., and receives as navigable tributaries the Aller, the Leine
+ from Hanover, and some smaller streams. Ocean-going steamers, however,
+ cannot get as far as Bremen, and unload at Bremerhaven. The Elbe,
+ after a course of 250 m., enters German territory near Bodenbach, 490
+ m. from its mouth. It is navigable above this point through its
+ tributary, the Moldau, to Prague. Hamburg may be reached by vessels of
+ 17 ft. draught. The navigable tributaries of the Elbe are the Saale
+ (below Naumburg), the Havel, Spree, Elde, Sude and some others. The
+ Oder begins to be navigable almost on the frontier at Ratibor, 480 m.
+ from its mouth, receiving as navigable tributaries the Glatz Neisse
+ and the Warthe. Only the lower course of the Vistula belongs to the
+ German empire, within which it is a broad, navigable stream of
+ considerable volume. On the Pregel ships of 3000 tons reach
+ Königsberg, and river barges reach Insterburg; the Alle, its
+ tributary, may also be navigated. The Memel is navigable in its course
+ of 113 m. from the Russian frontier. Germany is thus a country
+ abounding in natural waterways, the total length of them being
+ estimated at 7000 m. But it is only the Rhine, in its middle course,
+ that has at all times sufficient volume of water to meet the
+ requirements of a good navigable river.
+
+ _Lakes._--The regions which abound in lakes have already been pointed
+ out. The Lake of Constance or Bodensee (204ž sq. m.) is on the
+ frontier of the empire, portions of the northern banks belonging
+ severally to Bavaria, Württemberg and Baden. In the south the largest
+ lakes are the Chiemsee (33 sq. m.); the Ammersee and the Würmsee. A
+ good many smaller lakes are to be found in the Bavarian Alps. The
+ North German plain is dotted with upwards of 500 lakes, covering an
+ area of about 2500 sq. m. The largest of these are the three
+ Haffs--the Oder Haff covering 370 sq. m., the Frische Haff, 332, and
+ the Kurische Haff, 626. The lakes in the Prussian and Pomeranian
+ provinces, in Mecklenburg and in Holstein, and those of the Havel,
+ have already been mentioned. In the west the only lakes of importance
+ are the Steinhuder Meer, 14 m. north-west of Hanover, and the
+ Dümmersee on the southern frontier of Oldenburg. (P. A. A.)
+
+ _Geology._--Germany consists of a floor of folded Palaeozoic rocks
+ upon which rest unconformably the comparatively little disturbed beds
+ of the Mesozoic system, while in the North German plain a covering of
+ modern deposits conceals the whole of the older strata from view,
+ excepting some scattered and isolated outcrops of Cretaceous and
+ Tertiary beds. The rocks which compose the ancient floor are thrown
+ into folds which run approximately from W.S.W. to E.N.E. They are
+ exposed on the one hand in the neighbourhood of the Rhine and on the
+ other hand in the Bohemian _massif_. With the latter must be included
+ the Frankenwald, the Thüringerwald, and even the Harz. The oldest
+ rocks, belonging to the Archaean system, occur in the south, forming
+ the Vosges and the Black Forest in the west, and the greater part of
+ the Bohemian _massif_, including the Erzgebirge, in the east. They
+ consist chiefly of gneiss and schist, with granite and other eruptive
+ rocks. Farther north, in the Hunsrück, the Taunus, the Eifel and
+ Westerwald, the Harz and the Frankenwald, the ancient floor is
+ composed mainly of Devonian beds. Other Palaeozoic systems are,
+ however, included in the folds. The Cambrian, for example, is exposed
+ at Leimitz near Hof in the Frankenwald, and the important coal-field
+ of the Saar lies on the southern side of the Hunsrück, while
+ Ordovician and Silurian beds have been found in several localities.
+ Along the northern border of the folded belt lies the coal basin of
+ the Ruhr in Westphalia, which is the continuation of the Belgian
+ coal-field, and bears much the same relation to the Rhenish Devonian
+ area that the coal basin of Liége bears to the Ardennes. Carboniferous
+ and Devonian beds are also found south-east of the Bohemian _massif_,
+ where lies the extensive coal-field of Silesia. The Permian, as in
+ England, is not involved in the folds which have affected the older
+ beds, and in general lies unconformably upon them. It occurs chiefly
+ around the masses of ancient rock, and one of the largest areas is
+ that of the Saar.
+
+ Between the old rocks of the Rhine on the west and the ancient
+ _massif_ of Bohemia on the east a vast area of Triassic beds extends
+ from Hanover to Basel and from Metz to Bayreuth. Over the greater part
+ of this region the Triassic beds are free from folding and are nearly
+ horizontal, but faulting is by no means absent, especially along the
+ margins of the Bohemian and Rhenish hills. The Triassic beds must
+ indeed have covered a large part of these old rock masses, but they
+ have been preserved only where they were faulted down to a lower
+ level. Along the southern margin of the Triassic area there is a long
+ band of Jurassic beds dipping towards the Danube; and at its eastern
+ extremity this band is continuous with a synclinal of Jurassic beds,
+ running parallel to the western border of the Bohemian _massif_, but
+ separated from it by a narrow strip of Triassic beds. Towards the
+ north, in Hanover and Westphalia, the Triassic beds are followed by
+ Jurassic and Cretaceous deposits, the latter being here the more
+ important. As in the south of England, the lower beds of the
+ Cretaceous are of estuarine origin and the Upper Cretaceous overlaps
+ the Lower, lying in the valley of the Ruhr directly upon the
+ Palaeozoic rocks. In Saxony also the upper Cretaceous beds rest
+ directly upon the Palaeozoic or Archaean rocks. Still more to the
+ east, in the province of Silesia, both Jurassic and Cretaceous beds
+ are again met with, but they are to a large extent concealed by the
+ recent accumulations of the great plain. The Eocene system is unknown
+ in Germany except in the foothills of the Alps; but the Oligocene and
+ Miocene are widely spread, especially in the great plain and in the
+ depression of the Danube. The Oligocene is generally marine. Marine
+ Miocene occurs in N.W. Germany and the Miocene of the Danube valley is
+ also in part marine, but in central Germany it is of fluviatile or
+ lacustrine origin. The lignites of Hesse, Cassel, &c., are
+ interstratified with basaltic lava-flows which form the greater part
+ of the Vogelsberg and other hills. The trachytes of the Siebengebirge
+ are probably of slightly earlier date. The precise age of the
+ volcanoes of the Eifel, many of which are in a very perfect state of
+ preservation, is not clear, but they are certainly Tertiary or
+ Post-tertiary. Leucite and nepheline lavas are here abundant. In the
+ Siebengebirge the little crater of Roderberg, with its lavas and
+ scoriae of leucite-basalt, is posterior to some of the Pleistocene
+ river deposits.
+
+ A glance at a geological map of Germany will show that the greater
+ part of Prussia and of German Poland is covered by Quaternary
+ deposits. These are in part of glacial origin, and contain
+ Scandinavian boulders; but fluviatile and aeolian deposits also occur.
+ Quaternary beds also cover the floor of the broad depression through
+ which the Rhine meanders from Basel to Mainz, and occupy a large part
+ of the plain of the Danube. The depression of the Rhine is a trough
+ lying between two faults or system of faults. The very much broader
+ depression of the Danube is associated with the formation of the Alps,
+ and was flooded by the sea during a part of the Miocene period.
+ (P. La.)
+
+ [Illustration: Goelogic Map.]
+
+ _Climate._--The climate of Germany is to be regarded as intermediate
+ between the oceanic and continental climates of western and eastern
+ Europe respectively. It has nothing in common with the Mediterranean
+ climate of southern Europe, Germany being separated from that region
+ by the lofty barrier of the Alps. Although there are very considerable
+ differences in the range of temperature and the amount of rainfall
+ throughout Germany, these are not so great as they would be were it
+ not that the elevated plateaus and mountain chains are in the south,
+ while the north is occupied by low-lying plains. In the west no chain
+ of hills intercepts the warmer and moister winds which blow from the
+ Atlantic, and these accordingly influence at times even the eastern
+ regions of Germany. The mean annual temperature of south-western
+ Germany, or the Rhine and Danube basins, is about 52° to 54° F., that
+ of central Germany 48° to 50°, and that of the northern plain 46° to
+ 48°. In Pomerania and West Prussia it is only 44° to 45°, and in East
+ Prussia 42° to 44°. The mean January temperature varies between 22°
+ and 34° (in Masuren and Cologne respectively); the mean July
+ temperature, between 61° in north Schleswig and 68° at Cologne. The
+ extremes of cold and heat are, as recorded in the ten years 1895-1905,
+ 7° in Königsberg and 93° in Heidelberg (the hottest place in Germany).
+ The difference in the mean annual temperature between the south-west
+ and north-west of Germany amounts to about 3°. The contrasts of heat
+ and cold are furnished by the valley of the Rhine above Mainz, which
+ has the greatest mean heat, the mildest winter and the highest summer
+ temperature, and the lake plateau of East Prussia, where Arys on the
+ Spirdingsee has a like winter temperature to the Brocken at 3200 ft.
+ The Baltic has the lowest spring temperature, and the autumn there is
+ also not characterized by an appreciably higher degree of warmth. In
+ central Germany the high plateaus of the Erz and Fichtelgebirge are
+ the coldest regions. In south Germany the upper Bavarian plain
+ experiences an inclement winter and a cold summer. In Alsace-Lorraine
+ the Vosges and the plateau of Lorraine are also remarkable for low
+ temperatures. The warmest districts of the German empire are the
+ northern parts of the Rhine plain, from Karlsruhe downwards,
+ especially the Rheintal; these are scarcely 300 ft. above the
+ sea-level, and are protected by mountainous tracts of land. The same
+ holds true of the valleys of the Neckar, Main and Mosel. Hence the
+ vine is everywhere cultivated in these districts. The mean summer
+ temperature there is 66° and upwards, while the average temperature of
+ January does not descend to the freezing point (32°). The climate of
+ north-western Germany (west of the Elbe) shows a predominating oceanic
+ character, the summers not being too hot (mean summer temperature 60°
+ to 62°), and snow in winter remaining but a short time on the ground.
+ West of the Weser the average temperature of January exceeds 32°; to
+ the east it sinks to 30°, and therefore the Elbe is generally covered
+ with ice for some months of the year, as are also its tributaries. The
+ farther one proceeds to the east the greater are the contrasts of
+ summer and winter. While the average summer warmth of Germany is 60°
+ to 62°, the January temperature falls as low as 26° to 28° in West
+ Prussia, Posen and Silesia, and 22° to 26° in East Prussia and upper
+ Silesia. The navigation of the rivers is regularly interrupted by
+ frost. Similarly the upper basin of the Danube, or the Bavarian plain,
+ has a rather inclement climate in winter, the average for January
+ being 25° to 26°.
+
+ As regards rainfall, Germany belongs to those regions where
+ precipitation takes place at all seasons, but chiefly in the form of
+ summer rains. In respect to the quantity of rain the empire takes a
+ middle position between the humidity of north-western Europe and the
+ aridity of the east. There are considerable differences between
+ particular places. The rainfall is greatest in the Bavarian tableland
+ and the hilly regions of western Germany. For the Eifel, Sauerland,
+ Harz, Thuringian Forest, Rhön, Vogelsberg, Spessart, the Black Forest,
+ the Vosges, &c., the annual average may be stated at 34 in. or more,
+ while in the lower terraces of south-western Germany, as in the
+ Erzgebirge and the Sudetic range, it is estimated at 30 to 32 in.
+ only. The same average obtains also on the humid north-west coast of
+ Germany as far as Bremen and Hamburg. In the remaining parts of
+ western Germany, on the shores of farther Pomerania, and in East
+ Prussia, it amounts to upwards of 24 in. In western Germany there is a
+ district famous for the scarcity of rain and for producing the best
+ kind of wine: in the valley of the Rhine below Strassburg, in the
+ Palatinate, and also in the valley of the Main, no more than from 16
+ to 20 in. fall. Mecklenburg, Brandenburg and Lusatia, Saxony and the
+ plateau of Thuringia, West Prussia, Posen and lower Silesia are also
+ to be classed among the more arid regions of Germany, the annual
+ rainfall being 16 to 20 in. Thunderstorms are most frequent in July,
+ and vary between fifteen and twenty-five in the central districts,
+ descending in the eastern provinces of Prussia to ten annually.
+
+ _Flora._--The flora of Germany comprises 3413 species of phanerogamic
+ and 4306 cryptogamic plants. The country forms a section of the
+ central European zone, and its flora is largely under the influence of
+ the Baltic and Alpine elements, which to a great degree here coalesce.
+ All plants peculiar to the temperate zone abound. Wheat, rye, barley
+ and oats are cultivated everywhere, but spelt only in the south and
+ buckwheat in the north and north-west. Maize only ripens in the south.
+ Potatoes grow in every part of the country, those of the sandy plains
+ in the north being of excellent quality. All the commoner sorts of
+ fruit--apples, pears, cherries, &c.--grow everywhere, but the more
+ delicate kinds, such as figs, apricots and peaches, are confined to
+ the warmer districts. The vine flourishes as far as the 51° N., but
+ only yields good wine in the districts of the Rhine and Danube. Flax
+ is grown in the north, and hemp more particularly in the central
+ districts. Rape can be produced everywhere when the soil permits.
+ Tobacco is cultivated on the upper Rhine and in the valley of the
+ Oder. The northern plain, especially in the province of Saxony,
+ produces beet (for sugar), and hops are largely grown in Bavaria,
+ Württemberg, Alsace, Baden and the Prussian province of Posen.
+
+
+ Forests.
+
+ Speaking generally, northern Germany is not nearly so well wooded as
+ central and southern Germany, where indeed most of the lower mountains
+ are covered with timber, as is indicated by the frequent use of the
+ termination _wald_ affixed to the names of the mountain ranges (as
+ Schwarzwald, Thüringerwald, &c.). The "Seenplatten" are less wooded
+ than the hill country, but the eastern portion of the northern
+ lowlands is well provided with timber. A narrow strip along the shores
+ of the Baltic is covered with oaks and beeches; farther inland, and
+ especially east of the Elbe, coniferous trees are the most prevalent,
+ particularly the Scotch fir; birches are also abundant. The mountain
+ forests consist chiefly of firs, pines and larches, but contain also
+ silver firs, beeches and oaks. Chestnuts and walnuts appear on the
+ terraces of the Rhine valley and in Swabia and Franconia. The whole
+ north-west of Germany is destitute of wood, but to compensate for
+ this the people have ample supplies of fuel in the extensive stretches
+ of turf.
+
+ _Fauna._--The number of wild animals in Germany is not very great.
+ Foxes, martens, weasels, badgers and otters are to be found
+ everywhere; bears are found in the Alps, wolves are rare, but they
+ find their way sometimes from French territory to the western
+ provinces, or from Poland to Prussia and Posen. Among the rodents the
+ hamster and the field-mouse are a scourge to agriculture. Of game
+ there are the roe, stag, boar and hare; the fallow deer and the wild
+ rabbit are less common. The elk is to be found in the forests of East
+ Prussia. The feathered tribes are everywhere abundant in the fields,
+ woods and marshes. Wild geese and ducks, grouse, partridges, snipe,
+ woodcock, quails, widgeons and teal are plentiful all over the
+ country, and in recent years preserves have been largely stocked with
+ pheasants. The length of time that birds of passage remain in Germany
+ differs considerably with the different species. The stork is seen for
+ about 170 days, the house-swallow 160, the snow-goose 260, the snipe
+ 220. In northern Germany these birds arrive from twenty to thirty days
+ later than in the south.
+
+ The waters of Germany abound with fish; but the genera and species are
+ few. The carp and salmon tribes are the most abundant; after them rank
+ the pike, the eel, the shad, the roach, the perch and the lamprey. The
+ Oder and some of the tributaries of the Elbe abound in crayfish, and
+ in the stagnant lakes of East Prussia leeches are bred. In addition to
+ frogs, Germany has few varieties of Amphibia. Of serpents there are
+ only two poisonous kinds, the common viper and the adder
+ (_Kreuzotter_).
+
+_Population._--Until comparatively recent times no estimate of the
+population of Germany was precise enough to be of any value. At the
+beginning of the 19th century the country was divided into some hundred
+states, but there was no central agency for instituting an exact census
+on a uniform plan. The formation of the German Confederation in 1815
+effected but little change in this respect, and it was left to the
+different states to arrange in what manner the census should be taken.
+On the foundation, however, of the German customs union, or
+_Zollverein_, between certain German states, the necessity for accurate
+statistics became apparent and care was taken to compile trustworthy
+tables. Researches show the population of the German empire, as at
+present constituted, to have been: (1816) 24,833,396; (1855) 36,113,644;
+and (1871) 41,058,792. The following table shows the population and area
+of each of the states included in the empire for the years 1871, 1875,
+1900 and 1905:--
+
+ _Area and Population of the German States._
+
+ +-----------------------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+-------+
+ | | Area | Population. |Density|
+ | States of the Empire. |English +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+ per |
+ | | Sq. m. | 1871. | 1875. | 1900. | 1905. | Sq. m.|
+ +-----------------------------+--------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-------+
+ | Kingdoms-- | | | | | | |
+ | Prussia |134,616 |24,691,433 |25,742,404 |34,472,509 |37,293,324 | 277.3 |
+ | Bavaria | 29,292 | 4,863,450 | 5,022,390 | 6,176,057 | 6,524,372 | 222.7 |
+ | Saxony | 5,789 | 2,556,244 | 2,760,586 | 4,202,216 | 4,508,601 | 778.8 |
+ | Württemberg | 7,534 | 1,818,539 | 1,881,505 | 2,169,480 | 2,302,179 | 305.5 |
+ | Grand-Duchies-- | | | | | | |
+ | Baden | 5,823 | 1,461,562 | 1,507,179 | 1,867,944 | 2,010,728 | 345.3 |
+ | Hesse | 2,966 | 852,894 | 884,218 | 1,119,893 | 1,209,175 | 407.6 |
+ | Mecklenburg-Schwerin | 5,068 | 557,897 | 553,785 | 607,770 | 625,045 | 123.3 |
+ | Saxe-Weimar | 1,397 | 286,183 | 292,933 | 362,873 | 388,095 | 277.8 |
+ | Mecklenburg-Strelitz | 1,131 | 96,982 | 95,673 | 102,602 | 103,451 | 91.5 |
+ | Oldenburg | 2,482 | 314,459 | 319,314 | 399,180 | 438,856 | 176.8 |
+ | Duchies-- | | | | | | |
+ | Brunswick | 1,418 | 311,764 | 327,493 | 464,333 | 485,958 | 342.5 |
+ | Saxe-Meiningen | 953 | 187,957 | 194,494 | 250,731 | 268,916 | 282.2 |
+ | Saxe-Altenburg | 511 | 142,122 | 145,844 | 194,914 | 206,508 | 404.1 |
+ | Saxe-Coburg-Gotha | 764 | 174,339 | 182,599 | 229,550 | 242,432 | 317.3 |
+ | Anhalt | 888 | 203,437 | 213,565 | 316,085 | 328,029 | 369.4 |
+ | Principalities-- | | | | | | |
+ | Schwartzburg-Sondershausen| 333 | 75,523 | 76,676 | 80,898 | 85,152 | 255.7 |
+ | Schwartzburg-Rudolstadt | 363 | 67,191 | 67,480 | 93,059 | 96,835 | 266.7 |
+ | Waldeck | 433 | 56,224 | 54,743 | 57,918 | 59,127 | 136.5 |
+ | Reuss-Greiz | 122 | 45,094 | 46,985 | 68,396 | 70,603 | 578.7 |
+ | Reuss-Schleiz | 319 | 89,032 | 92,375 | 139,210 | 144,584 | 453.2 |
+ | Schaumburg-Lippe | 131 | 32,059 | 33,133 | 43,132 | 44,992 | 343.4 |
+ | Lippe | 469 | 111,135 | 112,452 | 138,952 | 145,577 | 310.4 |
+ | Free Towns-- | | | | | | |
+ | Lübeck | 115 | 52,158 | 56,912 | 96,775 | 105,857 | 920.5 |
+ | Bremen | 99 | 122,402 | 142,200 | 224,882 | 263,440 |2661.0 |
+ | Hamburg | 160 | 338,974 | 388,618 | 768,349 | 874,878 |5467.9 |
+ | Imperial Territory-- | | | | | | |
+ | Alsace-Lorraine | 5,604 | 1,549,738 | 1,531,804 | 1,719,470 | 1,814,564 | 323.8 |
+ | +--------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-------+
+ | German Empire |208,780 |41,058,792 |42,727,360 |56,367,178 |60,641,278 | 290.4 |
+ +-----------------------------+--------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-------+
+
+ [Illustration: German Empire.]
+
+ The population of the empire has thus increased, since 1871, by
+ 19,582,486 or 47.6%. The increase of population during 1895-1900 was
+ greatest in Hamburg, Bremen, Lübeck, Saxony, Prussia and Baden, and
+ least in Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Waldeck. Of the total population in
+ 1900, 54.3% was urban (i.e. living in towns of 2000 inhabitants and
+ above), leaving 45.7% to be classified as rural. On the 1st of
+ December 1905, of the total population 29,884,681 were males and
+ 30,756,597 females; and it is noticeable that the male population
+ shows of late years a larger relative increase than the female, the
+ male population having in five years increased by 2,147,434 and the
+ female by only 2,126,666. The greater increase in the male population
+ is attributable to diminished emigration and to the large increase in
+ immigrants, who are mostly males. In 1905, 485,906 marriages were
+ contracted in Germany, being at the rate of 8.0 per thousand
+ inhabitants. In the same year the total number of births was
+ 2,048,453. Of these, 61,300 were stillborn and 174,494 illegitimate,
+ being at the rate, respectively, of 3% and 8.5% of the total.
+ Illegitimacy is highest in Bavaria (about 15%), Berlin (14%), and over
+ 12% in Saxony, Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Saxe-Meiningen. It is lowest
+ in the Rhine Province and Westphalia (3.9 and 2.6 respectively).
+ Divorce is steadily on the increase, being in 1904, 11.1 per 10,000
+ marriages, as against 8.1, 8.1, 9.3 and 10.1 for the four preceding
+ years. The average deaths for the years 1901-1905 amounted to
+ 1,227,903; the rate was thus 20.2 per thousand inhabitants, but the
+ death-rate has materially decreased, the total number of deaths in
+ 1907 standing at 1,178,349; the births for the same year were
+ 2,060,974. In connexion with suicides, it is interesting to observe
+ that the highest rates prevail in some of the smaller and more
+ prosperous states of the empire--for example, in Saxe-Weimar,
+ Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and Saxe-Altenburg (on a three years' average of
+ figures), while the Roman Catholic country Bavaria, and the
+ impoverished Prussian province of Posen show the most favourable
+ statistics. For Prussia the rate is 20, and for Saxony it is as high
+ as 31 per 100,000 inhabitants. The large cities, notably Berlin,
+ Hamburg, Breslau and Dresden, show, however, relatively the largest
+ proportion.
+
+ In 1900 the German-speaking population of the empire amounted to
+ 51,883,131. Of the inhabitants speaking other languages there were:
+ Polish, 3,086,489; French (mostly in Lorraine), 211,679; Masurian,
+ 142,049; Danish, 141,061; Lithuanian, 106,305; Cassubian, 100,213;
+ Wendish, 93,032; Dutch, 80,361; Italian, 65,961; Moravian, 64,382;
+ Czech, 43,016; Frisian, 20,677; English, 20,217; Walloon, 11,841. In
+ 1905 there were resident within the empire 1,028,560 subjects of
+ foreign states, as compared with 778,698 in 1900. Of these 17,293 were
+ subjects of Great Britain and Ireland, 17,184 of the United States of
+ America and 20,584 of France. The bulk of the other foreigners
+ residing in the country belonged to countries lying contiguous, such
+ as Austria, which claimed nearly the half, Russia and Italy.
+
+ _Languages._--The German-speaking nations in their various branches
+ and dialects, if we include the Dutch and the Walloons, extend in a
+ compact mass along the shores of the Baltic and of the North Sea, from
+ Memel in the east to a point between Gravelines and Calais near the
+ Straits of Dover. On this northern line the Germans come in contact
+ with the Danes who inhabit the northern parts of Schleswig within the
+ limits of the German empire. A line from Flensburg south-westward to
+ Joldelund and thence northwestward to Hoyer will nearly give the
+ boundary between the two idioms.[2] The German-French frontier
+ traverses Belgium from west to east, touching the towns of St Omer,
+ Courtrai and Maastricht. Near Eupen, south of Aix-la-Chapelle, it
+ turns southward, and near Arlon south-east as far as the crest of the
+ Vosges mountains, which it follows up to Belfort, traversing there the
+ watershed of the Rhine and the Doubs. In the Swiss territory the line
+ of demarcation passes through Bienne, Fribourg, Saanen, Leuk and Monte
+ Rosa. In the south the Germans come into contact with Rhaeto-Romans
+ and Italians, the former inhabiting the valley of the Vorder-Rhein and
+ the Engadine, while the latter have settled on the southern slopes of
+ the Alps, and are continually advancing up the valley of the Adige.
+ Carinthia and Styria are inhabited by German people, except the valley
+ of the Drave towards Klagenfurt. Their eastern neighbours there are
+ first the Magyars, then the northern Slavs and the Poles. The whole
+ eastern frontier is very much broken, and cannot be described in a few
+ words. Besides detached German colonies in Hungary proper, there is a
+ considerable and compact German (Saxon) population in Transylvania.
+ The river March is the frontier north of the Danube from Pressburg as
+ far as Brünn, to the north of which the German regions begin near
+ Olmütz, the interior of Bohemia and Moravia being occupied by Czechs
+ and Moravians. In these countries the Slav language has been steadily
+ superseding the German. In the Prussian provinces of Silesia and Posen
+ the eastern parts are mixed territories, the German language
+ progressing very slowly among the Poles. In Bromberg and Thorn, in the
+ valley of the Vistula, German is prevalent. In West Prussia some parts
+ of the interior, and in East Prussia a small region along the Russian
+ frontier, are occupied by Poles (Cassubians in West Prussia, Masurians
+ in East Prussia). The total number of German-speaking people, within
+ the boundaries wherein they constitute the compact mass of the
+ population, may be estimated, if the Dutch and Walloons be included,
+ at 65 millions.
+
+ The geographical limits of the German language thus do not quite
+ coincide with the German frontiers. The empire contains about 3-1/3
+ millions of persons who do not make use of German in everyday life,
+ not counting the resident foreigners.
+
+ Apart from the foreigners above mentioned, German subjects speaking a
+ tongue other than German are found only in Prussia, Saxony and
+ Alsace-Lorraine. The following table shows roughly the distribution of
+ German-speaking people in the world outside the German empire:--
+
+ Austria-Hungary 12,000,000 | Other European
+ Netherlands (Dutch) 5,200,000 | Countries 2,300,000
+ Belgium (Walloon) 4,000,000 | America 13,000,000
+ Luxemburg 200,000 | Asia 100,000
+ Switzerland 2,300,000 | Africa 600,000
+ France 500,000 | Australia 150,000
+
+ According to the census of the 1st of December 1900 there were
+ 51,634,757 persons speaking commonly one language and 248,374 speaking
+ two languages. In the kingdom of Saxony, according to the census of
+ 1900, there were 48,000 Wends, mostly in Lusatia. With respect to
+ Alsace-Lorraine, detailed estimates (but no census) gave the number of
+ French in the territory of Lorraine at about 170,000, and in that of
+ Alsace at about 46,000.
+
+ The Poles have increased very much, owing to a greater surplus of
+ births than in the case of the German people in the eastern provinces
+ of Prussia, to immigration from Russia, and to the Polonization of
+ many Germans through clerical and other influences (see _History_).
+ The Poles are in the majority in upper Silesia (Government district of
+ Oppeln; 55%) and the province of Posen (60%). They are numerous in
+ West Prussia (34%) and East Prussia (14%).
+
+ The Wends are decreasing in number, as are also the Lithuanians on the
+ eastern border of East Prussia, Czechs are only found in Silesia on
+ the confines of Bohemia.
+
+ Russians flocked to Germany in thousands after the Russo-Japanese War
+ and the insurrections in Russia, and the figures given for 1900 had
+ been doubled in 1907. Males preponderate among the various
+ nationalities, with the exception of the British, the larger
+ proportion of whom are females either in domestic service or engaged
+ in tuition.
+
+ _Chief Towns._--According to the results of the census of the 1st of
+ December 1905 there were within the empire 41 towns with populations
+ exceeding 100,000, viz.:--
+
+ +--------------------+----------------+-----------+
+ | | State. |Population.|
+ +--------------------+----------------+-----------+
+ | Berlin | Prussia |2,040,148 |
+ | Hamburg | Hamburg | 802,793 |
+ | Munich | Bavaria | 538,393 |
+ | Dresden | Saxony | 516,996 |
+ | Leipzig | " | 502,570 |
+ | Breslau | Prussia | 470,751 |
+ | Cologne | " | 428,503 |
+ | Frankfort-on-Main | " | 334,951 |
+ | Nuremberg | Bavaria | 294,344 |
+ | Düsseldorf | Prussia | 253,099 |
+ | Hanover | " | 250,032 |
+ | Stuttgart | Württemberg | 249,443 |
+ | Chemnitz | Saxony | 244,405 |
+ | Magdeburg | Prussia | 240,661 |
+ | Charlottenburg | " | 239,512 |
+ | Essen | " | 231,396 |
+ | Stettin | " | 224,078 |
+ | Königsberg | " | 219,862 |
+ | Bremen | Bremen | 214,953 |
+ | Duisburg | Prussia | 192,227 |
+ | Dortmund | " | 175,575 |
+ | Halle | " | 169,899 |
+ | Altona | " | 168,301 |
+ | Strassburg | Alsace-Lorraine| 167,342 |
+ | Kiel | Prussia | 163,710 |
+ | Elberfeld | " | 162,682 |
+ | Mannheim | Baden | 162,607 |
+ | Danzig | Prussia | 159,685 |
+ | Barmen | " | 156,148 |
+ | Rixdorf | " | 153,650 |
+ | Gelsenkirchen | " | 147,037 |
+ | Aix-la-Chapelle | " | 143,906 |
+ | Schöneberg | " | 140,992 |
+ | Brunswick | Brunswick | 136,423 |
+ | Posen | Prussia | 137,067 |
+ | Cassel | " | 120,446 |
+ | Bochum | " | 118,455 |
+ | Karlsruhe | Baden | 111,200 |
+ | Crefeld | Prussia | 110,347 |
+ | Plauen | Saxony | 105,182 |
+ | Wiesbaden | Prussia | 100,953 |
+ +--------------------+----------------+-----------+
+
+ _Density of Population._--In respect of density of population,
+ Germany with (1900) 269.9 and (1905) 290.4 inhabitants to the
+ square mile is exceeded in Europe only by Belgium, Holland and
+ England. Apart from the free cities, Hamburg, Bremen and
+ Lübeck, the kingdom of Saxony is the most, and Mecklenburg-Strelitz
+ the least, closely peopled state of the empire. The most
+ thinly populated districts are found, not as might be expected in
+ the mountain regions, but in some parts of the plains. Leaving out
+ of account the small centres, Germany may be roughly divided into
+ two thinly and two densely populated parts. In the former division
+ has to be classed all the North German plain. There it is only in the
+ valleys of the larger navigable rivers and on the southern border
+ of the plain that the density exceeds 200 inhabitants per square mile.
+ In some places, indeed, it is far greater, e.g. at the mouths of the
+ Elbe and the Weser, in East Holstein, in the delta of the Memel and
+ the environs of Hamburg. This region is bordered on the south by
+ a densely peopled district, the northern boundary of which may be
+ defined by a line from Coburg via Cassel to Münster, for in this part
+ there are not only very fertile districts, such as the _Goldene Aue_ in
+ Thuringia, but also centres of industry. The population is thickest
+ in upper Silesia around Beuthen (coal-fields), around Ratibor, Neisse
+ and Waldenburg (coal-fields), around Zittau (kingdom of Saxony),
+ in the Elbe valley around Dresden, in the districts of Zwickau and
+ Leipzig as far as the Saale, on the northern slopes of the Harz and
+ around Bielefeld in Westphalia. In all these the density exceeds
+ 400 inhabitants to the square mile, and in the case of Saxony rises
+ to 750. The third division of Germany comprises the basin of the
+ Danube and Franconia, where around Nuremberg, Bamberg and
+ Würzburg the population is thickly clustered. The fourth division
+ embraces the valleys of the upper Rhine and Neckar and the district
+ of Düsseldorf on the lower Rhine. In this last the proportion exceeds
+ 1200 inhabitants to the square mile.
+
+ _Emigration._--There have been great oscillations in the actual
+ emigration by sea. It first exceeded 100,000 soon after the Franco-German
+ War (1872, 126,000), and this occurred again in the years
+ 1880 to 1892. Germany lost during these thirteen years more than
+ 1,700,000 inhabitants by emigration. The total number of those
+ who sailed for the United States from 1820 to 1900 may be estimated
+ at more than 4,500,000. The number of German emigrants to
+ Brazil between 1870 and 1900 was about 52,000. The greater
+ number of the more recent emigrants was from the agricultural
+ provinces of northern Germany--West Prussia, Posen, Pomerania,
+ Mecklenburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Hanover, and sometimes the
+ emigration reached 1% of the total population of these provinces.
+ In subsequent years the emigration of native Germans greatly
+ decreased and, in 1905, amounted only to 28,075. But to this
+ number must be added 284,787 foreigners who in that year were
+ shipped from German ports (notably Hamburg and Bremen) to
+ distant parts. Of the above given numbers of purely German
+ emigrants 26,007 sailed for the United States of America; 243 to
+ Canada; 333 to Brazil; 674 to the Argentine Republic; 7 to other
+ parts of America; 57 to Africa; and 84 to Australia.
+
+_Agriculture._--Despite the enormous development of industries and
+commerce, agriculture and cattle-rearing still represent in Germany a
+considerable portion of its economic wealth. Almost two-thirds of the
+soil is occupied by arable land, pastures and meadows, and of the whole
+area, in 1900, 91% was classed as productive. Of the total area 47.67%
+was occupied by land under tillage, 0.89% by gardens, 11.02% by
+meadow-land, 5.01% by pastures, and 0.25% by vineyards. The largest
+estates are found in the Prussian provinces of Pomerania, Posen and
+Saxony, and in East and West Prussia, while in the Prussian Rhine
+province, in Baden and Württemberg small farms are the rule.
+
+ The same kinds of cereal crops are cultivated in all parts of the
+ empire, but in the south and west wheat is predominant, and in the
+ north and east rye, oats and barley. To these in some districts are
+ added spelt, buckwheat, millet, rice-wheat, lesser spelt and maize.
+ In general the soil is remarkably well cultivated. The three years'
+ rotation formerly in use, where autumn and spring-sown grain and
+ fallow succeeded each other, has now been abandoned, except in
+ some districts, where the system has been modified and improved.
+ In south Germany the so-called _Fruchtwechsel_ is practised, the fields
+ being sown with grain crops every second year, and with pease or
+ beans, grasses, potatoes, turnips, &c., in the intermediate years.
+ In north Germany the mixed _Koppelwirthschaft_ is the rule, by which
+ system, after several years of grain crops, the ground is for two or
+ three seasons in pasture.
+
+ Taking the average of the six years 1900-1905, the crop of wheat
+ amounted to 3,550,033 tons (metric), rye to 9,296,616 tons, barley to
+ 3,102,883 tons, and oats to 7,160,883 tons. But, in spite of this
+ considerable yield in cereals, Germany cannot cover her home
+ consumption, and imported on the average of the six years 1900-1905
+ about 4˝ million tons of cereals to supply the deficiency. The potato
+ is largely cultivated, not merely for food, but for distillation into
+ spirits. This manufacture is prosecuted especially in eastern Germany.
+ The number of distilleries throughout the German empire was, in
+ 1905-1906, 68,405. The common beet (_Beta vulgaris_) is largely grown
+ in some districts for the production of sugar, which has greatly
+ increased of recent years. There are two centres of the beet sugar
+ production: Magdeburg for the districts Prussian Saxony, Hanover,
+ Brunswick, Anhalt and Thuringia, and Frankfort-on-Oder at the centre
+ of the group Silesia, Brandenburg and Pomerania. Flax and hemp are
+ cultivated, though not so much as formerly, for manufacture into linen
+ and canvas, and also rape seed for the production of oil. The home
+ supply of the former no longer suffices for the native demand. The
+ cultivation of hops is in a very thriving condition in the southern
+ states of Germany. The soil occupied by hops was estimated in 1905 at
+ 98,000 acres--a larger area than in Great Britain, which had in the
+ same year about 48,000 acres. The total production of hops was 29,000
+ tons in 1905, and of this over 25,000 were grown in Bavaria,
+ Württemberg, Baden and Alsace-Lorraine. Almost the whole yield in hops
+ is consumed in the country by the great breweries.
+
+ Tobacco forms a most productive and profitable object of culture in
+ many districts. The total extent under this crop in 1905 was about
+ 35,000 acres, of which 45% was in Baden, 12% in Bavaria, 30% in
+ Prussia, and the rest in Alsace and Hesse-Darmstadt. In the north the
+ plant is cultivated principally in Pomerania, Brandenburg and East and
+ West Prussia. Of late years the production has somewhat diminished,
+ owing to the extensive tobacco manufacturing industries of Bremen and
+ Hamburg, which import almost exclusively foreign leaves.
+
+ Ulm, Nuremberg, Quedlinburg, Erfurt, Strassburg and Guben are famed
+ for their vegetables and garden seeds. Berlin is noted for its flower
+ nurseries, the Rhine valley, Württemberg and the Elbe valley below
+ Dresden for fruit, and Frankfort-on-main for cider.
+
+
+ Vine.
+
+ The culture of the vine is almost confined to southern and western
+ Germany, and especially to the Rhine district. The northern limits of
+ its growth extend from Bonn in a north-easterly direction through
+ Cassel to the southern foot of the Harz, crossing 52° N. on the Elbe,
+ running then east some miles to the north of that parallel, and
+ finally turning sharply towards the south-west on the Warthe. In the
+ valley of the Saale and Elbe (near Dresden), and in lower Silesia
+ (between Guben and Grünberg), the number of vineyards is small, and
+ the wines of inferior quality; but along the Rhine from Basel to
+ Coblenz, in Alsace, Baden, the Palatinate and Hesse, and above all in
+ the province of Nassau, the lower slopes of the hills are literally
+ covered with vines. Here are produced the celebrated Rüdesheimer,
+ Hochheimer and Johannisberger. The vines of the lower Main,
+ particularly those of Würzburg, are the best kinds; those of the upper
+ Main and the valley of the Neckar are rather inferior. The Moselle
+ wines are lighter and more acid than those of the Rhine. The total
+ amount produced in Germany is estimated at 1000 million gallons, of a
+ value of Ł4,000,000; Alsace-Lorraine turning out 400 millions; Baden,
+ 175; Bavaria, Württemberg and Hesse together, 300; while the
+ remainder, which though small in quantity is in quality the best, is
+ produced by Prussia.
+
+
+ Live stock.
+
+ The cultivation of grazing lands in Germany has been greatly improved
+ in recent times and is in a highly prosperous condition. The provinces
+ of Schleswig-Holstein, Pomerania, Hanover (especially the marsh-lands
+ near the sea) and the grand-duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin are
+ particularly remarkable in this respect. The best meadow-lands of
+ Bavaria are in the province of Franconia and in the outer range of the
+ Alps, and those of Saxony in the Erzgebirge. Württemberg, Hesse and
+ Thuringia also yield cattle of excellent quality. These large
+ cattle-rearing centres not only supply the home markets but export
+ live stock in considerable quantities to England and France. Butter is
+ also largely exported to England from the North Sea districts and from
+ Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg. The breeding of horses has
+ attained a great perfection. The main centre is in East and West
+ Prussia, then follow the marsh districts on the Elbe and Weser, some
+ parts of Westphalia, Oldenburg, Lippe, Saxony and upper Silesia, lower
+ Bavaria and Alsace-Lorraine. Of the stud farms Trakehnen in East
+ Prussia and Graditz in the Prussian province of Saxony enjoy a
+ European reputation. The aggregate number of sheep has shown a
+ considerable falling off, and the rearing of them is mostly carried on
+ only on large estates, the number showing only 9,692,501 in 1900, and
+ 7,907,200 in 1904, as against 28,000,000 in 1860. As a rule,
+ sheep-farming is resorted to where the soil is of inferior quality and
+ unsuitable for tillage and the breeding of cattle. Far more attention
+ is accordingly given to sheep-farming in northern and north-eastern
+ Germany than in Schleswig-Holstein, Westphalia, the Rhineland and
+ south Germany. The native demand for wool is not covered by the home
+ production, and in this article the export from the United Kingdom to
+ Germany is steadily rising, having amounted in 1905 to a value of
+ Ł1,691,035, as against Ł742,632 in 1900. The largest stock of pigs is
+ in central Germany and Saxony, in Westphalia, on the lower Rhine, in
+ Lorraine and Hesse. Central Germany (especially Gotha and Brunswick)
+ exports sausages and hams largely, as well as Westphalia, but here
+ again considerable importation takes place from other countries. Goats
+ are found everywhere, but especially in the hilly districts. Poultry
+ farming is a considerable industry, the geese of Pomerania and the
+ fowls of Thuringia and Lorraine being in especial favour. Bee-keeping
+ is of considerable importance, particularly in north Germany and
+ Silesia.
+
+ On the whole, despite the prosperous condition of the German
+ live-stock farming, the consumption of meat exceeds the amount
+ rendered available by home production, and prices can only be kept
+ down by a steady increase in the imports from abroad.
+
+ _Fisheries._--The German fisheries, long of little importance, have
+ been carefully fostered within recent years. The deep-sea fishing in
+ the North Sea, thanks to the exertions of the German fishing league
+ (_Deutscher Fischereiverein_) and to government support, is extremely
+ active. Trawlers are extensively employed, and steamers bring the
+ catches directly to the large fish markets at Geestemünde and Altona,
+ whence facilities are afforded by the railways for the rapid transport
+ of fish to Berlin and other centres. The fish mostly caught are cod,
+ haddock and herrings, while Heligoland yields lobsters, and the
+ islands of Föhr, Amrum and Sylt oysters of good quality. The German
+ North Sea fishing fleet numbered in 1905 618 boats, with an aggregate
+ crew of 5441 hands. Equally well developed are the Baltic fisheries,
+ the chief ports engaged in which are Danzig, Eckernförde, Kolberg and
+ Travemünde. The principal catch is haddock and herrings. The catch of
+ the North Sea and Baltic fisheries in 1906 was valued at over
+ Ł700,000, exclusive of herrings for salting. The fisheries do not,
+ however, supply the demand for fish, and fresh, salt and dried fish is
+ imported largely in excess of the home yield.
+
+ _Mines and Minerals._--Germany abounds in minerals, and the
+ extraordinary industrial development of the country since 1870 is
+ largely due to its mineral wealth. Having left France much behind in
+ this respect, it now rivals Great Britain and the United States.
+
+ Germany produces more silver than any other European state, and the
+ quantity is annually increasing. It is extracted from the ores in the
+ mines of Freiburg (Saxony), the Harz Mountains, upper Silesia,
+ Merseburg, Aix-la-Chapelle, Wiesbaden and Arnsberg. Gold is found in
+ the sand of the rivers Isar, Inn and Rhine, and also, to a limited
+ extent, on the Harz. The quantity yielded in 1905 was, of silver,
+ about 400 tons of a value of Ł1,600,000, and gold, about 4 tons,
+ valued at about Ł548,000.
+
+ Lead is produced in considerable quantities in upper Silesia, the Harz
+ Mountains, in the Prussian province of Nassau, in the Saxon Erzgebirge
+ and in the Sauerland. The yield in 1905 amounted to about 153,000
+ tons; of which 20,000 tons were exported.
+
+ Copper is found principally in the Mansfeld district of the Prussian
+ province of Saxony and near Arnsberg in the Sauerland, the ore
+ yielding 31,713 tons in 1905, of which 5000 tons were exported.
+
+ About 90% of the zinc produced in Europe is yielded by Belgium and
+ Germany. It is mostly found in upper Silesia, around Beuthen, and in
+ the districts of Wiesbaden and Aix-la-Chapelle. In 1905 no less than
+ 198,000 tons of block zinc were produced, of which 16,500 tons were
+ exported.
+
+ Of other minerals (with the exceptions of coal, iron and salt treated
+ below) nickel and antimony are found in the upper Harz; cobalt in the
+ hilly districts of Hesse and the Saxon Erzgebirge; arsenic in the
+ Riesengebirge; quicksilver in the Sauerland and in the spurs of the
+ Saarbrücken coal hills; graphite in Bavaria; porcelain clay in Saxony
+ and Silesia; amber along the whole Baltic coast; and lime and gypsum
+ in almost all parts.
+
+
+ Coal.
+
+ Coal-mining appears to have been first practised in the 14th century
+ at Zwickau (Saxony) and on the Ruhr. There are six large coal-fields,
+ occupying an area of about 3600 sq. m., of which the most important
+ occupies the basin of the Ruhr, its extent being estimated at 2800 sq.
+ m. Here there are more than 60 beds, of a total thickness of 150 to
+ 200 ft. of coal; and the amount in the pits has been estimated at
+ 45,000 millions of tons. Smaller fields are found near Osnabrück,
+ Ibbenbüren and Minden, and a larger one near Aix-la-Chapelle. The Saar
+ coal-field, within the area enclosed by the rivers Saar, Nahe and
+ Blies (460 sq. m.), is of great importance. The thickness of 80 beds
+ amounts to 250 ft., and the total mass of coal is estimated at 45,400
+ million tons. The greater part of the basin belongs to Prussia, the
+ rest to Lorraine. A still larger field exists in the upper Silesian
+ basin, on the borderland between Austria and Poland, containing about
+ 50,000 million tons. Beuthen is the chief centre. The Silesian
+ coal-fields have a second centre in Waldenburg, east of the
+ Riesengebirge. The Saxon coal-fields stretch eastwards for some miles
+ from Zwickau. Deposits of less consequence are found in upper Bavaria,
+ upper Franconia, Baden, the Harz and elsewhere.
+
+ The following table shows the rapidly increasing development of the
+ coal production. That of lignite is added, the provinces of Saxony and
+ Brandenburg being rich in this product:--
+
+ _Production of Coal and Lignite._
+
+ +------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------+
+ | | Coal. | Lignite. |
+ | Year.+-----------+----------+---------+-----------+----------+--------+
+ | |Quantities.| Value. | Hands. |Quantities.| Value. | Hands. |
+ +------+-----------+----------+---------+-----------+----------+--------+
+ | |Mill. Tons.|Mill. Mks.| |Mill. Tons.|Mill. Mks.| |
+ | 1871 | 29.4 | 218.4 | .. | 8.5 | 26.2 | |
+ | 1881 | 48.7 | 252.3 | 180,000 | 12.8 | 38.1 | 25,600 |
+ | 1891 | 73.7 | 589.5 | 283,000 | 20.5 | 54.2 | 35,700 |
+ | 1899 | 101.6 | 789.6 | 379,000 | 34.2 | 78.4 | 44,700 |
+ | 1900 | 109.3 | 966.1 | 414,000 | 40.5 | 98.5 | 50,900 |
+ | 1905 | 121.2 | 1049.9 | 490,000 | 52.5 | 122.2 | 52,800 |
+ +------+-----------+----------+---------+-----------+----------+--------+
+
+ This production permits a considerable export of coal to the west and
+ south of the empire, but the distance from the coal-fields to the
+ German coast is such that the import of British coal cannot yet be
+ dispensed with (1905, over 7,000,000 tons). Besides this, from
+ 7,000,000 to 8,000,000 tons of lignite come annually from Bohemia. In
+ north Germany peat is also of importance as a fuel; the area of the
+ peat moors in Prussia is estimated at 8000 sq. m., of which 2000 are
+ in the north of Hanover.
+
+ The iron-fields of Germany fall into three main groups: those of the
+ lower Rhine and Westphalia, of which Dortmund and Düsseldorf are the
+ centres; those of Lorraine and the Saar; and those of upper Silesia.
+ The output of the ore has enormously increased of recent years, and
+ the production of pig iron, as given for 1905, amounted to 10,875,000
+ tons of a value of Ł28,900,000.
+
+ Germany possesses abundant salt deposits. The actual production not
+ only covers the home consumption, but also allows a yearly increasing
+ exportation, especially to Russia, Austria and Scandinavia. The
+ provinces of Saxony and Hanover, with Thuringia and Anhalt, produce
+ half the whole amount. A large salt-work is found at Strzalkowo
+ (Posen), and smaller ones near Dortmund, Lippstadt and Minden
+ (Westphalia). In south Germany salt abounds most in Württemberg (Hall,
+ Heilbronn, Rottweil); the principal Bavarian works are at the foot of
+ the Alps near Freilassing and Rosenheim. Hesse and Baden, Lorraine and
+ the upper Palatinate have also salt-works. The total yield of mined
+ salt amounted in 1905 to 6,209,000 tons, including 1,165,000 tons of
+ rock salt. The production has made great advance, having in 1850 been
+ only 5 million cwts.
+
+_Manufactures._--In no other country of the world has the manufacturing
+industry made such rapid strides within recent years as in Germany. This
+extraordinary development of industrial energy embraces practically all
+classes of manufactured articles. In a general way the chief
+manufactures may be geographically distributed as follows. Prussia,
+Alsace-Lorraine, Bavaria and Saxony are the chief seats of the iron
+manufacture. Steel is produced in Rhenish Prussia. Saxony is predominant
+in the production of textiles, though Silesia and Westphalia manufacture
+linen. Cotton goods are largely produced in Baden, Bavaria,
+Alsace-Lorraine and Württemberg, woollens and worsteds in Saxony and the
+Rhine province, silk in Rhenish Prussia (Elberfeld), Alsace and Baden.
+Glass and porcelain are largely produced in Bavaria; lace in Saxony;
+tobacco in Bremen and Hamburg; chemicals in the Prussian province of
+Saxony; watches in Saxony (Glashütte) and Nuremberg; toys in Bavaria;
+gold and silver filagree in Berlin and Aschaffenburg; and beer in
+Bavaria and Prussia.
+
+
+ Iron industry.
+
+ It is perhaps more in respect of its iron industry than of its other
+ manufactures that Germany has attained a leading position in the
+ markets of the world. Its chief centres are in Westphalia and the
+ Rhine province (_auf roter Erde_), in upper Silesia, in
+ Alsace-Lorraine and in Saxony. Of the total production of pig iron in
+ 1905 amounting to over 10,000,000 tons, more than the half was
+ produced in the Rhineland and Westphalia. Huge blast furnaces are in
+ constant activity, and the output of rolled iron and steel is
+ constantly increasing. In the latter the greatest advance has been
+ made. The greater part of it is produced at or around Essen, where are
+ the famous Krupp works, and Bochum. Many states have been for a
+ considerable time supplied by Krupp with steel guns and battleship
+ plates. The export of steel (railway) rails and bridges from this part
+ is steadily on the increase.
+
+ Hardware also, the production of which is centred in Solingen,
+ Heilbronn, Esslingen, &c., is largely exported. Germany stands second
+ to Great Britain in the manufacture of machines and engines. There are
+ in many large cities of north Germany extensive establishments for
+ this purpose, but the industry is not limited to the large cities. In
+ agricultural machinery Germany is a serious competitor with England.
+ The locomotives and wagons for the German railways are almost
+ exclusively built in Germany; and Russia, as well as Austria, receives
+ large supplies of railway plant from German works. In shipbuilding,
+ likewise, Germany is practically independent, yards having been
+ established for the construction of the largest vessels.
+
+
+ Cotton and textiles.
+
+ Before 1871 the production of cotton fabrics in France exceeded that
+ in Germany, but as the cotton manufacture is pursued largely in
+ Alsace, the balance is now against the former country. In 1905 there
+ were about 9,000,000 spindles in Germany. The export of the goods
+ manufactured amounted in this year to an estimated value of
+ Ł19,600,000. Cotton spinning and weaving are not confined to one
+ district, but are prosecuted in upper Alsace (Mülhausen, Gebweiler,
+ Colmar), in Saxony (Zwickau, Chemnitz, Annaberg), in Silesia (Breslau,
+ Liegnitz), in the Rhine province (Düsseldorf, Münster, Cologne), in
+ Erfurt and Hanover, in Württemberg (Reutlingen, Cannstatt), in Baden,
+ Bavaria (Augsburg, Bamberg, Bayreuth) and in the Palatinate.
+
+ Although Germany produces wool, flax and hemp, the home production of
+ these materials is not sufficient to meet the demand of manufactures,
+ and large quantities of them have to be imported. In 1895 almost a
+ million persons (half of them women) were employed in this branch of
+ industry, and in 1897 the value of the cloth, buckskin and flannel
+ manufacture was estimated at Ł18,000,000. The chief seats of this
+ manufacture are the Rhenish districts of Aix-la-Chapelle, Düren, Eupen
+ and Lennep, Brandenburg, Saxony, Silesia and lower Lusatia, the chief
+ centres in this group being Berlin, Cottbus, Spremberg, Sagan and
+ Sommerfeld.
+
+ The manufacture of woollen and half-woollen dress materials centres
+ mainly in Saxony, Silesia, the Rhine province and in Alsace. Furniture
+ covers, table covers and plush are made in Elberfeld and Chemnitz, in
+ Westphalia and the Rhine province (notably in Elberfeld and Barmen);
+ shawls in Berlin and the Bavarian Vogtland; carpets in Berlin, Barmen
+ and Silesia. In the town of Schmiedeberg in the last district, as also
+ in Cottbus (Lusatia), oriental patterns are successfully imitated. The
+ chief seats of the stocking manufacture are Chemnitz and Zwickau in
+ Saxony, and Apolda in Thuringia. The export of woollen goods from
+ Germany in 1905 amounted to a value of Ł13,000,000.
+
+ Although linen was formerly one of her most important articles of
+ manufacture, Germany is now left far behind in this industry by Great
+ Britain, France and Austria-Hungary. This branch of textile
+ manufacture has its principal centres in Silesia, Westphalia, Saxony
+ and Württemberg, while Hirschberg in Silesia, Bielefeld in Westphalia
+ and Zittau in Saxony are noted for the excellence of their
+ productions. The goods manufactured, now no longer, as formerly,
+ coarse in texture, vie with the finer and more delicate fabrics of
+ Belfast. In the textile industry for flax and hemp there were, in
+ 1905, 276,000 fine spindles, 22,300 hand-looms and 17,600 power-looms
+ in operation, and, in 1905, linen and jute materials were exported of
+ an estimated value of over Ł2,000,000. The jute manufacture, the
+ principal centres of which are Berlin, Bonn, Brunswick and Hamburg,
+ has of late attained considerable dimensions.
+
+ Raw silk can scarcely be reckoned among the products of the empire,
+ and the annual demand has thus to be provided for by importation. The
+ main centre of the silk industry is Crefeld and its neighbourhood;
+ then come Elberfeld and Barmen, Aix-la-Chapelle, as well as Berlin,
+ Bielefeld, Chemnitz, Stuttgart and the district around Mülhausen in
+ Alsace.
+
+
+ Paper.
+
+ The manufacture of paper is prosecuted almost everywhere in the
+ empire. There were 1020 mills in operation in 1895, and the exports in
+ 1905 amounted to more than Ł3,700,000 sterling, as against imports of
+ a value of over Ł700,000. The manufacture is carried on to the largest
+ extent in the Rhine province, in Saxony and in Silesia. Wall papers
+ are produced chiefly in Rhenish Prussia, Berlin and Hamburg; the finer
+ sorts of letter-paper in Berlin, Leipzig and Nuremberg; and
+ printing-paper (especially for books) in Leipzig, Berlin and
+ Frankfort-on-Main.
+
+
+ Leather.
+
+ The chief seat of the leather industry is Hesse-Darmstadt, in which
+ Mainz and Worms produce excellent material. In Prussia large factories
+ are in operation in the Rhine province, in Westphalia and Silesia
+ (Brieg). Boot and shoe manufactures are carried on everywhere; but the
+ best goods are produced by Mainz and Pirmasens. Gloves for export are
+ extensively made in Württemberg, and Offenbach and Aschaffenburg are
+ renowned for fancy leather wares, such as purses, satchels and the
+ like.
+
+ Berlin and Mainz are celebrated for the manufacture of furniture;
+ Bavaria for toys; the Black Forest for clocks; Nuremberg for pencils;
+ Berlin and Frankfort-on-Main for various perfumes; and Cologne for the
+ famous eau-de-Cologne.
+
+
+ Sugar.
+
+ The beetroot sugar manufacture is very considerable. It centres mainly
+ in the Prussian province of Saxony, where Magdeburg is the chief
+ market for the whole of Germany, in Anhalt, Brunswick and Silesia. The
+ number of factories was, in 1905, 376, and the amount of raw sugar and
+ molasses produced amounted to 2,643,531 metric tons, and of refined
+ sugar 1,711,063 tons.
+
+
+ Beer.
+
+ Beer is produced throughout the whole of Germany. The production is
+ relatively greatest in Bavaria. The _Brausteuergebiet_ (beer excise
+ district) embraces all the states forming the Zollverein, with the
+ exception of Bavaria, Württemberg, Baden and Alsace-Lorraine, in which
+ countries the excise duties are separately collected. The total number
+ of breweries in the beer excise district was, in 1905-1906, 5995,
+ which produced 1017 million gallons; in Bavaria nearly 6000 breweries
+ with 392 million gallons; in Baden over 700 breweries with 68 million
+ gallons; in Württemberg over 5000 breweries with 87 million gallons;
+ and in Alsace-Lorraine 95 breweries with about 29 million gallons. The
+ amount brewed per head of the population amounted, in 1905, roughly to
+ 160 imperial pints in the excise district; to 450 in Bavaria; 280 in
+ Württemberg; 260 in Baden; and 122 in Alsace-Lorraine. It may be
+ remarked that the beer brewed in Bavaria is generally of darker colour
+ than that produced in other states, and extra strong brews are
+ exported largely into the beer excise district and abroad.
+
+_Commerce._--The rapid development of German trade dates from the
+_Zollverein_ (customs union), under the special rules and regulations of
+which it is administered. The Zollverein emanates from a convention
+originally entered into, in 1828, between Prussia and Hesse, which,
+subsequently joined by the Bavarian customs-league, by the kingdom of
+Saxony and the Thuringian states, came into operation, as regards the
+countries concerned, on the 1st of January 1834. With progressive
+territorial extensions during the ensuing fifty years, and embracing the
+grand-duchy of Luxemburg, it had in 1871, when the German empire was
+founded, an area of about 209,281 sq. m., with a population of
+40,678,000. The last important addition was in October 1888, when
+Hamburg and Bremen were incorporated. Included within it, besides the
+grand-duchy of Luxemburg, are the Austrian communes of Jungholz and
+Mittelberg; while, outside, lie the little free-port territories of
+Hamburg, Cuxhaven, Bremerhaven and Geestemünde, Heligoland, and small
+portions of the districts of Constance and Waldshut, lying on the Baden
+Swiss frontier. Down to 1879 Germany was, in general, a free-trade
+country. In this year, however, a rigid protective system was introduced
+by the _Zolltarifgesetz_, since modified by the commercial treaties
+between Germany and Austria-Hungary, Italy, Switzerland and Belgium, of
+the 1st of February 1892, and by a customs tariff law of the 25th of
+December 1902. The foreign commercial relations of Germany were again
+altered by the general and conventional customs tariff, which came into
+force on the 1st of March 1906. The Zolltarifgesetz of the 15th of July
+1879, while restricting the former free import, imposed considerable
+duties. Exempt from duty were now only refuse, raw products, scientific
+instruments, ships and literary and artistic objects; forty-four
+articles--notably beer, vinegar, sugar, herrings, cocoa, salt, fish
+oils, ether, alum and soda--were unaffected by the change, while duties
+were henceforth levied upon a large number of articles which had
+previously been admitted duty free, such as pig iron, machines and
+locomotives, grain, building timber, tallow, horses, cattle and sheep;
+and, again, the tariff law further increased the duties leviable upon
+numerous other articles. Export duties were abolished in 1865 and
+transit dues in 1861. The law under which Great Britain enjoyed the
+"most favoured nation treatment" expired on the 31st of December 1905,
+but its provisions were continued by the _Bundesrat_ until further
+notice. The average value of each article is fixed annually in Germany
+under the direction of the Imperial Statistical Office, by a commission
+of experts, who receive information from chambers of commerce and other
+sources. There are separate valuations for imports and exports. The
+price fixed is that of the goods at the moment of crossing the frontier.
+For imports the price does not include customs duties, cost of
+transport, insurance, warehousing, &c., incurred after the frontier is
+passed. For exports, the price includes all charges within the
+territory, but drawbacks and bounties are not taken into account. The
+quantities are determined according to obligatory declarations, and, for
+imports, the fiscal authorities may actually weigh the goods. For
+packages an official tax is deducted. The countries whence goods are
+imported and the ultimate destination of exports are registered. The
+import dues amounted in the year 1906, the first year of the revised
+tariff, to about Ł31,639,000, or about 10s. 5d. per head of population.
+
+ Statistics relating to the foreign trade of the Empire are necessarily
+ confined to comparatively recent times. The quantities of such
+ imported articles as are liable to duty have, indeed, been known for
+ many years; and in 1872 official tables were compiled showing the
+ value both of imports and of exports. But when the results of these
+ tables proved the importation to be very much greater than the
+ exportation, the conviction arose that the valuation of the exports
+ was erroneous and below the reality. In 1872 the value of the imports
+ was placed at Ł173,400,000 and that of the exports at Ł124,700,000. In
+ 1905 the figures were--imports, Ł371,000,000, and exports,
+ Ł292,000,000, including precious metals.
+
+Table A following shows the classification of goods adopted before the
+tariff revision of 1906. From 1907 a new classification has been
+adopted, and the change thus introduced is so great that it is
+impossible to make any comparisons between the statistics of years
+subsequent to and preceding the year 1906. Table B shows imports and
+exports for 1907 and 1908 according to the new classification adopted.
+
+ TABLE A.--_Classes of Imports and Exports, 1905._
+
+ +-------------------------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | | Import. | Export. |
+ +-------------------------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | Refuse. | Ł6,866,250 | Ł1,170,200 |
+ | Cotton and cottons. | 23,488,750 | 22,949,600 |
+ | Lead and by-products. | 996,300 | 979,400 |
+ | Brush and sieve makers' goods. | 102,400 | 515,450 |
+ | Drugs, chemists' and oilmen's | | |
+ | colours. | 15,896,900 | 23,196,250 |
+ | Iron and iron goods. | 3,156,500 | 33,126,400 |
+ | Ores, precious metals, asbestos, &c.| 28,834,050 | 9,899,450 |
+ | Flax and other vegetable spinning | | |
+ | materials except cotton. | 6,794,100 | 1,235,700 |
+ | Grain and agricultural produce. | 59,136,200 | 7,496,500 |
+ | Glass. | 538,050 | 2,743,900 |
+ | Hair, feathers, bristles. | 3,218,600 | 1,848,150 |
+ | Skins. | 18,965,500 | 9,548,450 |
+ | Wood and wooden wares. | 16,940,850 | 6,056,150 |
+ | Hops. | 913,150 | 2,135,600 |
+ | Instruments, machines, &c. | 4,351,500 | 17,898,250 |
+ | Calendars. | 34,300 | 74,700 |
+ | Caoutchouc, &c. | 7,379,600 | 4,616,400 |
+ | Clothes, body linen, millinery. | 739,900 | 7,321,050 |
+ | Copper and copper goods. | 8,273,400 | 10,307,050 |
+ | Hardware, &c. | 2,042,400 | 12,610,550 |
+ | Leather and leather goods. | 3,567,950 | 9,665,300 |
+ | Linens. | 1,750,100 | 1,904,950 |
+ | Candles. | 11,150 | 42,350 |
+ | Literary and works of art. | 3,066,050 | 9,025,500 |
+ | Groceries and confectionery. | 41,446,400 | 17,585,000 |
+ | Fats and oils. | 12,510,600 | 2,631,600 |
+ | Paper goods. | 1,086,800 | 7,158,800 |
+ | Furs. | 265,700 | 720,200 |
+ | Petroleum. | 5,036,600 | 132,300 |
+ | Silks and silk goods. | 9,523,300 | 8,889,000 |
+ | Soap and perfumes. | 151,600 | 768,200 |
+ | Playing cards. | 400 | 18,950 |
+ | Stone goods. | 2,822,000 | 2,110,550 |
+ | Coal, lignite, coke and peat. | 10,136,800 | 15,096,450 |
+ | Straw and hemp goods. | 561,650 | 262,100 |
+ | Tar, pitch, resin. | 2,504,400 | 834,100 |
+ | Animals, and animal products. | 9,926,200 | 590,700 |
+ | Earthenware goods. | 391,650 | 5,076,350 |
+ | Cattle. | 11,366,200 | 725,100 |
+ | Oilcloth. | 43,150 | 177,300 |
+ | Wools and woollen textiles. | 25,290,200 | 21,562,900 |
+ | Zinc and zinc goods. | 682,250 | 2,413,600 |
+ | Tin and japanned goods. | 1,770,550 | 744,100 |
+ | Goods insufficiently declared. | . . | 806,300 |
+ | +-------------+-------------+
+ | Total. |Ł352,317,250 |Ł284,626,900 |
+ +-------------------------------------+-------------+-------------+
+
+ TABLE B.--_Classes of Imports and Exports, 1907 and 1908._
+
+ +-----------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+
+ | | Imports. | Exports. |
+ | +-----------------+-----------------+
+ | Groups of Articles. | Value in Ł1000. | Value in Ł1000. |
+ | +--------+--------+--------+--------+
+ | | 1907. | 1908.* | 1907. | 1908.* |
+ +-----------------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
+ |Agricultural and forest | | | | |
+ | produce** |215,532 |205,512 | 45,796 | 50,324 |
+ | Agricultural produce*** | 93,253 |102,954 | 10,369 | 15,168 |
+ | Colonial produce and | | | | |
+ | substitutes for the same | 12,151 | 12,328 | 84 | 108 |
+ | Southern fruit and fruit | | | | |
+ | peel | 3,214 | 3,262 | 20 | 23 |
+ | Forest produce | 28,166 | 26,299 | 4,066 | 3,967 |
+ | Resins | 8,216 | 8,209 | 2,500 | 2,325 |
+ | Animals and animal | | | | |
+ | products** | 63,283 | 61,794 | 9,607 | 9,676 |
+ | Hides and skins | 16,920 | 17,699 | 5,383 | 5,453 |
+ | Meat, oil, sugar, beverages| 21,523 | 20,404 | 20,284 | 20,048 |
+ |Mineral and fossil raw | | | | |
+ | materials, mineral oils | 47,575 | 45,540 | 26,166 | 26,208 |
+ | Earths and stones | 6,541 | 7,542 | 3,250 | 3,006 |
+ | Ores, slag, cinders | 16,465 | 15,451 | 1,407 | 1,206 |
+ | Mineral fuel | 16,895 | 14,910 | 19,445 | 20,020 |
+ | Mineral oils and other | | | | |
+ | fossil raw materials | 7,168 | 7,209 | 558 | 491 |
+ | Coal-tar, coal-tar oils | 506 | 428 | 1,506 | 1,485 |
+ |Chemical and pharmaceutical | | | | |
+ | products, colours | 14,784 | 14,850 | 28,116 | 26,845 |
+ | Chemical primary materials,| | | | |
+ | acids, salts | 9,226 | 9,550 | 9,661 | 9,832 |
+ | Colours and dyeing | | | | |
+ | materials | 951 | 879 | 11,630 | 10,518 |
+ | Varnish, lacquer | 189 | 158 | 206 | 221 |
+ | Ether, alcohol not included| | | | |
+ | elsewhere, essential | | | | |
+ | oils, perfumery and | | | | |
+ | cosmetics | 1,979 | 1,918 | 1,118 | 1,004 |
+ | Artificial manures | 992 | 1,001 | 1,303 | 1,236 |
+ | Explosives of all kinds | 86 | 74 | 1,612 | 1,269 |
+ | Other chemical and | | | | |
+ | pharmaceutical products | 1,361 | 1,270 | 2,586 | 2,765 |
+ |Animal and vegetable textile | | | | |
+ | materials and wares | | | | |
+ | thereof | 98,540 | 92,105 | 78,086 | 70,343 |
+ | Silk and silk goods | 13,533 | 13,704 | 13,324 | 11,364 |
+ | Wool | 33,260 | 31,195 | 27,114 | 24,918 |
+ | Unworked wool | 19,975 | 19,309 | 2,647 | 2,561 |
+ | Worked wool | 4,625 | 4,961 | 3,799 | 3,393 |
+ | Wares of spun wool | 8,660 | 6,925 | 20,668 | 18,964 |
+ | Cotton | 38,543 | 34,456 | 29,004 | 26,201 |
+ | Unworked cotton | 27,705 | 26,167 | 3,264 | 2,987 |
+ | Worked cotton | 980 | 950 | 912 | 891 |
+ | Cotton wares | 9,858 | 7,338 | 24,828 | 22,324 |
+ | Other vegetable textile | | | | |
+ | materials | 10,783 | 10,411 | 3,777 | 3,471 |
+ | Unworked | 7,923 | 7,819 | 1,125 | 1,211 |
+ | Worked | 166 | 168 | 122 | 137 |
+ | Wares thereof | 2,685 | 2,423 | 2,531 | 2,124 |
+ |Leather and leather wares, | | | | |
+ | furriers' wares | 6,695 | 6,657 | 16,778 | 17,835 |
+ | Leather | 2,658 | 2,804 | 7,503 | 8,328 |
+ | Leather wares | 1,332 | 1,176 | 4,016 | 3,867 |
+ | Furriers' wares | 2,698 | 2,672 | 5,237 | 5,616 |
+ |Caoutchouc wares | 694 | 754 | 2,328 | 2,325 |
+ | Wares of soft caoutchouc | 670 | 735 | 1,694 | 1,723 |
+ | Hardened caoutchouc and | | | | |
+ | wares thereof | 24 | 19 | 634 | 602 |
+ |Wares of animal or vegetable | | | | |
+ | material for carving or | | | | |
+ | moulding | 2,448 | 2,068 | 4,260 | 4,131 |
+ |Wooden wares | 859 | 769 | 1,707 | 1,666 |
+ |Paper, cardboard and wares | | | | |
+ | thereof | 1,349 | 1,205 | 9,342 | 9,111 |
+ |Books, pictures, paintings | 1,992 | 2,036 | 4,667 | 4,765 |
+ |Earthenware | 467 | 377 | 5,224 | 4,612 |
+ |Glass and glassware | 747 | 728 | 5,671 | 5,149 |
+ |Precious metals and wares | | | | |
+ | thereof | 13,281 | 21,243 | 18,629 | 6,858 |
+ | Gold | 11,616 | 19,295 | 15,898 | 6,151 |
+ | Gold | 11,184 | 18,873 | 11,071 | 2,897 |
+ | Gold wares | 432 | 422 | 4,827 | 3,254 |
+ | Silver | 1,665 | 1,948 | 2,731 | 2,707 |
+ | Silver | 1,434 | 1,716 | 1,206 | 1,418 |
+ | Silver wares | 231 | 232 | 1,525 | 1,289 |
+ |Base metals and wares | | | | |
+ | thereof | 26,035 | 26,398 | 57,146 | 58,895 |
+ | Iron and iron wares | 5,903 | 4,472 | 38,899 | 40,162 |
+ | Pig iron (including | | | | |
+ | non-malleable alloys) | 1,601 | 912 | 966 | 905 |
+ | Iron wares | 4,302 | 3,560 | 37,933 | 39,257 |
+ | Aluminium and aluminium | | | | |
+ | wares | 546 | 453 | 368 | 273 |
+ | Raw aluminium | 529 | 433 | 152 | 77 |
+ | Aluminium wares | 17 | 20 | 216 | 196 |
+ | Lead and lead wares | 1,438 | 1,484 | 945 | 985 |
+ | Raw lead (including | | | | |
+ | waste) | 1,427 | 1,470 | 525 | 568 |
+ | Lead wares | 11 | 14 | 420 | 417 |
+ | Zinc and zinc wares | 727 | 847 | 2,433 | 2,489 |
+ | Raw zinc (including | | | | |
+ | waste) | 706 | 825 | 1,631 | 1,784 |
+ | Zinc wares | 21 | 22 | 802 | 705 |
+ | Tin and tin wares | 2,405 | 2,629 | 1,380 | 1,236 |
+ | Raw tin (including | | | | |
+ | waste) | 2,357 | 2,581 | 787 | 688 |
+ | Tin wares | 48 | 48 | 593 | 548 |
+ | Nickel and nickel wares | 400 | 540 | 246 | 298 |
+ | Raw nickel | 375 | 527 | 160 | 233 |
+ | Nickel wares | 25 | 13 | 86 | 65 |
+ | Copper and copper wares | 13,803 | 15,088 | 7,998 | 8,470 |
+ | Raw copper (including | | | | |
+ | copper coin, brass, | | | | |
+ | tombac, &c.) | 12,995 | 14,192 | 2,204 | 2,014 |
+ | Copper wares | 808 | 896 | 5,794 | 6,456 |
+ | Instruments of precision | 813 | 885 | 4,877 | 4,982 |
+ |Machinery, vehicles | 7,093 | 5,489 | 33,117 | 34,653 |
+ | Machinery | 4,090 | 3,451 | 19,041 | 20,684 |
+ | Electro-technical products | 411 | 451 | 8,227 | 9,107 |
+ | Vehicles and vessels | 2,562 | 1,587 | 5,849 | 4,862 |
+ |Firearms, clocks, musical | | | | |
+ | instruments, toys | 1,732 | 1,424 | 8,704 | 7,505 |
+ | Clocks and watches | 1,382 | 1,134 | 1,296 | 1,210 |
+ | Musical instruments | 223 | 170 | 3,176 | 2,780 |
+ | Toys | 39 | 35 | 3,949 | 3,273 |
+ | +--------+--------+--------+--------+
+ | Total |442,663 |429,636 |349,114 |336,347 |
+ +-----------------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
+
+ * Provisional figures only.
+ ** Excluding vegetable and animal textile materials.
+ *** Excluding vegetable textile materials.
+
+
+ The following table shows the commercial intercourse in imports and
+ exports, exclusive of bullion and coin, between Germany and the chief
+ countries of the world in 1905, 1906 and 1907.
+
+ _Imports._
+
+ +---------------------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
+ | | 1905. | 1906. | 1907. |
+ | +--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+ | Country. | Value | of | Value | of | Value | of |
+ | | in | Germany's| in | Germany's| in | Germany's|
+ | | Ł1000. | Total | Ł1000. | Total | Ł1000. | Total |
+ | | | Imports.| | Imports.| | Imports.|
+ +---------------------+--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+ | Belgium | 13,439 | 3.8 | 14,315 | 3.6 | 14,586 | 3.4 |
+ | Denmark | 5,986 | 1.7 | 6,302 | 1.6 | 6,050 | 1.4 |
+ | France | 19,772 | 5.6 | 21,306 | 5.4 | 22,302 | 5.2 |
+ | United Kingdom | 35,320 | 10.1 | 40,531 | 10.3 | 48,014 | 11.2 |
+ | Italy | 10,350 | 3 | 11,851 | 3 | 14,030 | 3.3 |
+ | Netherlands | 12,077 | 3 | 11,864 | 3 | 11,187 | 2.6 |
+ | Austria-Hungary | 36,974 | 10.6 | 39,814 | 10.1 | 39,939 | 9.3 |
+ | Rumania | 4,568 | 1.3 | 5,774 | 1.5 | 7,365 | 1.7 |
+ | Russia | 47,816 | 13.6 | 52,528 | 13.4 | 54,447 | 12.7 |
+ | Sweden | 5,887 | 1.7 | 7,359 | 1.9 | 8,457 | 2 |
+ | Switzerland | 8,980 | 2.6 | 10,659 | 2.9 | 10,366 | 2.4 |
+ | Spain | 5,742 | 1.6 | 7,410 | 1.9 | 6,878 | 1.6 |
+ | British South Africa| 1,769 | 0.5 | 1,766 | 0.4 | 2,258 | 0.5 |
+ | Dominion of Canada | 481 | 0.1 | 463 | 0.1 | 483 | 0.1 |
+ | New Zealand | 75 | .. | 87 | .. | 94 | .. |
+ | British West Africa | 2,562 | 0.7 | 2,731 | 0.7 | 3,601 | 0.8 |
+ | British India | 13,657 | 3.9 | 15,842 | 4 | 20,016 | 4.7 |
+ | Dutch Indies | 5,848 | 1.7 | 7,002 | 1.8 | 9,199 | 2.1 |
+ | Argentine Republic | 18,150 | 5.2 | 18,302 | 4.7 | 21,756 | 5.1 |
+ | Brazil | 8,454 | 2.4 | 9,246 | 2.4 | 9,636 | 2.2 |
+ | Chile | 6,536 | 1.9 | 7,131 | 1.8 | 7,074 | 1.6 |
+ | United States | 48,770 | 13.9 | 60,787 | 15.4 | 64,864 | 15.1 |
+ | Commonwealth of | | | | | | |
+ | Australia | 7,690 | 2.2 | 8,619 | 2.2 | 11,209 | 2.6 |
+ +---------------------+--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+
+ _Exports._
+
+ +---------------------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
+ | | 1905. | 1906. | 1907. |
+ | +--------+----------+--------+----------+--------=----------+
+ | Country. | Value | of | Value | of | Value | of |
+ | | in | Germany's| in | Germany's| in | Germany's|
+ | | Ł1000. | Total | Ł1000. | Total | Ł1000. | Total |
+ | | | Exports.| | Exports.| | Exports.|
+ +---------------------+--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+ | Belgium | 15,364 | 5.5 | 17,509 | 5.6 | 16,861 | 5 |
+ | Denmark | 8,668 | 3.1 | 9,699 | 3.1 | 10,182 | 3 |
+ | France | 14,420 | 5.1 | 18,815 | 6 | 22,080 | 6.6 |
+ | United Kingdom | 51,253 | 18.2 | 52,473 | 16.8 | 52,135 | 15.5 |
+ | Italy | 8,045 | 2.9 | 11,354 | 3.6 | 14,893 | 4.4 |
+ | Netherlands | 21,295 | 7.6 | 21,799 | 7 | 22,232 | 6.6 |
+ | Norway | 3,447 | 1.2 | 3,573 | 1.2 | 4,211 | 1.3 |
+ | Austria-Hungary | 28,526 | 10.1 | 31,926 | 10.2 | 35,231 | 10.5 |
+ | Rumania | 2,144 | 0.8 | 3,140 | 1 | 3,372 | 1 |
+ | Russia | 17,027 | 6 | 19,962 | 6.4 | 21,531 | 6.4 |
+ | Sweden | 7,653 | 2.7 | 8,675 | 2.8 | 9,177 | 2.7 |
+ | Switzerland | 17,649 | 6.3 | 18,367 | 5.9 | 21,948 | 6.5 |
+ | Spain | 2,609 | 0.9 | 2,838 | 0.9 | 3,228 | 1 |
+ | British South Africa| 1,687 | 0.6 | 1,607 | 0.5 | 1,422 | 0.4 |
+ | Dominion of Canada | 1,071 | 0.4 | 1,203 | 0.4 | 1,456 | 0.4 |
+ | New Zealand | 227 | 0.1 | 244 | 0.1 | 263 | 0.1 |
+ | Turkey | 3,484 | 1.3 | 3,357 | 1.1 | 4,011 | 1.2 |
+ | British India | 4,226 | 1.5 | 5,011 | 1.6 | 4,868 | 1.4 |
+ | China | 3,727 | 1.3 | 3,331 | 1.1 | 3,105 | 0.9 |
+ | Japan | 4,158 | 1.5 | 4,328 | 1.4 | 5,036 | 1.5 |
+ | Argentine Republic | 6,463 | 2.3 | 8,367 | 2.7 | 8,810 | 2.6 |
+ | Brazil | 3,525 | 1.3 | 4,364 | 1.4 | 5,118 | 1.5 |
+ | United States | 26,660 | 9.5 | 31,281 | 10 | 32,070 | 9.5 |
+ | Commonwealth of | | | | | | |
+ | Australia | 2,264 | 0.8 | 2,863 | 0.9 | 3,004 | 0.9 |
+ +---------------------+--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+
+ The commerce of Germany shows an upward tendency, which progresses
+ _pari passu_ with its greatly increased production. The export of
+ ships from the United Kingdom to the empire decreased during two
+ years, 1903 (Ł305,682) and 1904 (Ł365,062), almost to a vanishing
+ point, German yards being able to cope with the demands made upon them
+ for the supply of vessels of all classes, including mercantile vessels
+ and ships of war. In 1905 and subsequent years, however, the degree of
+ employment in German yards increased to such an extent, principally
+ owing to the placing of the Admiralty contracts with private builders,
+ that the more urgent orders for mercantile vessels were placed abroad.
+
+ The following tables give the value of trade between the United
+ Kingdom and Germany in 1900 and 1905:--
+
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+ | Staple Imports into the United | | |
+ | Kingdom from Germany. | 1900. | 1905. |
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+ | | Ł | Ł |
+ | Sugar | 9,164,573 |10,488,085 |
+ | Glass and manufactures | 1,078,648 | 1,108,117 |
+ | Eggs | 1,017,119 | 764,966 |
+ | Cottons and yarn | 992,244 | 1,476,385 |
+ | Woollens and yarn | 1,312,671 | 1,984,475 |
+ | Iron and steel and manufactures| 1,012,376 | 379,479 |
+ | Machinery | 411,178 | 735,536 |
+ | Paper | 523,544 | 528,946 |
+ | Musical instruments | 660,777 | 676,391 |
+ | Toys | 644,690 | 714,628 |
+ | Zinc and manufactures | 461,023 | 673,602 |
+ | Wood and manufactures | 1,470,839 | 1,109,584 |
+ | Chemicals | 513,200 | 735,830 |
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+ | Principal Articles exported by | | |
+ | Great Britain to Germany. | 1900. | 1905. |
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+ | | Ł | Ł |
+ | Cottons and yarn | 3,843,917 | 4,941,917 |
+ | Woollens and yarn | 3,743,842 | 3,795,591 |
+ | Alpaca, &c., yarn | 1,022,259 | 1,325,519 |
+ | Wool | 742,632 | 1,691,035 |
+ | Ironwork | 2,937,055 | 1,500,414 |
+ | Herrings | 1,651,441 | 2,042,483 |
+ | Machinery | 2,040,797 | 2,102,835 |
+ | Coals, cinders | 4,267,172 | 3,406,535 |
+ | New ships | 1,592,865 | 1,377,081 |
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+
+_Navigation._--The seamen of Frisia are among the best in the world, and
+the shipping of Bremen and Hamburg had won a respected name long before
+a German mercantile marine, properly so called, was heard of. Many
+Hamburg vessels sailed under charter of English and other houses in
+foreign, especially Chinese, waters. Since 1868 all German ships have
+carried a common flag--black, white, red; but formerly Oldenburg,
+Hanover, Bremen, Hamburg, Lübeck, Mecklenburg and Prussia had each its
+own flag, and Schleswig-Holstein vessels sailed under the Danish flag.
+The German mercantile fleet occupies, in respect of the number of
+vessels, the fourth place--after Great Britain, the United States of
+America and Norway; but in respect of tonnage it stands third--after
+Great Britain and the United States only.
+
+The following table shows its distribution on the 1st of January of the
+two years 1905 and 1908:--
+
+ +-----------------+-----------------+------------------+------------------+
+ | | Baltic Ports. | North Sea Ports. | Total Shipping. |
+ | +-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ | |Number.| Tonnage.|Number.| Tonnage. |Number.| Tonnage. |
+ |-----------------+-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ |1905-- | | | | | | |
+ | Sailing vessels| 386 | 19,067 | 2181 | 559,436 | 2567 | 578,503 |
+ | Steamers | 486 | 236,509 | 1171 |1,537,563 | 1657 |1,774,072 |
+ |-----------------+-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ | Totals | 872 | 255,576 | 3352 |2,096,999 | 4224 |2,352,575 |
+ | +-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ |1908-- | | | | | | |
+ | Sailing vessels| 394 | 17,472 | 2255 | 516,180 | 2649 | 533,652 |
+ | Steamers | 521 | 274,952 | 140l |1,981,831 | 1922 |2,256,783 |
+ | +-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ | Totals | 915 | 292,424 | 3656 |2,498,011 | 4571 |2,790,435 |
+ +-----------------+-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+
+In 1905, 2136 vessels of 283,171 tons, and in 1908, 2218 vessels of
+284,081 tons, belonged to Prussian ports, and the number of sailors of
+the mercantile marine was 60,616 in 1905 and 71,853 in 1908.
+
+The chief ports are Hamburg, Stettin, Bremen, Kiel, Lübeck, Flensburg,
+Bremerhaven, Danzig (Neufahrwasser), Geestemünde and Emden; and the
+number and tonnage of vessels of foreign nationality entering and
+clearing the ports of the empire, as compared with national shipping,
+were in 1906:--
+
+ +---------------+---------+----------+---------+----------+
+ | | Number | | Number | |
+ | Foreign Ships.| entered | Tonnage. | cleared | Tonnage. |
+ | |in Cargo.| |in Cargo.| |
+ +---------------+---------+----------+---------+----------+
+ | Danish | 5917 |1,589,346 | 5059 |1,219,388 |
+ | British | 5327 |5,129,017 | 3211 |2,552,268 |
+ | Swedish | 4891 |1,164,431 | 3317 | 747,656 |
+ | Dutch | 2181 | 458,401 | 1973 | 316,562 |
+ | Norwegian | 1565 | 817,483 | 720 | 347,811 |
+ | Russian | 720 | 250,564 | 439 | 143,983 |
+ +---------------+---------+----------+---------+----------+
+
+The ports of Hamburg and Bremen, which are the chief outlets for
+emigration to the United States of America, carry on a vast commercial
+trade with all the chief countries of the world, and are the main gates
+of maritime intercourse between the United Kingdom and Germany.
+
+The inland navigation is served by nearly 25,000 river, canal and
+coasting vessels, of a tonnage of about 4,000,000.
+
+_Railways._--The period of railway construction was inaugurated in
+Germany by the opening of the line (4 m. in length) from Nuremberg to
+Fürth in 1835, followed by the main line (71 m.) between Leipzig and
+Dresden, opened throughout in 1839. The development of the railway
+system was slow and was not conceived on any uniform plan. The want of a
+central government operated injuriously, for it often happened that
+intricate negotiations and solemn treaties between several sovereign
+states were required before a line could be constructed; and, moreover,
+the course it was to take was often determined less by the general
+exigencies of commerce than by many trifling interests or desires of
+neighbouring states. The state which was most self-seeking in its
+railway politics was Hanover, which separated the eastern and western
+parts of the kingdom of Prussia. The difficulties arising to Prussia
+from this source were experienced in a still greater degree by the
+seaports of Bremen and Hamburg, which were severely hampered by the
+particularism displayed by Hanover.
+
+The making of railways was from the outset regarded by some German
+states as exclusively a function of the government. The South German
+states, for example, have only possessed state railways. In Prussia
+numerous private companies, in the first instance, constructed their
+systems, and the state contented itself for the most part with laying
+lines in such districts only as were not likely to attract private
+capital.
+
+The development of the German railway system falls conveniently into
+four periods. The first, down in 1840, embraces the beginnings of
+railway enterprise. The next, down to 1848, shows the linking-up of
+various existing lines and the establishment of inter-connexion between
+the chief towns. The third, down to 1881, shows the gradual
+establishment of state control in Prussia, and the formation of direct
+trunk lines. The fourth begins from 1881 with the purchase of
+practically all the railways in Prussia by the government, and the
+introduction of a uniform system of interworking between the various
+state systems. The purchase of the railways by the Prussian government
+was on the whole equably carried out, but there were several hard cases
+in the expropriation of some of the smaller private lines.
+
+The majority of the German railways are now owned by the state
+governments. Out of 34,470 m. of railway completed and open for traffic
+in 1906, only 2579 m. were the property of private undertakings, and of
+these about 150 were worked by the state. The bulk of the railways are
+of the normal 4 ft. 8˝ in. gauge. Narrow-gauge (2˝ ft.) lines--or light
+railways--extended over 1218 m. in 1903, and of these 537 m. were worked
+by the state.
+
+The board responsible for the imperial control over the whole railway
+system in Germany is the _Reichseisenbahnamt_ in Berlin, the
+administration of the various state systems residing, in Prussia, in the
+ministry of public works; in Bavaria in the ministry of the royal house
+and of the exterior; in Württemberg in the ministry of the exterior; in
+Saxony in the ministry of the interior; in Baden and Hesse-Darmstadt in
+commissions of the ministry of finance; and in Alsace-Lorraine in the
+imperial ministry of railways.
+
+ The management of the Prussian railway system is committed to the
+ charge of twenty "directions," into which the whole network of lines
+ is divided, being those of Altona, Berlin, Breslau, Bromberg, Danzig,
+ Elberfeld, Erfurt, Essen a.d. Ruhr, Frankfort-on-Main, Halle a.d.
+ Saale, Hanover, Cassel, Kattowitz, Cologne, Königsberg, Magdeburg,
+ Münster, Posen, Saarbrücken and Stettin. The entire length of the
+ system was in 1906 20,835 m., giving an average of about 950 m. to
+ each "direction." The smallest mileage controlled by a "direction" is
+ Berlin, with 380 m., and the greatest, Königsberg, with 1200 m.
+
+ The Bavarian system embraces 4642 m., and is controlled and managed,
+ apart from the "general direction" in Munich, by ten traffic boards,
+ in Augsburg, Bamberg, Ingolstadt, Kempten, Munich, Nuremberg,
+ Regensburg, Rosenheim, Weiden and Würzburg.
+
+ The system of the kingdom of Saxony has a length of 1616 m., and is
+ controlled by the general direction in Dresden.
+
+ The length of the Württemberg system is 1141 m., and is managed by a
+ general direction in Stuttgart.
+
+ Baden (state) controls 1233, Oldenburg (state) 382,
+ Mecklenburg-Schwerin 726 and Saxe-Weimar 257 m. respectively. Railways
+ lying within the other smaller states are mostly worked by Prussia.
+
+ Alsace-Lorraine has a separate system of 1085 m., which is worked by
+ the imperial general direction in Strassburg.
+
+ By the linking-up of the various state systems several grand trunk
+ line routes have been developed--notably the lines
+ Berlin-Vienna-Budapest; Berlin-Cologne-Brussels and Paris;
+ Berlin-Halle-Frankfort-on-Main-Basel; Hamburg-Cassel-Munich and
+ Verona; and Breslau-Dresden-Bamberg-Geneva. Until 1907 no uniform
+ system of passenger rates had been adopted, each state retaining its
+ own fares--a condition that led to much confusion. From the 1st of May
+ 1907 the following tariff came into force. For ordinary trains the
+ rate for first class was fixed at 1źd. a mile; for second class at
+ .7d.; for third class at ˝d., and for fourth class at źd. a mile. For
+ express trains an extra charge is made of 2s. for distances exceeding
+ 93 m. (150 kils.) in the two superior classes, and 1s. for a lesser
+ distance, and of 1s. and 6d. respectively in the case of third class
+ tickets. Fourth class passengers are not conveyed by express trains.
+ The above rates include government duty; but the privilege of free
+ luggage (as up to 56 lb.) has been withdrawn, and all luggage other
+ than hand baggage taken into the carriages is charged for. In 1903
+ 371,084,000 metric tons of goods, including animals, were conveyed by
+ the German railways, yielding Ł68,085,000 sterling, and the number of
+ passengers carried was 957,684,000, yielding Ł29,300,000.
+
+ The passenger ports of Germany affording oversea communications to
+ distant lands are mainly those of Bremen (Bremerhaven) and Hamburg
+ (Cuxhaven) both of which are situate on the North Sea. From them great
+ steamship lines, notably the North German Lloyd, the Hamburg-American,
+ the Hamburg South American and the German East African steamship
+ companies, maintain express mail and other services with North and
+ South America, Australia, the Cape of Good Hope and the Far East.
+ London and other English ports, French, Italian and Levant coast towns
+ are also served by passenger steamboat sailings from the two great
+ North Sea ports. The Baltic ports, such as Lübeck, Stettin, Danzig
+ (Neufahrwasser) and Königsberg, principally provide communication with
+ the coast towns of the adjacent countries, Russia and Sweden.
+
+_Waterways._--In Germany the waterways are almost solely in the
+possession of the state. Of ship canals the chief is the Kaiser Wilhelm
+canal (1887-1895), 61 m. long, connecting the North Sea and the Baltic;
+it was made with a breadth at bottom of 72 ft. and at the surface of 213
+ft., and with a depth of 29 ft. 6 in., but in 1908 work was begun for
+doubling the bottom width and increasing the depth to 36 ft. In respect
+of internal navigation, the principal of the greater undertakings are
+the Dortmund-Ems and the Elbe-Trave canals. The former, constructed in
+1892-1899, has a length of 150 m. and a mean depth of 8 ft. The latter,
+constructed 1895-1900, has a length of 43 m. and a mean depth of about
+7˝ ft. A project was sanctioned in 1905 for a canal, adapted for vessels
+up to 600 tons, from the Rhine to the Weser at Hanover, utilizing a
+portion of the Dortmund-Ems canal; for a channel accommodating vessels
+of similar size between Berlin and Stettin; for improving the waterway
+between the Oder and the Vistula, so as to render it capable of
+accommodating vessels of 400 tons; and for the canalization of the upper
+Oder.
+
+ On the whole, Germany cannot be said to be rich in canals. In South
+ Germany the Ludwigs canal was, until the annexation of
+ Alsace-Lorraine, the only one of importance. It was constructed by
+ King Louis I. of Bavaria in order to unite the German Ocean and the
+ Black Sea, and extends from the Main at Bamberg to Kelheim on the
+ Danube. Alsace-Lorraine had canals for connecting the Rhine with the
+ Rhone and the Marne, a branch serving the collieries of the Saar
+ valley. The North German plain has, in the east, a canal by which
+ Russian grain is conveyed to Königsberg, joining the Pregel to the
+ Memel, and the upper Silesian coalfield is in communication with the
+ Oder by means of the Klodnitz canal. The greatest number of canals is
+ found around Berlin; they serve to join the Spree to the Oder and
+ Elbe, and include the Teltow canal opened in 1906. The canals in
+ Germany (including ship canals through lakes) have a total length of
+ about 2600 m. Navigable and canalized rivers, to which belong the
+ great water-systems of the Rhine, Elbe and Oder, have a total length
+ of about 6000 m.
+
+_Roads._--The construction of good highways has been well attended to in
+Germany only since the Napoleonic wars. The separation of the empire
+into small states was favourable to road-making, inasmuch as it was
+principally the smaller governments that expended large sums for their
+network of roads. Hanover and Thuringia have long been distinguished for
+the excellence of their roads, but some districts suffer even still from
+the want of good highways. The introduction of railways for a time
+diverted attention from road-making, but this neglect has of late been
+to some extent remedied. In Prussia the districts (_Kreise_) have
+undertaken the charge of the construction of the roads; but they receive
+a subsidy from the public funds of the several provinces. Turnpikes were
+abolished in Prussia in 1874 and in Saxony in 1885. The total length of
+the public roads is estimated at 80,000 m.
+
+_Posts and Telegraphs._--With the exception of Bavaria and Württemberg,
+which have administrations of their own, all the German states belong to
+the imperial postal district (_Reichspostgebiet_). Since 1874 the postal
+and telegraphic departments have been combined. Both branches of
+administration have undergone a surprising development, especially since
+the reduction of the postal rates. Germany, including Bavaria and
+Württemberg, constitutes with Austria-Hungary a special postal union
+(Deutsch-Österreichischer Postverband), besides forming part of the
+international postal union. There are no statistics of posts and
+telegraphs before 1867, for it was only when the North German union was
+formed that the lesser states resigned their right of carrying mails in
+favour of the central authority. Formerly the prince of Thurn-and-Taxis
+was postmaster-general of Germany, but only some of the central states
+belonged to his postal territory. The seat of management was
+Frankfort-on-Main.
+
+ The following table shows the growth in the number of post offices for
+ the whole empire:--
+
+ +------+-------------+-------------+
+ | Year.|Post Offices.|Men employed.|
+ +------+-------------+-------------+
+ | 1872 | 7,518 | .. |
+ | 1880 | 9,460 | .. |
+ | 1890 | 24,952 | 128,687 |
+ | 1899 | 36,388 | 206,945 |
+ | 1904 | 38,658 | 261,985 |
+ | 1907 | 40,083 | 319,026 |
+ +------+-------------+-------------+
+
+ In 1872 there were 2359 telegraph offices; in 1880, 9980; in 1890,
+ 17,200; and in 1907, 37,309. There were 188 places provided with
+ telephone service in 1888, and 13,175 in 1899. The postal receipts
+ amounted for the whole empire in 1907 to Ł33,789,460, and the
+ expenditure to Ł31,096,944, thus showing a surplus of Ł2,692,516.
+
+_Constitution._--The constitution of the German empire is, in all
+essentials, that of the North German Confederation, which came into
+force on the 7th of June 1867. Under this the presidency (_Praesidium_)
+of the confederation was vested in the king of Prussia and his heirs. As
+a result of the Franco-German war of 1870 the South German states joined
+the confederation; on the 9th of December 1870 the diet of the
+confederation accepted the treaties and gave to the new confederation
+the name of German Empire (_Deutsche Reich_), and on the 18th of January
+1871 the king of Prussia was proclaimed German emperor (_Deutscher
+Kaiser_) at Versailles. This was a change of style, not of functions and
+powers. The title is "German emperor," not "emperor of Germany," being
+intended to show that the Kaiser is but _primus inter pares_ in a
+confederation of territorial sovereigns; his authority as territorial
+sovereign (_Landesherr_) extends over Prussia, not over Germany.
+
+The imperial dignity is hereditary in the line of Hohenzollern, and
+follows the law of primogeniture. The emperor exercises the imperial
+power in the name of the confederated states. In his office he is
+assisted by a federal council (_Bundesrat_), which represents the
+governments of the individual states of Germany. The members of this
+council, 58 in number, are appointed for each session by the governments
+of the individual states. The legislative functions of the empire are
+vested in the emperor, the Bundesrat, and the Reichstag or imperial
+Diet. The members of the latter, 397 in number, are elected for a space
+of five years by universal suffrage. Vote is by ballot, and one member
+is elected by (approximately) every 150,000 inhabitants.
+
+As regards its legislative functions, the empire has supreme and
+independent control in matters relating to military affairs and the
+navy, to the imperial finances, to German commerce, to posts and
+telegraphs, and also to railways, in so far as these affect the common
+defence of the country. Bavaria and Württemberg, however, have preserved
+their own postal and telegraphic administration. The legislative power
+of the empire also takes precedence of that of the separate states in
+the regulation of matters affecting freedom of migration
+(_Freizügigkeit_), domicile, settlement and the rights of German
+subjects generally, as well as in all that relates to banking, patents,
+protection of intellectual property, navigation of rivers and canals,
+civil and criminal legislation, judicial procedure, sanitary police, and
+control of the press and of associations.
+
+The executive power is in the emperor's hands. He represents the empire
+internationally, and can declare war if defensive, and make peace as
+well as enter into treaties with other nations; he also appoints and
+receives ambassadors. For declaring offensive war the consent of the
+federal council must be obtained. The separate states have the privilege
+of sending ambassadors to the other courts; but all consuls abroad are
+officials of the empire and are named by the emperor.
+
+Both the Bundesrat and the Reichstag meet in annual sessions convoked by
+the emperor who has the right of proroguing and dissolving the Diet; but
+the prorogation must not exceed 60 days, and in case of dissolution new
+elections must be ordered within 60 days, and the new session opened
+within 90 days. All laws for the regulation of the empire must, in order
+to pass, receive the votes of an absolute majority of the federal
+council and the Reichstag.
+
+ Alsace-Lorraine is represented in the Bundesrat by four commissioners
+ (_Kommissäre_), without votes, who are nominated by the Statthalter
+ (imperial lieutenant).
+
+ The fifty-eight members of the Bundesrat are nominated by the
+ governments of the individual states for each session; while the
+ members of the Reichstag are elected by universal suffrage and ballot
+ for the term of five years. Every German who has completed his
+ twenty-fifth year is prima facie entitled to the suffrage in the state
+ within which he has resided for one year. Soldiers and those in the
+ navy are not thus entitled, so long as they are serving under the
+ colours. Excluded, further, are persons under tutelage, bankrupts and
+ paupers, as also such persons who have been deprived of civil rights,
+ during the time of such deprivation. Every German citizen who has
+ completed his twenty-fifth year and has resided for a year in one of
+ the federal states is eligible for election in any part of the empire,
+ provided he has not been, as in the cases above, excluded from the
+ right of suffrage. The secrecy of the ballot is ensured by special
+ regulations passed on the 28th of April 1903. The voting-paper,
+ furnished with an official stamp, must be placed in an envelope by the
+ elector in a compartment set apart for the purpose in the polling
+ room, and, thus enclosed, be handed by him to the presiding officer.
+ An absolute majority of votes decides the election. If (as in the case
+ of several candidates) an absolute majority over all the others has
+ not been declared, a test election (_Stichwahl_) takes place between
+ the two candidates who have received the greatest number of votes. In
+ case of an equal number of votes being cast for both candidates, the
+ decision is by lot.
+
+ The subjoined table gives the names of the various states composing
+ the empire and the number of votes which the separate states have in
+ the federal council. Each state may appoint as many members to the
+ federal council as it has votes. The table also gives the number of
+ the deputies in the Reichstag.
+
+ +-----------------------------------------+----------+----------+
+ | | No. of | No. of |
+ | States of the Empire. |Members in|Members in|
+ | |Bundesrat.|Reichstag.|
+ +-----------------------------------------+----------+----------+
+ |Kingdom of Prussia | 17 | 236 |
+ | " Bavaria | 6 | 48 |
+ | " Saxony | 4 | 23 |
+ | " Württemberg | 4 | 17 |
+ |Grand duchy of Baden | 3 | 14 |
+ | " Hesse | 3 | 9 |
+ | " Mecklenburg-Schwerin | 2 | 6 |
+ | " Saxe-Weimar | 1 | 3 |
+ | " Mecklenburg-Strelitz | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Oldenburg | 1 | 3 |
+ |Duchy of Brunswick | 2 | 3 |
+ | " Saxe-Meiningen | 1 | 2 |
+ | " Saxe-Altenburg | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Saxe-Coburg-Gotha | 1 | 2 |
+ | " Anhalt | 1 | 2 |
+ |Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen| 1 | 1 |
+ | " Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Waldeck | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Reuss-Greiz | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Reuss-Schleiz | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Schaumburg-Lippe | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Lippe | 1 | 1 |
+ |Free town of Lübeck | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Bremen | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Hamburg | 1 | 3 |
+ |Imperial territory of Alsace-Lorraine | .. | 15 |
+ | +----------+----------+
+ | Total | 58 | 397 |
+ +-----------------------------------------+----------+----------+
+
+ The Reichstag must meet at least once in each year. Since November
+ 1906 its members have been paid (see PAYMENT OF MEMBERS).
+
+ The following table shows its composition after the elections of 1903
+ and 1907:--
+
+ +--------------------------------------------+-----+-----+
+ | Parties. |1903.|1907.|
+ +--------------------------------------------+-----+-----+
+ | Centre | 100 | 108 |
+ | Social Democrats | 81 | 43 |
+ | Conservatives | 51 | 60 |
+ | National Liberals | 49 | 57 |
+ | Freisinnige Volkspartei | 27 | 33 |
+ | Reichspartei | 19 | 22 |
+ | Alsatians, Guelphs and Danes | 18 | 5 |
+ | Poles | 16 | 20 |
+ | Wirtschaftliche Vereinigung (Reform Partei)| 12 | 21 |
+ | Freisinnige Vereinigung | 9 | 16 |
+ | Wilde (no party) | 9 | 5 |
+ | Bund der Landwirte | 3 | 6 |
+ | Bauernbund | 3 | 1 |
+ +--------------------------------------------+-----+-----+
+
+All the German states have separate representative assemblies, except
+Alsace-Lorraine and the two grand-duchies of Mecklenburg. The six larger
+states have adopted the two-chamber system, but in the composition of
+the houses great differences are found. The lesser states also have
+chambers of representatives numbering from 12 members (in Reuss-Greiz)
+to 48 members (in Brunswick), and in most states the different classes,
+as well as the cities and the rural districts, are separately
+represented. The free towns have legislative assemblies, numbering from
+120 to 200 members.
+
+Imperial measures, after passing the Bundesrat and the Reichstag, must
+obtain the sanction of the emperor in order to become law, and must be
+countersigned, when promulgated, by the chancellor of the empire
+(_Reichskanzler_). All members of the federal council are entitled to be
+present at the deliberations of the Reichstag. The Bundesrat, acting
+under the direction of the chancellor of the empire, is also a supreme
+administrative and consultative board, and as such it has nine standing
+committees, viz.: for army and fortresses; for naval purposes; for
+tariffs, excise and taxes; for trade and commerce; for railways, posts
+and telegraphs; for civil and criminal law; for financial accounts; for
+foreign affairs; and for Alsace-Lorraine. Each committee includes
+representatives of at least four states of the empire.
+
+For the several branches of administration a considerable number of
+imperial offices have been gradually created. All of them, however,
+either are under the immediate authority of the chancellor of the
+empire, or are separately managed under his responsibility. The most
+important are the chancery office, the foreign office and the general
+post and telegraph office. But the heads of these do not form a cabinet.
+
+ _The Chancellor of the Empire (Reichskanzler)._--The Prussian
+ plenipotentiary to the Bundesrat is the president of that assembly; he
+ is appointed by the emperor, and bears the title Reichskanzler. This
+ head official can be represented by any other member of the Bundesrat
+ named in a document of substitution. The Reichskanzler is the sole
+ responsible official, and conducts all the affairs of the empire, with
+ the exception of such as are of a purely military character, and is
+ the intermediary between the emperor, the Bundesrat and the Reichstag.
+ All imperial rescripts require the counter-signature of the chancellor
+ before attaining validity. All measures passed by the Reichstag
+ require the sanction of the majority of the Bundesrat, and only become
+ binding on being proclaimed on behalf of the empire by the chancellor,
+ which publication takes place through the _Reichsgesetzblatt_ (the
+ official organ of the chancellor).
+
+ _Government Offices._--The following imperial offices are directly
+ responsible to the chancellor and stand under his control:--
+
+ 1. The foreign office, which is divided into three departments: (i.)
+ the political and diplomatic; (ii.) the political and commercial;
+ (iii.) the legal. The chief of the foreign office is a secretary of
+ state, taking his instructions immediately from the chancellor.
+
+ 2. The colonial office (under the direction of a secretary of state)
+ is divided into (i.) a civil department; (ii.) a military department;
+ (iii.) a disciplinary court.
+
+ 3. The ministry of the interior or home office (under the conduct of a
+ secretary of state). This office is divided into four departments,
+ dealing with (i.) the business of the Bundesrat, the Reichstag, the
+ elections, citizenship, passports, the press, and military and naval
+ matters, so far as the last concern the civil authorities; (ii.)
+ purely social matters, such as old age pensions, accident insurance,
+ migration, settlement, poor law administration, &c.; (iii.) sanitary
+ matters, patents, canals, steamship lines, weights and measures; and
+ (iv.) commercial and economic relations--such as agriculture,
+ industry, commercial treaties and statistics.
+
+ 4. The imperial admiralty (_Reichsmarineamt_), which is the chief
+ board for the administration of the imperial navy, its maintenance and
+ development.
+
+ 5. The imperial ministry of justice (_Reichsjustizamt_), presided over
+ by a secretary of state. This office, not to be confused with the
+ _Reichsgericht_ (supreme legal tribunal of the empire) in Leipzig,
+ deals principally with the drafting of legal measures to be submitted
+ to the Reichstag.
+
+ 6. The imperial treasury (_Reichsschatzamt_), or exchequer, is the
+ head financial office of the empire. Presided over by a secretary of
+ state, its functions are principally those appertaining to the control
+ of the national debt and its administration, together with such as in
+ the United Kingdom are delegated to the board of inland revenue.
+
+ 7. The imperial railway board (_Reichseisenbahnamt_), the chief
+ official of which has the title of "president," deals exclusively with
+ the management of the railways throughout the empire, in so far as
+ they fall under the control of the imperial authorities in respect of
+ laws passed for their harmonious interworking, their tariffs and the
+ safety of passengers conveyed.
+
+ 8. The imperial post office (_Reichspostamt_), under a secretary of
+ state, controls the post and telegraph administration of the empire
+ (with the exception of Bavaria and Württemberg), as also those in the
+ colonies and dependencies.
+
+ 9. The imperial office for the administration of the imperial railways
+ in Alsace-Lorraine, the chief of which is the Prussian minister of
+ public works.
+
+ 10. The office of the accountant-general of the empire
+ (_Rechnungshof_), which controls and supervises the expenditure of the
+ sums voted by the legislative bodies, and revises the accounts of the
+ imperial bank (_Reichsbank_).
+
+ 11. The administration of the imperial invalid fund, i.e. of the fund
+ set apart in 1871 for the benefit of soldiers invalided in the war of
+ 1870-71; and
+
+ 12. The imperial bank (_Reichsbank_), supervised by a committee of
+ four under the presidency of the imperial chancellor, who is a fifth
+ and permanent member of such committee.
+
+ The heads of the various departments of state do not form, as in
+ England, the nucleus of a cabinet. In so far as they are secretaries
+ of state, they are directly responsible to the chancellor, who
+ represents all the offices in his person, and, as has been said, is
+ the medium of communication between the emperor and the Bundesrat and
+ Reichstag.
+
+ _Colonies._--The following table gives some particulars of the
+ dependencies of the empire:--
+
+ +------------------------------------+------------+-----------+------------+
+ | | | Area | |
+ | Name. | Date of |(estimated)| Pop. |
+ | |Acquisition.| sq. m. |(estimated).|
+ +------------------------------------+------------+-----------+------------+
+ |In Africa-- | | | |
+ | Togoland | 1884 | 33,700 | 1,000,000 |
+ | Cameroon | 1884 | 190,000 | 3,500,000 |
+ | S.W. Africa | 1884 | 322,450 | 200,000 |
+ | East Africa | 1885 | 364,000 | 7,000,000 |
+ | +------------+-----------+------------+
+ | Total in Africa | | 910,150 | 11,700,000 |
+ |In the Pacific-- | | | |
+ | German New Guinea | 1884 | 70,000 | 110,000(?)|
+ | Bismarck Archipelago | 1884 | 20,000 | 188,000 |
+ | Caroline, Pelew and Mariana Islands| 1899 | 800 | 41,600 |
+ | Solomon Islands | 1886 | 4,200 | 45,000 |
+ | Marshall Islands | 1885 | 160 | 15,000 |
+ | Samoan Islands | 1899 | 985 | 33,000 |
+ | | +-----------+------------+
+ | Total in Pacific | | 96,145 | 432,600 |
+ |In Asia-- | | | |
+ | Kiao-chow | 1897 | 117 | 60,000 |
+ | | +-----------+------------+
+ | Total dependencies | 1884-1899 |1,006,412 | 12,192,600 |
+ +------------------------------------+------------+-----------+------------+
+
+ Except Kiao-chow, which is controlled by the admiralty, the
+ dependencies of the empire are under the direction of the colonial
+ office. This office, created in 1907, replaced the colonial department
+ of the foreign office which previously had had charge of colonial
+ affairs. The value of the trade of the colonies with Germany in 1906
+ was: imports into Germany, Ł1,028,000; exports from Germany,
+ Ł2,236,000. For 1907 the total revenue from the colonies was Ł849,000;
+ the expenditure of the empire on the colonies in the same year being
+ Ł4,362,000. (See the articles on the various colonies.)
+
+_Local Government._--In the details of its organization local
+self-government differs considerably in the various states of the German
+empire. The general principle on which it is based, however, is that
+which has received its most complete expression in the Prussian system:
+government by experts, checked by lay criticism and the power of the
+purse, and effective control by the central authorities. In Prussia at
+least the medieval system of local self-government had succumbed
+completely to the centralizing policy of the monarchy, and when it was
+revived it was at the will and for the purposes of the central
+authorities, as subsidiary to the bureaucratic system. This fact
+determined its general characteristics. In England the powers of the
+local authorities are defined by act of parliament, and within the
+limits of these powers they have a free hand. In Germany general powers
+are granted by law, subject to the approval of the central authorities,
+with the result that it is the government departments that determine
+what the local elected authorities may do, and that the latter regard
+themselves as commissioned to carry out, not so much the will of the
+locality by which they are elected, as that of the central government.
+This attitude is, indeed, inevitable from the double relation in which
+they stand. A _Bürgermeister_, once elected, becomes a member of the
+bureaucracy and is responsible to the central administration; even the
+headman of a village commune is, within the narrow limits of his
+functions, a government official. Moreover, under the careful
+classification of affairs into local and central, many things which in
+England are regarded as local (e.g. education, sanitary administration,
+police) are regarded as falling under the sphere of the central
+government, which either administers them directly or by means of
+territorial delegations consisting either of individuals or of groups of
+individuals. These may be purely official (e.g. the Prussian
+_Regierung_), a mixture of officials and of elected non-official members
+approved by the government (e.g. the _Bezirksausschuss_), or may consist
+wholly of authorities elected for another purpose, but made to act as
+the agents of the central departments (e.g. the _Kreisausschuss_). That
+this system works without friction is due to the German habit of
+discipline; that it is, on the whole, singularly effective is a result
+of the peculiarly enlightened and progressive views of the German
+bureaucracy.[3]
+
+The unit of the German system of local government is the commune
+(_Gemeinde_, or more strictly _Ortsgemeinde_). These are divided into
+rural communes (_Landgemeinden_) and urban communes (_Stadtgemeinden_),
+the powers and functions of which, though differing widely, are based
+upon the same general principle of representative local self-government.
+The higher organs of local government, so far as these are
+representative, are based on the principle of a group or union of
+communes (_Gemeindeverband_). Thus, in Prussia, the representative
+assembly of the Circle (_Kreistag_) is composed of delegates of the
+rural communes, as well as of the large landowners and the towns, while
+the members of the provincial diet (_Provinziallandtag_) are chosen by
+the _Kreistage_ and by such towns as form separate _Kreise_.
+
+In Prussia the classes of administrative areas are as follows: (1) the
+province, (2) the government district (_Regierungsbezirk_), (3) the
+rural circle (_Landkreis_) and urban circle (_Stadtkreis_), (4) the
+official district (_Amtsbezirk_), (5) the town commune (_Stadtgemeinde_)
+and rural commune (_Landgemeinde_). Of these areas the provinces,
+circles and communes are for the purposes both of the central
+administration and of local self-government, and the bodies by which
+they are governed are corporations. The _Regierungsbezirke_ and
+_Amtsbezirke_, on the other hand, are for the purposes of the central
+administration only and are not incorporated. The Prussian system is
+explained in greater detail in the article PRUSSIA (q.v.). Here it must
+suffice to indicate briefly the general features of local government in
+the other German states, as compared with that in Prussia. The province,
+which usually covers the area of a formerly independent state (e.g.
+Hanover) is peculiar to Prussia. The _Regierungsbezirk_, however, is
+common to the larger states under various names, _Regierungsbezirk_ in
+Bavaria, _Kreishauptmannschaft_ in Saxony, _Kreis_ in Württemberg.
+Common to all is the president (_Regierungspräsident_, _Kreishauptmann_
+in Saxony), an official who, with a committee of advisers, is
+responsible for the oversight of the administration of the circles and
+communes within his jurisdiction. Whereas in Prussia, however, the
+_Regierung_ is purely official, with no representative element, the
+_Regierungsbezirk_ in Bavaria has a representative body, the _Landrat_,
+consisting of delegates of the district assemblies, the towns, large
+landowners, clergy and--in certain cases--the universities; the
+president is assisted by a committee (_Landratsausschuss_) of six
+members elected by the _Landrat_. In Saxony the _Kreishauptmann_ is
+assisted by a committee (_Kreisausschuss_).
+
+Below the _Regierungsbezirk_ is the _Kreis_, or Circle, in Prussia,
+Baden and Hesse, which corresponds to the _Distrikt_ in Bavaria, the
+_Oberamt_ in Württemberg[4] and the _Amtshauptmannschaft_ in Saxony. The
+representative assembly of the Circle (_Kreistag_, _Distriktsrat_ in
+Bavaria, _Amtsversammlung_ in Württemberg, _Bezirksversammlung_ in
+Saxony) is elected by the communes, and is presided over by an official,
+either elected or, as in the case of the Prussian _Landrat_, nominated
+from a list submitted by the assembly. So far as their administrative
+and legislative functions are concerned the German _Kreistage_ have been
+compared to the English county councils or the Hungarian _comitatus_.
+Their decisions, however, are subject to the approval of their official
+chiefs. To assist the executive a small committee (_Kreisausschuss_,
+_Distriktsausschuss_, &c.) is elected subject to official approval. The
+official district (_Amtsbezirk_), a subdivision of the circle for
+certain administrative purposes (notably police), is peculiar to
+Prussia.
+
+ _Rural Communes._--As stated above, the lowest administrative area is
+ the commune, whether urban or rural. The laws as to the constitution
+ and powers of the rural communes vary much in the different states. In
+ general the commune is a body corporate, its assembly consisting
+ either (in small villages) of the whole body of the qualified
+ inhabitants (_Gemeindeversammlung_), or of a representative assembly
+ (_Gemeindevertretung_) elected by them (in communes where there are
+ more than forty qualified inhabitants). At its head is an elected
+ headman (_Schulze_, _Dorfvorsteher_, &c.), with a small body of
+ assistants (_Schöffen_, &c.). He is a government official responsible,
+ _inter alia_, for the policing of the commune. Where there are large
+ estates these sometimes constitute communes of themselves. For common
+ purposes several communes may combine, such combinations being termed
+ in Württemberg _Bürgermeistereien_, in the Rhine province
+ _Amtsverbände_. In general the communes are of slight importance.
+ Where the land is held by small peasant proprietors, they display a
+ certain activity; where there are large ground landlords, these
+ usually control them absolutely.
+
+ _Towns._--The constitution of the towns (_Städteverfassung_) varies
+ more greatly in the several states than that of the rural communes.
+ According to the so-called _Stein'sche Städteverfassung_ (the system
+ introduced in Prussia by Stein in 1808), which, to differentiate
+ between it and other systems, is called the _Magistratsverfassung_ (or
+ magisterial constitution), the municipal communes enjoy a greater
+ degree of self-government than do the rural. In the magisterial
+ constitution of larger towns and cities, the members of the
+ _Magistrat_, i.e. the executive council (also called _Stadtrat_,
+ _Gemeinderat_), are elected by the representative assembly of the
+ citizens (_Stadtverordnetenversammlung_) out of their own body.
+
+ In those parts of Germany which come under the influence of French
+ legislation, the constitution of the towns and that of the rural
+ communes (the so-called _Bürgermeistereiverfassung_) is identical, in
+ that the members of the communal executive body are, in the same way
+ as those of the communal assembly, elected to office immediately by
+ the whole body of municipal electors.
+
+ The government of the towns is regulated in the main by municipal
+ codes (_Städteordnungen_), largely based upon Stein's reform of 1808.
+ This, superseding the autonomy severally enjoyed by the towns and
+ cities since the middle ages (see COMMUNE), aimed at welding the
+ citizens, who had hitherto been divided into classes and gilds, into
+ one corporate whole, and giving them all an active share in the
+ administration of public affairs, while reserving to the central
+ authorities the power of effective control.
+
+ The system which obtains in all the old Prussian provinces (with the
+ exception of Rügen and Vorpommern or Hither Pomerania) and in
+ Westphalia is that of Stein, modified by subsequent laws--notably
+ those of 1853 and 1856--which gave the state a greater influence,
+ while extending the powers of the _Magistrat_. In Vorpommern and
+ Rügen, and thus in the towns of Greifswald, Stralsund and Bergen,
+ among others, the old civic constitutions remain unchanged. In the new
+ Prussian provinces, Frankfort-on-Main received a special municipal
+ constitution in 1867 and the towns of Schleswig-Holstein in 1869. The
+ province of Hanover retains its system as emended in 1858, and
+ Hesse-Nassau, with the exception of Frankfort-on-Main, received a
+ special corporate system in 1897. The municipal systems of Bavaria,
+ Württemberg and Saxony are more or less based on that of Stein, but
+ with a wider sphere of self-government. In Mecklenburg there is no
+ uniform system. In Saxe-Coburg, the towns of Coburg and Neustadt have
+ separate and peculiar municipal constitutions. In almost all the other
+ states the system is uniform. The free cities of Lübeck, Hamburg and
+ Bremen, as sovereign states, form a separate class. Their
+ constitutions are described in the articles on them.
+
+ Where the "magisterial" constitution prevails, the members of the
+ _Magistrat_, i.e. the executive council (also called variously
+ _Stadtrat_, _Gemeindevorstand_, &c.), are as a rule elected by the
+ representative assembly of the burgesses
+ (_Stadtverordnetenversammlung_; also _Gemeinderat_, _städtischer
+ Ausschuss_, _Kollegium der Bürgervorsteher_, _Stadtältesten_, &c.).
+ The _Magistrat_ consists of the chief burgomaster (_Erster
+ Bürgermeister_ or _Stadtschultheiss_, and in the large cities
+ Oberbürgermeister), a second burgomaster or assessor, and in large
+ towns of a number of paid and unpaid town councillors (_Ratsherren_,
+ _Senatoren_, _Schöffen_, _Ratsmänner_, _Magistratsräte_), together
+ with certain salaried members selected for specific purposes (e.g.
+ _Baurat_, for building). Over this executive body the
+ _Stadtverordneten_, who are elected by the whole body of citizens and
+ unpaid, exercise a general control, their assent being necessary to
+ any measures of importance, especially those involving any
+ considerable outlay. They are elected for from three to six years; the
+ members of the _Magistrat_ are chosen for six, nine or twelve years,
+ sometimes even for life. In the large towns the burgomasters must be
+ jurists, and are paid. The police are under the control of the
+ _Magistrat_, except in certain large cities, where they are under a
+ separate state department.
+
+ The second system mentioned above (_Bürgermeistereiverfassung_)
+ prevails in the Rhine province, the Bavarian Palatinate, Hesse,
+ Saxe-Weimar, Anhalt, Waldeck and the principalities of Reuss and
+ Schwarzburg. In Württemberg, Baden and Hesse-Nassau the system is a
+ compromise between the two; both the town and rural communes have a
+ mayor (_Bürgermeister_ or _Schultheiss_, as the case may be) and a
+ _Gemeinderat_ for administrative purposes, the citizens exercising
+ control through a representative _Gemeindeausschuss_ (communal
+ committee).
+
+_Justice._--By the Judicature Act--_Gerichtsverfassungsgesetz_--of 1879,
+the so-called "regular litigious" jurisdiction of the courts of law was
+rendered uniform throughout the empire, and the courts are now
+everywhere alike in character and composition; and with the exception of
+the _Reichsgericht_ (supreme court of the empire), immediately subject
+to the government of the state in which they exercise jurisdiction, and
+not to the imperial government. The courts, from the lowest to the
+highest, are _Amtsgericht_, _Landgericht_, _Oberlandesgericht_ and
+_Reichsgericht_. There are, further, _Verwaltungsgerichte_
+(administrative courts) for the adjustment of disputes between the
+various organs of local government, and other special courts, such as
+military, consular and arbitration courts (_Schiedsgericht_). In
+addition to litigious business the courts also deal with non-litigious
+matters, such as the registration of titles to land, guardianship and
+the drawing up and custody of testamentary dispositions, all which are
+almost entirely within the province of the _Amtsgerichte_. There are
+uniform codes of criminal law (_Strafgesetzbuch_), commercial law and
+civil law (_Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch_), the last of which came into force
+on the 1st of January 1900. The criminal code, based on that of Prussia
+anterior to 1870, was gradually adopted by all the other states and was
+generally in force by 1872. It has, however, been frequently emended and
+supplemented.
+
+ The lowest courts of first instance are the _Amtsgerichte_, each
+ presided over by a single judge, and with jurisdiction in petty
+ criminal and civil cases, up to 300 marks (Ł15). They are also
+ competent to deal with all disputes as to wages, and letting and
+ hiring, without regard to the value of the object in dispute. Petty
+ criminal cases are heard by the judge (_Amtsrichter_) sitting with two
+ _Schöffen_--assessors--selected by lot from the jury lists, who are
+ competent to try prisoners for offences punishable with a fine, not
+ exceeding 600 marks (Ł30) or corresponding confinement, or with
+ imprisonment not exceeding three months. The _Landgerichte_ revise the
+ decisions of the _Amtsgerichte_, and have also an original
+ jurisdiction in criminal and civil cases and in divorce proceedings.
+ The criminal chamber of the _Landgericht_ is composed of five judges,
+ and a majority of four is required for a conviction. These courts are
+ competent to try cases of felony punishable with a term of
+ imprisonment not exceeding five years. The preliminary examination is
+ conducted by a judge, who does not sit on the bench at the trial. Jury
+ courts (_Schwurgerichte_) are not permanent institutions, but are
+ periodically held. They are formed of three judges of the
+ _Landgericht_ and a jury of twelve; and a two-thirds majority is
+ necessary to convict. There are 173 _Landgerichte_ in the empire,
+ being one court for every 325,822 inhabitants. The first court of
+ second instance is the _Oberlandesgericht_, which has an original
+ jurisdiction in grave offences and is composed of seven judges. There
+ are twenty-eight such courts in the empire. Bavaria alone has an
+ _Oberstes Landesgericht_, which exercises a revising jurisdiction over
+ the _Oberlandesgerichte_ in the state. The supreme court of the German
+ empire is the _Reichsgericht_, having its seat at Leipzig. The judges,
+ numbering ninety-two, are appointed by the emperor on the advice of
+ the federal council (_Bundesrat_). This court exercises an appellate
+ jurisdiction in civil cases remitted, for the decision of questions of
+ law, by the inferior courts and also in all criminal cases referred to
+ it. It sits in four criminal and six civil senates, each consisting of
+ seven judges, one of whom is the president. The judges are styled
+ _Reichsgerichtsräte_ (counsellors of the imperial court).
+
+ In the _Amtsgericht_ a private litigant may conduct his own case; but
+ where the object of the litigation exceeds 300 marks (Ł15), and in
+ appeals from the _Amtsgericht_ to the _Landgericht_, the plaintiff
+ (and also the defendant) must be represented by an
+ advocate--_Rechtsanwalt_.
+
+ A _Rechtsanwalt_, having studied law at a university for four years
+ and having passed two state examinations, if desiring to practise must
+ be admitted as "defending counsel" by the _Amtsgericht_ or
+ _Landgericht_, or by both. These advocates are not state officials,
+ but are sworn to the due execution of their duties. In case a client
+ has suffered damage owing to the negligence of the advocate, the
+ latter can be made responsible. In every district of the
+ _Oberlandesgericht_, the _Rechtsanwälte_ are formed into an
+ _Anwaltkammer_ (chamber of advocates), and the council of each
+ chamber, sitting as a court of honour, deals with and determines
+ matters affecting the honour of the profession. An appeal lies from
+ this to a second court of honour, consisting of the president, three
+ judges of the _Reichsgericht_ and of three lawyers admitted to
+ practice before that court.
+
+ Criminal prosecutions are conducted in the name of the crown by the
+ _Staatsanwälte_ (state attorneys), who form a separate branch of the
+ judicial system, and initiate public prosecutions or reject evidence
+ as being insufficient to procure conviction. The proceedings in the
+ courts are, as a rule, public. Only in exceptional circumstances are
+ cases heard _in camera_.
+
+ Military offences come before the military court and serious offences
+ before the _Kriegsgericht_. The court-martial is, in every case,
+ composed of the commander of the district as president, and four
+ officers, assisted by a judge-advocate (_Kriegsgerichtsrat_), who
+ conducts the case and swears the judges and witnesses. In the most
+ serious class of cases, three officers and two judge-advocates are the
+ judges. The prisoner is defended by an officer, whom he may himself
+ appoint, and can be acquitted by a simple majority, but only be
+ condemned by a two-thirds majority. There are also _Kaufmanns-_ and
+ _Gewerbegerichte_ (commercial and industrial courts), composed of
+ persons belonging to the classes of employers and employees, under the
+ presidency of a judge of the court. Their aim is the effecting of a
+ reconciliation between the parties. From the decision of these courts
+ an appeal lies to the _Landgericht_ where the amount of the object in
+ dispute exceeds 100 marks (Ł5).
+
+ The following table shows the number of criminal cases tried before
+ the courts of first instance, with the number and sex of convicted
+ persons, and the number of the latter per 10,000 of the civil
+ population over twelve years of age:--
+
+ +------+-------------------------+-------------------+---------+------------+
+ | | Cases tried. | Persons convicted.| |Convictions |
+ | Year.|-------------------------+-------------------| Total. | per 10,000 |
+ | |Amtsgericht.|Landgericht.| Males. |Females. | |Inhabitants.|
+ +------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+------------+
+ | 1900 | 1,143,687 | 94,241 | 396,975 | 72,844 | 469,819 | 119.5 |
+ | 1901 | 1,205,558 | 101,471 | 419,592 | 77,718 | 497,310 | 125.6 |
+ | 1902 | 1,221,080 | 104,434 | 431,257 | 81,072 | 512,329 | 127.3 |
+ | 1903 | 1,251,662 | 105,241 | 424,813 | 80,540 | 505,353 | 123.4 |
+ | 1904 | 1,287,686 | 105,457 | 435,191 | 81,785 | 516,976 | 124.2 |
+ +------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+------------+
+
+ Of those convicted in 1904, 225,326 had been previously convicted.
+
+_Poor Law._--A law passed by the North German Confederation of the 6th
+of June 1870, and subsequently amended by an imperial law of the 12th of
+March 1894, laid down rules for the relief of the destitute in all the
+states composing the empire, with the exception of Bavaria and
+Alsace-Lorraine. According to the system adopted, the public relief of
+the poor is committed to the care of local unions (_Ortsarmenverbände_)
+and provincial unions (_Landarmenverbände_), the former corresponding,
+generally, to the commune, and the latter to a far wider area, a circle
+or a province. Any person of eighteen years, who has continuously
+resided with a local union for the space of two years, there acquires
+his domicile. But any destitute German subject must be relieved by the
+local union in which he happens to be at the time, the cost of the
+relief being defrayed by the local or provincial union in which he has
+his domicile. The wife and children have also their domicile in the
+place where the husband or father has his.[5]
+
+ Relief of the poor is one of the chief duties of the organs of local
+ self-government. The moneys for the purpose are mainly derived from
+ general taxation (poor rates per se being but rarely directly levied),
+ special funds and voluntary contributions. In some German states and
+ communes certain dues (such as the dog tax in Saxony), death duties
+ and particularly dues payable in respect of public entertainments and
+ police court fines, are assigned to the poor-relief chest. In some
+ large towns the Elberfeld system of unpaid district visitors and the
+ interworking of public and private charity is in force. The imperial
+ laws which introduced the compulsory insurance of all the humbler
+ workers within the empire, and gave them, when incapacitated by
+ sickness, accident and old age, an absolute right to pecuniary
+ assistance, have greatly reduced pauperism and crime.
+
+_Workmen's Insurance._--On June 15, 1883, the Reichstag, as the result
+of the policy announced by the emperor William I. in his speech from the
+throne in 1881, passed an act making insurance against sickness,
+accident, and incapacity compulsory on all workers in industrial
+pursuits. By further laws, in 1885 and 1892, this obligation was
+extended to certain other classes of workers, and the system was further
+modified by acts passed in 1900 and 1903. Under this system every person
+insured has a right to assistance in case of sickness, accident, or
+incapacity, while in case of death his widow and children receive an
+annuity.
+
+ 1. Insurance against sickness is provided for under these laws partly
+ by the machinery already existing, i.e. the sick benefit societies,
+ partly by new machinery devised to meet the new obligation imposed.
+ The sick-funds (_Krankenkassen_) are thus of seven kinds: (1) free
+ assistance funds (_Freie Hilfskassen_), either registered under the
+ law of 1876, as modified in 1884 (_Eingeschriebene Hilfskassen_), or
+ established under the law of the separate states (_landesrechtliche
+ Hilfskassen_); (2) _Betriebs-_ or _Fabrikkrankenkassen_, funds
+ established by individual factory-owners; (3) _Baukrankenkasse_, a
+ fund established for workmen engaged on the construction (_Bau_) of
+ particular engineering works (canal-digging, &c.), by individual
+ contractors; (4) gild sick funds (_Innungskrankenkassen_), established
+ by the gilds for the workmen and apprentices of their members; (5)
+ miners' sick fund (_Knappschaftskasse_); (6) local sick fund
+ (_Ortskrankenkasse_), established by the commune for particular crafts
+ or classes of workmen; (7) _Gemeindekrankenversicherung_, i.e.
+ insurance of members of the commune as such, in the event of their not
+ subscribing to any of the other funds. Of these, 2, 3, 6 and 7 were
+ created under the above-mentioned laws.
+
+ The number of such funds amounted in 1903 to 23,271, and included
+ 10,224,297 workmen. The _Ortskrankenkassen_, with 4,975,322 members,
+ had the greatest, and the _Baukrankenkassen_, with 16,459, the
+ smallest number of members. The _Ortskrankenkassen_, which endeavour
+ to include workmen of a like trade, have to a great extent, especially
+ in Saxony, fallen under the control of the Social Democrats. The
+ appointment of permanent doctors (_Kassenärzte_) at a fixed salary has
+ given rise to much difference between the medical profession and this
+ local sick fund; and the insistence on "freedom of choice" in doctors,
+ which has been made by the members and threatens to militate against
+ the interest of the profession, has been met on the part of the
+ medical body by the appointment of a commission to investigate cases
+ of undue influence in the selection.
+
+ According to the statistics furnished in the _Vierteljahreshefte zur
+ Statistik des deutschen Reiches_ for 1905, the receipts amounted to
+ upwards of Ł10,000,000 for 1903, and the expenditure to somewhat less
+ than this sum. Administrative changes were credited with nearly
+ Ł600,000, and the invested funds totalled Ł9,000,000. The workmen
+ contribute at the rate of two-thirds and the employers at the rate of
+ one-third; the sum payable in respect of each worker varying from
+ 1˝-3% of the earnings in the "communal sick fund" to at most l˝-4% in
+ the others.
+
+ 2. Insurance against old age and invalidity comprehends all persons
+ who have entered upon their 17th year, and who belong to one of the
+ following classes of wage-earners: artisans, apprentices, domestic
+ servants, dressmakers, charwomen, laundresses, seamstresses,
+ housekeepers, foremen, engineers, journeymen, clerks and apprentices
+ in shops (excepting assistants and apprentices in chemists' shops),
+ schoolmasters, schoolmistresses, teachers and governesses, provided
+ the earnings do not exceed Ł100 per annum. The insured are arranged in
+ five classes, according to the amount of their yearly earnings: viz.
+ Ł17, 10s.; Ł27, 10s.; Ł47, 10s.; Ł57, 10s.; and Ł100. The
+ contributions, affixed to a "pension book" in stamps, are payable each
+ week, and amount, in English money, to 1.45d., 2.34d., 2.82d., 3.30d.
+ and 4.23d. Of the contribution one half is paid by the employer and
+ the other by the employee, whose duty it is to see that the amount has
+ been properly entered in the pension book. The pensions, in case of
+ invalidity, amount (including a state subsidy of Ł2, 10s. for each)
+ respectively to Ł8, 8s.; Ł11, 5s.; Ł13, 10s.; Ł15, 15s.; and Ł18. The
+ old-age pensions (beginning at 70 years) amount to Ł5, 10s.; Ł7; Ł8,
+ 10s.; Ł10; and Ł11, 10s. The old-age and invalid insurance is carried
+ out by thirty-one large territorial offices, to which must be added
+ nine special unions. The income of the forty establishments was, in
+ 1903, Ł8,500,000 (including Ł1,700,000 imperial subsidy). The capital
+ collected was upwards of Ł50,000,000.
+
+ It may be added that employees in mercantile and trading houses, who
+ have not exceeded the age of 40 years and whose income is below Ł150,
+ are allowed voluntarily to share in the benefits of this insurance.
+
+ 3. _Accident Insurance (Unfallversicherung)._--The insurance of
+ workmen and the lesser officials against the risks of accident is
+ effected not through the state or the commune, but through
+ associations formed _ad hoc_. These associations are composed of
+ members following the same or allied occupations (e.g. foresters,
+ seamen, smiths, &c.), and hence are called "professional associations"
+ (_Berufsgenossenschaften_). They are empowered, subject to the limits
+ set by the law, to regulate their own business by means of a general
+ meeting and of elected committees. The greater number of these
+ associations cover a very wide field, generally the whole empire; in
+ such cases they are empowered to divide their spheres into sections,
+ and to establish agents in different centres to inquire into cases of
+ accident, and to see to the carrying out of the rules prescribed by
+ the association for the avoidance of accidents. Those associations, of
+ which the area of operations extends beyond any single state, are
+ subordinate to the control of the imperial insurance bureau
+ (_Reichsversicherungsamt_) at Berlin; those that are confined to a
+ single state (as generally in the case of foresters and husbandmen)
+ are under the control of the state insurance bureau
+ (_Landesversicherungsamt_).
+
+ So far as their earnings do not exceed Ł150 per annum, the following
+ classes are under the legal obligation to insure: labourers in mines,
+ quarries, dockyards, wharves, manufactories and breweries;
+ bricklayers and navvies; post-office, railway, and naval and military
+ servants and officials; carters, raftsmen and canal hands; cellarmen,
+ warehousemen; stevedores; and agricultural labourers. Each of these
+ groups forms an association, which within a certain district embraces
+ all the industries with which it is connected. The funds for covering
+ the compensation payable in respect of accidents are raised by
+ payments based, in agriculture, on the taxable capital, and in other
+ trades and industries on the earnings of the insured. Compensation in
+ respect of injury or death is not paid if the accident was brought
+ about through the culpable negligence or other delict of the insured.
+ In case of injury, involving incapacity for more than thirteen weeks
+ (for the earlier period the _Krankenkassen_ provide), the weekly sum
+ payable during complete or permanent incapacity is fixed at the ratio
+ of two-thirds of the earnings during the year preceding the accident,
+ and in case of partial disablement, at such a proportion of the
+ earnings as corresponds to the loss through disablement. In certain
+ circumstances (e.g. need for paid nursing) the sum may be increased to
+ the full rate of the previous earnings. In case of death, as a
+ consequence of injury, the following payments are made: (1) a sum of
+ at least Ł2, 10s. to defray the expenses of interment; (2) a monthly
+ allowance of one-fifth of the annual earnings as above to the widow
+ and each child up to the age of 15.
+
+ _Life Insurance._--There were forty-six companies in 1900 for the
+ insurance of life. The number of persons insured was 1,446,249 at the
+ end of that year, the insurances amounting to roughly Ł320,000,000.
+ Besides these are sixty-one companies--of which forty-six are
+ comprised in the above life insurance companies--paying subsidies in
+ case of death or of military service, endowments, &c. Some of these
+ companies are industrial. The transactions of all these companies
+ included in 1900 over 4,179,000 persons, and the amount of insurances
+ effected was Ł80,000,000.
+
+_Religion._--So far as the empire as a whole is concerned there is no
+state religion, each state being left free to maintain its own
+establishment. Thus while the emperor, as king of Prussia, is _summus
+episcopus_ of the Prussian Evangelical Church, as emperor he enjoys no
+such ecclesiastical headship. In the several states the relations of
+church and state differ fundamentally according as these states are
+Protestant or Catholic. In the latter these relations are regulated
+either by concordats between the governments and the Holy See, or by
+bulls of circumscription issued by the pope after negotiation. The
+effects of concordats and bulls alike are tempered by the exercise by
+the civil power of certain traditional reserved rights, e.g. the
+_placetum regium_, _recursus ab abusu_, _nominatio regia_, and that of
+vetoing the nomination of _personae minus gratae_. In the Protestant
+states the ecclesiastical authority remains purely territorial, and the
+sovereign remains effective head of the established church. During the
+19th century, however, a large measure of ecclesiastical self-government
+(by means of general synods, &c.) was introduced, _pari passu_ with the
+growth of constitutional government in the state; and in effect, though
+the theoretical supremacy of the sovereign survives in the church as in
+the state, he cannot exercise it save through the general synod, which
+is the state parliament for ecclesiastical purposes. Where a sovereign
+rules over a state containing a large proportion of both Catholics and
+Protestants, which is usually the case, both systems coexist. Thus in
+Prussia the relations of the Roman Catholic community to the Protestant
+state are regulated by arrangement between the Prussian government and
+Rome; while in Bavaria the king, though a Catholic, is legally _summus
+episcopus_ of the Evangelical Church.
+
+ According to the religious census of 1900 there were in the German
+ empire 35,231,104 Evangelical Protestants, 20,327,913 Roman Catholics,
+ 6472 Greek Orthodox, 203,678 Christians belonging to other
+ confessions, 586,948 Jews, 11,597 members of other sects and 5938
+ unclassified. The Christians belonging to other confessions include
+ Moravian Brethren, Mennonites, Baptists, Methodists and Quakers,
+ German Catholics, Old Catholics, &c. The table on following page shows
+ the distribution of the population according to religious beliefs as
+ furnished by the census of 1900.
+
+ Almost two-thirds of the population belong to the Evangelical Church,
+ and rather more than a third to the Church of Rome; the actual figures
+ (based on the census of 1900) being (%) Evangelical Protestants, 62.5;
+ Roman Catholics, 36.1; Dissenters and others, .043, and Jews, 1.0. The
+ Protestants have not increased proportionately in number since 1890,
+ while the Roman Catholics show a small relative increase. Three states
+ in Germany have a decidedly predominant Roman Catholic population,
+ viz. Alsace-Lorraine, Bavaria and Baden; and in four states the
+ Protestant element prevails, but with from 24 to 34% of Roman
+ Catholics; viz. Prussia, Württemberg, Hesse and Oldenburg. In Saxony
+ and the eighteen minor states the number of Roman Catholics is only
+ from 0.3 to 3.3% of the population.
+
+ +--------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+--------+
+ | States. |Evangelicals.| Catholics.| Other | Jews. |
+ | | | |Christians.| |
+ +--------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+--------+
+ | Prussia | 21,817,577 |12,113,670 | 139,127 |392,322 |
+ | Bavaria | 1,749,206 | 4,363,178 | 7,607 | 54,928 |
+ | Saxony | 3,972,063 | 198,265 | 19,103 | 12,416 |
+ | Württemberg | 1,497,299 | 650,392 | 9,426 | 11,916 |
+ | Baden | 704,058 | 1,131,639 | 5,563 | 26,132 |
+ | Hesse | 746,201 | 341,570 | 7,368 | 24,486 |
+ | Mecklenburg-Schwerin | 597,268 | 8,182 | 487 | 1,763 |
+ | Saxe-Weimar | 347,144 | 14,158 | 361 | 1,188 |
+ | Mecklenburg-Strelitz | 100,568 | 1,612 | 62 | 331 |
+ | Oldenburg | 309,510 | 86,920 | 1,334 | 1,359 |
+ | Brunswick | 436,976 | 24,175 | 1,271 | 1,824 |
+ | Saxe-Meiningen | 244,810 | 4,170 | 395 | 1,351 |
+ | Saxe-Altenburg | 189,885 | 4,723 | 206 | 99 |
+ | Saxe-Coburg-Gotha | 225,074 | 3,330 | 515 | 608 |
+ | Anhalt | 301,953 | 11,699 | 794 | 1,605 |
+ | Schwarzburg-Sondershausen| 79,593 | 1,110 | 27 | 166 |
+ | Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt | 92,298 | 676 | 37 | 48 |
+ | Waldeck | 55,285 | 1,831 | 164 | 637 |
+ | Reuss-Greiz | 66,860 | 1,043 | 444 | 48 |
+ | Reuss-Schleiz | 135,958 | 2,579 | 466 | 178 |
+ | Schaumburg-Lippe | 41,908 | 785 | 177 | 257 |
+ | Lippe | 132,708 | 5,157 | 205 | 879 |
+ | Lübeck | 93,671 | 2,190 | 213 | 670 |
+ | Bremen | 208,815 | 13,506 | 876 | 1,409 |
+ | Hamburg | 712,338 | 30,903 | 3,149 | 17,949 |
+ | Alsace-Lorraine | 372,078 | 1,310,450 | 4,301 | 32,379 |
+ +--------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+--------+
+ | Total | 35,231,104 |20,327,913 | 203,678 |586,948 |
+ +--------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+--------+
+
+ From the above table little can be inferred as to the geographical
+ distribution of the two chief confessions. On this point it must be
+ borne in mind that the population of the larger towns, on account of
+ the greater mobility of the population since the introduction of
+ railways and the abolition of restrictions upon free settlement, has
+ become more mixed--Berlin, Leipzig, Hamburg, &c., showing
+ proportionally more Roman Catholics, and Cologne, Frankfort-on-Main,
+ Munich more Protestants than formerly. Otherwise the geographical
+ limits of the confessions have been but little altered since the
+ Thirty Years' War. In the mixed territories those places which
+ formerly belonged to Roman Catholic princes are Roman Catholic still,
+ and _vice versa_. Hence a religious map of South Germany looks like an
+ historical map of the 17th century. The number of localities where the
+ two confessions exist side by side is small. Generally speaking, South
+ Germany is predominantly Roman Catholic. Some districts along the
+ Danube (province of Bavaria, Upper Palatinate, Swabia), southern
+ Württemberg and Baden, and in Alsace-Lorraine are entirely so. These
+ territories are bordered by a broad stretch of country on the north,
+ where Protestantism has maintained its hold since the time of the
+ Reformation, including Bayreuth or eastern upper Franconia, middle
+ Franconia, the northern half of Württemberg and Baden, with Hesse and
+ the Palatinate. Here the average proportion of Protestants to Roman
+ Catholics is two to one. The basin of the Main is again Roman Catholic
+ from Bamberg to Aschaffenburg (western upper Franconia and lower
+ Franconia). In Prussia the western and south-eastern provinces are
+ mostly Roman Catholic, especially the Rhine province, together with
+ the government districts of Münster and Arnsberg. The territories of
+ the former principality of Cleves and of the countship of Mark
+ (comprising very nearly the basin of the Ruhr), which went to
+ Brandenburg in 1609, must, however, be excepted. North of Münster,
+ Roman Catholicism is still prevalent in the territory of the former
+ bishopric of Osnabrück. In the east, East Prussia (Ermeland excepted)
+ is purely Protestant. Roman Catholicism was predominant a hundred
+ years ago in all the frontier provinces acquired by Prussia in the
+ days of Frederick the Great, but since then the German immigrants have
+ widely propagated the Protestant faith in these districts. A
+ prevailingly Roman Catholic population is still found in the district
+ of Oppeln and the countship of Glatz, in the province of Posen, in the
+ Polish-speaking _Kreise_ of West Prussia, and in Ermeland (East
+ Prussia). In all the remaining territory the Roman Catholic creed is
+ professed only in the Eichsfeld on the southern border of the province
+ of Hanover and around Hildesheim.
+
+
+ Protestant Church.
+
+ The adherents of Protestantism are divided by their confessions into
+ Reformed and Lutheran. To unite these the "church union" has been
+ introduced in several Protestant states, as for example in Prussia and
+ Nassau in 1817, in the Palatinate in 1818 and in Baden in 1822. Since
+ 1817 the distinction has accordingly been ignored in Prussia, and
+ Christians are there enumerated only as Evangelical or Roman Catholic.
+ The union, however, has not remained wholly unopposed--a section of
+ the more rigid Lutherans who separated themselves from the state
+ church being now known as Old Lutherans. In 1866 Prussia annexed
+ Hanover and Schleswig-Holstein, where the Protestants were Lutherans,
+ and Hesse, where the Reformed Church had the preponderance. The
+ inhabitants of these countries opposed the introduction of the union,
+ but could not prevent their being subordinated to the Prussian
+ _Oberkirchenrat_ (high church-council), the supreme court of the state
+ church. A synodal constitution for the Evangelical State Church was
+ introduced in Prussia in 1875. The _Oberkirchenrat_ retains the right
+ of supreme management. The ecclesiastical affairs of the separate
+ provinces are directed by consistorial boards. The parishes
+ (_Pfarreien_) are grouped into dioceses (_Sprengel_), presided over by
+ superintendents, who are subordinate to the superintendent-general of
+ the province. Prussia has sixteen superintendents-general. The
+ ecclesiastical administration is similarly regulated in the other
+ countries of the Protestant creed. Regarding the number of churches
+ and chapels Germany has no exact statistics.
+
+
+ Roman Catholic Church.
+
+ There are five archbishoprics within the German empire: Gnesen-Posen,
+ Cologne, Freiburg (Baden), Munich-Freising and Bamberg. The twenty
+ bishoprics are: Breslau (where the bishop has the title of
+ "prince-bishop"), Ermeland (seat at Frauenburg, East Prussia), Kulm
+ (seat at Pelplin, West Prussia), Fulda, Hildesheim, Osnabrück,
+ Paderborn, Münster, Limburg, Trier, Metz, Strassburg, Spires,
+ Würzburg, Regensburg, Passau, Eichstätt, Augsburg, Rottenburg
+ (Württemberg) and Mainz. Apostolic vicariates exist in Dresden (for
+ Saxony), and others for Anhalt and the northern missions.
+
+ The Old Catholics (q.v.), who seceded from the Roman Church in
+ consequence of the definition of the dogma of papal infallibility,
+ number roughly 50,000, with 54 clergy.
+
+
+ Jews.
+
+ It is in the towns that the Jewish element is chiefly to be found.
+ They belong principally to the mercantile class, and are to a very
+ large extent dealers in money. Their wealth has grown to an
+ extraordinary degree. They are increasingly numerous in Hamburg,
+ Berlin, Frankfort-on-Main, Breslau, Königsberg, Posen, Cologne,
+ Nuremberg and Fürth. As a rule their numbers are proportionately
+ greater in Prussia than elsewhere within the empire. But, since 1871,
+ the Jewish population of Germany shows a far smaller increase than
+ that of the Christian confessions, and even in the parts of the
+ country where the Jewish population is densest it has shown a tendency
+ to diminish. It is relatively greatest in the province of Posen, where
+ the numbers have fallen from 61,982 (39.1 per thousand) in 1871 to
+ 35,327 (18.7 per thousand) in 1900. The explanation is twofold--the
+ extraordinary increase (1) in their numbers in Berlin and the province
+ of Brandenburg, and (2) in the number of conversions to the Christian
+ faith. In this last regard it may be remarked that the impulse is less
+ from religious conviction than from a desire to associate on more
+ equal terms with their neighbours. Though still, in fact at least, if
+ not by law, excluded from many public offices, especially from
+ commands in the army, they nevertheless are very powerful in Germany,
+ the press being for the most part in their hands, and they furnish in
+ many cities fully one-half of the lawyers and the members of the
+ corporation. It should be mentioned, as a curious fact, that the
+ numbers of the Jewish persuasion in the kingdom of Saxony increased
+ from 3358 (1.3 per thousand) in 1871 to 12,416 (3 per thousand) in
+ 1900.
+
+_Education._--In point of educational culture Germany ranks high among
+all the civilized great nations of the world (see EDUCATION:
+_Germany_). Education is general and compulsory throughout the empire,
+and all the states composing it have, with minor modifications, adopted
+the Prussian system providing for the establishment of elementary
+schools--_Volksschulen_--in every town and village. The school age is
+from six to fourteen, and parents can be compelled to send their
+children to a _Volksschule_, unless, to the satisfaction of the
+authorities, they are receiving adequate instruction in some other
+recognized school or institution.
+
+ The total number of primary schools was 60,584 in 1906-1907; teachers,
+ 166,597; pupils, 9,737,262--an average of about one _Volksschule_ to
+ every 900 inhabitants. The annual expenditure was over Ł26,000,000, of
+ which sum Ł7,500,000 was provided by state subvention. There were also
+ in Germany in the same year 643 private schools, giving instruction
+ similar to that of the elementary schools, with 41,000 pupils. A good
+ criterion of the progress of education is obtained from the
+ diminishing number of illiterate army recruits, as shown by the
+ following:
+
+ +-----------+---------+------------------------+
+ | | |Unable to Read or Write.|
+ | |Number of+--------+---------------+
+ | Years. |Recruits.| Total. | Per 1000 |
+ | | | | Recruits. |
+ +-----------+---------+--------+---------------+
+ | 1875-1876 | 139,855 | 3331 | 23.7 |
+ | 1880-1881 | 151,180 | 2406 | 15.9 |
+ | 1885-1886 | 152,933 | 1657 | 10.8 |
+ | 1890-1891 | 193,318 | 1035 | 5.4 |
+ | 1895-1896 | 250,287 | 374 | 1.5 |
+ | 1898-1899 | 252,382 | 173 | 0.7 |
+ | 1900-1901 | 253,000 | 131 | 0.45 |
+ +-----------+---------+--------+---------------+
+
+ Of the above 131 illiterates in 1900-1901, 114 were in East and West
+ Prussia, Posen and Silesia.
+
+_Universities and Higher Technical Schools._--Germany owes its large
+number of universities, and its widely diffused higher education to its
+former subdivision into many separate states. Only a few of the
+universities date their existence from the 19th century; the majority of
+them are very much older. Each of the larger provinces, except Posen,
+has at least one university, the entire number being 21. All have four
+faculties except Münster, which has no faculty of medicine. As regards
+theology, Bonn, Breslau and Tübingen have both a Protestant and a
+Catholic faculty; Freiburg, Munich, Münster and Würzburg are exclusively
+Catholic; and all the rest are Protestant.
+
+ The following table gives the names of the 21 universities, the dates
+ of their respective foundations, the number of their professors and
+ other teachers for the winter half-year 1908-1909, and of the students
+ attending their lectures during the winter half-year of 1907-1908:
+
+ +------------+-----------+----------+--------------------------------------+-------+
+ | | Date of |Professors| Students. | |
+ | |Foundation.| and +---------+------+---------+-----------+ Total.|
+ | | | Teachers.|Theology.| Law. |Medicine.|Philosophy.| |
+ +------------+-----------+----------+---------+------+---------+-----------+-------+
+ | Berlin | 1809 | 493 | 326 | 2747 | 1153 | 3934 | 8220 |
+ | Bonn | 1818 | 190 | 395 | 833 | 282 | 1699 | 3209 |
+ | Breslau | 1811 | 189 | 330 | 617 | 284 | 840 | 2071 |
+ | Erlangen | 1743 | 77 | 155 | 323 | 355 | 225 | 1058 |
+ | Freiburg | 1457 | 150 | 219 | 373 | 580 | 642 | 1814 |
+ | Giessen | 1607 | 100 | 63 | 204 | 331 | 546 | 1144 |
+ | Göttingen | 1737 | 161 | 102 | 441 | 188 | 1126 | 1857 |
+ | Greifswald | 1456 | 105 | 68 | 188 | 186 | 361 | 803 |
+ | Halle | 1694 | 174 | 331 | 450 | 217 | 1239 | 2237 |
+ | Heidelberg | 1385 | 177 | 55 | 357 | 385 | 879 | 1676 |
+ | Jena | 1558 | 116 | 48 | 267 | 265 | 795 | 1375 |
+ | Kiel | 1665 | 121 | 35 | 271 | 239 | 480 | 1025 |
+ | Königsberg | 1544 | 152 | 68 | 317 | 218 | 502 | 1105 |
+ | Leipzig | 1409 | 234 | 303 | 1013 | 606 | 2419 | 4341 |
+ | Marburg | 1527 | 117 | 133 | 400 | 261 | 876 | 1670 |
+ | Munich | 1826 | 239 | 169 | 1892 | 1903 | 1979 | 5943 |
+ | Münster | 1902 | 95 | 278 | 458 | .. | 870 | 1606 |
+ | Rostock | 1418 | 65 | 48 | 67 | 211 | 322 | 648 |
+ | Strassburg | 1872 | 167 | 241 | 369 | 255 | 844 | 1709 |
+ | Tübingen | 1477 | 111 | 464 | 467 | 263 | 384 | 1578 |
+ | Würzburg | 1582 | 102 | 106 | 331 | 625 | 320 | 1382 |
+ +------------+-----------+----------+---------+------+---------+-----------+-------+
+
+ Not included in the above list is the little academy--Lyceum
+ Hosianum--at Braunsberg in Prussia, having faculties of theology
+ (Roman Catholic) and philosophy, with 13 teachers and 150 students. In
+ all the universities the number of matriculated students in 1907-1908
+ was 46,471, including 320 women, 2 of whom studied theology, 14 law,
+ 150 philosophy and 154 medicine. There were also, within the same
+ period, 5653 non-matriculated _Hörer_ (hearers), including 2486 women.
+
+ Ten schools, technical high schools, or _Polytechnica_, rank with the
+ universities, and have the power of granting certain degrees. They
+ have departments of architecture, building, civil engineering,
+ chemistry, metallurgy and, in some cases, anatomy. These schools are
+ as follows: Berlin (Charlottenburg), Munich, Darmstadt, Karlsruhe,
+ Hanover, Dresden, Stuttgart, Aix-la-Chapelle, Brunswick and Danzig; in
+ 1908 they were attended by 14,149 students (2531 foreigners), and had
+ a teaching staff of 753. Among the remaining higher technical schools
+ may be mentioned the three mining academies of Berlin, Clausthal, in
+ the Harz, and Freiberg in Saxony. For instruction in agriculture there
+ are agricultural schools attached to several universities--notably
+ Berlin, Halle, Göttingen, Königsberg, Jena, Poppelsdorf near Bonn,
+ Munich and Leipzig. Noted academies of forestry are those of Tharandt
+ (in Saxony), Eberswalde, Münden on the Weser, Hohenheim near
+ Stuttgart, Brunswick, Eisenach, Giessen and Karlsruhe. Other technical
+ schools are again the five veterinary academies of Berlin, Hanover,
+ Munich, Dresden and Stuttgart, the commercial colleges
+ (_Handelshochschulen_) of Leipzig, Aix-la-Chapelle, Hanover,
+ Frankfort-on-Main and Cologne, in addition to 424 commercial schools
+ of a lesser degree, 100 schools for textile manufactures and numerous
+ schools for special metal industries, wood-working, ceramic
+ industries, naval architecture and engineering and navigation. For
+ military science there are the academies of war (_Kriegsakademien_) in
+ Berlin and Munich, a naval academy in Kiel, and various cadet and
+ non-commissioned officers' schools.
+
+ _Libraries._--Mental culture and a general diffusion of knowledge are
+ extensively promoted by means of numerous public libraries established
+ in the capital, the university towns and other places. The most
+ celebrated public libraries are those of Berlin (1,000,000 volumes and
+ 30,000 MSS.); Munich (1,000,000 volumes, 40,000 MSS.); Heidelberg
+ (563,000 volumes, 8000 MSS.); Göttingen (503,000 volumes, 6000 MSS.);
+ Strassburg (760,000 volumes); Dresden (500,000 volumes, 6000 MSS.);
+ Hamburg (municipal library, 600,000 volumes, 5000 MSS.); Stuttgart
+ (400,000 volumes, 3500 MSS.); Leipzig (university library, 500,000
+ volumes, 5000 MSS.); Würzburg (350,000 volumes); Tübingen (340,000
+ volumes); Rostock (318,000 volumes); Breslau (university library,
+ 300,000 volumes, 7000 MSS.); Freiburg-im-Breisgau (250,000 volumes);
+ Bonn (265,000 volumes); and Königsberg (230,000 volumes, 1100 MSS.).
+ There are also famous libraries at Gotha, Wolfenbüttel and Celle.
+
+ _Learned Societies._--There are numerous societies and unions, some of
+ an exclusively scientific character and others designed for the
+ popular diffusion of useful knowledge. Foremost among German academies
+ is the Academy of Sciences (_Akademie der Wissenschaften_) in Berlin,
+ founded in 1700 on Leibnitz's great plan and opened in 1711. After
+ undergoing various vicissitudes, it was reorganized by Frederick the
+ Great on the French model and received its present constitution in
+ 1812. It has four sections: physical, mathematical, philosophical and
+ historical. The members are (1) ordinary (50 in number, each receiving
+ a yearly dotation of Ł30), and (2) extraordinary, consisting of
+ honorary and corresponding (foreign) members. It has published since
+ 1811 a selection of treatises furnished by its most eminent men, among
+ whom must be reckoned Schleiermacher, the brothers Humboldt, Grimm,
+ Savigny, Böckh, Ritter and Lachmann, and has promoted philological and
+ historical research by helping the production of such works as _Corpus
+ inscriptionum Graecarum_; _Corpus inscriptionum Latinarum_; _Monumenta
+ Germaniae historica_, the works of Aristotle, Frederick the Great's
+ works and Kant's collected works. Next in order come (1) the Academy
+ of Sciences at Munich, founded in 1759, divided into three classes,
+ philosophical, historical and physical, and especially famous for its
+ historical research; (2) the Society of Sciences (_Gesellschaft der
+ Wissenschaften_) in Göttingen, founded in 1742; (3) that of Erfurt,
+ founded 1758; (4) Görlitz (1779) and (5) the "Royal Saxon Society of
+ Sciences" (_Königliche sächsische Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften_),
+ founded in Leipzig in 1846. Ample provision is made for scientific
+ collections of all kinds in almost all places of any importance,
+ either at the public expense or through private munificence.
+
+ _Observatories._--These have in recent years been considerably
+ augmented. There are 19 leading observatories in the empire, viz. at
+ Bamberg, Berlin (2), Bonn, Bothkamp in Schleswig, Breslau, Düsseldorf,
+ Gotha, Göttingen, Hamburg, Heidelberg, Jena, Kiel, Königsberg,
+ Leipzig, Munich, Potsdam, Strassburg and Wilhelmshaven.
+
+ _Book Trade._--This branch of industry, from the important position it
+ has gradually acquired since the time of the Reformation, is to be
+ regarded as at once a cause and a result of the mental culture of
+ Germany. Leipzig, Berlin and Stuttgart are the chief centres of the
+ trade. The number of booksellers in Germany was not less than 10,000
+ in 1907, among whom were approximately 6000 publishers. The following
+ figures will show the recent progress of German literary production,
+ in so far as published works are concerned:
+
+ Year 1570 1600 1618 1650 1700 1750 1800 1840 1884 1902
+ Books 229 791 1293 725 951 1219 3335 6904 15,607 26,902
+
+ _Newspapers._--While in England a few important newspapers have an
+ immense circulation, the newspapers of Germany are much more numerous,
+ but on the whole command a more limited sale. Some large cities,
+ notably Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg, Dresden, Leipzig and Munich, have,
+ however, newspapers with a daily circulation of over 100,000 copies,
+ and in the case of some papers in Berlin a million copies is reached.
+ Most readers receive their newspapers through the post office or at
+ their clubs, which may help to explain the smaller number of copies
+ sold.
+
+ _Fine Arts._--Perhaps the chief advantage which Germany has derived
+ from the survival of separate territorial sovereignties within the
+ empire has been the decentralization of culture. Patronage of art is
+ among the cherished traditions of the German princes; and even
+ where--as for instance at Cassel--there is no longer a court, the
+ artistic impetus given by the former sovereigns has survived their
+ fall. The result has been that there is in Germany no such
+ concentration of the institutions for the encouragement and study of
+ the fine arts as there is in France or England. Berlin has no
+ practical monopoly, such as is possessed by London or Paris, of the
+ celebrated museums and galleries of the country. The picture galleries
+ of Dresden, Munich and Cassel still rival that at Berlin, though the
+ latter is rapidly becoming one of the richest in the world in works of
+ the great masters, largely at the cost of the private collections of
+ England. For the same reason the country is very well provided with
+ excellent schools of painting and music. Of the art schools the most
+ famous are those of Munich, Düsseldorf, Dresden and Berlin, but there
+ are others, e.g. at Karlsruhe, Weimar and Königsberg. These schools
+ are in close touch with the sovereigns and the governments, and the
+ more promising pupils are thus from the first assured of a career,
+ especially in connexion with the decoration of public buildings and
+ monuments. To this fact is largely due the excellence of the Germans
+ in grandiose decorative painting and sculpture, a talent for the
+ exercise of which plenty of scope has been given them by the numerous
+ public buildings and memorials raised since the war of 1870. Perhaps
+ for this very reason, however, the German art schools have had no such
+ cosmopolitan influence as that exercised by the schools of Paris, the
+ number of foreign students attending them being comparatively small.
+ It is otherwise with the schools of music, which exercise a profound
+ influence far beyond the borders of Germany. Of these the most
+ important are the conservatoires of Leipzig, Dresden, Berlin, Munich
+ and Frankfort-on-Main. The fame of Weimar as a seat of musical
+ education, though it possesses an excellent conservatoire, is based
+ mainly on the tradition of the abbé Liszt, who gathered about him here
+ a number of distinguished pupils, some of whom have continued to make
+ it their centre. Music in Germany also receives a great stimulus from
+ the existence, in almost every important town, of opera-houses partly
+ supported by the sovereigns or by the civic authorities. Good music
+ being thus brought within the reach of all, appreciation of it is very
+ wide-spread in all classes of the population. The imperial government
+ maintains institutes at Rome and Athens which have done much for the
+ advancement of archaeology. (P. A. A.)
+
+_Army._--The system of the "nation in arms" owes its existence to the
+reforms in the Prussian army that followed Jena. The "nation in arms"
+itself was the product of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars,
+but it was in Prussia that was seen the systematization and the
+economical and effective application of the immense forces of which the
+revolutionary period had demonstrated the existence (see also ARMY;
+CONSCRIPTION; FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS, &c.). It was with an army and a
+military system that fully represented the idea of the "nation in arms"
+that Prussia created the powerful Germany of later days, and the same
+system was extended by degrees over all the other states of the new
+empire. But these very successes contained in themselves the germ of new
+troubles. Increased prosperity, a still greater increase in population
+and the social and economic disturbances incidental to the conversion of
+an agricultural into a manufacturing community, led to the practical
+abandonment of the principle of _universal_ service. More men came
+before the recruiting officer than there was money to train; and in 1895
+the period of service with the colours was reduced from three to two
+years--a step since followed by other military powers, the idea being
+that with the same peace effective and financial grants half as many men
+again could be passed through the ranks as before.
+
+In 1907 the recruiting statistics were as follows:
+
+ Number of young men attaining service age (including
+ those who had voluntarily enlisted before their time) 556,772
+ Men belonging to previous years who had been put back
+ for re-examination, &., still borne on the lists 657,753
+ ---------
+ 1,214,525
+
+ _Deduct_--Physically unfit, &c. 35,802
+ Struck off 860
+
+ Voluntarily enlisted in the army and navy,
+ on or before attaining service age 57,739
+ Assigned as recruits to the navy 10,374
+ Put back, &c. 684,193
+ -------
+ 788,968
+ -------
+ Available as army recruits, fit 425,557
+ -------
+ Of these, (a) Assigned to the active army for two or three
+ years' service with the colours _ _ 212,661
+ (b) Assigned to the Ersatz-Reserve of the | |
+ army and navy |_untrained_| 89,877
+ (c) Assigned to the 1st levy of Landsturm |_ _| 123,019
+ -------
+ 425,557
+
+Thus only half the men on whom the government has an effective hold go
+to the colours in the end. Moreover few of the men "put back, &c.," who
+figure on both sides of the account for any one year, and seem to
+average 660,000, are really "put back." They are in the main those who
+have failed or fail to present themselves, and whose names are retained
+on the liability lists against the day of their return. Many of these
+have emigrated.
+
+By the constitution of the 16th of April 1871 every German is liable to
+service and no substitution is allowed. Liability begins at the age of
+seventeen, and actual service, as a rule, from the age of twenty. The
+men serve in the active army and army reserve for seven years, of which
+two years (three in the case of cavalry and horse artillery recruits)
+are spent with the colours. During his four or five years in the
+reserve, the soldier is called out for training with his corps twice,
+for a maximum of eight weeks (in practice usually for six). After
+quitting the reserve the soldier is drafted into the first ban of the
+_Landwehr_ for five years more, in which (except in the cavalry, which
+is not called out in peace time) he undergoes two trainings of from
+eight to fourteen days. Thence he passes into the second ban and remains
+in it until he has completed his thirty-ninth year--i.e. from six to
+seven years more, the whole period of army and Landwehr service being
+thus nineteen years. Finally, all soldiers are passed into the
+_Landsturm_, in the first ban of which they remain until the completion
+of their forty-fifth year. The second ban consists of untrained men
+between the ages of thirty-nine and forty-five. Young men who reach a
+certain standard of education, however, are only obliged to serve for
+one year in the active army. They are called One-Year Volunteers
+(_Einjährig-Freiwilligen_), defray their own expenses and are the chief
+source of supply of reserve and Landwehr officers. That proportion of
+the annual contingents which is dismissed untrained goes either to the
+Ersatz-Reserve or to the 1st ban of the Landsturm (the Landwehr, it will
+be observed, contains only men who have served with the colours). The
+Ersatz consists exclusively of young men, who would in war time be
+drafted to the regimental depots and thence sent, with what training
+circumstances had in the meantime allowed, to the front. Some men of the
+Ersatz receive a short preliminary training in peace time.
+
+In 1907 the average height of the private soldiers was 5 ft. 6 in., that
+of the non-commissioned officers 5 ft. 6˝ in., and that of the one-year
+volunteers 5 ft. 9˝ in. A much greater proportion of the country
+recruits were accepted as "fit" than of those coming from the towns.
+Voluntary enlistments of men who desired to become non-commissioned
+officers were most frequent in the provinces of the old Prussian
+monarchy, but in Berlin itself and in Westphalia the enlistments fell
+far short of the number of non-commissioned officers required for the
+territorial regiments of the respective districts. Above all, in
+Alsace-Lorraine one-eighth only of the required numbers were obtained.
+
+ _Peace and War Strengths._--German military policy is revised every
+ five years; thus a law of April 1905 fixes the strength and
+ establishments to be attained on March 31, 1910, the necessary
+ augmentations, &c., being carried out gradually in the intervening
+ years. The peace strength for the latter date was fixed at 505,839 men
+ (not including officers, non-commissioned officers and one-year
+ volunteers), forming--
+
+ 633 battalions infantry.
+ 510 squadrons cavalry.
+ 574 batteries field and horse artillery.
+ 40 battalions foot artillery.
+ 29 battalions pioneers.
+ 12 battalions communication troops.
+ 23 train battalions, &c.
+
+ The addition of about 25,000 officers and 85,000 non-commissioned
+ officers, one-year men, &c., brings the peace footing of the German
+ army in 1910 to a total of about 615,000 of all ranks.
+
+ As for war, the total fighting strength of the German nation
+ (including the navy) has been placed at as high a figure as
+ 11,000,000. Of these 7,000,000 have received little or no training,
+ owing to medical unfitness, residence abroad, failure to appear,
+ surplus of annual contingents, &c., as already explained, and not more
+ than 3,000,000 of these would be available in war. The real military
+ resources of Germany, untrained and trained, are thus about 7,000,000,
+ of whom 4,000,000 have at one time or another done a continuous period
+ of service with the colours.[6] This is of course for a war of defence
+ _ŕ outrance_. For an offensive war, only the active army, the reserve,
+ the Ersatz and the 1st levy of the Landwehr would be really available.
+
+ A rough calculation of the number of these who go to form or to
+ reinforce the field armies and the mobilized garrisons may be given:
+
+ Cadres of officers and non-commissioned officers 100,000
+ From 7 annual contingents of recruits (i.e.
+ active army and reserve) 1,200,000
+ From 5 contingents of Landwehr (1st ban) 600,000
+ From 7 classes of Ersatz reserve called to the
+ depots, able-bodied men 400,000
+ One-year volunteers recalled to the colours or
+ serving as reserve and Landwehr officers 100,000
+ ---------
+ 2,400,000
+
+ These again would divide into a first line army of 1,350,000 and a
+ second of 1,050,000. It is calculated that the field army would
+ consist, in the third week of a great war, of 633 battalions, 410
+ squadrons and 574 batteries, with technical, departmental and medical
+ troops (say 630,000 bayonets, 60,000 sabres and 3444 guns, or 750,000
+ men), and that these could be reinforced in three or four weeks by 350
+ fresh battalions. Behind these forces there would shortly become
+ available for secondary operations about 460 battalions of the 1st ban
+ Landwehr, and 200 squadrons and about 220 batteries of the reserve and
+ Landwehr. In addition, each would leave behind depot troops to form
+ the nucleus on which the 2nd ban Landwehr and the Landsturm would
+ eventually be built up. The total number of units of the three arms in
+ all branches may be stated approximately at 2200 battalions, 780
+ squadrons and 950 batteries.
+
+ _Command and Organization._--By the articles of the constitution the
+ whole of the land forces of the empire form a united army in war and
+ peace under the orders of the emperor. The sovereigns of the chief
+ states are entitled to nominate the lower grades of officers, and the
+ king of Bavaria has reserved to himself the special privilege of
+ superintending the general administration of the three Bavarian army
+ corps; but all appointments are made subject to the emperor's
+ approval. The emperor is empowered to erect fortresses in any part of
+ the empire. It is the almost invariable practice of the kings of
+ Prussia to command their forces in person, and the army commands, too,
+ are generally held by leaders of royal or princely rank. The natural
+ corollary to this is the assignment of special advisory duties to a
+ responsible chief of staff. The officers are recruited either from the
+ Cadet Corps at Berlin or from amongst those men, of sufficient social
+ standing, who join the ranks as "avantageurs" with a view to obtaining
+ commissions. Reserve and Landwehr officers are drawn from among
+ officers and selected non-commissioned officers retired from the
+ active army, and one-year volunteers who have passed a special
+ examination. All candidates, from whatever source they come, are
+ subject to approval or rejection by their brother officers before
+ being definitively commissioned. Promotion in the German army is
+ excessively slow, the senior subalterns having eighteen to twenty
+ years' commissioned service and the senior captains sometimes thirty.
+ The number of officers on the active list is about 25,000. The
+ under-officers number about 84,000.
+
+ The German army is organized in twenty-three army corps, stationed and
+ recruited in the various provinces and states as follows: Guard,
+ Berlin (general recruiting); I. Königsberg (East Prussia); II. Stettin
+ (Pomerania); III. Berlin (Brandenburg); IV. Magdeburg (Prussian
+ Saxony); V. Posen (Poland and part of Silesia); VI. Breslau (Silesia);
+ VII. Münster (Westphalia); VIII. Coblenz (Rhineland); IX. Altona
+ (Hanse Towns and Schleswig-Holstein); X. Hanover (Hanover); XI. Cassel
+ (Hesse-Cassel); XII. Dresden (Saxony); XIII. Stuttgart (Württemberg);
+ XIV. Karlsruhe (Baden); XV. Strassburg (Alsace); XVI. Metz (Lorraine);
+ XVII. Danzig (West Prussia); XVIII. Frankfurt-am-Main (Hesse
+ Darmstadt, Main country); XIX. Leipzig (Saxony); I. Bavarian Corps,
+ Munich; II. Bavarian Corps, Würzburg; III. Bavarian Corps, Nuremberg.
+ The formation of a XX. army corps out of the extra division of the
+ XIV. corps at Colmar in Alsace, with the addition of two regiments
+ from Westphalia and drafts of the XV. and XVI. corps, was announced in
+ 1908 as the final step of the programme for the period 1906-1910. The
+ normal composition of an army corps on war is (a) staff, (b) 2
+ infantry divisions, each of 2 brigades (4 regiments or 12
+ battalions), 2 regiments of field artillery (comprising 9 batteries of
+ field-guns and 3 of field howitzers, 72 pieces in all), 3 squadrons of
+ cavalry, 1 or 2 companies of pioneers, a bridge train and 1 or 2
+ bearer companies; (c) corps troops, 1 battalion rifles, telegraph
+ troops, bridge train, ammunition columns, train (supply) battalion,
+ field bakeries, bearer companies and field hospitals, &c., with, as a
+ rule, one or two batteries of heavy field howitzers or mortars and a
+ machine-gun group. The remainder of the cavalry and horse artillery
+ attached to the army corps in peace goes in war to form the cavalry
+ divisions. Certain corps have an increased effective; thus the Guard
+ has a whole cavalry division, and the I. corps (Königsberg) has three
+ divisions. Several corps possess an extra infantry brigade of two
+ 2-battalion regiments, but these, unless stationed on the frontiers,
+ are gradually absorbed into new divisions and army corps. In war
+ several army corps, cavalry divisions and reserve divisions are
+ grouped in two or more "armies," and in peace the army corps are
+ divided for purposes of superior control amongst several "army
+ inspections."
+
+ The cavalry is organized in regiments of cuirassiers, dragoons,
+ lancers, hussars and mounted rifles,[7] the regiments having four
+ service and one depot squadrons. Troopers are armed with lance, sword
+ and carbine (for which in 1908 the substitution of a short rifle with
+ bayonet was suggested). In peace time the highest permanent
+ organization is the brigade of two regiments or eight squadrons, but
+ in war and at manoeuvres divisions of three brigades, with horse
+ artillery attached, are formed.
+
+ The infantry consists of 216 regiments, mostly of three battalions
+ each. These are numbered, apart from the eight Guard regiments and the
+ Bavarians, serially throughout the army. Certain regiments are styled
+ grenadiers and fusiliers. In addition there are eighteen chasseur or
+ rifle battalions (_Jäger_). The battalion has always four companies,
+ each, at war strength, 250 strong. The armament of the infantry is the
+ model 1898 magazine rifle and bayonet (see RIFLE).
+
+ The field (including horse) artillery consists in peace of 94
+ regiments subdivided into two or three groups (_Abteilungen_), each of
+ two or three 6-gun batteries. The field gun in use is the quick-firing
+ gun 96/N.A. (see ORDNANCE: _Field Equipments_).
+
+ The foot artillery is intended for siege and fortress warfare, and to
+ furnish the heavy artillery of the field army. It consists of forty
+ battalions. Machine gun detachments, resembling 4-gun batteries and
+ horsed as artillery, were formed to the number of sixteen in
+ 1904-1906. These are intended to work with the cavalry divisions.
+ Afterwards it was decided to form additional small groups of two guns
+ each, less fully horsed, to assist the infantry, and a certain number
+ of these were created in 1906-1908.
+
+ The engineers are a technical body, not concerned with field warfare
+ or with the command of troops. On the other hand, the pioneers (29
+ battalions) are assigned to the field army, with duties corresponding
+ roughly to those of field companies R.E. in the British service. Other
+ branches represented in Great Britain by the Royal Engineers are known
+ in Germany by the title "communication troops," and comprise railway,
+ telegraph and airship and balloon battalions. The Train is charged
+ with the duties of supply and transport. There is one battalion to
+ each army corps.
+
+ _Remounts._--The peace establishment in horses is approximately
+ 100,000. Horses serve eight to nine years in the artillery and nine to
+ ten in the cavalry, after which, in the autumn of each year, they are
+ sold, and their places taken by remounts. The latter are bought at
+ horse-fairs and private sales, unbroken, and sent to the 25 remount
+ depots, whence, when fit for the service, they are sent to the various
+ units, as a rule in the early summer. Most of the cavalry and
+ artillery riding horses come from Prussia proper. The Polish districts
+ produce swift Hussar horses of a semi-eastern type. Hanover is second
+ only to East Prussia in output of horses. Bavaria, Saxony and
+ Württemberg do not produce enough horses for their own armies and have
+ to draw on Prussia. Thirteen thousand four hundred and forty-five
+ young horses were bought by the army authorities during 1907. The
+ average price was about Ł51 for field artillery draught horses, Ł65
+ for heavy draught horses, and Ł46 for riding horses.
+
+ The military expenditure of Germany, according to a comparative table
+ furnished to the House of Commons by the British war office in 1907,
+ varied between Ł36,000,000 and Ł44,000,000 per annum in the period
+ 1899-1902, and between Ł42,000,000 and Ł51,000,000 per annum in that
+ of 1905-1909.
+
+ _Colonial Troops._--In 1906 these, irrespective of the brigade of
+ occupation then maintained in north China and of special
+ reinforcements sent to S.W. Africa during the Herrero war, consisted
+ of the _German East Africa_ troops, 220 Europeans and 1470 natives;
+ the _Cameroon_ troops, 145 European and 1170 natives; _S.W. African
+ troops_, entirely European and normally consisting of 606 officers
+ and men active and a reserve of ex-soldier settlers; the Kiao-Chau
+ garrison (chiefly marines), numbering 2687 officers and men; and
+ various small police forces in Togo, New Guinea, Samoa, &c.
+
+ _Fortresses._--The fixed defences maintained by the German empire
+ (apart from naval ports and coast defences) belong to two distinct
+ epochs in the military policy of the state. In the first period
+ (roughly 1871-1899), which is characterized by the development of the
+ offensive spirit, the fortresses, except on the French and Russian
+ frontiers, were reduced to a minimum. In the interior only Spandau,
+ Cüstrin, Magdeburg, Ingolstadt and Ulm were maintained as defensive
+ supporting points, and similarly on the Rhine, which was formerly
+ studded with fortresses from Basel to Emmerich, the defences were
+ limited to New Breisach, Germersheim, Mainz, Coblenz, Cologne and
+ Wesel, all of a "barrier" character and not organized specially as
+ centres of activity for field armies. The French frontier, and to a
+ less extent the Russian, were organized offensively. Metz, already
+ surrounded by the French with a girdle of forts, was extended and
+ completed (see FORTIFICATION AND SIEGECRAFT) as a great entrenched
+ camp, and Strassburg, which in 1870 possessed no outlying works, was
+ similarly expanded, though the latter was regarded an instrument of
+ defence more than of attack. On the Russian frontier Königsberg,
+ Danzig, Thorn, Posen, Glogau (and on a smaller scale Boyen in East
+ Prussia and Graudenz on the Vistula) were modernized and improved.
+
+ From 1899, however, Germany began to pay more attention to her fixed
+ defences, and in the next years a long line of fortifications came
+ into existence on the French frontier, the positions and strength of
+ which were regulated with special regard to a new strategic
+ disposition of the field armies and to the number and sites of the
+ "strategic railway stations" which were constructed about the same
+ time. Thus, the creation of a new series of forts extending from
+ Thionville (Diedenhofen) to Metz and thence south-eastward was coupled
+ with the construction of twelve strategic railway stations between
+ Cologne and the Belgian frontier, and later--the so-called
+ "fundamental plan" of operations against France having apparently
+ undergone modification in consequence of changes in the foreign
+ relations of the German government--an immense strategic railway
+ station was undertaken at Saarburg, on the right rear of Thionville
+ and well away from the French frontier, and many important new works
+ both of fortification and of railway construction were begun in Upper
+ Alsace, between Colmar and Basel.
+
+ The coast defences include, besides the great naval ports of
+ Wilhelmshaven on the North Sea and Kiel on the Baltic, Danzig, Pillau,
+ Memel, Friedrichsort, Cuxhaven, Geestemünde and Swinemünde.
+ (C. F. A.)
+
+_Navy._--The German navy is of recent origin. In 1848 the German people
+urged the construction of a fleet. Money was collected, and a few
+men-of-war were fitted out; but these were subsequently sold, the German
+_Bundestag_ (federal council) not being in sympathy with the aspirations
+of the nation. Prussia however, began laying the foundations of a small
+navy. To meet the difficulty arising from the want of good harbours in
+the Baltic, a small extent of territory near Jade Bay was bought from
+Oldenburg in 1854, for the purpose of establishing a war-port there. Its
+construction was completed at enormous expense, and it was opened for
+ships by the emperor in June 1869 under the name of Wilhelmshaven. In
+1864 Prussia, in annexing Holstein, obtained possession of the excellent
+port of Kiel, which has since been strongly fortified. From the time of
+the formation of the North German Confederation the navy has belonged to
+the common federal interest. Since 1st October 1867 all its ships have
+carried the same flag, of the national colours--black, white, red, with
+the Prussian eagle and the iron cross.
+
+From 1848 to 1868 the increase of the navy was slow. In 1851 it
+consisted of 51 vessels, including 36 small gunboats of 2 guns each. In
+1868 it consisted of 45 steamers (including 2 ironclads) and 44 sailing
+vessels, but during the various wars of the period 1848-1871, only a few
+minor actions were fought at sea, and for many years after the French
+War the development of the navy did not keep pace with that of the
+empire's commercial interests beyond the seas, or compete seriously with
+the naval power of possible rivals. But towards the end of the 19th
+century Germany started on a new naval policy, by which her fleet was
+largely and rapidly increased. Details of this development will be found
+in the article NAVY (see also _History_ below, _ad fin._). It will be
+sufficient here to give the statistics relating to the beginning of the
+year 1909, reference being made only to ships effective at that date and
+to ships authorized in the construction programme of 1907:
+
+ Modern battleships 20 effective, 4 approaching completion.
+ Old battleships and coast
+ defence ships 11 effective (4 non-effective).
+ Armoured cruisers 9 effective, 1 approaching completion.
+ Protected cruisers 31 effective, 2 approaching completion.
+ Torpedo craft of modern
+ types 130 effective, 3 approaching completion.
+
+ _Administration._--In 1889 the administration was transferred from the
+ ministry of war to the imperial admiralty (_Reichsmarineamt_), at the
+ head of which is the naval secretary of state. The chief command was
+ at the same time separated from the administration and vested in a
+ naval officer, who controls the movements of the fleet, its personnel
+ and training, while the maintenance of the arsenals and dockyards,
+ victualling and clothing and all matters immediately affecting the
+ _matériel_, fall within the province of the secretary of state. The
+ navy is divided between the Baltic (Kiel) and North Sea
+ (Wilhelmshaven) stations, which are strategically linked by the Kaiser
+ Wilhelm Canal (opened in 1895), across the Schleswig-Holstein
+ peninsula. Danzig, Cuxhaven and Sonderburg have also been made naval
+ bases.
+
+ _Personnel._--The German navy is manned by the obligatory service of
+ the essentially maritime population--such as sailors, fishermen and
+ others, as well as by volunteers, who elect for naval service in
+ preference to that in the army. It is estimated that the total
+ seafaring population of Germany amounts to 80,000. The active naval
+ personnel was, in 1906, 2631 officers (including engineers, marines,
+ medical, &c.) and 51,138 under-officers and men, total 53,769. In
+ addition, there is a reserve of more than 100,000 officers and men.
+ (P. A. A.)
+
+_Finance._--The imperial budget is voted every year by the Reichstag.
+The "extraordinary funds," from which considerable sums appear annually
+in the budget, were created after the Franco-German War. Part of the
+indemnity was invested for definite purposes. The largest of these
+investments served for paying the pensions of the invalided, and
+amounted originally to Ł28,000,000. Every year, not only the interest,
+but part of the capital is expended in paying these pensions, and the
+capital sum was thus reduced in 1903 to Ł15,100,000, and in 1904 to
+Ł13,200,000. Another fund, of about Ł5,200,000, serves for the
+construction and armament of fortresses; while Ł6,000,000, known as the
+_Reichskriegsschatz_--or "war treasure fund"--is not laid out at
+interest, but is stored in coined gold and bullion in the Juliusturm at
+Spandau. In addition to these, the railways in Alsace-Lorraine, which
+France bought of the Eastern Railway Company for Ł13,000,000, in order
+to transfer them to the control of Germany, are also the property of the
+empire.
+
+During the years 1908 and 1909 considerable public discussion and
+political activity were devoted to the reorganization of German imperial
+finance, and it is only possible here to deal historically with the
+position up to that time, since further developments of an important
+nature were already foreshadowed.
+
+In 1871 the system accepted was that the imperial budget should be
+financed substantially by its reliance on the revenue from what were the
+obvious imperial resources--customs and excise duties, stamp duties,
+post and telegraph receipts, and among minor sources the receipts from
+the Alsace-Lorraine railways. But it was also provided that, for the
+purpose of deficits, the states should, in addition, if required by the
+imperial minister of finance, contribute their quotas according to
+population--_Matrikular Beiträge_. It was not expected that these would
+become chronic, but in a few years, and emphatically by the early
+'eighties, they were found to be an essential part of the financial
+system, owing to regular deficits. It had been intended that, in return
+for the _Matrikular Beiträge_, regular assignments (_Überweisungen_)
+should be returned to the states, in relief of their own taxation, which
+would practically wipe out the contribution; but instead of these the
+_Überweisungen_ were considerably less. Certain reorganizations were
+made in 1887 and 1902, but the excess of the _Matrikular Beiträge_ over
+the _Überweisungen_ continued; the figures in 1905 and 1908 being as
+follows (in millions of marks):--
+
+ +------+-------------+---------------+---------+
+ | | Matrikular- | Überweisungen.| Excess. |
+ | | Beiträge. | | |
+ +------+-------------+---------------+---------+
+ | 1905 | 213 | 189 | 24 |
+ | 1908 | 346 | 195 | 150 |
+ +------+-------------+---------------+---------+
+
+These figures show how natural it was to desire to relieve the states by
+increasing the direct imperial revenue.
+
+Meanwhile, in spite of the "matricular contributions," the calls on
+imperial finance had steadily increased, and up to 1908 were continually
+met to a large extent by loans, involving a continual growth of the
+imperial debt, which in 1907 amounted to 3643 millions of marks. The
+imperial budget, like that of most European nations, is divided into two
+portions, the ordinary and the extraordinary; and the increase under
+both heads (especially for army and navy) became a recurrent factor. A
+typical situation is represented by the main figures for 1905 and 1906
+(in millions of marks):
+
+ +------+-----------------------+----------+-----------+
+ | | Expenditure. | | |
+ | +-----------+-----------+ Revenue. | Raised by |
+ | | Ordinary. | Extra- | | Loan. |
+ | | | ordinary. | | |
+ +------+-----------+-----------+----------+-----------+
+ | 1905 | 2002 | 193 | 2053 | 341 |
+ | 1906 | 2157 | 235 | 2118 | 258 |
+ +------+-----------+-----------+----------+-----------+
+
+The same process went on in 1907 and 1908, and it was necessarily
+recognized that the method of balancing the imperial budget by a regular
+increase of debt could not be satisfactory in a country where the
+general increase of wealth and taxable capacity had meanwhile been
+conspicuous. And though the main proposals made by the government for
+new taxation, including new direct taxes, resulted in a parliamentary
+deadlock in 1909, and led to Prince von Bülow's resignation as
+chancellor, it was already evident that some important reorganization of
+the imperial financial system was inevitable.
+
+ _Currency._--The German empire adopted a gold currency by the law of
+ the 4th of December 1871. Subsequently the old local coinages
+ (_Landesmünzen_) began to be called in and replaced by new gold and
+ silver coins. The old gold coins, amounting to Ł4,550,000, had been
+ called in as early as 1873; and the old silver coins have since been
+ successively put out of circulation, so that none actually remains as
+ legal tender but the thaler (3s.). The currency reform was at first
+ facilitated by the French indemnity, a great part of which was paid in
+ gold. But later on that metal became scarcer; the London gold prices
+ ran higher and higher, while silver prices declined. The average rate
+ per ounce of standard silver in 1866-1870 was 60-5/8d., in January
+ 1875 only 57˝d., in July 1876 as low as 49d. It rose in January 1877
+ to 57˝d., but again declined, and in September 1878 it was 50-5/8d.
+ While the proportion of like weights of fine gold and fine silver in
+ 1866-1870 averaged 1 to 15.55, it was 1 to 17.79 in 1876, 1 to 17.18
+ in 1877, and, in 1902, in consequence of the heavy fall in silver, the
+ ratio became as much as 1 to 39. By the currency law of the 9th of
+ July 1873, the present coinage system was established and remains,
+ with certain minor modifications, now in force as then introduced. The
+ unit is the mark (1 shilling)--the tenth part of the imperial _gold
+ coin_ (Krone = crown), of which last 139˝ are struck from a pound of
+ pure gold. Besides these ten-mark pieces, there are Doppelkronen
+ (double crowns), about equivalent in value to an English sovereign
+ (the average rate of exchange being 20 marks 40 pfennige per Ł1
+ sterling), and, formerly, half-crowns (halbe Kronen = 5 marks) in gold
+ were also issued, but they have been withdrawn from circulation.
+ Silver coins are 5, 2 and 1 mark pieces, equivalent to 5, 2 and 1
+ shillings respectively, and 50 pfennige pieces = 6d. Nickel coins are
+ 10 and 5 pfennige pieces, and there are bronze coins of 2 and 1
+ pfennige. The system is decimal; thus 100 pfennige = 1 mark, 1000
+ pfennige = the gold krone (or crown), and 1d. English amounts roughly
+ to 8 pfennige.
+
+ _Banking._--A new banking law was promulgated for the whole empire on
+ the 14th of March 1875. Before that date there existed thirty-two
+ banks with the privilege of issuing notes, and on the 31st of December
+ 1872, Ł67,100,000 in all was in circulation, Ł25,100,000 of that sum
+ being uncovered. The banking law was designed to reduce this
+ circulation of notes; Ł19,250,000 was fixed as an aggregate maximum of
+ uncovered notes of the banks. The private banks were at the same time
+ obliged to erect branch offices in Berlin or Frankfort-on-Main for the
+ payment of their notes. In consequence of this regulation numerous
+ banks resigned the privilege of issuing notes, and at present there
+ are in Germany but the following private note banks, issuing private
+ notes, viz. the Bavarian, the Saxon, the Württemberg, the Baden and
+ the Brunswick, in addition to the Imperial Bank. The Imperial Bank
+ (Reichsbank) ranks far above the others in importance. It took the
+ place of the Prussian Bank in 1876, and is under the superintendence
+ and management of the empire, which shares in the profits. Its head
+ office is in Berlin, and it is entitled to erect branch offices in any
+ part of the empire. It has a capital of Ł9,000,000 divided into 40,000
+ shares of Ł150 each, and 60,000 shares of Ł50 each. The Imperial Bank
+ is privileged to issue bank-notes, which must be covered to the extent
+ of 1s. 3d. in coined money, bullion or bank-notes, the remainder in
+ bills at short sight. Of the net profits, a dividend of 3˝% is first
+ payable to the shareholders, 20% of the remainder is transferred to
+ the reserve until this has reached a total of Ł3,000,000, and of the
+ remainder again a quarter is apportioned to the shareholders and
+ three-quarters falls to the imperial exchequer. If the net profits do
+ not reach 3˝%, the balance must be made good from the reserve. Private
+ note banks are not empowered to do business outside the state which
+ has conceded them the privilege to issue notes, except under certain
+ limitations. One of these is that they agree that their privilege to
+ issue private notes may be withdrawn at one year's notice without
+ compensation. But this condition has not been enforced in the case of
+ such banks as have agreed to accept as binding the official rate of
+ discount of the Reichsbank after this has reached or when it exceeds
+ 4%. At other times they are not to discount at more than ź% below the
+ official rate of the Reichsbank, or in case the Reichsbank itself
+ discounts at a lower rate than the official rate, at more than 1/8%
+ below that rate.
+
+ The following table shows the financial condition of the note-issuing
+ banks, in thousands of marks, over a term of years:
+
+ _Liabilities._
+
+ +------+-------+----------+---------------+------------+------------------+
+ | Year.| Banks.| Capital. | Reserve. | Notes in | Total, including |
+ | | | | |Circulation.|other Liabilities.|
+ +------+-------+----------+---------------+------------+------------------+
+ | 1900 | 8 | 219,672 | 48,329 | 1,313,855 | 2,237,017 |
+ | 1901 | 7 | 231,672 | 54,901 | 1,345,436 | 2,360,453 |
+ | 1902 | 6 | 216,000 | 56,684 | 1,373,482 | 2,353,951 |
+ | 1903 | 6 | 216,000 | 60,131 | 1,394,336 | 2,365,256 |
+ | 1904 | 6 | 216,000 | 64,385 | 1,433,421 | 2,378,845 |
+ +------+-------+----------+---------------+------------+------------------+
+
+ _Assets._
+
+ +------+-------+----------+----------------+-----------+------------------+
+ | Year.| Banks.| Coin and | Notes of State | Bills. | Total. |
+ | | | Bullion. |and other Banks.| | |
+ +------+-------+----------+----------------+-----------+------------------+
+ | 1900 | 8 | 899,630 | 51,931 | 1,036,961 | 2,239,564 |
+ | 1901 | 7 | 990,262 | 60,770 | 990,950 | 2,360,355 |
+ | 1902 | 6 |1,052,391 | 54,389 | 901,408 | 2,354,253 |
+ | 1903 | 6 | 973,953 | 54,231 | 984,604 | 2,356,511 |
+ | 1904 | 6 | 996,601 | 66,372 | 947,358 | 2,379,234 |
+ +------+-------+----------+----------------+-----------+------------------+
+
+ The total turnover of the Imperial Bank was, in the first year of its
+ foundation, 1ž milliards pounds sterling; and, in 1899, 90 milliards.
+ Eighty-five per cent of its bank-notes have been, on the average,
+ covered by metal reserve.
+
+ The total value of silver coins is not to exceed 10 marks, and that of
+ copper and nickel 2˝ marks per head of the population. While the
+ coinage of silver, nickel and copper is reserved to the state, the
+ coinage of gold pieces can be undertaken by the state for the account
+ of private individuals on payment of a fixed charge. The coinage takes
+ place in the six mints belonging to the various states--thus Berlin
+ (Prussia), Munich (Bavaria), Dresden (in the Muldenerhütte near
+ Freiberg, Saxony), Stuttgart (Württemberg), Karlsruhe (Baden) and
+ Hamburg (for the state of Hamburg). Of the thalers, the Vereinsthaler,
+ coined until 1867 in Austria, was by ordinance of the Bundesrat
+ declared illegal tender since the 1st of January 1903. No one can be
+ compelled to accept more than 20 marks in silver or more than 1 mark
+ in nickel and copper coin; but, on the other hand, the Imperial Bank
+ accepts imperial silver coin in payment to any amount.
+
+ The total value of thalers, which, with the exception of the
+ Vereinsthaler, are legal tender, was estimated in 1894 at about
+ Ł20,000,000.
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY.--Cotta, _Deutschlands Boden_ (2 vols., 1853); H.A.
+ Daniel, _Deutschland_ (1896); J. Kutzen, _Das deutsche Land_ (Breslau,
+ 1900); Von Klöden, _Geographisches Handbuch_, vol. ii. (1875); G.
+ Neumann, _Das deutsche Reich_ (2 vols., 1874); O. Brunckow, _Die
+ Wohnplätze des deutschen Reiches--auf Grund der amtlichen Materialien
+ bearbeitet_ (new ed., Berlin, 1897); _Handbuch der Wirtschaftskunde
+ Deutschlands_ (4 vols., Leipzig, 1901-1905); _Gothaischer
+ genealogischer Hofkalender auf das Jahr 1907_ (Gotha); A. von W. Keil,
+ _Neumanns Ortslexikon des deutschen Reiches_ (3rd ed., Leipzig, 1894);
+ Meyer, _Konversations-Lexikon_ (1902 seqq.); Brockhaus,
+ _Konversations-Lexikon_ (1900 seqq.); J. Kürschner, _Staats- Hof- und
+ Kommunal-handbuch des Reiches und der Einzelstaaten_ (Leipzig, 1900);
+ P. Hage, _Grundriss der deutschen Staats- und Rechtskunde_ (Stuttgart,
+ 1906), and for Statistical matter chiefly the following: _Centralblatt
+ für das deutsche Reich. Herausgegeben im Reichsamt der Innern_
+ (Berlin, 1900); _Die deutsche Armee und die kaiserliche Marine_
+ (Berlin, 1889); _Gewerbe und Handel im deutschen Reich nach der
+ gewerblichen Betriebszählung, vom 14. Juni 1895_ (Berlin, 1899);
+ _Handbuch für das deutsche Reich auf das Jahr 1900, bearbeitet im
+ Reichsamt der Innern_ (Berlin); _Handbuch für die deutsche
+ Handelsmarine auf das Jahr 1900; Statistik des deutschen Reichs_,
+ published by the _Kaiserliches Statistisches Amt_ (including trade,
+ navigation, criminal statistics, sick insurance, &c.); _Statistisches
+ Jahrbuch für das deutsche Reich_ (Berlin, 1906) and _Vierteljahrshefte
+ für Statistik des deutschen Reichs_ (including census returns,
+ commerce and railways). See also among English publications on
+ geographical and statistical matter: _Annual Statement of the Trade of
+ the United Kingdom with Foreign Countries and British Possessions for
+ the Year 1899_ (London, 1900); and G.G. Chisholm, _Europe_, being
+ vols. i. and ii. of Stanford's _Compendium of Geography and Travel_
+ (London, 1899 and 1900). The fullest general account of the geology of
+ Germany will be found in R. Lepsius, _Geologie von Deutschland und den
+ angrenzenden Gebieten_ (Stuttgart, first volume completed in 1892).
+ Shorter descriptions will be found in E. Kayser, _Lehrbuch der
+ geologischen Formationskunde_ (Stuttgart, English edition under the
+ title _Text-book of Comparative Geology_), and H. Credner, _Elemente
+ der Geologie_ (Leipzig).
+
+
+ARCHAEOLOGY
+
+From an archaeological point of view Germany is very far from being a
+homogeneous whole. Not only has the development of the south differed
+from that of the north, and the west been subjected to other influences
+than those affecting the east, but even where the same influences have
+been at work the period of their operation has often varied widely in
+the different districts, so that in a general sketch of the whole
+country the chronology can only be a very rough approximation. In this
+article the dates assigned to the various periods in south Germany are
+those given by Sophus Müller, on the lines first laid down by Montelius.
+As regards north Germany, Müller puts the Northern Bronze age 500 years
+later than the Southern, but a recent find in Sweden bears out
+Montelius's view that southern influence made itself rapidly felt in the
+North. The conclusions of Montelius and Müller are disputed by W.
+Ridgeway, who maintains that the Iron age originated in central Europe,
+and that iron must consequently have been worked in those regions as far
+back as c. 2000 B.C.
+
+_Older Palaeolithic Period._--The earliest traces of man's handiwork are
+found either at the end of the pre-Glacial epoch, or in an inter-Glacial
+period, but it is a disputed point whether the latter is the first of a
+series of such periods. A typical German find is at Taubach, near
+Weimar, where almond-shaped stone wedges, small flint knives, and
+roughly-hacked pieces of porphyry and quartz are found, together with
+the remains of elephants. There are also bone implements, which are not
+found in the earliest periods in France.
+
+_Palaeolithic Transition Period_ (_Solutré_).--More highly developed
+forms are found when the mammoth has succeeded the elephant. Implements
+of chipped stone for the purposes of boring and scraping suggest that
+man worked hides for clothing. Ornaments of perforated teeth and shells
+are found.
+
+_Later Palaeolithic Period_ (_La Madeleine_).--The next period is marked
+by the presence of reindeer. In the Hohlefels in the Swabian Achthal
+there is still no trace of earthenware, and we find the skull of a
+reindeer skilfully turned into a drinking-vessel. Saws, needles, awls
+and bone harpoons are found. It is to be noticed that none of the German
+finds (mostly in the south and west) show any traces of the highly
+developed artistic sense so characteristic of the dwellers in France at
+this period.
+
+The gap in our knowledge of the development of Palaeolithic into
+Neolithic civilization has recently been partially filled in by
+discoveries in north Germany and France of objects showing rather more
+developed forms than those of the former period, but still unaccompanied
+by earthenware. It is a disputed point whether the introduction of
+Neolithic civilization is due to a new ethnological element.
+
+_Neolithic Age_ (in south Germany till c. 2000 B.C.).--Neolithic man
+lived under the same climatic conditions as prevail to-day, but amidst
+forests of fir. He shows advance in every direction, and by the end of
+the later Neolithic period he is master of the arts of pottery and
+spinning, is engaged in agricultural pursuits, owns domestic animals,
+and makes weapons and tools of fine shape, either ground and polished or
+beautifully chipped. Traces of Neolithic settlements have been found
+chiefly in the neighbourhood of Worms, in the Main district and in
+Thuringia. These dwellings are usually holes in the ground, and
+presumably had thatched roofs. Our knowledge of the later Neolithic age,
+as of the succeeding periods, is largely gained from the remains of
+lake-dwellings, represented in Germany chiefly by Bavarian finds. The
+lake-dwellings in Mecklenburg, Pomerania and East Prussia are of a
+different type, and it is not certain that they date back to the Stone
+age. Typical Neolithic cemeteries are found at Hinkelstein, Alzey and
+other places in the neighbourhood of Worms. In these graves the
+skeletons lie flat, while in other cemeteries, as at Flomborn in
+Rhine-Hessen, and near Heilbronn, they are in a huddled position (hence
+the name _Hockergräber_). Necklaces and bracelets of Mediterranean
+shells point to a considerable amount of commerce. Other objects found
+in the graves are small flint knives, stone axes, flint and lumps of
+pyrites for obtaining fire, and, in the women's graves, hand-mills for
+grinding corn. The earthenware vessels usually have rounded bottoms. The
+earliest ornamentation consists of finger-imprints. Later we find two
+periods of zigzag designs in south Germany with an intermediate stage of
+spirals and wavy lines, while in north and east Germany the so-called
+string-ornamentation predominates. Towards the end of the period the
+inhabitants of north Germany erect megalithic graves, and in Hanover
+especially the passage-graves.
+
+_Bronze Age_ (in south Germany from c. 2000-1000 B.C.).--In the later
+Stone age we note the occasional use of copper, and then the gradual
+appearance of bronze. The bronze civilization of the Aegean seems to
+have had direct influence along the basins of the Danube and Elbe, while
+the culture of the western parts of central Germany was transmitted
+through Italy and France. No doubt the pre-eminence of the north, and
+especially of Denmark, at this period, was due to the amber trade,
+causing southern influence to penetrate up the basin of the Elbe to
+Jutland. The earlier period is characterized by the practice of
+inhumation in barrows made of clays, stones or sand, according to the
+district. Bronze is cast, whereas at a later time it shows signs of the
+hammer. From the finds in Bavarian graves it appears that the chief
+weapons were the dagger and the long pointed _Palstab_ (palstave), while
+a short dagger fixed like an axe on a long shaft is characteristic of
+the North. The women wore two bronze pins, a bracelet on each arm, amber
+ornaments and a necklace of bronze tubes in spirals. One or two vases
+are found in each barrow, ornamented with finger-imprints, "string"
+decoration, &c. The later period is characterized by the practice of
+cremation, though the remains are still placed in barrows. Swords make
+their appearance. The women wear more and more massive ornaments. The
+vases are highly polished and of elegant form, with zigzag decoration.
+
+_Hallstatt Period_ (in Germany 8th-5th century B.C.).--The Hallstatt
+stage of culture, named after the famous cemetery in upper Austria, is
+marked by the introduction of iron (see HALLSTATT). In Germany its
+centre is Bavaria, Baden and Württemberg, with the Thuringian forest as
+the northern boundary. In Brandenburg, Lusatia, Silesia, Posen and
+Saxony, where there was no strong Bronze age tradition, Hallstatt
+influence is very noticeable. In west Prussia the urns with human faces
+deserve notice. The dead are either buried in barrows or cremated, the
+latter especially in north and east Germany. In Bavaria both practices
+are resorted to, as at Hallstatt. The pottery develops beautiful form
+and colour. Fibulae, often of the "kettle-drum" form, take the place of
+the Bronze age pin.
+
+_La Tčne Period_ (4th-1st century B.C.).--Down to this time there is
+very little evidence concerning the racial affinities of the population.
+When our records first begin the western and southern portions of
+Germany seem to have been inhabited by Celtic peoples (see below
+"Ethnography"). La Tčne, in Switzerland, has given its name to the
+period, of which the earlier part corresponds to the time of Celtic
+supremacy. It is interesting to note how the Celts absorb Roman and
+still more Greek culture, even imitating foreign coins, and pass on
+their new arts to their Teutonic neighbours; but in spite of the strong
+foreign influence the Celtic civilization can in some sort be termed
+national. Later it has a less rich development, betraying the political
+decay of the race. Its centres in Germany are the southern districts as
+far as Thuringia, and the valleys of the Main and Saar. The
+ornamentation is of the conventionalized plant type: gold is freely
+used, and enamel, of a kind different from the Roman enamel used later
+in Germany, is applied to weapons and ornaments. Chariots are used in
+war, and fortified towns are built, though we must still suppose the
+houses to have consisted of a wooden framework coated with clay. In
+these districts La Tčne influence is contemporary with the use of
+tumuli, but in the (non-Celtic) coast districts it must be sought in
+urn-cemeteries.
+
+_Roman Period_ (from the 1st century A.D.).--The period succeeding to La
+Tčne ought rather to be called Romano-Germanic, the relation of the
+Teutonic races to the Roman civilization being much the same as that of
+the Celts to classical culture in the preceding period. The Rhine lands
+were of course the centre of Roman civilization, with Roman roads,
+fortresses, stone and tiled houses and marble temples. By this time the
+Teutonic peoples had probably acquired the art of writing, though the
+origin of their national (Runic) alphabet is still disputed. The graves
+of the period contain urns of earthenware or glass, cremation being the
+prevalent practice, and the objects found include one or more coins in
+accordance with Roman usage.
+
+_Period of National Migrations_ (A.D. 300-500).--The grave-finds do not
+bear out the picture of a period of ceaseless war painted by the Roman
+historians. On the contrary, weapons are seldom found, at any rate in
+graves, the objects in which bear witness to a life of extraordinary
+luxury. Magnificent drinking-vessels, beautifully ornamented dice and
+draughtsmen, masses of gay beads, are among the commonest grave-finds. A
+peculiarity of the period is the development of decoration inspired by
+animal forms, but becoming more and more tortuous and fantastic. Only
+those eastern parts of Germany which were now occupied by Slavonic
+peoples remained uninfluenced by this rich civilization.
+
+_The Merovingian Period_ (A.D. 500-800) sees the completion of the work
+of converting the German tribes to Christianity. _Reihengräber_,
+containing objects of value, but otherwise like modern cemeteries, with
+the dead buried in rows (_Reihen_), are found over all the Teutonic part
+of Germany, but some tribes, notably the Alamanni, seem still to have
+buried their dead in barrows. Among the Franks and Burgundians we find
+monolithic sarcophagi in imitation of the Romans, and in other districts
+sarcophagi were constructed out of several blocks of stone--the
+so-called _Plattengräber_. The weapons are the _spatha_, or
+double-bladed German sword, the _sax_ (a short sword, or long knife,
+_semispathium_), the knife, shield, and the favourite German axe, though
+this latter is not found in Bavaria. The ornaments are beads, earrings,
+brooches, rings, bracelets, &c., thickly studded with precious stones.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--S. Müller, _Urgeschichte Europas_ (1905), and
+ _Tierornamentik_ (1881); O. Montelius, "Chronologie der Bronzezeit in
+ N. Deutschland und Skandinavien," in _Archiv für Anthropologie_, vols.
+ xxv. and xxvi.; M. Hoernes, _Urgeschichte des Menschen_ (1892), and
+ _Der diluviale Mensch in Europa_ (1903); M. Much, _Kupferzeit in
+ Europa_ (1893); R. Munro, _Lake-dwellings of Europe_ (1890); J. Naue,
+ _Bronzezeit in Ober-Bayern_ (1894); O. Tischler, _Ostpreussische
+ Altertümer_ (1902); R. Virchow, _Über Hünengräber und Pfahlbauten_
+ (1866); J. Mestorf, _Urnenfriedhöfe in Schleswig-Holstein_ (1886); A.
+ Lissauer, _Prähistorische Denkmäler Preussens_ (1887); I. Undset,
+ _Erstes Auftreten des Eisens in N. Europa_ (1882); L. Lindenschmit,
+ _Handbuch der deutschen Altertumskunde_, i. (1880-1889); and W.
+ Ridgeway, _Early Age of Greece_, i. (1901). Also articles by the above
+ and others, chiefly in _Zeitschrift für Ethnologie_ (Berlin); _Archiv
+ für Anthropologie_ (Brunswick); _Globus_ (Brunswick); _Westdeutsche
+ Zeitschrift_ (Trier); _Schriften der physikalisch-ökonomischen
+ Gesellschaft_ (Königsberg); _Nachrichten über deutsche Altertumskunde_
+ (Berlin); _Verhandlungen der Berliner Gesellschaft für Anthropologie_,
+ &c.; _Beiträge zur Anthropologie Bayerns_ (Munich); and _Zeitschrift
+ für deutsches Altertum_ (Berlin). (B. S. P.)
+
+
+ETHNOGRAPHY AND EARLY HISTORY
+
+ Julius Caesar in Germany.
+
+Our direct knowledge of Germany begins with the appointment of Julius
+Caesar as governor of Gaul in 59 B.C. Long before that time there is
+evidence of German communication with southern civilization, as the
+antiquities prove, and occasional travellers from the Mediterranean had
+made their way into those regions (e.g. Pytheas, towards the end of the
+4th century), but hardly any records of their journeys survive. The
+first Teutonic peoples whom the Romans are said to have encountered are
+the Cimbri and Teutoni, probably from Denmark, who invaded Illyria, Gaul
+and Italy towards the end of the 2nd century B.C. When Caesar arrived in
+Gaul the westernmost part of what is now Germany was in the possession
+of Gaulish tribes. The Rhine practically formed the boundary between
+Gauls and Germans, though one Gaulish tribe, the Menapii, is said to
+have been living beyond the Rhine at its mouth, and shortly before the
+arrival of Caesar an invading force of Germans had seized and settled
+down in what is now Alsace, 72 B.C. At this time the Gauls were being
+pressed by the Germans along the whole frontier, and several of Caesar's
+campaigns were occupied with operations, either against the Germans, or
+against Gaulish tribes set in motion by the Germans. Among these we may
+mention the campaign of his first year of office, 58 B.C., against the
+German king Ariovistus, who led the movement in Alsace, and that of 55
+B.C. in which he expelled the Usipetes and Tencteri who had crossed the
+lower Rhine. During the period of Caesar's government he succeeded in
+annexing the whole of Gaul as far as the Rhine. (For the campaigns see
+CAESAR, JULIUS.)
+
+
+ The campaign of other Roman leaders.
+
+After peace had been established in Italy by Augustus, attempts were
+made to extend the Roman frontier beyond the Rhine. The Roman prince
+Nero Claudius Drusus (q.v.) in the year 12 B.C. annexed what is now the
+kingdom of the Netherlands, and constructed a canal (Fossa Drusiana)
+between the Rhine and the lake Flevo (Lacus Flevus), which partly
+corresponded to the Zuyder Zee, though the topography of the district
+has greatly altered. He also penetrated into regions beyond and crossed
+the Weser, receiving the submission of the Bructeri, Chatti and
+Cherusci. After Drusus' death in 9 B.C., while on his return from an
+expedition which reached the Elbe, the German command was twice
+undertaken by Tiberius, who in A.D. 5 received the submission of all the
+tribes in this quarter, including the Chauci and the Langobardi. A Roman
+garrison was left in the conquered districts between the Rhine and the
+Elbe, but the reduction was not thoroughly completed. About the same
+time the Roman fleet voyaged along the northern coast apparently as far
+as the north of Jutland, and received the nominal submission of several
+tribes in that region, including the Cimbri and the Charudes. In A.D. 9
+Quintilius Varus, the successor of Tiberius, was surprised in the
+_Saltus Teutobergensis_ between the Lippe and the Weser by a force
+raised by Arminius, a chief of the Cherusci, and his army consisting of
+three legions was annihilated. Germanicus Caesar, during his tenure of
+the command of the Roman armies on the Rhine, made repeated attempts to
+recover the Roman position in northern Germany and exact vengeance for
+the death of Varus, but without real success, and after his recall the
+Rhine formed for the greater part of its course the boundary of the
+Empire. A standing army was kept up on the Rhine, divided into two
+commands, upper and lower Germany, the headquarters of the former being
+at Mainz, those of the latter at Vetera, near Xanten. A number of
+important towns grew up, among which we may mention Trier (Augusta
+Trevirorum), Cologne (Colonia Agrippinensis), Bonn (Bonna), Worms
+(Borbetomagus), Spires (Noviomagus), Strassburg (Argentoratum) and
+Augsburg (Augusta Vindelicorum).
+
+At a later date, however, probably under the Flavian emperors, the
+frontier of upper Germany was advanced somewhat beyond the Rhine, and a
+fortification, the _Pfahlgraben_, constructed to protect it. It led from
+Hönningen on the Rhine, about half-way between Bonn and Coblenz, to
+Mittenberg above Aschaffenburg on the Main, thence southwards to Lorch
+in Württemberg, whence it turned east to the junction of the Altmühl
+with the Danube at Kelheim.
+
+During the wars of Drusus, Tiberius and Germanicus the Romans had ample
+opportunity of getting to know the tribal geography of Germany,
+especially the western part, and though most of our authorities lived at
+a somewhat later period, it is probable that they derived their
+information very largely from records of that time. It will be
+convenient, therefore, to give an account of the tribal geography of
+Germany in the time of Augustus, as our knowledge of the subject is much
+more complete for his reign than for several centuries later.
+
+
+ The German tribes.
+
+Of the Gaulish tribes west of the Rhine, the most important was the
+Treveri, inhabiting the basin of the Moselle, from whom the city of
+Trier (Trčves) derives its name. The Rauraci probably occupied the south
+of Alsace. To the south of the Treveri lay the Mediomatrici, and to the
+west of them lay the important tribe of the Sequani, who had called in
+Ariovistus. The Treveri claimed to be of German origin, and the same
+claim was made by a number of tribes in Belgium, the most powerful of
+which were the Nervii. The meaning of this claim is not quite clear, as
+there is some obscurity concerning the origin of the name Germani. It
+appears to be a Gaulish term, and there is no evidence that it was ever
+used by the Germans themselves. According to Tacitus it was first
+applied to the Tungri, whereas Caesar records that four Belgic tribes,
+namely, the Condrusi, Eburones, Caeraesi and Paemani, were collectively
+known as Germani. There is no doubt that these tribes were all
+linguistically Celtic, and it is now the prevailing opinion that they
+were not of German origin ethnologically, but that the ground for their
+claim was that they had come from over the Rhine (cf. Caesar, _De Bello
+Gallico_ ii. 4). It would therefore seem that the name Germani
+originally denoted certain Celtic tribes to the east of the Rhine, and
+that it was then transferred to the Teutonic tribes which subsequently
+occupied the same territory.
+
+
+ Their movements.
+
+There is little doubt that during the last century before the Christian
+era the Celtic peoples had been pushed considerably farther west by the
+Teutonic peoples, a process which was still going on in Caesar's time,
+when we hear of the overthrow of the Menapii, the last Gaulish tribe
+beyond the Rhine. In the south the same process can be observed. The
+Boii were expelled from their territories in Bohemia by the Marcomanni
+in the time of Augustus, and the Helvetii are also recorded to have
+occupied formerly lands east of the Rhine, in what is now Baden and
+Württemberg. Caesar also mentions a Gaulish tribe named Volcae
+Tectosages as living in Germany in his time. The Volcae Arecomici in the
+south of France and the Tectosages of Galatia were in all probability
+offshoots of this people. The name of the tribe was adopted in the
+Teutonic languages as a generic term for all Celtic and Italian peoples
+(O.H.G. _Walha_, A.S. _Wealas_), from which it is probably to be
+inferred that they were the Celtic people with whom the Teutonic races
+had the closest association in early times. It has been thought that
+they inhabited the basin of the Weser, and a number of place-names in
+this district are supposed to be of Celtic origin. Farther to the south
+and west Ptolemy mentions a number of place-names which are certainly
+Celtic, e.g. Mediolanion, Aregelia, Lougidounon, Lokoriton, Segodounon.
+There is therefore great probability that a large part of western
+Germany east of the Rhine had formerly been occupied by Celtic peoples.
+In the east a Gaulish people named Cotini are mentioned, apparently in
+the upper basin of the Oder, and Tacitus speaks of a tribe in the same
+neighbourhood, the Osi, who he says spoke the Pannonian language. It is
+probable, therefore, that in other directions also the Germans had
+considerably advanced their frontier southwards at a comparatively
+recent period.
+
+
+ Tribes in the west and north.
+
+Coming now to the Germans proper, the basin of the Rhine between
+Strassburg and Mainz was inhabited by the Tribocci, Nemetes and
+Vangiones, farther down by the Mattiaci about Wiesbaden, and the Ubii in
+the neighbourhood of Cologne; beyond them were the Sugambri, and in the
+Rhine delta the Batavi and other smaller tribes. All these tribes
+remained in subjection to the Romans. Beyond them were the Tencteri,
+probably about the basin of the Lahn, and the Usipetes about the basin
+of the Ruhr. The basin of the Lippe and the upper basin of the Ems were
+inhabited by the Bructeri, and in the same neighbourhood were the
+Ampsivarii, who derive their name from the latter river. East of them
+lay the Chasuarii, presumably in the basin of the Hase. The upper basin
+of the Weser was inhabited by the Chatti, whose capital was Mattium,
+supposed to be Maden on the Eder. To the north-west of them were
+situated the Marsi, apparently between the Diemel and the Lippe, while
+the central part of the basin of the Weser was inhabited by the
+Cherusci, who seem to have extended considerably eastward. The lower
+part of the river-basin was inhabited by the Angrivarii. The coastlands
+north of the mouth of the Rhine were occupied by the Canninefates,
+beyond them by the Frisii as far as the mouth of the Ems, thence onward
+to the mouth of the Elbe by the Chauci. As to the affinities of all
+these various tribes we have little definite information, but it is
+worth noting that the Batavi in Holland are said to have been a branch
+of the Chatti, from whom they had separated owing to a _seditio
+domestica_. The basin of the Elbe was inhabited by Suebic tribes, the
+chief of which were the Marcomanni, who seem to have been settled on the
+Saale during the latter part of the 1st century B.C., but moved into
+Bohemia before the beginning of the Christian era, where they at once
+became a formidable power under their king Maroboduus. The Quadi were
+settled somewhat farther east about the source of the Elbe. The
+Hermunduri in the basin of the Saale were in alliance with the Romans
+and occupied northern Bavaria with their consent. The Semnones
+apparently dwelt below the junction of the Saale and Elbe. The
+Langobardi (see LOMBARDS) possessed the land between the territory of
+the Semnones and the mouth of the river. Their name is supposed to be
+preserved in Bardengau, south of Hamburg. From later evidence it is
+likely that another division of the Suebi inhabited western Holstein.
+The province of Schleswig (perhaps only the west coast) and the islands
+adjacent were inhabited by the Saxons, while the east coast, at least in
+later times, was occupied by the Angli. The coast of Mecklenburg was
+probably inhabited by the Varini (the later Warni). The eastern part of
+Germany was much less known to the Romans, information being
+particularly deficient as to the populations of the coast districts,
+though it seems probable that the Rugii inhabited the eastern part of
+Pomerania, where a trace of them is preserved in the name Rügenwalde.
+The lower part of the basin of the Oder was probably occupied by the
+Burgundiones, and the upper part by a number of tribes collectively
+known as Lugii, who seem to correspond to the Vandals of later times,
+though the early Roman writers apparently used the word Vandilii in a
+wider sense, embracing all the tribes of eastern Germany. Among the
+Lugii we may probably include the Silingae, who afterwards appear among
+the Vandals in Spain, and whose name is preserved in Slavonic form in
+that of the province Silesia. The Goths (Gotones) apparently inhabited
+the basin of the Vistula about the middle of its course, but the lower
+part of the basin was inhabited by non-Teutonic peoples, among whom we
+may mention the Galindi, probably Prussians, and the Aestii, either
+Prussian or Esthonian, in the coastlands at the mouth of the river, who
+are known especially in connexion with the amber trade. To the east of
+the Vistula were the Slavonic tribes (Veneti), and amongst them, perhaps
+rather to the north, a Finnish population (Fenni), which disappeared in
+later times.
+
+
+ Domestic wars of the Germans.
+
+In the time of Augustus by far the most powerful ruler in Germany was
+Maroboduus, king of the Marcomanni. His supremacy extended over all the
+Suebic tribes (except perhaps the Hermunduri), and most of the peoples
+of eastern Germany, including apparently the Lugii and Goths. But in the
+year A.D. 17 he became involved in an unsuccessful campaign against
+Arminius, prince of the Cherusci, in which the Semnones and Langobardi
+revolted against him, and two years later he was deprived of his throne
+by a certain Catualda. The latter, however, was soon expelled by
+Vibilius, king of the Hermunduri, and his power was transferred to
+Vannius, who belonged to the Quadi. About the same time Arminius met his
+death while trying to make himself king of the Cherusci. In the year 28
+the Frisians revolted from the Romans, and though they submitted again
+in the year 47, Claudius immediately afterwards recalled the Roman
+troops to the left bank of the Rhine. In the year 50 Vannius, king of
+the Suebi, was driven from the throne by Vibilius, king of the
+Hermunduri, and his nephews Vangio and Sido obtained his kingdom. In the
+year 58 the Chatti suffered a serious disaster in a campaign against the
+Hermunduri. They seem, however, to have recovered very soon, and at the
+end of the 1st century had apparently extended their power at the
+expense of the Cherusci. During the latter part of the 1st century the
+Chauci seem to have been enlarging their territories: as early as the
+year 47 we find them raiding the Roman lands on the lower Rhine, and in
+58 they expelled the Ampsivarii, who after several vain attempts to
+acquire new possessions were annihilated by the neighbouring tribes.
+During the last years of the 1st century the Angrivarii are found moving
+westwards, probably under pressure from the Chauci, and the power of the
+Bructeri was almost destroyed by their attack. In 69 the Roman territory
+on the lower Rhine was disturbed by the serious revolt of Claudius
+Civilis, a prince of the Batavi who had served in the Roman army. He was
+joined by the Bructeri and other neighbouring tribes, but being defeated
+by Petilius Cerealis (afterwards consular legate in Britain) at Vetera
+and in other engagements gave up the struggle and arranged a
+capitulation in A.D. 70. By the end of the 1st century the Chauci and
+Chatti seem to have become by far the most powerful tribes in western
+Germany, though the former are seldom mentioned after this time.
+
+After the time of Tacitus our information regarding German affairs
+becomes extremely meagre. The next important conflict with the Romans
+was the Marcomannic War (166-180), in which all the Suebic tribes
+together with the Vandals (apparently the ancient Lugii) and the
+Sarmatian Iazyges seem to have taken part. Peace was made by the emperor
+Commodus in A.D. 180 on payment of large sums of money.
+
+
+ The Alamanni, the Goths and the Franks.
+
+About the beginning of the 3rd century we find a forward movement in
+south-west Germany among a group of tribes known collectively as
+Alamanni (q.v.) who came in conflict with the emperor Caracalla in the
+year 213. About the same time the Goths also made their first appearance
+in the south-east and soon became the most formidable antagonists of
+Rome. In the year 251 they defeated and slew the emperor Decius, and in
+the reign of Gallienus their fleets setting out from the north of the
+Black Sea worked great havoc on the coast of the Aegean (see GOTHS). It
+is not to be supposed, however, that they had quitted their own lands on
+the Vistula by this time. In this connexion we hear also of the Heruli
+(q.v.), who some twenty years later, about 289, make their appearance in
+the western seas. In 286 we hear for the first time of maritime raids by
+the Saxons in the same quarter. About the middle of the 3rd century the
+name Franks (q.v.) makes its first appearance, apparently a new
+collective term for the tribes of north-west Germany from the Chatti to
+the mouth of the Rhine.
+
+
+ Arrival of the Huns.
+
+In the 4th century the chief powers in western Germany were the Franks
+and the Alamanni, both of whom were in constant conflict with the
+Romans. The former were pressed in their rear by the Saxons, who at some
+time before the middle of the 4th century appear to have invaded and
+conquered a considerable part of north-west Germany. About the same time
+great national movements seem to have been taking place farther east.
+The Burgundians made their appearance in the west shortly before the end
+of the 3rd century, settling in the basin of the Main, and it is
+probable that some portions of the north Suebic peoples, perhaps the
+ancient Semnones, had already moved westward. By the middle of the 4th
+century the Goths had become the dominant power in eastern Germany, and
+their King Hermanaric held a supremacy which seems to have stretched
+from the Black Sea to Holstein. At his death, however, the supremacy of
+eastern Germany passed to the Huns, an invading people from the east,
+whose arrival seems to have produced a complete displacement of
+population in this region. With regard to the course of events in
+eastern Germany we have no knowledge, but during the 5th century several
+of the peoples previously settled there appear to have made their way
+into the lands south of the Carpathians and Riesengebirge, amongst whom
+(besides the Goths) may be especially mentioned the Rugii and the
+Gepides, the latter perhaps originally a branch of the Goths. According
+to tradition the Vandals had been driven into Pannonia by the Goths in
+the time of Constantine. We do not know how far northward the Hunnish
+power reached in the time of Attila, but the invasion of this nation was
+soon followed by a great westward movement of the Slavs.
+
+
+ The Burgundians and other tribes.
+
+In the west the Alamanni and the descendants of the Marcomanni, now
+called Baiouarii (Bavarians), had broken through the frontiers of the
+Roman provinces of Vindelicia and Noricum at the beginning of the 5th
+century, while the Vandals together with some of the Suebi and the
+non-Teutonic Alani from the east crossed the Rhine and invaded Gaul in
+406. About 435-440 the Burgundians were overthrown by Attila, and their
+king Gunthacarius (Gundahar) killed. The remains of the nation shortly
+afterwards settled in Gaul. About the same time the Franks overran and
+occupied the modern Belgium, and in the course of the next half-century
+their dominions were enormously extended towards the south (see FRANKS).
+After the death of Attila in 453 the power of the Huns soon collapsed,
+but the political divisions of Germany in the ensuing period are far
+from clear.
+
+
+ The Franks and others in the 6th century.
+
+In the 6th century the predominant peoples are the Franks, Frisians,
+Saxons, Alamanni, Bavarians, Langobardi, Heruli and Warni. By the
+beginning of this century the Saxons seem to have penetrated almost, if
+not quite, to the Rhine in the Netherlands. Farther south, however, the
+old land of the Chatti was included in the kingdom of Clovis. Northern
+Bavaria was occupied by the Franks, whose king Clovis subdued the
+Alamanni in 495. To the east of the Franks between the Harz, the Elbe
+and the Saale lay the kingdom of the Thuringi, the origin of whom is not
+clear. The Heruli also had a powerful kingdom, probably in the basin of
+the Elbe, and to the east of them were the Langobardi. The Warni
+apparently now dwelt in the regions about the mouth of the Elbe, while
+the whole coast from the mouth of the Weser to the west Scheldt was in
+the hands of the Frisians. By this time all the country east of the
+lower Elbe seems to have been Slavonic. In the north, perhaps in the
+province of Schleswig, we hear now for the first time of the Danes.
+Theodoric, king of the Ostrogoths, endeavoured to form a confederacy
+with the Thuringi, Heruli and Warni against Clovis in order to protect
+the Visigoths in the early years of the 6th century, but very shortly
+afterwards the king of the Heruli was slain by the Langobardi and their
+existence as an independent power came to an end. In 531 the Thuringian
+kingdom was destroyed by the Frankish king Theodoric, son of Clovis,
+with whom the Saxons were in alliance.
+
+
+ The Saxons and the Franks.
+
+During the 6th and 7th centuries the Saxons were intermittently under
+Frankish supremacy, but their conquest was not complete until the time
+of Charlemagne. Shortly after the middle of the 6th century the Franks
+were threatened with a new invasion by the Avars. In 567-568 the
+Langobardi, who by this time had moved into the Danube basin, invaded
+Italy and were followed by those of the Saxons who had settled in
+Thuringia. Their lands were given by the Frankish king Sigeberht to the
+north Suebi and other tribes who had come either from the Elbe basin or
+possibly from the Netherlands. About the same time Sigeberht was
+defeated by the Avars, and though the latter soon withdrew from the
+Frankish frontiers, their course was followed by a movement of the
+Slavs, who occupied the basin of the Elster and penetrated to that of
+the Main.
+
+By the end of the 6th century the whole basin of the Elbe except the
+Saxon territory near the mouth had probably become Slavonic. To the east
+of the Saale were the Sorbs (Sorabi), and beyond them the Daleminci and
+Siusli. To the east of the Saxons were the Polabs (Polabi) in the basin
+of the Elbe, and beyond them the Hevelli about the Havel. Farther north
+in Mecklenburg were the Warnabi, and in eastern Holstein the Obotriti
+and the Wagri. To the east of the Warnabi were the Liutici as far as the
+Oder, and beyond that river the Pomerani. To the south of the Oder were
+the Milcieni and the Lusici, and farther east the Poloni with their
+centre in the basin of the Vistula. The lower part of the Vistula basin,
+however, was in possession of Prussian tribes, the Prussi and Lithuani.
+
+The Warni now disappear from history, and from this time the Teutonic
+peoples of the north as far as the Danish boundary about the Eider are
+called Saxons. The conquest of the Frisians by the Franks was begun by
+Pippin (Pepin) of Heristal in 689 and practically completed by Charles
+Martel, though they were not entirely brought into subjection until the
+time of Charlemagne. The great overthrow of the Saxons took place about
+772-773 and by the end of the century Charlemagne had extended his
+conquests to the border of the Danes. By this time the whole of the
+Teutonic part of Germany had been finally brought under his government.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--Caesar, _De bello Gallico_, especially i. 31 ff., iv.
+ 1-19, vi. 21 ff.; Velleius Paterculus, especially ii. 105 ff.; Strabo,
+ especially pp. 193 ff., 290 ff.; Pliny, _Natural History_, iv. §§ 99
+ ff., 106; Tacitus, Annales, i. 38 ff., ii. 5 ff., 44 ff., 62 f., 88;
+ _Germania_, passim; _Histories_, iv.; Ptolemy ii. 9, §§ 2 ff., 11,
+ iii. 5, §§ 19 ff.; Dio Cassius, passim; Julius Capitolinus; Claudius
+ Mamertinus; Ammianus Marcellinus, passim; Zosimus; Jordanes, _De
+ origine Getarum_; Procopius, _De bello Gothico_; K. Zeuss, _Die
+ Deutschen und die Nachbarstämme_; O. Bremer in Paul's _Grundriss d.
+ germ. Philologie_ (2nd ed.), vol. iii. pp. 735 ff. (F. G. M. B.)
+
+
+MEDIEVAL AND MODERN HISTORY
+
+ Divisions of Germany.
+
+When Clovis, or Chlodovech, became king of a tribe of the Salian Franks
+in 481, five years after the fall of the Western empire, the region
+afterwards called Germany was divided into five main districts, and its
+history for the succeeding three centuries is mainly the history of the
+tribes inhabiting these districts. In the north-east, dwelling between
+the Rhine and the Elbe, were the Saxons (q.v.), to the east and south of
+whom stretched the extensive kingdom of Thuringia (q.v.). In the
+south-west the Alamanni occupied the territory afterwards called Swabia
+(q.v.), and extended along the middle Rhine until they met the Ripuarian
+Franks, then living in the northern part of the district which at a
+later period was called after them, Franconia (q.v.); and in the
+south-east were the Bavarians, although it was some time before their
+country came to be known as Bavaria (q.v.).
+
+
+ The wars of Clovis.
+
+Clovis was descended from Chlogio, or Clodion, who had ruled over a
+branch of the Salian Franks from 427 to 447, and whose successors,
+following his example, had secured an influential position for their
+tribe. Having obtained possession of that part of Gaul which lay between
+the Seine and the Loire, Clovis turned his attention to his eastern
+neighbours, and was soon engaged in a struggle with the Alamanni which
+probably arose out of a quarrel between them and the Ripuarian Franks
+for the possession of the middle Rhine. When in 496, or soon afterwards,
+the Alamanni were defeated, they were confined to what was afterwards
+known as Swabia, and the northern part of their territory was
+incorporated with the kingdom of the Franks. Clovis had united the
+Salian Franks under his rule, and he persuaded, or compelled, the
+Ripuarian Franks also to accept him as their king; but on his death in
+511 his kingdom was divided, and the Ripuarian, or Rhenish, Franks as
+they are sometimes called, together with some of the Alamanni, came
+under the rule of his eldest son Theuderich or Theodoric I. This was the
+first of the many partitions which effectually divided the kingdom of
+the Franks into an eastern and a western portion, that is to say, into
+divisions which eventually became Germany and France respectively, and
+the district ruled by Theuderich was almost identical with that which
+afterwards bore the name of Austrasia. In 531 Theuderich killed
+Hermannfried, king of the Thuringians, a former ally, with whom he had
+quarrelled, conquered his kingdom, and added its southern portion to his
+own possessions. His son and successor, Theudebert I., exercised a
+certain supremacy over the Alamanni and the Bavarians, and even claimed
+authority over various Saxon tribes between whom and the Franks there
+had been some fighting. After his death in 548, however, the Frankish
+power in Germany sank to very minute proportions, a result due partly to
+the spirit of tribal independence which lingered among the German races,
+but principally to the paralysing effect of the unceasing rivalry
+between Austrasia and Neustria. From 548 the Alamanni were ruled by a
+succession of dukes who soon made themselves independent; and in 555 a
+duke of the Bavarians, who exercised his authority without regard for
+the Frankish supremacy, is first mentioned. In Thuringia, which now only
+consisted of the central part of the former kingdom, King Dagobert I.
+set up in 634 a duke named Radulf who soon asserted his independence of
+Dagobert and of his successor, Sigebert III. The Saxons for their part
+did not own even a nominal allegiance to the Frankish kings, whose
+authority on the right bank of the Rhine was confined to the district
+actually occupied by men of their own name, which at a later date became
+the duchy of Franconia. During these years the eastern border of Germany
+was constantly ravaged by various Slavonic tribes. King Dagobert sent
+troops to repel these marauders from time to time, but the main burden
+of defence fell upon the Saxons, Bavarians and Thuringians. The virtual
+independence of these German tribes lasted until the union of Austrasia
+and Neustria in 687, an achievement mainly due to the efforts of Pippin
+of Heristal, who soon became the actual, though not the nominal, ruler
+of the Frankish realm. Pippin and his son Charles Martel, who was mayor
+of the palace from 717 to 741, renewed the struggle with the Germans and
+were soon successful in re-establishing the central power which the
+Merovingian kings had allowed to slip from their grasp. The ducal office
+was abolished in Thuringia, a series of wars reduced the Alamanni to
+strict dependence, and both countries were governed by Frankish
+officials. Bavaria was brought into subjection about the same time; the
+Bavarian law, committed to writing between 739 and 748, strongly
+emphasizes the supremacy of the Frankish king, whose authority it
+recognizes as including the right to appoint and even to depose the duke
+of Bavaria. The Saxons, on the other hand, succeeded in retaining their
+independence as a race, although their country was ravaged in various
+campaigns and some tribes were compelled from time to time to pay
+tribute. The rule of Pippin the Short, both before and after his
+coronation as king, was troubled by constant risings on the part of his
+East Frankish or German subjects, but aided by his brother Carloman, who
+for a time administered this part of the Frankish kingdom, Pippin was
+generally able to deal with the rebels.
+
+
+ The Saxons remain independent.
+
+After all, however, even these powerful Frankish conquerors had but
+imperfect success in Germany. When they were present with their
+formidable armies, they could command obedience; when engaged, as they
+often were, in distant parts of the vast Frankish territory, they could
+not trust to the fulfilment of the fair promises they had exacted. One
+of the chief causes of their ill-success was the continued independence
+of the Saxons. Ever since they had acquired the northern half of
+Thuringia, this warlike race had been extending its power. They were
+still heathens, cherishing bitter hatred towards the Franks, whom they
+regarded as the enemies both of their liberties and of their religion;
+and their hatred found expression, not only in expeditions into Frankish
+territory, but in help willingly rendered to every German confederation
+which wished to throw off the Frankish yoke. Hardly any rebellion
+against the dukes of the Franks, or against King Pippin, took place in
+Germany without the Saxons coming forward to aid the rebels. This was
+perfectly understood by the Frankish rulers, who tried again and again
+to put an end to the evil by subduing the Saxons. They could not,
+however, attain their object. An occasional victory was gained, and some
+border tribes were from time to time compelled to pay tribute; but the
+mass of the Saxons remained unconquered. This was partly due to the fact
+that the Saxons had not, like the other German confederations, a duke
+who, when beaten, could be held responsible for the engagements forced
+upon him as the representative of his subjects. A Saxon chief who made
+peace with the Franks could undertake nothing for the whole people. As a
+conquering race, they were firmly compact; conquered, they were in the
+hands of the victor a rope of sand.
+
+
+ Christianity in Germany.
+
+It was during the time of Pippin of Heristal and his son and grandson
+that the conversion of the Germans to Christianity was mainly effected.
+Some traces of Roman Christianity still lingered in the Rhine valley and
+in southern Germany, but the bulk of the people were heathen, in spite
+of the efforts of Frank and Irish missionaries and the command of King
+Dagobert I. that all his subjects should be baptized. Rupert, bishop of
+Worms, had already made some progress in the work of converting the
+Bavarians and Alamanni, as had Willibrord among the Thuringians when St
+Boniface appeared in Germany in 717. Appointed bishop of the Germans by
+Pope Gregory II., and supported by Charles Martel, he preached with much
+success in Bavaria and Thuringia, notwithstanding some hostility from
+the clergy who disliked the influence of Rome. He founded or restored
+bishoprics in Bavaria, Thuringia and elsewhere, and in 742 presided over
+the first German council. When he was martyred in 755 Christianity was
+professed by all the German races except the Saxons, and the church,
+organized and wealthy, had been to a large extent brought under the
+control of the papacy. The old pagan faith was not yet entirely
+destroyed, and traces of its influence may still be detected in popular
+beliefs and customs. But still Christianity was dominant, and soon
+became an important factor in the process of civilization, while the
+close alliance of the German church with the papacy was followed by
+results of the utmost consequence for Germany.
+
+
+ The work of Charlemagne.
+
+The reign of Charlemagne is a period of great importance in the history
+of Germany. Under his rule the first signs of national unity and a
+serious advance in the progress of order and civilization may be seen.
+The long struggle, which ended in 804 with the submission of the Saxons
+to the emperor, together with the extension of a real Frankish authority
+over the Bavarians, brought the German races for the first time under a
+single ruler; while war and government, law and religion, alike tended
+to weld them into one people. The armies of Charlemagne contained
+warriors from all parts of Germany; and although tribal law was
+respected and codified, legislation common to the whole empire was also
+introduced. The general establishment of the Frankish system of
+government and the presence of Frankish officials helped to break down
+the barriers of race, and the influence of Christianity was in the same
+direction. With the conversion of the Saxons the whole German race
+became nominally Christian; and their ruler was lavish in granting lands
+and privileges to prelates, and untiring in founding bishoprics,
+monasteries and schools. Measures were also taken for the security and
+good government of the country. Campaigns against the Slavonic tribes,
+if sometimes failing in their immediate object, taught those peoples to
+respect the power of the Frankish monarch; and the establishment of a
+series of marches along the eastern frontier gave a sense of safety to
+the neighbouring districts. The tribal dukes had all disappeared, and
+their duchies were split up into districts ruled by counts (q.v.), whose
+tendencies to independence the emperor tried to check by the visits of
+the _missi dominici_ (q.v.). Some of the results of the government of
+Charlemagne were, however, less beneficial. His coronation as Roman
+emperor in 800, although it did not produce at the time so powerful an
+impression in Germany as in France, was fraught with consequences not
+always favourable for the former country. The tendencies of the tribe to
+independence were crushed as their ancient popular assemblies were
+discouraged; and the liberty of the freemen was curtailed owing to the
+exigencies of military service, while the power of the church was rarely
+directed to the highest ends.
+
+
+ Louis I. and his sons.
+
+The reign of the emperor Louis I. was marked by a number of abortive
+schemes for the partition of his dominions among his sons, which
+provoked a state of strife that was largely responsible for the
+increasing weakness of the Empire. The mild nature of his rule,
+however, made Louis popular with his German subjects, to whose support
+mainly he owed his restoration to power on two occasions. When in 825
+his son Louis, afterwards called "the German," was entrusted with the
+government of Bavaria and from this centre gradually extended his
+authority over the Carolingian dominions east of the Rhine, a step was
+taken in the process by which East Francia, or Germany, was becoming a
+unit distinguishable from other portions of the Empire; a process which
+was carried further by the treaty of Verdun in August 843, when, after a
+struggle between Louis the German and his brothers for their father's
+inheritance, an arrangement was made by which Louis obtained the bulk of
+the lands east of the Rhine together with the districts around Mainz,
+Worms and Spires on the left bank. Although not yet a single people, the
+German tribes had now for the first time a ruler whose authority was
+confined to their own lands, and from this time the beginnings of
+national life may be traced. For fifty years the main efforts of Louis
+were directed to defending his kingdom from the inroads of his Slavonic
+neighbours, and his detachment from the rest of the Empire necessitated
+by these constant engagements towards the east, gradually gave both him
+and his subjects a distinctive character, which was displayed and
+emphasized when, in ratifying an alliance with his half-brother, the
+West-Frankish king, Charles the Bald, the oath was sworn in different
+tongues. The East and West Franks were unable to understand each other's
+speech, so Charles took the oath in a Romance, and Louis in a German
+dialect.
+
+
+ Louis the German and his successors.
+
+Important as is the treaty of Verdun in German history, that of Mersen,
+by which Louis and Charles the Bald settled in 870 their dispute over
+the kingdom of Lothair, second son of the emperor Lothair I., is still
+more important. The additional territory which Louis then obtained gave
+to his dominions almost the proportions which Germany maintained
+throughout the middle ages. They were bounded on the east by the Elbe
+and the Bohemian mountains, and on the west beyond the Rhine they
+included the districts known afterwards as Alsace and Lorraine. His
+jurisdiction embraced the territories occupied by the five ancient
+German tribes, and included the five archbishoprics of Mainz, Treves
+(Trier), Cologne, Salzburg and Bremen. When Louis died in 876 his
+kingdom was divided among his three sons, but as the two elder of these
+soon died without heirs, Germany was again united in 882 under his
+remaining son Charles, called "the Fat," who soon became ruler of almost
+the whole of the extensive domains of Charlemagne. There was, however,
+no cohesion in the restored empire, the disintegration of which,
+moreover, was hastened by the ravages of the Northmen, who plundered the
+cities in the valley of the Rhine. Charles attempted to buy off these
+redoubtable invaders, a policy which aroused the anger of his German
+subjects, whose resentment was accentuated by the king's indifference to
+their condition, and found expression in 887 when Arnulf, an
+illegitimate son of Carloman, the eldest son of Louis the German, led an
+army of Bavarians against him. Arnulf himself was recognized as German
+or East-Frankish king, although his actual authority was confined to
+Bavaria and its neighbourhood. He was successful in freeing his kingdom
+for a time from the ravages of the Northmen, but was not equally
+fortunate in his contests with the Moravians. After his death in 899 his
+kingdom came under the nominal rule of his young son Louis "the Child,"
+and in the absence of firm rule and a central authority became the prey
+of the Magyars and other hordes of invaders.
+
+
+ Feudalism in Germany.
+
+During these wars feudalism made rapid advance in Germany. The different
+peoples compelled to attend to their own defence appointed dukes for
+special military services (see DUKE); and these dukes, chosen often from
+members of the old ducal families, succeeded without much difficulty in
+securing a more permanent position for themselves and their descendants.
+In Saxony, for example, we hear of Duke Otto the Illustrious, who also
+ruled over Thuringia; and during the early years of the 10th century
+dukes appear in Franconia, Bavaria, Swabia and Lorraine. These dukes
+acquired large tracts of land of which they gave grants on conditions of
+military service to persons on whom they could rely; while many
+independent landowners sought their protection on terms of vassalage.
+The same process took place in the case of great numbers of freemen of a
+lower class, who put themselves at the service of their more powerful
+neighbours in return for protection. In this manner the feudal tenure of
+land began to prevail in almost all parts of Germany, and the elaborate
+social system which became known as feudalism was gradually built up.
+The dukes became virtually independent, and when Louis the Child died in
+911, the royal authority existed in name only.
+
+
+ Conrad I.
+
+While Louis the Child lived the German dukes were virtually kings in
+their duchies, and their natural tendency was to make themselves
+absolute rulers. But, threatened as they were by the Magyars, with the
+Slavs and Northmen always ready to take advantage of their weakness,
+they could not afford to do without a central government. Accordingly
+the nobles assembled at Forchheim, and by the advice of Otto the
+Illustrious, duke of Saxony, Conrad of Franconia was chosen German king.
+The dukes of Bavaria, Swabia and Lorraine were displeased at this
+election, probably because Conrad was likely to prove considerably more
+powerful than they wished. Rather than acknowledge him, the duke of
+Lotharingia, or Lorraine, transferred his allegiance to Charles the
+Simple of France; and it was in vain that Conrad protested and
+despatched armies into Lorraine. With the help of the French king the
+duke maintained his ground, and for the time his country was lost to
+Germany. Bavaria and Swabia yielded, but, mainly through the fault of
+the king himself, their submission was of brief duration. The rise of
+the dukes had been watched with extreme jealousy by the leading
+prelates. They saw that the independence they had hitherto enjoyed would
+be much more imperilled by powerful local governors than by a sovereign
+who necessarily regarded it as part of his duty to protect the church.
+Hence they had done everything they could to prevent the dukes from
+extending their authority, and as the government was carried on during
+the reign of Louis the Child mainly by Hatto I., archbishop of Mainz,
+they had been able to throw considerable obstacles in the way of their
+rivals. They had now induced Conrad to quarrel with both Swabia and
+Bavaria, and also with Henry, duke of Saxony, son of the duke to whom he
+chiefly owed his crown. In these contests the German king met with
+indifferent success, but the struggle with Saxony was not very serious,
+and when dying in December 919 Conrad recommended the Franconian nobles
+to offer the crown to Henry, the only man who could cope with the
+anarchy by which he had himself been baffled.
+
+
+ Henry the Fowler.
+
+The nobles of Franconia acted upon the advice of their king, and the
+Saxons were very willing that their duke should rise to still higher
+honours. Henry I., called "the Fowler," who was chosen German king in
+May 919, was one of the best of German kings, and was a born statesman
+and warrior. His ambition was of the noblest order, for he sank his
+personal interests in the cause of his country, and he knew exactly when
+to attain his objects by force, and when by concession and moderation.
+Almost immediately he overcame the opposition of the dukes of Swabia and
+Bavaria; some time later, taking advantage of the troubled state of
+France, he accepted the homage of the duke of Lorraine, which for many
+centuries afterwards remained a part of the German kingdom.
+
+
+ Henry and the Magyars.
+
+Having established internal order, Henry was able to turn to matters of
+more pressing moment. In the first year of his reign the Magyars, who
+had continued to scourge Germany during the reign of Conrad, broke into
+Saxony and plundered the land almost without hindrance. In 924 they
+returned, and this time by good fortune one of their greatest princes
+fell into the hands of the Germans. Henry restored him to his countrymen
+on condition that they made a truce for nine years; and he promised to
+pay yearly tribute during this period. The barbarians accepted his
+terms, and faithfully kept their word in regard to Henry's own lands,
+although Bavaria, Swabia and Franconia they occasionally invaded as
+before. The king made admirable use of the opportunity he had secured,
+confining his efforts, however, to Saxony and Thuringia, the only parts
+of Germany over which he had any control.
+
+
+ Henry's work in Saxony.
+
+In the southern and western German lands towns and fortified places had
+long existed; but in the north, where Roman influence had only been
+feeble, and where even the Franks had not exercised much authority until
+the time of Charlemagne, the people still lived as in ancient times,
+either on solitary farms or in exposed villages. Henry saw that, while
+this state of things lasted, the population could never be safe, and
+began the construction of fortresses and walled towns. Of every group of
+nine men one was compelled to devote himself to this work, while the
+remaining eight cultivated his fields and allowed a third of their
+produce to be stored against times of trouble. The necessities of
+military discipline were also a subject of attention. Hitherto the
+Germans had fought mainly on foot, and, as the Magyars came on
+horseback, the nation was placed at an immense disadvantage. A powerful
+force of cavalry was now raised, while at the same time the infantry
+were drilled in new and more effective modes of fighting. Although these
+preparations were carried on directly under Henry's supervision, only in
+Saxony and Thuringia the neighbouring dukes were stimulated to follow
+his example. When he was ready he used his new troops, before turning
+them against their chief enemy, the Magyars, to punish refractory
+Slavonic tribes; and he brought under temporary subjection nearly all
+the Slavs between the Elbe and the Oder. He proceeded also against the
+Bohemians, whose duke was compelled to do homage.
+
+
+ The Magyars return.
+
+The truce with the Magyars was not renewed, whereupon in 933 a body of
+invaders crossed, as in former years, the frontier of Thuringia. Henry
+prudently waited until dearth of provisions forced the enemy to divide
+into two bands. He then swept down upon the weaker force, annihilated
+it, and rapidly advanced against the remaining portion of the army. The
+second battle was more severe than the first, but not less decisive. The
+Magyars, unable to cope with a disciplined army, were cut down in great
+numbers, and those who survived rode in terror from the field. The exact
+scenes of these conflicts are not known, although the date of the second
+encounter was the 15th of March 933; but few more important battles have
+ever been fought. The power of the Magyars was not indeed destroyed, but
+it was crippled, and the way was prepared for the effective liberation
+of Germany from an intolerable plague. While the Magyars had been
+troubling Germany on the east and south, the Danes had been irritating
+her on the north. Charlemagne had established a march between the Eider
+and the Schlei; but in course of time the Danes had not only seized this
+territory, but had driven the German population beyond the Elbe. The
+Saxons had been slowly reconquering the lost ground, and now Henry,
+advancing with his victorious army into Jutland, forced Gorm, the Danish
+king, to become his vassal and regained the land between the Eider and
+the Schlei. But Henry's work concerned the duchy of Saxony rather than
+the kingdom of Germany. He concentrated all his energies on the
+government and defence of northern and eastern Germany, leaving the
+southern and western districts to profit by his example, while his
+policy of refraining from interference in the affairs of the other
+duchies tended to diminish the ill-feeling which existed between the
+various German tribes and to bring peace to the country as a whole. It
+is in these directions that the reign of Henry the Fowler marks a stage
+in the history of Germany.
+
+
+ The growth of towns.
+
+When this great king died in July 936 every land inhabited by a German
+population formed part of the German kingdom, and none of the duchies
+were at war either with him or among themselves. Along the northern and
+eastern frontier were tributary races, and the country was for the time
+rid of an enemy which, for nearly a generation, had kept it in perpetual
+fear. Great as were these results, perhaps Henry did even greater
+service in beginning the growth of towns throughout north Germany. Not
+content with merely making them places of defence, he decreed that they
+should be centres for the administration of justice, and that in them
+should be held all public festivities and ceremonies; he also instituted
+markets, and encouraged traders to take advantage of the opportunities
+provided for them. A strong check was thus imposed upon the tendency of
+freemen to become the vassals of great lords. This movement had become
+so powerful by the troubles of the epoch that, had no other current of
+influence set in, the entire class of freemen must soon have
+disappeared. As they now knew that they could find protection without
+looking to a superior, they had less temptation to give up their
+independence, and many of them settled in the towns where they could be
+safe and free. Besides maintaining a manly spirit in the population, the
+towns rapidly added to their importance by the stimulus they gave to all
+kinds of industry and trade.
+
+
+ Otto the Great.
+
+Before his death Henry obtained the promise of the nobles at a national
+assembly, or diet, at Erfurt to recognize his son Otto as his successor,
+and the promise was kept, Otto being chosen German king in July 936.
+Otto I. the Great began his reign under the most favourable
+circumstances. He was twenty-four years of age, and at the coronation
+festival, which was held at Aix-la-Chapelle, the dukes performed for the
+first time the nominally menial offices known as the arch-offices of the
+German kingdom. But these peaceful relations soon came to an end.
+Reversing his father's policy, Otto resolved that the dukes should act
+in the strictest sense as his vassals, or lose their dignities. At the
+time of his coronation Germany was virtually a federal state; he wished
+to transform it into a firm and compact monarchy. This policy speedily
+led to a formidable rebellion, headed by Thankmar, the king's
+half-brother, a fierce warrior, who fancied that he had a prior claim to
+the crown, and who secured a number of followers in Saxony. He was
+joined by Eberhard, duke of Franconia, and it was only by the aid of the
+duke of Swabia, whom the duke of Franconia had offended, that the rising
+was put down. This happened in 938, and in 939 a second rebellion, led
+by Otto's brother Henry, was supported by the duke of Franconia and by
+Giselbert, duke of Lorraine. Otto again triumphed, and derived immense
+advantages from his success. The duchy of Franconia he kept in his own
+hands, and in 944 he granted Lorraine to Conrad the Red, an energetic
+and honourable count, whom he still further attached to himself by
+giving him his daughter for his wife. Bavaria, on the death of its duke
+in 947, was placed under his brother Henry, who, having been pardoned,
+had become a loyal subject. The duchy of Swabia was also brought into
+Otto's family by the marriage of his son Ludolf with Duke Hermann's
+daughter, and by these means Otto made himself master of the kingdom.
+For the time, feudalism in truth meant that lands and offices were held
+on condition of service; the king was the genuine ruler, not only of
+freemen, but of the highest vassals in the nation.
+
+
+ Otto's wars with France and with the Slavs.
+
+In the midst of these internal troubles Otto was attacked by the French
+king, Louis IV., who sought to regain Lorraine. However, the German king
+was soon able to turn his arms against his new enemy; he marched into
+France and made peace with Louis in 942. Otto's subsequent interventions
+in the affairs of France were mainly directed towards making peace
+between Louis and his powerful and rebellious vassal, Hugh the Great,
+duke of the Franks, both of whom were married to sisters of the German
+king. Much more important than Otto's doings in France were his wars
+with his northern and eastern neighbours. The duke of Bohemia, after a
+long struggle, was brought to submission in 950. Among the Slavs between
+the Elbe and the Oder the king was represented by Margrave Gero, a
+warrior well fitted for the rough work he had to do, loyal to his
+sovereign, but capable of any treachery towards his enemies, who
+conquered much of the country north of Bohemia between the Oder and the
+upper and middle Elbe. Margrave Billung, who looked after the Abotrites
+on the lower Elbe, was less fortunate, mainly because of the
+neighbourhood of the Danes, who, after the death of King Henry, often
+attacked the hated Germans, but some progress was made in bringing this
+district under German influence. Otto, having profound faith in the
+power of the church to reconcile conquered peoples to his rule, provided
+for the benefit of the Danes the bishoprics of Schleswig, Ripen and
+Aarhus; and among those which he established for the Slavs were the
+important bishoprics of Brandenburg and Havelberg. In his later years he
+set up the archbishopric of Magdeburg, which took in the sees of
+Meissen, Zeitz and Merseburg.
+
+
+ Otto in Italy.
+
+Having secured peace in Germany and begun the real conquest of the
+border races, Otto was by far the greatest sovereign in Europe; and, had
+he refused to go beyond the limits within which he had hitherto acted,
+it is probable that he would have established a united monarchy. But a
+decision to which he soon came deprived posterity of the results which
+might have sprung from the policy of his earlier years. About 951
+Adelaide, widow of Lothair, son of Hugh, king of Italy, having refused
+to marry the son of Berengar, margrave of Ivrea, was cast into prison
+and cruelly treated. She appealed to Otto; other reasons called him in
+the same direction, and in 951 he crossed the Alps and descended into
+Lombardy. He displaced Berengar, and was so fascinated by Queen Adelaide
+that within a few weeks he was married to her at Pavia. But Otto's son,
+Ludolf, who had received a promise of the German crown, saw his rights
+threatened by this marriage. He went to an old enemy of his father,
+Frederick, archbishop of Mainz, and the two plotted together against the
+king, who, hearing of their proceedings, returned to Germany in 952,
+leaving Duke Conrad of Lorraine as his representative in Italy. Otto,
+who did not suspect how deep were the designs of the conspirators, paid
+a visit to Mainz, where he was seized and was compelled to take certain
+solemn pledges which, after his escape, he repudiated.
+
+
+ The civil war.
+
+ Defeat of Magyars.
+
+War broke out in 953, and the struggle was the most serious in which he
+had been engaged. In Lorraine, of which duchy Otto made his brother
+Bruno, archbishop of Cologne, administrator, his cause was triumphant;
+but everywhere else dark clouds gathered over his head. Conrad the Red
+hurried from Italy and joined the rebels; in Swabia, in Bavaria, in
+Franconia and even in Saxony, the native land of the king, many sided
+with them. It is extremely remarkable that this movement acquired so
+quickly such force and volume. The explanation, according to some
+historians, is that the people looked forward with alarm to the union of
+Germany with Italy. There were still traditions of the hardships
+inflicted upon the common folk by the expeditions of Charlemagne, and it
+is supposed that they anticipated similar evils in the event of his
+empire being restored. Whether or not this be the true explanation, the
+power of Otto was shaken to its foundations. At last he was saved by the
+presence of an immense external peril. The Magyars were as usual
+stimulated to action by the disunion of their enemies; and Conrad and
+Ludolf made the blunder of inviting their help, a proceeding which
+disgusted the Germans, many of whom fell away from their side and
+rallied to the head and protector of the nation. In a very short time
+Conrad and the archbishop of Mainz submitted, and although Ludolf held
+out a little longer he soon asked for pardon. Lorraine was given to
+Bruno; but Conrad, its former duke, although thus punished, was not
+disgraced, for Otto needed his services in the war with the Magyars. The
+great battle against these foes was fought on the 10th of August 955 on
+the Lechfeld near Augsburg. After a fierce and obstinate fight, in which
+Conrad and many other nobles fell, the Germans were victorious; the
+Magyars were even more thoroughly scourged than in the battles in which
+Otto's father had given them their first real check. The deliverance of
+Germany was complete, and from this time, notwithstanding certain wild
+raids towards the east, the Magyars began to settle in the land they
+still occupy, and to adapt themselves to the conditions of civilized
+life.
+
+
+ Otto crowned emperor.
+
+Entreated by Pope John XII., who needed a helper against Berengar, Otto
+went a second time to Italy, in 961; and on this occasion he received
+from the pope at Rome the imperial crown. In 966 he was again in Italy,
+where he remained six years, exercising to the full his imperial rights
+in regard to the papacy, but occupied mainly in an attempt to make
+himself master of the southern, as well as of the northern half of the
+peninsula.
+
+
+ Connexion of Germany with the Empire.
+
+By far the most important act of Otto's eventful life was his assumption
+of the Lombard and the imperial crowns. His successors steadily followed
+his example, and the sovereign crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle claimed as his
+right coronation by the pope in Rome. Thus grew up the Holy Roman
+Empire, that strange state which, directly descending through the empire
+of Charlemagne from the empire of the Caesars, contained so many
+elements foreign to ancient life. We are here concerned with it only as
+it affected Germany. Germany itself never until our own day became an
+empire. It is true that at last the Holy Roman Empire was in reality
+confined to Germany; but in theory it was something quite different.
+Like France, Germany was a kingdom, but it differed from France in this,
+that its king was also king in Italy and Roman emperor. As the latter
+title made him nominally the secular lord of the world, it might have
+been expected to excite the pride of his German subjects; and doubtless,
+after a time, they did learn to think highly of themselves as the
+imperial race. But the evidence tends to show that at first at least
+they had no wish for this honour, and would have preferred their ruler
+to devote himself entirely to his own people.
+
+There are signs that during Otto's reign they began to have a distinct
+consciousness of national life, their use of the word "deutsch" to
+indicate the whole people being one of these symptoms. Their common
+sufferings, struggles and triumphs, however, account far more readily
+for this feeling than the supposition that they were elated by their
+king undertaking obligations which took him for years together away from
+his native land. So solemn were the associations of the imperial title
+that, after acquiring it, Otto probably looked for more intimate
+obedience from his subjects. They were willing enough to admit the
+abstract claims of the Empire; but in the world of feudalism there was a
+multitude of established customs and rights which rudely conflicted with
+these claims, and in action, remote and abstract considerations gave way
+before concrete and present realities. Instead of strengthening the
+allegiance of the Germans towards their sovereign, the imperial title
+was the means of steadily undermining it. To the connexion of their
+kingdom with the Empire they owe the fact that for centuries they were
+the most divided of European nations, and that they have only recently
+begun to create a genuinely united state. France was made up of a number
+of loosely connected lands, each with its own lord, when Germany, under
+Otto, was to a large extent moved by a single will, well organized and
+strong. But the attention of the French kings was concentrated on their
+immediate interests, and in course of time they brought their unruly
+vassals to order. The German kings, as emperors, had duties which often
+took them away for long periods from Germany. This alone would have
+shaken their authority, for, during their absence, the great vassals
+seized rights which were afterwards difficult to recover. But the
+emperors were not merely absent, they had to engage in struggles in
+which they exhausted the energies necessary to enforce obedience at
+home; and, in order to obtain help, they were sometimes glad to concede
+advantages to which, under other conditions, they would have tenaciously
+clung. Moreover, the greatest of all their struggles was with the
+papacy; so that a power outside their kingdom, but exercising immense
+influence within it, was in the end always prepared to weaken them by
+exciting dissension among their people. Thus the imperial crown was the
+most fatal gift that could have been offered to the German kings;
+apparently giving them all things, it deprived them of nearly
+everything. And in doing this it inflicted on many generations
+incalculable and needless suffering.
+
+
+ Otto and the duchies.
+
+By the policy of his later years Otto did much to prepare the way for
+the process of disintegration which he rendered inevitable by restoring
+the Empire. With the kingdom divided into five great duchies, the
+sovereign could always have maintained at least so much unity as Henry
+the Fowler secured; and, as the experience of Otto himself showed, there
+would have been chances of much greater centralization. Yet he threw
+away this advantage. Lorraine was divided into two duchies, Upper
+Lorraine and Lower Lorraine. In each duchy of the kingdom he appointed a
+count palatine, whose duty was to maintain the royal rights; and after
+Margrave Gero died in 965 his territory was divided into three marches,
+and placed under margraves, each with the same powers as Gero. Otto gave
+up the practice of retaining the duchies either in his own hands or in
+those of relatives. Even Saxony, his native duchy and the chief source
+of his strength, was given to Margrave Billung, whose family kept it for
+many years. To combat the power of the princes, Otto, especially after
+he became emperor and looked upon himself as the protector of the
+church, immensely increased the importance of the prelates. They
+received great gifts of land, were endowed with jurisdiction in criminal
+as well as civil cases, and obtained several other valuable sovereign
+rights. The emperor's idea was that, as church lands and offices could
+not be hereditary, their holders would necessarily favour the crown. But
+he forgot that the church had a head outside Germany, and that the
+passion for the rights of an order may be not less intense than that for
+the rights of a family. While the Empire was at peace with the popes the
+prelates did strongly uphold it, and their influence was unquestionably,
+on the whole, higher than that of rude secular nobles. But with the
+Empire and the Papacy in conflict, they could not but abide, as a rule,
+by the authority which had the most sacred claims to their loyalty. From
+all these circumstances it curiously happened that the sovereign who did
+more than almost any other to raise the royal power, was also the
+sovereign who, more than any other, wrought its decay.
+
+
+ Otto II.
+
+Otto II. had been crowned German king at Aix-la-Chapelle and emperor at
+Rome during his father's lifetime. Becoming sole ruler in May 973, his
+troubles began in Lorraine, but were more serious in Bavaria, which was
+now a very important duchy. Its duke, Henry, the brother of Otto I., had
+died in 955 and had been succeeded by a young son, Henry, whose
+turbulent career subsequently induced the Bavarian historian Aventinus
+to describe him as _rixosus_, or the Quarrelsome. In 973 Burchard II.,
+duke of Swabia, died, and the new emperor refused to give this duchy to
+Henry, further irritating this duke by bestowing it upon his enemy,
+Otto, a grandson of the emperor Otto I. Having collected allies Henry
+rebelled, and in 976 the emperor himself marched against him and drove
+him into Bohemia. Bavaria was taken from him and given to Otto of
+Swabia, but it was deprived of some of its importance. The southern
+part, Carinthia, which had hitherto been a march district, was separated
+from it and made into a duchy, and the church in Bavaria was made
+dependent upon the king and not upon the duke. Having arrived at this
+settlement Otto marched against the Bohemians, but while he was away
+from Germany war was begun against him by Henry, the new duke of
+Carinthia, who, forgetting the benefits he had just received, rose to
+avenge the wrongs of his friend, the deposed duke Henry of Bavaria. The
+emperor made peace with the Bohemians and quickly put down the rising.
+Henry of Bavaria was handed over to the keeping of the bishop of Utrecht
+and Carinthia received another duke.
+
+
+ Otto and France.
+
+In his anxiety to obtain possession of southern Italy, Otto I. had
+secured as a wife for his son and successor Theophano, daughter of the
+East Roman emperor, Romanus II., the ruler of much of southern Italy.
+Otto II., having all his father's ambition with much of his strength and
+haughtiness, longed to get away from Germany and to claim these remoter
+districts. But he was detained for some time owing to the sudden
+invasion of Lower Lorraine by Lothair, king of France, in 978. So
+stealthily did the invader advance that the emperor had only just time
+to escape from Aix-la-Chapelle before the town was seized and plundered.
+As quickly as possible Otto placed himself at the head of a great army
+and marched to Paris, but he was compelled to retreat without taking the
+city, and in 980 peace was made.
+
+
+ Otto in Italy.
+
+At last, after an expedition against the Poles, Otto was able to fulfil
+the wish of his heart; he went to Italy in 980 and never returned to
+Germany. His claims to southern Italy were vehemently opposed, and in
+July 982 he suffered a disastrous defeat at the hands of the East Roman
+emperor's subjects and their Saracen allies. The news of this crushing
+blow cast a gloom over Germany, which was again suffering from the
+attacks of her unruly neighbours. The Saxons were able to cope with the
+Danes and the German boundary was pushed forward in the south-east; but
+the Slavs fought with such courage and success that during the reigns of
+the emperors Otto II. and Otto III. much of the work effected by the
+margraves Hermann Billung and Gero was undone, and nearly two centuries
+passed before they were driven back to the position which they had
+perforce occupied under Otto the Great. Such were the first-fruits of
+the assumption of the imperial crown.
+
+
+ Otto III.
+
+About six months before his death in Rome, in December 983, Otto held a
+diet at Verona which was attended by many of the German princes, who
+recognized his infant son Otto as his successor. Otto was then taken to
+Germany, and after his father's death he was crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle
+on Christmas Day 983. Henry of Bavaria was released from his confinement
+and became his guardian; but as this restless prince showed an
+inclination to secure the crown for himself, the young king was taken
+from him and placed in the care of his mother Theophano. Henry, however,
+gained a good deal of support both within and without Germany and caused
+much anxiety to Otto's friends, but in 985 peace was made and he was
+restored to Bavaria. While Theophano acted as regent, the chief
+functions of government were discharged by Willigis, archbishop of Mainz
+(d. 1011), a vigorous prelate who had risen from a humble rank to the
+highest position in the German Church. He was aided by the princes, each
+of whom claimed a voice in the administration, and, during the lifetime
+of Theophano at least, a stubborn and sometimes a successful resistance
+was offered to the attacks of the Slavs. But under the prevalent
+conditions a vigorous rule was impossible, and during Otto's minority
+the royal authority was greatly weakened. In Saxony the people were
+quickly forgetting their hereditary connexion with the successors of
+Henry the Fowler; in Bavaria, after the death of Duke Henry in 995, the
+nobles, heedless of the royal power, returned to the ancient German
+custom and chose Henry's son Henry as their ruler.
+
+
+ The character of Otto.
+
+In 995 Otto III. was declared to have reached his majority. He had been
+so carefully trained in all the learning of the time that he was called
+the "wonder of the world," and a certain fascination still belongs to
+his imaginative and fantastic nature. Imbued by his mother with the
+extravagant ideas of the East Roman emperors he introduced into his
+court an amount of splendour and ceremonial hitherto unknown in western
+Europe. The heir of the western emperors and the grandson of an eastern
+emperor, he spent most of his time in Rome, and fancied he could unite
+the world under his rule. In this vague design he was encouraged by
+Gerbert, the greatest scholar of the day, whom, as Silvester II., he
+raised to the papal throne. Meanwhile Germany was suffering severely
+from internal disorders and from the inroads of her rude neighbours; and
+when in the year 1000 Otto visited his northern kingdom there were hopes
+that he would smite these enemies with the vigour of his predecessors.
+But these hopes were disappointed; on the contrary, Otto seems to have
+released Boleslaus, duke of the Poles, from his vague allegiance to the
+German kings, and he founded an archbishopric at Gnesen, thus freeing
+the Polish sees from the authority of the archbishop of Magdeburg.
+
+
+ Henry II.
+
+When Otto III. died in January 1002 there remained no representative of
+the elder branch of the imperial family, and several candidates came
+forward for the vacant throne. Among these candidates was Henry of
+Bavaria, son of Duke Henry the Quarrelsome and a great-grandson of Henry
+the Fowler, and at Mainz in June 1002 this prince was chosen German king
+as Henry II. Having been recognized as king by the Saxons, the
+Thuringians and the nobles of Lorraine, the new king was able to turn
+his attention to the affairs of government, but on the whole his reign
+was an unfortunate one for Germany. For ten years civil war raged in
+Lorraine; in Saxony much blood was shed in petty quarrels; and Henry
+made expeditions against his turbulent vassals in Flanders and
+Friesland. He also interfered in the affairs of Burgundy, but the
+acquisition of this kingdom was the work of his successor, Conrad II.
+During nearly the whole of this reign the Germans were fighting the
+Poles. Boleslaus of Poland, who was now a very powerful sovereign,
+having conquered Lusatia and Silesia, brought Bohemia also under his
+rule and was soon at variance with the German king. Anxious to regain
+these lands Henry allied himself with some Slavonic tribes, promising
+not to interfere with the exercise of their heathen religion, while
+Boleslaus found supporters among the discontented German nobles. The
+honours of the ensuing war were with Henry, and when peace was made in
+1006 Boleslaus gave up Bohemia, but the struggle was soon renewed and
+neither side had gained any serious advantage when peace was again made
+in 1013. A third Polish war broke out in 1015. Henry led his troops in
+person and obtained assistance from the Russians and the Hungarians;
+peace was concluded in 1018, the Elbe remaining the north-east boundary
+of Germany. Henry made three journeys to Italy, being crowned king of
+the Lombards at Pavia in 1004 and emperor at Rome ten years later.
+Before the latter event, in order to assert his right of sovereignty
+over Rome, he called himself king of the Romans, a designation which
+henceforth was borne by his successors until they received the higher
+title from the pope. Hitherto a sovereign crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle had
+been "king of the West Franks," or "king of the Franks and Saxons."
+Henry was generous to the church, to which he looked for support, but he
+maintained the royal authority over the clergy. Although generally
+unsuccessful he strove hard for peace, and during this reign the
+principle of inheritance was virtually established with regard to German
+fiefs.
+
+
+ Conrad II.
+
+After Henry's death the nobles met at Kamba, near Oppenheim, and in
+September 1024 elected Conrad, a Franconian count, to the vacant throne.
+Although favoured by the German clergy the new king, Conrad II., had to
+face some opposition; this, however, quickly vanished and he received
+the homage of the nobles in the various duchies and seemed to have no
+reason to dread internal enemies. Nevertheless, he had soon to battle
+with a conspiracy headed by his stepson, Ernest II., duke of Swabia.
+This was caused primarily by Conrad's avowed desire to acquire the
+kingdom of Burgundy, but other reasons for dissatisfaction existed, and
+the revolting duke found it easy to gather around him the scattered
+forces of discontent. However, the king was quite able to deal with the
+rising, which, indeed, never attained serious proportions, although
+Ernest gave continual trouble until his death in 1030. With regard to
+the German duchies Conrad followed the policy of Otto the Great. He
+wished to control, not to abolish them. In 1026, when Duke Henry of
+Bavaria died, he obtained the duchy for his son Henry, afterwards the
+emperor Henry III.; later, despite the opposition of the nobles, he
+invested the same prince with Swabia, where the ducal family had died
+out. Franconia was in the hands of Conrad himself; thus Saxony,
+Thuringia, Carinthia and Lorraine were the only duchies not completely
+dependent upon the king.
+
+
+ The neighbouring countries.
+
+When Conrad ascended the throne the safety of Germany was endangered
+from three different points. On the north was Denmark ruled by Canute
+the Great; on the east was the wide Polish state whose ruler, Boleslaus,
+had just taken the title of king; and on the south-east was Hungary,
+which under its king, St Stephen, was rapidly becoming an organized and
+formidable power. Peace was maintained with Canute, and in 1035 a treaty
+was concluded and the land between the Eider and the Schlei was ceded to
+Denmark. In 1030 Conrad waged a short war against Hungary, but here also
+he was obliged to assent to a cession of territory. In Poland he was
+more fortunate. After the death of Boleslaus in 1025 the Poles plunged
+into a civil war, and Conrad was able to turn this to his own advantage.
+In 1031 he recovered Lusatia and other districts, and in 1033 the Polish
+duke of Mesislaus did homage to him at Merseburg. His authority was
+recognized by the Bohemians, and two expeditions taught the Slavonic
+tribes between the Elbe and the Oder to respect his power.
+
+
+ Conrad in Italy.
+
+In Italy, whither he journeyed in 1026 and 1036, Conrad was not
+welcomed. Although as emperor and as king of the Lombards he was the
+lawful sovereign of that country, the Germans were still regarded as
+intruders and could only maintain their rights by force. The event which
+threw the greatest lustre upon this reign was the acquisition of the
+kingdom of Burgundy, or Arles, which was bequeathed to Conrad by its
+king, Rudolph III., the uncle of his wife, Gisela. Rudolph died in 1032,
+and in 1033 Conrad was crowned king at Peterlingen, being at once
+recognized by the German-speaking population. For about two years his
+rival, Odo, count of Champagne, who was supported by the
+Romance-speaking inhabitants, kept up the struggle against him, but
+eventually all opposition was overcome and the possession of Burgundy
+was assured to the German king.
+
+
+ The nobles and the land.
+
+This reign is important in the history of Germany because it marks the
+beginning of the great imperial age, but it has other features of
+interest. In dealing with the revolt of Ernest of Swabia Conrad was
+aided by the reluctance of the vassals of the great lords to follow them
+against the king. This reluctance was due largely to the increasing
+independence of this class of landholders, who were beginning to learn
+that the sovereign, and not their immediate lord, was the protector of
+their liberties; the independence in its turn arose from the growth of
+the principle of heredity. In Germany Conrad did not definitely decree
+that fiefs should pass from father to son, but he encouraged and took
+advantage of the tendency in this direction, a tendency which was,
+obviously, a serious blow at the power of the great lords over their
+vassals. In 1037 he issued from Milan his famous edict for the kingdom
+of Italy which decreed that upon the death of a landholder his fief
+should descend to his son, or grandson, and that no fiefholder should be
+deprived of his fief without the judgment of his peers. In another
+direction Conrad's policy was to free himself as king from dependence
+upon the church. He sought to regain lands granted to the church by his
+predecessors; prelates were employed on public business much less
+frequently than heretofore. He kept a firm hand over the church, but his
+rule was purely secular; he took little or no interest in ecclesiastical
+affairs. During this reign the centre and basis of the imperial power in
+Germany was moved southwards. Saxony, the home of the Ottos, became less
+prominent in German politics, while Bavaria and the south were gradually
+gaining in importance.
+
+
+ Henry III.
+
+Henry III., who had been crowned German king and also king of Burgundy
+during his father's lifetime, took possession of his great inheritance
+without the slightest sign of opposition in June 1039. He was without
+the impulsiveness which marred Conrad's great qualities, but he had the
+same decisive judgment, wide ambition and irresistible will as his
+father. During the late king's concluding years a certain Bretislaus,
+who had served Conrad with distinction in Lusatia, became duke of
+Bohemia and made war upon the disunited Poles, easily bringing them into
+subjection. Thus Germany was again threatened with the establishment of
+a great and independent Slavonic state upon her eastern frontier. To
+combat this danger Henry invaded Bohemia, and after two reverses
+compelled Bretislaus to appear before him as a suppliant at Regensburg.
+The German king treated his foe generously and was rewarded by receiving
+to the end of his reign the service of a loyal vassal; he also gained
+the goodwill of the Poles by helping to bring about the return of their
+duke, Casimir I., who willingly did homage for his land. The king of
+Denmark, too, acknowledged Henry as his feudal lord. Moreover, by
+several campaigns in Hungary the German king brought that country into
+the position of a fief of the German crown. This war was occasioned by
+the violence of the Hungarian usurper, Aba Samuel, and formed Henry's
+principal occupation from 1041 to 1045.
+
+
+ Henry's internal policy.
+
+In Germany itself Henry acquired, during the first ten years of his
+rule, an authority which had been unknown since the days of Otto the
+Great. Early in his reign he had made a determined enemy of Godfrey the
+Bearded, duke of upper Lorraine, who, in 1044, conspired against him and
+who found powerful allies in Henry I., king of France, in the counts of
+Flanders and Holland, and in certain Burgundian nobles. However, Godfrey
+and his friends were easily worsted, and when the dispossessed duke
+again tried the fortune of war he found that the German king had
+detached Henry of France from his side and was also in alliance with the
+English king, Edward the Confessor. While thus maintaining his authority
+in the north-east corner of the country by alliances and expeditions,
+Henry was strong enough to put the laws in motion against the most
+powerful princes and to force them to keep the public peace. Under his
+severe but beneficent rule, Germany enjoyed a period of internal quiet
+such as she had probably never experienced before, but even Henry could
+not permanently divert from its course the main political tendency of
+the age, the desire of the great feudal lords for independence.
+
+
+ Henry's wars.
+
+Cowed, but unpacified and discontented, the princes awaited their
+opportunity, while the king played into their hands by allowing the
+southern duchies, Swabia, Bavaria and Carinthia, to pass from under his
+own immediate control. His position was becoming gradually weaker when
+in 1051 he invaded Hungary, where a reaction against German influence
+was taking place. After a second campaign in 1052 the Hungarian king,
+Andrew, was compelled to make peace and to own himself the vassal of the
+German king. Meanwhile Saxony and Bavaria were permeated by the spirit
+of unrest, and Henry returned from Hungary just in time to frustrate a
+widespread conspiracy against him in southern Germany. Encouraged by the
+support of the German rebels, Andrew of Hungary repudiated the treaty of
+peace and the German supremacy in that country came to a sudden end.
+Among the causes which undermined Henry's strength was the fact that the
+mediate nobles, who had stood loyally by his father, Conrad, were not
+his friends; probably his wars made serious demands upon them, and his
+strict administration of justice, especially his insistence upon the
+maintenance of the public peace, was displeasing to them.
+
+
+ Henry and the church.
+
+At the beginning of Henry's reign the church all over Europe was in a
+deplorable condition. Simony was universally practised and the morality
+of the clergy was very low. The Papacy, too, had sunk to a degraded
+condition and its authority was annihilated, not only by the character
+of successive popes, but by the fact that there were at the same time
+three claimants for the papal throne. Henry, a man of deep, sincere and
+even rigorous piety, regarded these evils with sorrow; he associated
+himself definitely with the movement for reform which proceeded from
+Cluny, and commanded his prelates to put an end to simony and other
+abuses. Then moving farther in the same direction he resolved to strike
+at the root of the evil by the exercise of his imperial authority. In
+1046 he entered Italy at the head of an army which secured for him
+greater respect than had been given to any German ruler since
+Charlemagne, and at Sutri and in Rome he deposed the three rival popes.
+He then raised to the papal see Suidger, bishop of Bamberg, who, as Pope
+Clement II., crowned him emperor; after Clement three other German
+popes--Damasus II., Leo IX. and Victor II.--owed their elevation to
+Henry. Under these popes a new era began for the church, and in thus
+reforming the Papacy Henry III. fulfilled what was regarded as the
+noblest duty of his imperial office, but he also sharpened a weapon
+whose keen edge was first tried against his son.
+
+The last years of Henry III. form a turning-point in German history.
+Great kings and emperors came after him, but none of them possessed the
+direct, absolute authority which he freely wielded; even in the case of
+the strongest the forms of feudalism more and more interposed themselves
+between the monarch and the nation, and at last the royal authority
+virtually disappeared. During this reign the towns entered upon an age
+of prosperity, and the Rhine and the Weser became great avenues of
+trade.
+
+
+ The minority of Henry IV.
+
+When Henry died in October 1056 the decline of the royal authority was
+accelerated by the fact that his successor was a child. Henry IV., who
+had been crowned king in 1054, was at first in charge of his mother, the
+empress Agnes, whose weak and inefficient rule was closely watched by
+Anno, archbishop of Cologne. In 1062, however, Anno and other prominent
+prelates and laymen, perhaps jealous of the influence exercised at court
+by Henry, bishop of Augsburg (d. 1063), managed by a clever trick to get
+possession of the king's person. Deserted by her friends Agnes retired,
+and forthwith Anno began to rule the state. But soon he was compelled to
+share his duties with Adalbert, archbishop of Bremen, and a year or two
+later Adalbert became virtually the ruler of Germany, leaving Anno to
+attend to affairs in Italy. Adalbert's rule was very successful.
+Compelling King Solomon to own Henry's supremacy he restored the
+influence of Germany in Hungary; in internal affairs he restrained the
+turbulence of the princes, but he made many enemies, especially in
+Saxony, and in 1066 Henry, who had just been declared of age, was
+compelled to dismiss him. The ambitious prelate, however, had gained
+great influence over Henry, who had grown up under the most diverse
+influences. The young king was generous and was endowed with
+considerable intellectual gifts; but passing as he did from Anno's
+gloomy palace at Cologne to Adalbert's residence in Bremen, where he was
+petted and flattered, he became wayward and wilful.
+
+
+ Henry's personal rule.
+
+Henry IV. assumed the duties of government soon after the fall of
+Adalbert and quickly made enemies of many of the chief princes,
+including Otto of Nordheim, the powerful duke of Bavaria, Rudolph, duke
+of Swabia, and Berthold of Zähringen, duke of Carinthia. In Saxony,
+where, like his father, he frequently held his court, he excited intense
+hostility by a series of injudicious proceedings. While the three Ottos
+were pursuing the shadow of imperial greatness in Italy, much of the
+crown land in this duchy had been seized by the nobles and was now held
+by their descendants. Henry IV. insisted on the restoration of these
+estates and encroached upon the rights of the peasants. Moreover, he
+built a number of forts which the people thought were intended for
+prisons; he filled the land with riotous and overbearing Swabians; he
+kept in prison Magnus, the heir to the duchy; and is said to have spoken
+of the Saxons in a tone of great contempt. All classes were thus
+combined against him, and when he ordered his forces to assemble for a
+campaign against the Poles the Saxons refused to join the host. In 1073
+the universal discontent found expression in a great assembly at
+Wormesleben, in which the leading part was taken by Otto of Nordheim, by
+Werner, archbishop of Magdeburg, and by Burkhard II., bishop of
+Halberstadt. Under Otto's leadership the Thuringians joined the rising,
+which soon spread far and wide. Henry was surprised by a band of rebels
+in his fortress at the Harzburg; he fled to Hersfeld and appealed to the
+princes for support, but he could not compel them to aid him and they
+would grant him nothing. After tedious negotiations he was obliged to
+yield to the demands of his enemies, and peace was made at Gerstungen in
+1074. Zealously carrying out the conditions of the peace, the peasants
+not only battered down the detested forts, they even destroyed the
+chapel at the Harzburg and committed other acts of desecration. These
+proceedings alarmed the princes, both spiritual and secular, and Henry,
+who had gained support from the cities of the Rhineland, was able to
+advance with a formidable army into Saxony in 1075. He gained a
+decisive victory, rebuilt the forts and completely restored the
+authority of the crown.
+
+
+ Pope Gregory VII.
+
+In 1073, while Germany was in this confused state, Hildebrand had become
+pope as Gregory VII., and in 1075 he issued his famous decree against
+the marriage of the clergy and against their investiture by laymen. To
+the latter decree it was impossible for any sovereign to submit, and in
+Germany there were stronger reasons than elsewhere for resistance. A
+large part of the land of the country was held by the clergy, and most
+of it had been granted to them because it was supposed that they would
+be the king's most efficient helpers. Were the feudal tie broken, the
+crown must soon vanish, and the constitution of medieval society undergo
+a radical change. Henry, who hitherto had treated the new pope with
+excessive respect, now announced his intention of going to Rome and
+assuming the imperial title. The pope, to whom the Saxons had been
+encouraged to complain, responded by sending back certain of Henry's
+messengers, with the command that the king should do penance for the
+crimes of which his subjects accused him. Enraged by this unexpected
+arrogance, Henry summoned a synod of German bishops to Worms in January
+1076, and Hildebrand was declared deposed. The papal answer was a bull
+excommunicating the German king, dethroning him and liberating his
+subjects from their oath of allegiance.
+
+
+ Effect of Henry's excommunication.
+
+Never before had a pope ventured to take so bold a step. It was within
+the memory even of young men that a German king had dismissed three
+popes, and had raised in turn four of his own prelates to the Roman see.
+And now a pope attempted to drag from his throne the successor of this
+very sovereign. The effect of the bull was tremendous; no other was ever
+followed by equally important results. The princes had long been chafing
+under the royal power; they had shaken even so stern an autocrat as
+Henry III., and the authority of Henry IV. was already visibly weakened.
+At this important stage in their contest with the crown a mighty ally
+suddenly offered himself, and with indecent eagerness they hastened to
+associate themselves with him. Their vassals and subjects, appalled by
+the invisible powers wielded by the head of the church, supported them
+in their rebellion. The Saxons again rose in arms and Otto of Nordheim
+succeeded in uniting the North and South German supporters of the pope.
+Henry had looked for no such result as this; he did not understand the
+influences which lay beneath the surface and was horrified by his
+unexpected isolation. At a diet in Tribur he humbled himself before the
+princes, but in vain. They turned from him and decided that the pope
+should be asked to judge Henry; that if, within a year, the sentence of
+excommunication were not removed, the king should lose his crown; and
+that in the meantime he should live in retirement.
+
+
+ Scene at Canossa.
+
+Next came the strange scene at Canossa which burned itself into the
+memory of Europe. For three days the representative of the Caesars
+entreated to be admitted into the pope's presence. No other mode of
+escape than complete subjection to Gregory had suggested itself, or was
+perhaps possible; but it did not save him. Although the pope forgave
+him, the German princes, resolved not to miss the chance which fortune
+had given them, met in March 1077, and deposed him, electing Rudolph,
+duke of Swabia, as his successor. But Henry's bitter humiliations
+transformed his character; they brought out all his latent capacities of
+manliness.
+
+
+ The struggle over investitures.
+
+The war of investitures that followed was the opening of the tremendous
+struggle between the Empire and the Papacy, which is the central fact of
+medieval history and which, after two centuries of conflict, ended in
+the exhaustion of both powers. Its details belong more to the history of
+Italy than to that of Germany, where it took the form of a fight between
+two rival kings, but in Germany its effects were more deeply felt. The
+nation now plucked bitter fruit from the seed planted by Otto the Great
+in assuming the imperial crown and by a long line of kings and emperors
+in lavishing worldly power upon the church. In the ambition of the
+spiritual and the secular princes the pope had an immensely powerful
+engine of offence against the emperor, and without the slightest scruple
+this was turned to the best advantage.
+
+
+ Henry IV. and the anti-kings.
+
+When this struggle began it may be said in general that Henry was
+supported by the cities and the lower classes, while Rudolph relied upon
+the princes and the opponents of a united Germany; or, to make another
+division, Henry's strength lay in the duchies of Franconia and Bavaria,
+Rudolph's in Swabia and Saxony. In the Rhineland and in southern Germany
+the cities had been steadily growing in wealth and power, and they could
+not fail to realize that they had more to fear from the princes than
+from the crown. Hence when Henry returned to Germany in 1078 Worms,
+Spires and many other places opened their gates to him and contributed
+freely to his cause; nevertheless his troops were beaten in three
+encounters and Pope Gregory thundered anew against him in March 1080.
+However, the fortune of war soon turned, and in October 1080 Rudolph of
+Swabia was defeated and slain. Henry then carried the war into Italy; in
+1084 he was crowned emperor in Rome by Wibert, archbishop of Ravenna,
+whom, as Clement III., he had set up as an anti-pope, and in 1085
+Gregory died an exile from Rome. Meanwhile in Germany Henry's opponents
+had chosen Hermann, count of Luxemburg, king in succession to Rudolph of
+Swabia. Hermann, however, was not very successful, and when Henry
+returned to Germany in 1084 he found that his most doughty opponent,
+Otto of Nordheim, was dead, and that the anti-king had few friends
+outside Saxony. This duchy was soon reduced to obedience and was treated
+with consideration, and when the third anti-king, Egbert, margrave of
+Meissen, was murdered in 1090 there would have been peace if Germany had
+followed her own impulses.
+
+
+ Henry and the Papacy.
+
+In the Papacy, however, Henry had an implacable foe; and again and again
+when he seemed on the point of a complete triumph the smouldering embers
+of revolt were kindled once more into flame. In Italy his son, Conrad,
+was stirred up against him and in 1093 was crowned king at Monza; then
+ten years later, when Germany was more peaceful than it had been for
+years and when the emperor's authority was generally acknowledged, his
+second son, Henry, afterwards the emperor Henry V., was induced to head
+a dangerous rebellion. The Saxons and the Thuringians were soon in arms,
+and they were joined by those warlike spirits of Germany to whom an age
+of peace brought no glory and an age of prosperity brought no gain.
+After some desultory fighting Henry IV. was taken prisoner and compelled
+to abdicate; he had, however, escaped and had renewed the contest when
+he died in August 1106.
+
+
+ The First Crusade.
+
+During this reign the first crusade took place, and the German king
+suffered severely from the pious zeal which it expressed and
+intensified. The movement was not in the end favourable to papal
+supremacy, but the early crusaders, and those who sympathized with them,
+regarded the enemies of the pope as the enemies of religion.
+
+
+ Henry V. in Germany.
+
+The early years of Henry V.'s reign were spent in campaigns in Flanders,
+Bohemia, Hungary and Poland, but the new king was soon reminded that the
+dispute over investitures was unsettled. Pope Paschal II. did not doubt,
+now that Henry IV. was dead, that he would speedily triumph; but he was
+soon undeceived. Henry V., who with unconscious irony had promised to
+treat the pope as a father, continued, like his predecessors, to invest
+prelates with the ring and the staff, and met the expostulations of
+Paschal by declaring that he would not surrender a right which had
+belonged to all former kings. Lengthened negotiations took place but
+they led to no satisfactory result, while the king's enemies in Germany,
+taking advantage of the deadlock, showed signs of revolt. One of the
+most ardent of these enemies was Lothair of Supplinburg, whom Henry
+himself had made duke of Saxony upon the extinction of the Billung
+family in 1106. Lothair was humbled in 1112, but he took advantage of
+the emperor's difficulties to rise again and again, the twin pillars of
+his strength being the Saxon hatred of the Franconian emperors and an
+informal alliance with the papal see. Henry's chief friends were his
+nephews, the two Hohenstaufen princes, Frederick and Conrad, to whose
+father Frederick the emperor Henry IV. had given the duchy of Swabia
+when its duke Rudolph became his rival. The younger Frederick succeeded
+to this duchy in 1105, while ten years later Conrad was made duke of
+Franconia, a country which for nearly a century had been under the
+immediate government of the crown. The two brothers were enthusiastic
+imperialists, and with persistent courage they upheld the cause of their
+sovereign during his two absences in Italy.
+
+
+ The concordat of Worms.
+
+At last, in September 1122, the investiture question was settled by the
+concordat of Worms. By this compromise, which exhaustion forced upon
+both parties, the right of electing prelates was granted to the clergy,
+and the emperor surrendered the privilege of investing them with the
+ring and the staff. On the other hand it was arranged that these
+elections should take place in the presence of the emperor or his
+representative, and that he should invest the new prelate with the
+sceptre, thus signifying that the bishop, or abbot, held his temporal
+fiefs from him and not from the pope. In Germany the victory remained
+with the emperor, but it was by no means decisive. The Papacy was far
+from realizing Hildebrand's great schemes; yet in regard to the question
+in dispute it gained solid advantage, and its general authority was
+incomparably more important than it had been half a century before.
+During this period it had waged war upon the emperor himself. Instead of
+acknowledging its inferiority as in former times it had claimed to be
+the higher power; it had even attempted to dispose of the imperial crown
+as if the Empire were a papal fief; and it had found out that it could
+at any time tamper, and perhaps paralyse, the imperial authority by
+exciting internal strife in Germany. Having thus settled this momentous
+dispute Henry spent his later years in restoring order in Germany, and
+in planning to assist his father-in-law, Henry I. of England, in France.
+During this reign under the lead of Otto, bishop of Bamberg (c.
+1063-1139), Pomerania began to come under the influence of Germany and
+of Christianity.
+
+
+ The reign of Lothair the Saxon.
+
+The Franconian dynasty died out with Henry V. in May 1125, and after a
+protracted contest Lothair, duke of Saxony, the candidate of the clergy,
+was chosen in the following August to succeed him. The new king's first
+enterprise was a disastrous campaign in Bohemia, but before this
+occurrence he had aroused the enmity of the Hohenstaufen princes by
+demanding that they should surrender certain lands which had formerly
+been the property of the crown. Lothair's rebuff in Bohemia stiffened
+the backs of Frederick and Conrad, and in order to contend with them the
+king secured a powerful ally by marrying his daughter Gertrude to Henry
+the Proud, a grandson of Welf, whom Henry IV. had made duke of Bavaria,
+a duchy to which Henry himself had succeeded in 1126. Henry was perhaps
+the most powerful of the king's subjects, nevertheless the dukes of
+Swabia and Franconia withstood him, and a long war desolated South
+Germany. This was ended by the submission of Frederick in 1134 and of
+Conrad in the following year. Lothair's position, which before 1130 was
+very weak, had gradually become stronger. He had put down the disorder
+in Bavaria, in Saxony and in Lorraine; a diet held at Magdeburg in 1135
+was attended by representatives from the vassal states of Denmark,
+Hungary, Bohemia and Poland; and in 1136, when he visited Italy for the
+second time, Germany was in a very peaceful condition. In June 1133
+during the king's first visit to Italy he had received from Pope
+Innocent II. the imperial crown and also the investiture of the
+extensive territories left by Matilda, marchioness of Tuscany; and at
+this time the pope seems to have claimed the emperor as his vassal, a
+statement to this effect (_post homo fit papae, sumit quo dante
+coronam_) being inscribed in the audience hall of the Lateran at Rome.
+
+ (_Continued in volume 11 slice 8._)
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] i.e. the territory once under the jurisdiction of an imperial
+ _Vogt_ or _advocatus_ (see ADVOCATE).
+
+ [2] The question, much disputed between Germans and Danes, is
+ exhaustively treated by P. Lauridsen in F. de Jessen's _La Question
+ de Sleswig_ (Copenhagen, 1906), pp. 114 et seq.
+
+ [3] See the comparative study in Percy Ashley's _Local and Central
+ Government_ (London, 1906).
+
+ [4] The _Kreis_ in Württemberg corresponds to the _Regierungsbezirk_
+ elsewhere.
+
+ [5] The system of compulsory registration, which involves a
+ notification to the police of any change of address (even temporary),
+ of course makes it easy to determine the domicile in any given case.
+
+ [6] Actually between 1883 and 1908 over five million recruits passed
+ through the drill sergeant's hands, as well as perhaps 210,000
+ one-year volunteers.
+
+ [7] These last have a curious history. They were formed from about
+ 1890 onwards, by individual squadrons, two or three being voted each
+ year. Ostensibly raised for the duties of mounted orderlies, at a
+ time when it would have been impolitic to ask openly for more
+ cavalry, they were little by little trained in real cavalry work,
+ then combined in provisional regiments for disciplinary purposes and
+ at last frankly classed as cavalry.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th
+Edition, Volume 11, Slice 7, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENCYC. BRITANNICA, VOL 11 SL 7 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37523-8.txt or 37523-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/5/2/37523/
+
+Produced by Marius Masi, Don Kretz and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/37523-8.zip b/37523-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..148376e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h.zip b/37523-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9f3a209
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/37523-h.htm b/37523-h/37523-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6bbf65e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/37523-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,17931 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
+ "text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
+
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Encyclop&aelig;dia Britannica, Volume XI Slice VII - Geoponici to Germany (part).
+ </title>
+
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+ body { margin-left: 12%; margin-right: 12%; text-align: justify; }
+ p { margin-top: .75em; margin-bottom: .75em; text-indent: 1em; line-height: 1.4em;}
+ p.c { margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; text-indent: 1em; padding-left: 1em; line-height: 1.4em;}
+ p.noind { margin-top: .75em; margin-bottom: .75em; text-indent: 0; }
+
+ h2,h3 { text-align: center; }
+ hr { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center; width: 70%; height: 5px; background-color: #dcdcdc; border:none; }
+ hr.art { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; width: 40%; height: 5px; background-color: #778899;
+ margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 6em }
+ hr.foot {margin-left: 2em; width: 16%; background-color: black; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 0; height: 1px; }
+ hr.full {width: 100%}
+
+ table.ws {white-space: nowrap; border-collapse: collapse; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;
+ margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;}
+ table.reg1 { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; clear: both;}
+ table.reg1 td { white-space: normal;}
+ table.reg { border-collapse: collapse; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; clear: both;}
+ table.reg td { white-space: normal;}
+ table.nobctr { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border-collapse: collapse; }
+ table.flt { border-collapse: collapse; }
+ table.pic { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; }
+ table.math0 { vertical-align: middle; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border-collapse: collapse;}
+ table.math0 td {text-align: center;}
+ table.math0 td.np {text-align: center; padding-left: 0; padding-right: 0;}
+
+ table.reg p {text-indent: 1em; margin-left: 1.5em; text-align: justify;}
+ table.reg td.tc5p { padding-left: 2em; text-indent: 0em; white-space: normal;}
+ table.nobctr td, table.flt td { white-space: normal; }
+ table.pic td { white-space: normal; text-indent: 1em; padding-left: 2em; padding-right: 1em;}
+ table.nobctr p, table.flt p {text-indent: -1.5em; margin-left: 1.5em;}
+ table.pic td p {text-indent: -1.5em; margin-left: 1.5em;}
+
+ td { white-space: nowrap; padding-right: 0.3em; padding-left: 0.3em;}
+ td.norm { white-space: normal; }
+ td.denom { border-top: 1px solid black; text-align: center; padding-right: 0.3em; padding-left: 0.3em;}
+
+ td.tcc { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: center; vertical-align: top;}
+ td.tccm { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: center; vertical-align: middle;}
+ td.tccb { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: center; vertical-align: bottom;}
+ td.tcr { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: right; vertical-align: top;}
+ td.tcrb { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: right; vertical-align: bottom;}
+ td.tcrm { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: right; vertical-align: middle;}
+ td.tcl { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: left; vertical-align: top;}
+ td.tclb { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: left; vertical-align: bottom;}
+ td.tclm { padding-right: 0.5em; padding-left: 0.5em; text-align: left; vertical-align: middle;}
+ td.vb { vertical-align: bottom; }
+
+ .caption { font-size: 0.9em; text-align: center; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 1em; padding-right: 1em;}
+ .caption1 { font-size: 0.9em; text-align: left; padding-bottom: 1em; padding-left: 3em; padding-right: 2em;}
+
+ td.lb {border-left: black 1px solid;}
+ td.ltb {border-left: black 1px solid; border-top: black 1px solid;}
+ td.rb {border-right: black 1px solid;}
+ td.rb2 {border-right: black 2px solid;}
+ td.tb, span.tb {border-top: black 1px solid;}
+ td.bb {border-bottom: black 1px solid;}
+ td.bb1 {border-bottom: #808080 3px solid; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em;}
+ td.rlb {border-right: black 1px solid; border-left : black 1px solid;}
+ td.allb {border: black 1px solid;}
+ td.cl {background-color: #e8e8e8}
+
+ table p { margin: 0;}
+
+ a:link, a:visited, link {text-decoration:none}
+
+ .author {text-align: right; margin-top: -1em; margin-right: 1em; font-variant: small-caps;}
+ .center {text-align: center; text-indent: 0;}
+ .center1 {text-align: center; text-indent: 0; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;}
+ .grk {font-style: normal; font-family:"Palatino Linotype","New Athena Unicode",Gentium,"Lucida Grande", Galilee, "Arial Unicode MS", sans-serif;}
+
+ .f80 {font-size: 80%}
+ .f90 {font-size: 90%}
+ .f150 {font-size: 150%}
+ .f200 {font-size: 200%}
+
+ .sp {position: relative; bottom: 0.5em; font-size: 0.75em;}
+ .sp1 {position: relative; bottom: 0.6em; font-size: 0.75em;}
+ .su {position: relative; top: 0.3em; font-size: 0.75em;}
+ .su1 {position: relative; top: 0.5em; font-size: 0.75em; margin-left: -1.2ex;}
+ .spp {position: relative; bottom: 0.5em; font-size: 0.6em;}
+ .suu {position: relative; top: 0.2em; font-size: 0.6em;}
+ .sc {font-variant: small-caps;}
+ .scs {text-transform: lowercase; font-variant: small-caps;}
+ .ov {text-decoration: overline}
+ .un {text-decoration: underline}
+ .cl {background-color: #f5f5f5;}
+ .bk {padding-left: 0; font-size: 80%;}
+ .bk1 {margin-left: -1em;}
+
+ .pagenum {position: absolute; right: 5%; text-align: right; font-size: 10pt;
+ background-color: #f5f5f5; color: #778899; text-indent: 0;
+ padding-left: 0.5em; padding-right: 0.5em; font-style: normal; }
+ span.sidenote {width: 8em; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top: 1.7em; margin-right: 2em;
+ font-size: 85%; float: left; clear: left; font-weight: bold;
+ font-style: italic; text-align: left; text-indent: 0;
+ background-color: #f5f5f5; color: black; }
+ .note {margin-left: 2em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 0.9em; }
+ .fn { position: absolute; left: 12%; text-align: left; background-color: #f5f5f5;
+ text-indent: 0; padding-left: 0.2em; padding-right: 0.2em; }
+ span.correction {border-bottom: 1px dashed red;}
+
+ div.poemr { margin-top: .75em; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ div.poemr p { margin-left: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em; margin-top: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; }
+ div.poemr p.s { margin-top: 1.5em; }
+ div.poemr p.i05 { margin-left: 0.4em; }
+ div.poemr p.i1 { margin-left: 1em; }
+ div.poemr p.i2 { margin-left: 2em; }
+
+ .figright1 { padding-right: 1em; padding-left: 2em; padding-top: 1.5em; text-align: center; }
+ .figleft1 { padding-right: 2em; padding-left: 1em; padding-top: 1.5em; text-align: center; }
+ .figcenter {text-align: center; margin: auto; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; padding-top: 1.5em;}
+ .figcenter1 {text-align: center; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 2em;}
+ .figure {text-align: center; padding-left: 1.5em; padding-right: 1.5em; padding-top: 1.5em; padding-bottom: 0;}
+ .bold {font-weight: bold; }
+
+ div.minind {text-align: justify;}
+ div.condensed, div.condensed1 { line-height: 1.3em; margin-left: 3%; margin-right: 3%; font-size: 95%; }
+ div.condensed1 p {margin-left: 0; padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em;}
+ div.condensed span.sidenote {font-size: 90%}
+
+ div.list {margin-left: 0;}
+ div.list p {padding-left: 4em; text-indent: -2em;}
+ div.list1 {margin-left: 0;}
+ div.list1 p {padding-left: 5em; text-indent: -3em;}
+
+ .pt05 {padding-top: 0.5em;}
+ .pt1 {padding-top: 1em;}
+ .pb1 {padding-bottom: 1em;}
+ .pt2 {padding-top: 2em;}
+ .ptb1 {padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em;}
+ td.prl {padding-left: 10%; padding-right: 7em; text-align: left; vertical-align: top;}
+
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition,
+Volume 11, Slice 7, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 7
+ "Geoponici" to "Germany"
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 24, 2011 [EBook #37523]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENCYC. BRITANNICA, VOL 11 SL 7 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marius Masi, Don Kretz and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="10" style="background-color: #dcdcdc; color: #696969; " summary="Transcriber's note">
+<tr>
+<td style="width:25%; vertical-align:top">
+Transcriber&rsquo;s note:
+</td>
+<td class="norm">
+A few typographical errors have been corrected. They
+appear in the text <span class="correction" title="explanation will pop up">like this</span>, and the
+explanation will appear when the mouse pointer is moved over the marked
+passage. Sections in Greek will yield a transliteration
+when the pointer is moved over them, and words using diacritic characters in the
+Latin Extended Additional block, which may not display in some fonts or browsers, will
+display an unaccented version. <br /><br />
+<a name="artlinks">Links to other EB articles:</a> Links to articles residing in other EB volumes will
+be made available when the respective volumes are introduced online.
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<div style="padding-top: 3em; ">&nbsp;</div>
+
+<h2>THE ENCYCLOP&AElig;DIA BRITANNICA</h2>
+
+<h2>A DICTIONARY OF ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE AND GENERAL INFORMATION</h2>
+
+<h3>ELEVENTH EDITION</h3>
+<div style="padding-top: 3em; ">&nbsp;</div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<h3>VOLUME XI SLICE VII<br /><br />
+Geoponici to Germany (part)</h3>
+<hr class="full" />
+<div style="padding-top: 3em; ">&nbsp;</div>
+
+<p class="center1" style="font-size: 150%; font-family: 'verdana';">Articles in This Slice</p>
+<table class="reg1" style="width: 90%; font-size: 90%; border: gray 2px solid;" cellspacing="8" summary="Contents">
+
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar1">GEOPONICI</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar37">GÉRARD, ÉTIENNE MAURICE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar2">GEORGE, SAINT</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar38">GÉRARD, FRANÇOIS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar3">GEORGE I.</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar39">GÉRARD, JEAN IGNACE ISIDORE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar4">GEORGE II.</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar40">GERARD, JOHN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar5">GEORGE III.</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar41">GÉRARDMER</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar6">GEORGE IV.</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar42">GERASA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar7">GEORGE V.</a> (of Great Britain)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar43">GÉRAULT-RICHARD, ALFRED LÉON</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar8">GEORGE V.</a> (of Hanover)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar44">GERBER, ERNST LUDWIG</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar9">GEORGE I.</a> (of the Hellenes)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar45">GERBERON, GABRIEL</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar10">GEORGE</a> (of Saxony)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar46">GERBERT, MARTIN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar11">GEORGE OF LAODICEA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar47">GERBIL</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar12">GEORGE OF TREBIZOND</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar48">GERENUK</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar13">GEORGE THE MONK</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar49">GERGOVIA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar14">GEORGE THE SYNCELLUS</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar50">GERHARD, FRIEDRICH WILHELM EDUARD</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar15">GEORGE, HENRY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar51">GERHARD, JOHANN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar16">GEORGE PISIDA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar52">GERHARDT, CHARLES FRÉDÉRIC</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar17">GEORGE, LAKE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar53">GERHARDT, PAUL</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar18">GEORGE JUNIOR REPUBLIC</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar54">GÉRICAULT, JEAN LOUIS ANDRÉ THÉODORE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar19">GEORGETOWN</a> (British Guiana)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar55">GERIZIM</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar20">GEORGETOWN</a> (Washington, U.S.A.)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar56">GERLACHE, ÉTIENNE CONSTANTIN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar21">GEORGETOWN</a> (Kentucky, U.S.A.)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar57">GERLE, CHRISTOPHE ANTOINE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar22">GEORGETOWN</a> (South Carolina, U.S.A.)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar58">GERMAN BAPTIST BRETHREN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar23">GEORGETOWN</a> (Texas, U.S.A.)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar59">GERMAN CATHOLICS</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar24">GEORGIA</a> (U.S.A.)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar60">GERMAN EAST AFRICA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar25">GEORGIA</a> (Transcaucasia)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar61">GERMAN EVANGELICAL SYNOD OF NORTH AMERICA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar26">GEORGIAN BAY</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar62">GERMANIC LAWS, EARLY</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar27">GEORGSWALDE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar63">GERMANICUS CAESAR</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar28">GEPHYREA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar64">GERMANIUM</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar29">GERA</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar65">GERMAN LANGUAGE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar30">GERALDTON</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar66">GERMAN LITERATURE</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar31">GÉRANDO, MARIE JOSEPH DE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar67">GERMAN REED ENTERTAINMENT</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar32">GERANIACEAE</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar68">GERMAN SILVER</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar33">GERANIUM</a></td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar69">GERMAN SOUTH-WEST AFRICA</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar34">GERARD</a> (archbishop of York)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar70">GERMANTOWN</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar35">GERARD</a> (Tum, Tunc, Tenque or Thom)</td> <td class="tcl"><a href="#ar71">GERMANY</a> (part)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><a href="#ar36">GERARD OF CREMONA</a></td> <td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page736" id="page736"></a>736</span></p>
+<p><span class="bold">GEOPONICI,<a name="ar1" id="ar1"></a></span><a name="fa1a" id="fa1a" href="#ft1a"><span class="sp">1</span></a> or <i>Scriptores rei rusticae</i>, the Greek and Roman
+writers on husbandry and agriculture. On the whole the Greeks
+paid less attention than the Romans to the scientific study of
+these subjects, which in classical times they regarded as a branch
+of economics. Thus Xenophon&rsquo;s <i>Oeconomicus</i> (see also <i>Memorabilia</i>,
+ii. 4) contains a eulogy of agriculture and its beneficial
+ethical effects, and much information is to be found in the writings
+of Aristotle and his pupil Theophrastus. About the same time
+as Xenophon, the philosopher Democritus of Abdera wrote a
+treatise <span class="grk" title="Peri Geôrgias">&#928;&#949;&#961;&#8054; &#915;&#949;&#969;&#961;&#947;&#7984;&#945;&#962;</span>, frequently quoted and much used by
+the later compilers of <i>Geoponica</i> (agricultural treatises). Greater
+attention was given to the subject in the Alexandrian period;
+a long list of names is given by Varro and Columella, amongst
+them Hiero II. and Attalus III. Philometor. Later, Cassius
+Dionysius of Utica translated and abridged the great work of
+the Carthaginian Mago, which was still further condensed by
+Diophanes of Nicaea in Bithynia for the use of King Deďotarus.
+From these and similar works Cassianus Bassus (<i>q.v.</i>) compiled
+his <i>Geoponica</i>. Mention may also be made of a little work
+<span class="grk" title="Peri Geôrgikôn">&#928;&#949;&#961;&#8054; &#915;&#949;&#969;&#961;&#947;&#953;&#954;&#8182;&#957;</span> by Michael Psellus (printed in Boissonade,
+<i>Anecdota Graeca</i>, i.).</p>
+
+<p>The Romans, aware of the necessity of maintaining a numerous
+and thriving order of agriculturists, from very early times
+endeavoured to instil into their countrymen both a theoretical
+and a practical knowledge of the subject. The occupation of
+the farmer was regarded as next in importance to that of the
+soldier, and distinguished Romans did not disdain to practise
+it. In furtherance of this object, the great work of Mago was
+translated into Latin by order of the senate, and the elder Cato
+wrote his <i>De agri cultura</i> (extant in a very corrupt state), a
+simple record in homely language of the rules observed by the old
+Roman landed proprietors rather than a theoretical treatise.
+He was followed by the two Sasernae (father and son) and Gnaeus
+Tremellius Scrofa, whose works are lost. The learned Marcus
+Terentius Varro of Reate, when eighty years of age, composed
+his <i>Rerum rusticarum, libri tres</i>, dealing with agriculture, the
+rearing of cattle, and the breeding of fishes. He was the first to
+systematize what had been written on the subject, and supplemented
+the labours of others by practical experience gained
+during his travels. In the Augustan age Julius Hyginus wrote
+on farming and bee-keeping, Sabinus Tiro on horticulture, and
+during the early empire Julius Graecinus and Julius Atticus on
+the culture of vines, and Cornelius Celsus (best known for his
+<i>De medicina</i>) on farming. The chief work of the kind, however,
+is that of Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella (<i>q.v.</i>). About the
+middle of the 2nd century the two Quintilii, natives of Troja,
+wrote on the subject in Greek. It is remarkable that Columella&rsquo;s
+work exercised less influence in Rome and Italy than in southern
+Gaul and Spain, where agriculture became one of the principal
+subjects of instruction in the superior educational establishments
+that were springing up in those countries. One result of this was
+the preparation of manuals of a popular kind for use in the schools.
+In the 3rd century Gargilius Martialis of Mauretania compiled
+a <i>Geoponica</i> in which medical botany and the veterinary art
+were included. The <i>De re rustica</i> of Palladius (4th century), in
+fourteen books, which is almost entirely borrowed from Columella,
+is greatly inferior in style and knowledge of the subject. It is a
+kind of farmer&rsquo;s calendar, in which the different rural occupations
+are arranged in order of the months. The fourteenth book
+(on forestry) is written in elegiacs (85 distichs). The whole of
+Palladius and considerable fragments of Martialis are extant.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The best edition of the <i>Scriptores rei rusticae</i> is by J.G. Schneider
+(1794-1797), and the whole subject is exhaustively treated by
+A. Magerstedt, <i>Bilder aus der römischen Landwirtschaft</i> (1858-1863);
+see also Teuffel-Schwabe, <i>Hist. of Roman Literature</i>, 54;
+C.F. Bähr in Ersch and Gruber&rsquo;s <i>Allgemeine Encyklopädie</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1a" id="ft1a" href="#fa1a"><span class="fn">1</span></a> The latinized form of a non-existent <span class="grk" title="Geôponikoi">&#915;&#949;&#969;&#960;&#959;&#957;&#953;&#954;&#959;&#943;</span>, used for
+convenience.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE, SAINT<a name="ar2" id="ar2"></a></span> (d. 303), the patron saint of England, Aragon
+and Portugal. According to the legend given by Metaphrastes
+the Byzantine hagiologist, and substantially repeated in the
+Roman <i>Acta sanctorum</i> and in the Spanish breviary, he was born
+in Cappadocia of noble Christian parents, from whom he received
+a careful religious training. Other accounts place his birth at
+Lydda, but preserve his Cappadocian parentage. Having embraced
+the profession of a soldier, he rapidly rose under Diocletian
+to high military rank. In Persian Armenia he organized
+and energized the Christian community at Urmi (Urumiah),
+and even visited Britain on an imperial expedition. When
+Diocletian had begun to manifest a pronounced hostility towards
+Christianity, George sought a personal interview with him, in
+which he made deliberate profession of his faith, and, earnestly
+remonstrating against the persecution which had begun, resigned
+his commission. He was immediately laid under arrest, and
+after various tortures, finally put to death at Nicomedia (his body
+being afterwards taken to Lydda) on the 23rd of April 303. His
+festival is observed on that anniversary by the entire Roman
+Catholic Church as a semi-duplex, and by the Spanish Catholics
+as a duplex of the first class with an octave. The day is also
+celebrated as a principal feast in the Orthodox Eastern Church,
+where the saint is distinguished by the titles <span class="grk" title="megalomartyr">&#956;&#949;&#947;&#945;&#955;&#972;&#956;&#945;&#961;&#964;&#965;&#961;</span> and
+<span class="grk" title="tropaiophoros">&#964;&#961;&#959;&#960;&#945;&#953;&#959;&#966;&#972;&#961;&#959;&#962;</span>.</p>
+
+<p>The historical basis of the tradition is particularly unsound,
+there being two claimants to the name and honour. Eusebius,
+<i>Hist. eccl.</i> viii. 5, writes: &ldquo;Immediately on the promulgation
+of the edict (of Diocletian) a certain man of no mean origin, but
+highly esteemed for his temporal dignities, as soon as the decree
+was published against the churches in Nicomedia, stimulated
+by a divine zeal and excited by an ardent faith, took it as it was
+openly placed and posted up for public inspection, and tore it
+to shreds as a most profane and wicked act. This, too, was
+done when the two Caesars were in the city, the first of whom
+was the eldest and chief of all and the other held fourth grade of
+the imperial dignity after him. But this man, as the first that
+was distinguished there in this manner, after enduring what
+was likely to follow an act so daring, preserved his mind, calm
+and serene, until the moment when his spirit fled.&rdquo; Rivalling
+this anonymous martyr, who is often supposed to have
+been St George, is an earlier martyr briefly mentioned in the
+<i>Chronicon Pascale</i>: &ldquo;In the year 225 of the Ascension of our
+Lord a persecution of the Christians took place, and many
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page737" id="page737"></a>737</span>
+suffered martyrdom, among whom also the Holy George was
+martyred.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Two Syrian church inscriptions bearing the name, one at Ezr&rsquo;a
+and the other at Shaka, found by Burckhardt and Porter, and
+discussed by J. Hogg in the <i>Transactions of the Royal Literary
+Society</i>, may with some probability be assigned to the middle
+of the 4th century. Calvin impugned the saint&rsquo;s existence
+altogether, and Edward Reynolds (1599-1676), bishop of Norwich,
+like Edward Gibbon a century later, made him one with George
+of Laodicea, called &ldquo;the Cappadocian,&rdquo; the Arian bishop of
+Alexandria (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">George of Laodicea</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p>Modern criticism, while rejecting this identification, is not
+unwilling to accept the main fact that an officer named Georgios,
+of high rank in the army, suffered martyrdom probably under
+Diocletian. In the canon of Pope Gelasius (494) George is
+mentioned in a list of those &ldquo;whose names are justly reverenced
+among men, but whose acts are known only to God,&rdquo; a statement
+which implies that legends had already grown up around his
+name. The caution of Gelasius was not long preserved; Gregory
+of Tours, for example, asserts that the saint&rsquo;s relics actually
+existed in the French village of Le Maine, where many miracles
+were wrought by means of them; and Bede, while still explaining
+that the <i>Gesta Georgii</i> are reckoned apocryphal, commits himself
+to the statement that the martyr was beheaded under Dacian,
+king of Persia, whose wife Alexandra, however, adhered to the
+Christian faith. The great fame of George, who is reverenced
+alike by Eastern and Western Christendom and by Mahommedans,
+is due to many causes. He was martyred on the eve
+of the triumph of Christianity, his shrine was reared near the
+scene of a great Greek legend (Perseus and Andromeda), and
+his relics when removed from Lydda, where many pilgrims had
+visited them, to Zorava in the Hauran served to impress his fame
+not only on the Syrian population, but on their Moslem conquerors,
+and again on the Crusaders, who in grateful memory
+of the saint&rsquo;s intervention on their behalf at Antioch built a new
+cathedral at Lydda to take the place of the church destroyed
+by the Saracens. This cathedral was in turn destroyed by
+Saladin.</p>
+
+<p>The connexion of St George with a dragon, familiar since the
+<i>Golden Legend</i> of Jacobus de Voragine, can be traced to the
+close of the 6th century. At Arsuf or Joppa&mdash;neither of them
+far from Lydda&mdash;Perseus had slain the sea-monster that
+threatened the virgin Andromeda, and George, like many another
+Christian saint, entered into the inheritance of veneration previously
+enjoyed by a pagan hero.<a name="fa1b" id="fa1b" href="#ft1b"><span class="sp">1</span></a> The exploit thus attaches
+itself to the very common Aryan myth of the sun-god as the
+conqueror of the powers of darkness.</p>
+
+<p>The popularity of St George in England has never reached
+the height attained by St Andrew in Scotland, St David in Wales
+or St Patrick in Ireland. The council of Oxford in 1222 ordered
+that his feast should be kept as a national festival; but it was
+not until the time of Edward III. that he was made patron of
+the kingdom. The republics of Genoa and Venice were also
+under his protection.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See P. Heylin, <i>The History of ... S. George of Cappadocia</i> (1631);
+S. Baring-Gould, Curious <i>Myths of the Middle Ages</i>; Fr. Görres,
+&ldquo;Der Ritter St Georg in der Geschichte, Legende und Kunst&rdquo; (<i>Zeitschrift
+für wissenschaftliche Theologie</i>, xxx., 1887, Heft i.); E.A.W.
+Budge, <i>The Martyrdom and Miracles of St George of Cappadocia</i>:
+the Coptic texts edited with an English translation (1888); Bolland,
+<i>Acta Sancti</i>, iii. 101; E.O. Gordon, <i>Saint George</i> (1907); M.H.
+Bulley, <i>St George for Merrie England</i> (1908).</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1b" id="ft1b" href="#fa1b"><span class="fn">1</span></a> G.A. Smith (<i>Hist. Geog. of Holy Land</i>, p. 164) points out another
+coincidence. &ldquo;The Mahommedans who usually identify St George
+with the prophet Elijah, at Lydda confound his legend with one
+about Christ himself. Their name for Antichrist is Dajjal, and they
+have a tradition that Jesus will slay Antichrist by the gate of Lydda.
+The notion sprang from an ancient bas-relief of George and the
+Dragon on the Lydda church. But Dajjal may be derived, by a
+very common confusion between <i>n</i> and <i>l</i>, from Dagon, whose name
+two neighbouring villages bear to this day, while one of the gates of
+Lydda used to be called the Gate of Dagon.&rdquo; It is a curious process
+by which the monster that symbolized heathenism conquered by
+Christianity has been evolved out of the first great rival of the God of
+Israel.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE I.<a name="ar3" id="ar3"></a></span> [George Louis] (1660-1727), king of Great Britain
+and Ireland, born in 1660, was heir through his father Ernest
+Augustus to the hereditary lay bishopric of Osnabrück, and to
+the duchy of Calenberg, which formed one portion of the Hanoverian
+possessions of the house of Brunswick, whilst he secured
+the reversion of the other portion, the duchy of Celle or Zell,
+by his marriage (1682) with the heiress, his cousin Sophia
+Dorothea. The marriage was not a happy one. The morals
+of German courts in the end of the 17th century took their tone
+from the splendid profligacy of Versailles. It became the
+fashion for a prince to amuse himself with a mistress or more
+frequently with many mistresses simultaneously, and he was
+often content that the mistresses whom he favoured should be
+neither beautiful nor witty. George Louis followed the usual
+course. Count Königsmark&mdash;a handsome adventurer&mdash;seized
+the opportunity of paying court to the deserted wife. Conjugal
+infidelity was held at Hanover to be a privilege of the male sex.
+Count Königsmark was assassinated. Sophia Dorothea was
+divorced in 1694, and remained in seclusion till her death in
+1726. When George IV., her descendant in the fourth generation,
+attempted in England to call his wife to account for sins of
+which he was himself notoriously guilty, free-spoken public
+opinion reprobated the offence in no measured terms. But in
+the Germany of the 17th century all free-spoken public opinion
+had been crushed out by the misery of the Thirty Years&rsquo; War,
+and it was understood that princes were to arrange their domestic
+life according to their own pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>The prince&rsquo;s father did much to raise the dignity of his family.
+By sending help to the emperor when he was struggling against
+the French and the Turks, he obtained the grant of a ninth
+electorate in 1692. His marriage with Sophia, the youngest
+daughter of Elizabeth the daughter of James I. of England,
+was not one which at first seemed likely to confer any prospect
+of advancement to his family. But though there were many
+persons whose birth gave them better claims than she had to the
+English crown, she found herself, upon the death of the duke of
+Gloucester, the next Protestant heir after Anne. The Act of
+Settlement in 1701 secured the inheritance to herself and her
+descendants. Being old and unambitious she rather permitted
+herself to be burthened with the honour than thrust herself
+forward to meet it. Her son George took a deeper interest in
+the matter. In his youth he had fought with determined courage
+in the wars of William III. Succeeding to the electorate on his
+father&rsquo;s death in 1698, he had sent a welcome reinforcement
+of Hanoverians to fight under Marlborough at Blenheim. With
+prudent persistence he attached himself closely to the Whigs
+and to Marlborough, refusing Tory offers of an independent
+command, and receiving in return for his fidelity a guarantee by
+the Dutch of his succession to England in the Barrier treaty of
+1709. In 1714 when Anne was growing old, and Bolingbroke
+and the more reckless Tories were coquetting with the son of
+James II., the Whigs invited George&rsquo;s eldest son, who was duke
+of Cambridge, to visit England in order to be on the spot in case
+of need. Neither the elector nor his mother approved of a step
+which was likely to alienate the queen, and which was specially
+distasteful to himself, as he was on very bad terms with his son.
+Yet they did not set themselves against the strong wish of the
+party to which they looked for support, and it is possible that
+troubles would have arisen from any attempt to carry out the
+plan, if the deaths, first of the electress (May 28) and then of the
+queen (August 1, 1714), had not laid open George&rsquo;s way to the
+succession without further effort of his own.</p>
+
+<p>In some respects the position of the new king was not unlike
+that of William III. a quarter of a century before. Both
+sovereigns were foreigners, with little knowledge of English
+politics and little interest in English legislation. Both sovereigns
+arrived at a time when party spirit had been running high, and when
+the task before the ruler was to still the waves of contention.
+In spite of the difference between an intellectually great man
+and an intellectually small one, in spite too of the difference
+between the king who began by choosing his ministers from
+both parties and the king who persisted in choosing his ministers
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page738" id="page738"></a>738</span>
+from only one, the work of pacification was accomplished by
+George even more thoroughly than by William.</p>
+
+<p>George I. was fortunate in arriving in England when a great
+military struggle had come to an end. He had therefore no
+reason to call upon the nation to make great sacrifices. All
+that he wanted was to secure for himself and his family a high
+position which he hardly knew how to occupy, to fill the pockets
+of his German attendants and his German mistresses, to get
+away as often as possible from the uncongenial islanders whose
+language he was unable to speak, and to use the strength of
+England to obtain petty advantages for his German principality.
+In order to do this he attached himself entirely to the Whig
+party, though he refused to place himself at the disposal of its
+leaders. He gave his confidence, not to Somers and Wharton
+and Marlborough, but to Stanhope and Townshend, the statesmen
+of the second rank. At first he seemed to be playing a
+dangerous game. The Tories, whom he rejected, were numerically
+superior to their adversaries, and were strong in the support
+of the country gentlemen and the country clergy. The strength
+of the Whigs lay in the towns and in the higher aristocracy.
+Below both parties lay the mass of the nation, which cared
+nothing for politics except in special seasons of excitement,
+and which asked only to be let alone. In 1715 a Jacobite insurrection
+in the north, supported by the appearance of the
+Pretender, the son of James II., in Scotland, was suppressed,
+and its suppression not only gave to the government a character
+of stability, but displayed its adversaries in an unfavourable
+light as the disturbers of the peace.</p>
+
+<p>Even this advantage, however, would have been thrown
+away if the Whigs in power had continued to be animated by
+violent party spirit. What really happened was that the Tory
+leaders were excluded from office, but that the principles and
+prejudices of the Tories were admitted to their full weight in the
+policy of the government. The natural result followed. The
+leaders to whom no regard was paid continued in opposition.
+The rank and file, who would personally have gained nothing
+by a party victory, were conciliated into quiescence.</p>
+
+<p>This mingling of two policies was conspicuous both in the
+foreign and the domestic actions of the reign. In the days of
+Queen Anne the Whig party had advocated the continuance
+of war with a view to the complete humiliation of the king of
+France, whom they feared as the protector of the Pretender,
+and in whose family connexion with the king of Spain they saw
+a danger for England. The Tory party, on the other hand, had
+been the authors of the peace of Utrecht, and held that France
+was sufficiently depressed. A fortunate concurrence of circumstances
+enabled George&rsquo;s ministers, by an alliance with the
+regent of France, the duke of Orleans, to pursue at the same time
+the Whig policy of separating France from Spain and from the
+cause of the Pretender, and the Tory policy of the maintenance
+of a good understanding with their neighbour across the Channel.
+The same eclecticism was discernible in the proceedings of the
+home government. The Whigs were conciliated by the repeal
+of the Schism Act and the Occasional Conformity Act, whilst
+the Tories were conciliated by the maintenance of the Test Act
+in all its vigour. The satisfaction of the masses was increased
+by the general well-being of the nation.</p>
+
+<p>Very little of all that was thus accomplished was directly
+owing to George I. The policy of the reign is the policy of his
+ministers. Stanhope and Townshend from 1714 to 1717 were
+mainly occupied with the defence of the Hanoverian settlement.
+After the dismissal of the latter in 1717, Stanhope in conjunction
+with Sunderland took up a more decided Whig policy. The
+Occasional Conformity Act and the Schism Act were repealed
+in 1719. But the wish of the liberal Whigs to modify if not to
+repeal the Test Act remained unsatisfied. In the following
+year the bursting of the South Sea bubble, and the subsequent
+deaths of Stanhope in 1721 and of Sunderland in 1722, cleared
+the way for the accession to power of Sir Robert Walpole, to
+whom and not to the king was due the conciliatory policy which
+quieted Tory opposition by abstaining from pushing Whig
+principles to their legitimate consequences.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless something of the honour due to Walpole must
+be reckoned to the king&rsquo;s credit. It is evident that at his accession
+his decisions were by no means unimportant. The royal
+authority was still able within certain limits to make its own
+terms. This support was so necessary to the Whigs that they
+made no resistance when he threw aside their leaders on his
+arrival in England. When by his personal intervention he
+dismissed Townshend and appointed Sunderland, he had no
+such social and parliamentary combination to fear as that which
+almost mastered his great-grandson in his struggle for power.
+If such a combination arose before the end of his reign it was
+owing more to his omitting to fulfil the duties of his station than
+from the necessity of the case. As he could talk no English,
+and his ministers could talk no German, he absented himself
+from the meetings of the cabinet, and his frequent absences
+from England and his want of interest in English politics
+strengthened the cabinet in its tendency to assert an independent
+position. Walpole at last by his skill in the management of
+parliament rose as a subject into the almost royal position denoted
+by the name of prime minister. In connexion with Walpole
+the force of wealth and station established the Whig aristocracy
+in a point of vantage from which it was afterwards difficult
+to dislodge them. Yet, though George had allowed the power
+which had been exercised by William and Anne to slip through
+his hands, it was understood to the last that if he chose to exert
+himself he might cease to be a mere cipher in the conduct of
+affairs. As late as 1727 Bolingbroke gained over one of the king&rsquo;s
+mistresses, the duchess of Kendal; and though her support of
+the fallen Jacobite took no effect, Walpole was not without fear
+that her reiterated entreaties would lead to his dismissal. The
+king&rsquo;s death in a carriage on his way to Hanover, in the night
+between 10th and 11th June in the same year, put an end to
+these apprehensions.</p>
+
+<p>His only children were his successor George II. and Sophia
+Dorothea (1687-1757), who married in 1706 Frederick William,
+crown prince (afterwards king) of Prussia. She was the mother
+of Frederick the Great.</p>
+<div class="author">(S. R. G.)</div>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See the standard English histories. A recent popular work is
+L. Melville&rsquo;s <i>The First George in Hanover and England</i> (1908).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE II.<a name="ar4" id="ar4"></a></span> [George Augustus] (1683-1760), king of Great
+Britain and Ireland, the only son of George I., was born in 1683.
+In 1705 he married Wilhelmina Caroline of Anspach. In 1706
+he was created earl of Cambridge. In 1708 he fought bravely
+at Oudenarde. At his father&rsquo;s accession to the English throne
+he was thirty-one years of age. He was already on bad terms
+with his father. The position of an heir-apparent is in no case an
+easy one to fill with dignity, and the ill-treatment of the prince&rsquo;s
+mother by his father was not likely to strengthen in him a
+reverence for paternal authority. It was most unwillingly that,
+on his first journey to Hanover in 1716, George I. appointed the
+prince of Wales guardian of the realm during his absence. In
+1717 the existing ill-feeling ripened into an open breach. At
+the baptism of one of his children, the prince selected one godfather
+whilst the king persisted in selecting another. The young
+man spoke angrily, was ordered into arrest, and was subsequently
+commanded to leave St James&rsquo;s and to be excluded from all
+court ceremonies. The prince took up his residence at Leicester
+House, and did everything in his power to support the opposition
+against his father&rsquo;s ministers.</p>
+
+<p>When therefore George I. died in 1727, it was generally supposed
+that Walpole would be at once dismissed. The first direction
+of the new king was that Sir Spencer Compton would draw up
+the speech in which he was to announce to the privy council his
+accession. Compton, not knowing how to set about his task,
+applied to Walpole for aid. Queen Caroline took advantage
+of this evidence of incapacity, advocated Walpole&rsquo;s cause with
+her husband and procured his continuance in office. This
+curious scene was indicative of the course likely to be taken by
+the new sovereign. His own mind was incapable of rising above
+the merest details of business. He made war in the spirit of a
+drill-sergeant, and he economized his income with the minute
+regularity of a clerk. A blunder of a master of the ceremonies
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page739" id="page739"></a>739</span>
+in marshalling the attendants on a levee put him out of temper.
+He took the greatest pleasure in counting his money piece by
+piece, and he never forgot a date. He was above all things
+methodical and regular. &ldquo;He seems,&rdquo; said one who knew him
+well, &ldquo;to think his having done a thing to-day an unanswerable
+reason for his doing it to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Most men so utterly immersed in details would be very
+impracticable to deal with. They would obstinately refuse to
+listen to a wisdom and prudence which meant nothing in their
+ears, and which brought home to them a sense of their own
+inferiority. It was the happy peculiarity of George II. that he
+was exempt from this failing. He seemed to have an instinctive
+understanding that such and such persons were either wiser or
+even stronger than himself, and when he had once discovered that,
+he gave way with scarcely a struggle. Thus it was that, though
+in his domestic relations he was as loose a liver as his father had
+been, he allowed himself to be guided by the wise but unobtrusive
+counsels of his wife until her death in 1737, and that when once
+he had recognized Walpole&rsquo;s superiority he allowed himself to
+be guided by the political sagacity of the great minister. It is
+difficult to exaggerate the importance of such a temper upon the
+development of the constitution. The apathy of the nation in
+all but the most exciting political questions, fostered by the
+calculated conservatism of Walpole, had thrown power into the
+hands of the great landowners. They maintained their authority
+by supporting a minister who was ready to make use of corruption,
+wherever corruption was likely to be useful, and who could
+veil over the baseness of the means which he employed by his
+talents in debate and in finance. To shake off a combination
+so strong would not have been easy. George II. submitted to
+it without a struggle.</p>
+
+<p>So strong indeed had the Whig aristocracy grown that it
+began to lose its cohesion. Walpole was determined to monopolize
+power, and he dismissed from office all who ventured to oppose
+him. An opposition formidable in talents was gradually formed.
+In its composite ranks were to be found Tories and discontented
+Whigs, discarded official hacks who were hungry for the emoluments
+of office, and youthful purists who fancied that if Walpole
+were removed, bribes and pensions would cease to be attractive
+to a corrupt generation. Behind them was Bolingbroke, excluded
+from parliament but suggesting every party move. In 1737 the
+opposition acquired the support of Frederick, prince of Wales.
+The young man, weak and headstrong, rebelled against the
+strict discipline exacted by his father. His marriage in 1736
+to Augusta of Saxony brought on an open quarrel. In 1737,
+just as the princess of Wales was about to give birth to her first
+child, she was hurried away by her husband from Hampton
+Court to St James&rsquo;s Palace at the imminent risk of her life,
+simply in order that the prince might show his spite to his father
+who had provided all necessary attendance at the former place.
+George ordered his son to quit St James&rsquo;s, and to absent himself
+from court. Frederick in disgrace gave the support of his name,
+and he had nothing else to give, to the opposition. Later in the
+year 1737, on the 20th of November, Queen Caroline died. In
+1742 Walpole, weighed down by the unpopularity both of his
+reluctance to engage in a war with Spain and of his supposed
+remissness in conducting the operations of that war, was driven
+from office. His successors formed a composite ministry in which
+Walpole&rsquo;s old colleagues and Walpole&rsquo;s old opponents were alike
+to be found.</p>
+
+<p>The years which followed settled conclusively, at least for this
+reign, the constitutional question of the power of appointing
+ministers. The war between Spain and England had broken
+out in 1739. In 1741 the death of the emperor Charles VI.
+brought on the war of the Austrian succession. The position of
+George II. as a Hanoverian prince drew him to the side of Maria
+Theresa through jealousy of the rising Prussian monarchy.
+Jealousy of France led England in the same direction, and in
+1741 a subsidy of Ł300,000 was voted to Maria Theresa. The
+king himself went to Germany and attempted to carry on the
+war according to his own notions. Those notions led him to
+regard the safety of Hanover as of far more importance than
+the wishes of England. Finding that a French army was about
+to march upon his German states, he concluded with France a
+treaty of neutrality for a year without consulting a single English
+minister. In England the news was received with feelings of
+disgust. The expenditure of English money and troops was to
+be thrown uselessly away as soon as it appeared that Hanover
+was in the slightest danger. In 1742 Walpole was no longer in
+office. Lord Wilmington, the nominal head of the ministry, was
+a mere cipher. The ablest and most energetic of his colleagues,
+Lord Carteret (afterwards Granville), attached himself specially
+to the king, and sought to maintain himself in power by his
+special favour and by brilliant achievements in diplomacy.</p>
+
+<p>In part at least by Carteret&rsquo;s mediation the peace of Breslau
+was signed, by which Maria Theresa ceded Silesia to Frederick
+(July 28, 1742). Thus relieved on her northern frontier, she
+struck out vigorously towards the west. Bavaria was overrun
+by her troops. In the beginning of 1743 one French army was
+driven across the Rhine. On June 27th another French army
+was defeated by George II. in person at Dettingen. Victory
+brought elation to Maria Theresa. Her war of defence was
+turned into a war of vengeance. Bavaria was to be annexed.
+The French frontier was to be driven back. George II. and
+Carteret after some hesitation placed themselves on her side.
+Of the public opinion of the political classes in England they
+took no thought. Hanoverian troops were indeed to be employed
+in the war, but they were to be taken into British pay. Collisions
+between British and Hanoverian officers were frequent. A
+storm arose against the preference shown to Hanoverian
+interests. After a brief struggle Carteret, having become
+Lord Granville by his mother&rsquo;s death, was driven from office
+in November 1744.</p>
+
+<p>Henry Pelham, who had become prime minister in the preceding
+year, thus saw himself established in power. By the acceptance
+of this ministry, the king acknowledged that the function of
+choosing a ministry and directing a policy had passed from his
+hands. In 1745 indeed he recalled Granville, but a few days
+were sufficient to convince him of the futility of his attempt, and
+the effort to exclude Pitt at a later time proved equally fruitless.</p>
+
+<p>Important as were the events of the remainder of the reign,
+therefore, they can hardly be grouped round the name of George
+II. The resistance to the invasion of the Young Pretender in
+1745, the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748, the great war ministry
+of Pitt at the close of the reign, did not receive their impulse from
+him. He had indeed done his best to exclude Pitt from office.
+He disliked him on account of his opposition in former years to
+the sacrifices demanded by the Hanoverian connexion. When
+in 1756 Pitt became secretary of state in the Devonshire administration,
+the king bore the yoke with difficulty. Early in the next
+year he complained of Pitt&rsquo;s long speeches as being above his
+comprehension, and on April 5, 1757, he dismissed him, only
+to take him back shortly after, when Pitt, coalescing with
+Newcastle, became master of the situation. Before Pitt&rsquo;s dismissal
+George II. had for once an opportunity of placing himself
+on the popular side, though, as was the case of his grandson during
+the American war, it was when the popular side happened to be
+in the wrong. In the true spirit of a martinet, he wished to see
+Admiral Byng executed. Pitt urged the wish of the House of
+Commons to have him pardoned. &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; replied the king, &ldquo;you
+have taught me to look for the sense of my subjects in another
+place than in the House of Commons.&rdquo; When George II. died
+in 1760, he left behind him a settled understanding that the
+monarchy was one of the least of the forces by which the policy
+of the country was directed. To this end he had contributed
+much by his disregard of English opinion in 1743; but it may
+fairly be added that, but for his readiness to give way to irresistible
+adversaries, the struggle might have been far more bitter and
+severe than it was.</p>
+
+<p>Of the connexion between Hanover and England in this reign
+two memorials remain more pleasant to contemplate than the
+records of parliamentary and ministerial intrigues. With the
+support of George II., amidst the derision of the English fashionable
+world, the Hanoverian Handel produced in England those
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page740" id="page740"></a>740</span>
+masterpieces which have given delight to millions, whilst the
+foundation of the university of Göttingen by the same king
+opened a door through which English political ideas afterwards
+penetrated into Germany.</p>
+
+<p>George II. had three sons,&mdash;Frederick Louis (1707-1751);
+George William (1717-1718); and William Augustus, duke of
+Cumberland (1721-1765); and five daughters, Anne (1709-1759),
+married to William, prince of Orange, 1734; Amelia Sophia
+Eleonora (1711-1786); Elizabeth Caroline (1713-1757); Mary
+(1723-1772), married to Frederick, landgrave of Hesse-Cassel,
+1740; Louisa (1724-1751), married to Frederick V., king of
+Denmark, 1743.</p>
+<div class="author">(S. R. G.)</div>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Lord Hervey, <i>Memoirs of the Reign of George II.</i>, ed. by J. W,
+Croker (3 vols., London, 1884); Horace Walpole, <i>Mem. of the Reign
+of George II.</i>, with notes by Lord Holland (3 vols., 2nd ed., 1847).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE III.<a name="ar5" id="ar5"></a></span> [George William Frederick] (1738-1820), king
+of Great Britain and Ireland, son of Frederick, prince of Wales,
+and grandson of George II., whom he succeeded in 1760, was born
+on the 4th of June 1738. After his father&rsquo;s death in 1751 he had
+been educated in seclusion from the fashionable world under
+the care of his mother and of her favourite counsellor the earl
+of Bute. He had been taught to revere the maxims of Bolingbroke&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Patriot King,&rdquo; and to believe that it was his appointed
+task in life to break the power of the Whig houses resting upon
+extensive property and the influence of patronage and corruption.
+That power had already been gravely shaken. The Whigs
+from their incompetency were obliged when the Seven Years&rsquo;
+War broke out to leave its management in the hands of William
+Pitt. The nation learned to applaud the great war minister
+who succeeded where others had failed, and whose immaculate
+purity put to shame the ruck of barterers of votes for places and
+pensions.</p>
+
+<p>In some sort the work of the new king was the continuation
+of the work of Pitt. But his methods were very different. He
+did not appeal to any widely spread feeling or prejudice; nor
+did he disdain the use of the arts which had maintained his
+opponents in power. The patronage of the crown was to be
+really as well as nominally his own; and he calculated, not
+without reason, that men would feel more flattered in accepting
+a place from a king than from a minister. The new Toryism of
+which he was the founder was no recurrence to the Toryism of
+the days of Charles II. or even of Anne. The question of the
+amount of toleration to be accorded to Dissenters had been
+entirely laid aside. The point at issue was whether the crown
+should be replaced in the position which George I. might have
+occupied at the beginning of his reign, selecting the ministers
+and influencing the deliberations of the cabinet. For this struggle
+George III. possessed no inconsiderable advantages. With an
+inflexible tenacity of purpose, he was always ready to give way
+when resistance was really hopeless. As the first English-born
+sovereign of his house, speaking from his birth the language of
+his subjects, he found a way to the hearts of many who never
+regarded his predecessors as other than foreign intruders.
+The contrast, too, between the pure domestic life which he led
+with his wife Charlotte, whom he married in 1761, and the
+habits of three generations of his house, told in his favour with
+the vast majority of his subjects. Even his marriage had been
+a sacrifice to duty. Soon after his accession he had fallen in love
+with Lady Sarah Lennox, and had been observed to ride morning
+by morning along the Kensington Road, from which the object
+of his affections was to be seen from the lawn of Holland House
+making hay, or engaged in some other ostensible employment.
+Before the year was over Lady Sarah appeared as one of the
+queen&rsquo;s bridesmaids, and she was herself married to Sir Charles
+Bunbury in 1762.</p>
+
+<p>At first everything seemed easy to him. Pitt had come to
+be regarded by his own colleagues as a minister who would pursue
+war at any price, and in getting rid of Pitt in 1761 and in carrying
+on the negotiations which led to the peace of Paris in 1762, the
+king was able to gather round him many persons who would not
+be willing to acquiesce in any permanent change in the system
+of government. With the signature of the peace his real difficulties
+began. The Whig houses, indeed, were divided amongst
+themselves by personal rivalries. But they were none of them
+inclined to let power and the advantages of power slip from their
+hands without a struggle. For some years a contest of influence
+was carried on without dignity and without any worthy aim.
+The king was not strong enough to impose upon parliament a
+ministry of his own choice. But he gathered round himself a
+body of dependants known as the king&rsquo;s friends, who were secure
+of his favour, and who voted one way or the other according
+to his wishes. Under these circumstances no ministry could
+possibly be stable; and yet every ministry was strong enough
+to impose some conditions on the king. Lord Bute, the king&rsquo;s
+first choice, resigned from a sense of his own incompetency in
+1763. George Grenville was in office till 1765; the marquis of
+Rockingham till 1766; Pitt, becoming earl of Chatham, till
+illness compelled him to retire from the conduct of affairs in
+1767, when he was succeeded by the duke of Grafton. But a
+struggle of interests could gain no real strength for any government,
+and the only chance the king had of effecting a permanent
+change in the balance of power lay in the possibility of his
+associating himself with some phase of strong national feeling,
+as Pitt had associated himself with the war feeling caused by
+the dissatisfaction spread by the weakness and ineptitude of his
+predecessors.</p>
+
+<p>Such a chance was offered by the question of the right to tax
+America. The notion that England was justified in throwing
+on America part of the expenses caused in the late war was
+popular in the country, and no one adopted it more pertinaciously
+then George III. At the bottom the position which he assumed
+was as contrary to the principles of parliamentary government
+as the encroachments of Charles I. had been. But it was veiled in
+the eyes of Englishmen by the prominence given to the power
+of the British parliament rather than to the power of the British
+king. In fact the theory of parliamentary government, like most
+theories after their truth has long been universally acknowledged,
+had become a superstition. Parliaments were held to be properly
+vested with authority, not because they adequately represented
+the national will, but simply because they were parliaments.
+There were thousands of people in England to whom it never
+occurred that there was any good reason why a British parliament
+should be allowed to levy a duty on tea in the London docks
+and should not be allowed to levy a duty on tea at the wharves
+of Boston. Undoubtedly George III. derived great strength
+from his honest participation in this mistake. Contending under
+parliamentary forms, he did not wound the susceptibilities of
+members of parliament, and when at last in 1770 he appointed
+Lord North&mdash;a minister of his own selection&mdash;prime minister,
+the object of his ambition was achieved with the concurrence of a
+large body of politicians who had nothing in common with the
+servile band of the king&rsquo;s friends.</p>
+
+<p>As long as the struggle with America was carried on with any
+hope of success they gained that kind of support which is always
+forthcoming to a government which shares in the errors and
+prejudices of its subjects. The expulsion of Wilkes from the
+House of Commons in 1769, and the refusal of the House to accept
+him as a member after his re-election, raised a grave constitutional
+question in which the king was wholly in the wrong; and Wilkes
+was popular in London and Middlesex. But his case roused
+no national indignation, and when in 1774 those sharp measures
+were taken with Boston which led to the commencement of the
+American rebellion in 1775, the opposition to the course taken
+by the king made little way either in parliament or in the country.
+Burke might point out the folly and inexpedience of the proceedings
+of the government. Chatham might point out that the true
+spirit of English government was to be representative, and that
+that spirit was being violated at home and abroad. George III.,
+who thought that the first duty of the Americans was to obey
+himself, had on his side the mass of unreflecting Englishmen who
+thought that the first duty of all colonists was to be useful and
+submissive to the mother-country. The natural dislike of every
+country engaged in war to see itself defeated was on his side,
+and when the news of Burgoyne&rsquo;s surrender at Saratoga arrived
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page741" id="page741"></a>741</span>
+in 1777, subscriptions of money to raise new regiments poured
+freely in.</p>
+
+<p>In March 1778 the French ambassador in London announced
+that a treaty of friendship and commerce had been concluded
+between France and the new United States of America. Lord
+North was anxious to resign power into stronger hands, and
+begged the king to receive Chatham as his prime minister.
+The king would not hear of it. He would have nothing to say to
+&ldquo;that perfidious man&rdquo; unless he would humble himself to enter
+the ministry as North&rsquo;s subordinate. Chatham naturally refused
+to do anything of the kind, and his death in the course of the year
+relieved the king of the danger of being again overruled by too
+overbearing a minister. England was now at war with France,
+and in 1779 she was also at war with Spain.</p>
+
+<p>George III. was still able to control the disposition of office.
+He could not control the course of events. His very ministers
+gave up the struggle as hopeless long before he would acknowledge
+the true state of the case. Before the end of 1779, two of the
+leading members of the cabinet, Lords Gower and Weymouth,
+resigned rather than bear the responsibility of so ruinous an
+enterprise as the attempt to overpower America and France
+together. Lord North retained office, but he acknowledged to
+the king that his own opinion was precisely the same as that
+of his late colleagues.</p>
+
+<p>The year 1780 saw an agitation rising in the country for
+economical reform, an agitation very closely though indirectly
+connected with the war policy of the king. The public meetings
+held in the country on this subject have no unimportant place
+in the development of the constitution. Since the presentation
+of the Kentish petition in the reign of William III. there had
+been from time to time upheavings of popular feeling against
+the doings of the legislature, which kept up the tradition that
+parliament existed in order to represent the nation. But these
+upheavings had all been so associated with ignorance and violence
+as to make it very difficult for men of sense to look with displeasure
+upon the existing emancipation of the House of Commons
+from popular control. The Sacheverell riots, the violent attacks
+upon the Excise Bill, the no less violent advocacy of the Spanish
+War, the declamations of the supporters of Wilkes at a more
+recent time, and even in this very year the Gordon riots, were
+not likely to make thoughtful men anxious to place real power
+in the hands of the classes from whom such exhibitions of folly
+proceeded. But the movement for economical reform was of
+a very different kind. It was carried on soberly in manner, and
+with a definite practical object. It asked for no more than the
+king ought to have been willing to concede. It attacked useless
+expenditure upon sinecures and unnecessary offices in the
+household, the only use of which was to spread abroad corruption
+amongst the upper classes. George III. could not bear to be
+interfered with at all, or to surrender any element of power
+which had served him in his long struggle with the Whigs. He
+held out for more than another year. The news of the capitulation
+of Yorktown reached London on the 25th of November
+1781. On the 20th of March 1782 Lord North resigned.</p>
+
+<p>George III. accepted the consequences of defeat. He called
+the marquis of Rockingham to office at the head of a ministry
+composed of pure Whigs and of the disciples of the late earl of
+Chatham, and he authorized the new ministry to open negotiations
+for peace. Their hands were greatly strengthened by
+Rodney&rsquo;s victory over the French fleet, and the failure of the
+combined French and Spanish attack upon Gibraltar; and
+before the end of 1782 a provisional treaty was signed with
+America, preliminaries of peace with France and Spain being
+signed early in the following year. On the 3rd of September 1783
+the definitive treaties with the three countries were simultaneously
+concluded. &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the king to John Adams, the first
+minister of the United States of America accredited to him,
+&ldquo;I wish you to believe, and that it may be understood in America,
+that I have done nothing in the late contest but what I thought
+myself indispensably bound to do by the duty which I owed to
+my people. I will be very frank with you. I was the last to
+consent to the separation: but the separation having been made
+and having become inevitable, I have always said, as I say now,
+that I would be the first to meet the friendship of the United
+States as an independent power.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Long before the signature of the treaties Rockingham died
+(July 1, 1782). The king chose Lord Shelburne, the head of
+the Chatham section of the government, to be prime minister.
+Fox and the followers of Rockingham refused to serve except
+under the duke of Portland, a minister of their own selection,
+and resigned office. The old constitutional struggle of the reign
+was now to be fought out once more. Fox, too weak to obtain
+a majority alone, coalesced with Lord North, and defeated
+Shelburne in the House of Commons on the 27th of February
+1783. On the 2nd of April the coalition took office, with Portland
+as nominal prime minister, and Fox and North the secretaries
+of state as its real heads.</p>
+
+<p>This attempt to impose upon him a ministry which he disliked
+made the king very angry. But the new cabinet had a large
+majority in the House of Commons, and the only chance of
+resisting it lay in an appeal to the country against the House of
+Commons. Such an appeal was not likely to be responded to
+unless the ministers discredited themselves with the nation.
+<span class="correction" title="amended from Goerge">George</span> III. therefore waited his time. Though a coalition
+between men bitterly opposed to one another in all political
+principles and drawn together by nothing but love of office was
+in itself discreditable, it needed some more positive cause of
+dissatisfaction to arouse the constituencies, which were by no
+means so ready to interfere in political disputes at that time as
+they are now. Such dissatisfaction was given by the India Bill,
+drawn up by Burke. As soon as it had passed through the Commons
+the king hastened to procure its rejection in the House of
+Lords by his personal intervention with the peers. He authorized
+Lord Temple to declare in his name that he would count any
+peer who voted for the bill as his enemy. On the 17th of
+December 1783 the bill was thrown out. The next day ministers
+were dismissed. William Pitt became prime minister. After
+some weeks&rsquo; struggle with a constantly decreasing majority in
+the Commons, the king dissolved parliament on the 25th of
+March 1784. The country rallied round the crown and the
+young minister, and Pitt was firmly established in office.</p>
+
+<p>There can be no reasonable doubt<a name="fa1c" id="fa1c" href="#ft1c"><span class="sp">1</span></a> that Pitt not only took
+advantage of the king&rsquo;s intervention in the Lords, but was
+cognizant of the intrigue before it was actually carried out. It
+was upon him, too, that the weight of reconciling the country
+to an administration formed under such circumstances lay.
+The general result, so far as George III. was concerned, was
+that to all outward appearance he had won the great battle of
+his life. It was he who was to appoint the prime minister, not
+any clique resting on a parliamentary support. But the circumstances
+under which the victory was won were such as to place
+the constitution in a position very different from that in which
+it would have been if the victory had been gained earlier in the
+reign. Intrigue there was indeed in 1783 and 1784 as there had
+been twenty years before. Parliamentary support was conciliated
+by Pitt by the grant of royal favours as it had been in
+the days of Bute. The actual blow was struck by a most questionable
+message to individual peers. But the main result of the
+whole political situation was that George III. had gone a long
+way towards disentangling the reality of parliamentary government
+from its accidents. His ministry finally stood because
+it had appealed to the constituencies against their representatives.
+Since then it has properly become a constitutional axiom that
+no such appeal should be made by the crown itself. But it
+may reasonably be doubted whether any one but the king
+was at that time capable of making the appeal. Lord Shelburne,
+the leader of the ministry expelled by the coalition, was unpopular
+in the country, and the younger Pitt had not had time to make
+his great abilities known beyond a limited circle. The real
+question for the constitutional historian to settle is not whether
+under ordinary circumstances a king is the proper person to
+place himself really as well as nominally at the head of the
+government; but whether under the special circumstances
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page742" id="page742"></a>742</span>
+which existed in 1783 it was not better that the king should
+call upon the people to support him, than that government
+should be left in the hands of men who rested their power on
+close boroughs and the dispensation of patronage, without
+looking beyond the walls of the House of Commons for support.</p>
+
+<p>That the king gained credit far beyond his own deserts by the
+glories of Pitt&rsquo;s ministry is beyond a doubt. Nor can there be
+any reasonable doubt that his own example of domestic propriety
+did much to strengthen the position of his minister. It is true
+that that life was insufferably dull. No gleams of literary or
+artistic taste lightened it up. The dependants of the court
+became inured to dull routine unchequered by loving sympathy.
+The sons of the household were driven by the sheer weariness of
+such an existence into the coarsest profligacy. But all this was
+not visible from a distance. The tide of moral and religious
+improvement which had set in in England since the days of
+Wesley brought popularity to a king who was faithful to his
+wife, in the same way that the tide of manufacturing industry
+and scientific progress brought popularity to the minister who
+in some measure translated into practice the principles of the
+<i>Wealth of Nations</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Nor were there wanting subjects of importance beyond the
+circle of politics in which George III. showed a lively interest.
+The voyages of discovery which made known so large a part of
+the islands and coasts of the Pacific Ocean received from him
+a warm support. In the early days of the Royal Academy,
+its finances were strengthened by liberal grants from the privy
+purse. His favourite pursuit, however, was farming. When
+Arthur Young was issuing his <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, he was
+supplied with information by the king, under the assumed name
+of Mr Ralph Robinson, relating to a farm at Petersham.</p>
+
+<p>The life of the king was suddenly clouded over. Early in his
+reign, in 1765, he had been out of health, and&mdash;though the fact
+was studiously concealed at the time&mdash;symptoms of mental
+aberration were even then to be perceived. In October 1788 he
+was again out of health, and in the beginning of the following
+month his insanity was beyond a doubt. Whilst Pitt and Fox
+were contending in the House of Commons over the terms on
+which the regency should be committed to the prince of Wales,
+the king was a helpless victim to the ignorance of physicians and
+the brutalities of his servants. At last Dr Willis, who had made
+himself a name by prescribing gentleness instead of rigour in
+the treatment of the insane, was called in. Under his more
+humane management the king rapidly recovered. Before the
+end of February 1789 he was able to write to Pitt thanking him
+for his warm support of his interests during his illness. On the
+23rd of April he went in person to St Paul&rsquo;s to return thanks
+for his recovery.</p>
+
+<p>The popular enthusiasm which burst forth around St Paul&rsquo;s
+was but a foretaste of a popularity far more universal. The
+French Revolution frightened the great Whig landowners till
+they made their peace with the king. Those who thought that
+the true basis of government was aristocratical were now of one
+mind with those who thought that the true basis of government
+was monarchical; and these two classes were joined by a far
+larger multitude which had no political ideas whatever, but which
+had a moral horror of the guillotine. As Elizabeth had once
+been the symbol of resistance to Spain, George was now the
+symbol of resistance to France. He was not, however, more
+than the symbol. He allowed Pitt to levy taxes and incur debt,
+to launch armies to defeat, and to prosecute the English imitators
+of French revolutionary courses. At last, however, after the
+Union with Ireland was accomplished, he learned that Pitt was
+planning a scheme to relieve the Catholics from the disabilities
+under which they laboured. The plan was revealed to him by
+the chancellor, Lord Loughborough, a selfish and intriguing
+politician who had served all parties in turn, and who sought to
+forward his own interests by falling in with the king&rsquo;s prejudices.
+George III. at once took up the position from which he never
+swerved. He declared that to grant concessions to the Catholics
+involved a breach of his coronation oath. No one has ever
+doubted that the king was absolutely convinced of the serious
+nature of the objection. Nor can there be any doubt that he
+had the English people behind him. Both in his peace ministry
+and in his war ministry Pitt had taken his stand on royal favour
+and on popular support. Both failed him alike now, and he
+resigned office at once. The shock to the king&rsquo;s mind was so
+great that it brought on a fresh attack of insanity. This time,
+however, the recovery was rapid. On the 14th of March 1801
+Pitt&rsquo;s resignation was formally accepted, and the late speaker,
+Mr Addington, was installed in office as prime minister.</p>
+
+<p>The king was well pleased with the change. He was never
+capable of appreciating high merit in any one; and he was
+unable to perceive that the question on which Pitt had resigned
+was more than an improper question, with which he ought never
+to have meddled. &ldquo;Tell him,&rdquo; he said, in directing his physician
+to inform Pitt of his restoration to health, &ldquo;I am now quite well,
+quite recovered from my illness; but what has he not to answer
+for, who has been the cause of my having been ill at all?&rdquo;
+Addington was a minister after his own mind. Thoroughly
+honest and respectable, with about the same share of abilities
+as was possessed by the king himself, he was certainly not likely
+to startle the world by any flights of genius. But for one circumstance
+Addington&rsquo;s ministry would have lasted long. So strong
+was the reaction against the Revolution that the bulk of the nation
+was almost as suspicious of genius as the king himself. Not only
+was there no outcry for legislative reforms, but the very idea of
+reform was unpopular. The country gentlemen were predominant
+in parliament, and the country gentlemen as a body looked upon
+Addington with respect and affection. Such a minister was therefore
+admirably suited to preside over affairs at home in the existing
+state of opinion. But those who were content with inaction at
+home would not be content with inaction abroad. In time of
+peace Addington would have been popular for a season. In
+time of war even his warmest admirers could not say that he
+was the man to direct armies in the most terrible struggle which
+had ever been conducted by an English government.</p>
+
+<p>For the moment this difficulty was not felt. On the 1st of
+October 1801, preliminaries of peace were signed between
+England and France, to be converted into the definitive peace
+of Amiens on the 27th of March 1802. The ruler of France was
+now Napoleon Bonaparte, and few persons in England believed
+that he had any real purpose of bringing his aggressive violence
+to an end. &ldquo;Do you know what I call this peace?&rdquo; said the
+king; &ldquo;an experimental peace, for it is nothing else. But it
+was unavoidable.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The king was right. On the 18th of May 1803 the declaration
+of war was laid before parliament. The war was accepted by
+all classes as inevitable, and the French preparations for an
+invasion of England roused the whole nation to a glow of
+enthusiasm only equalled by that felt when the Armada
+threatened its shores. On the 26th of October the king reviewed
+the London volunteers in Hyde Park. He found himself the
+centre of a great national movement with which he heartily
+sympathized, and which heartily sympathized with him.</p>
+
+<p>On the 12th of February 1804 the king&rsquo;s mind was again
+affected. When he recovered, he found himself in the midst
+of a ministerial crisis. Public feeling allowed but one opinion
+to prevail in the country&mdash;that Pitt, not Addington, was the
+proper man to conduct the administration in time of war. Pitt
+was anxious to form an administration on a broad basis, including
+Fox and all prominent leaders of both parties. The king would
+not hear of the admission of Fox. His dislike of him was personal
+as well as political, as he knew that Fox had had a great share
+in drawing the prince of Wales into a life of profligacy. Pitt
+accepted the king&rsquo;s terms, and formed an administration in
+which he was the only man of real ability. Eminent men, such
+as Lord Grenville, refused to join a ministry from which the king
+had excluded a great statesman on purely personal grounds.</p>
+
+<p>The whole question was reopened on Pitt&rsquo;s death on the 23rd of
+January 1806. This time the king gave way. The ministry of
+All the Talents, as it was called, included Fox amongst its
+members. At first the king was observed to appear depressed
+at the necessity of surrender. But Fox&rsquo;s charm of manner soon
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page743" id="page743"></a>743</span>
+gained upon him. &ldquo;Mr Fox,&rdquo; said the king, &ldquo;I little thought
+that you and I should ever meet again in this place; but I have
+no desire to look back upon old grievances, and you may rest
+assured I never shall remind you of them.&rdquo; On the 13th of
+September Fox died, and it was not long before the king and the
+ministry were openly in collision. The ministry proposed a
+measure enabling all subjects of the crown to serve in the army
+and navy in spite of religious disqualifications. The king objected
+even to so slight a modification of the laws against the Catholics
+and Dissenters, and the ministers consented to drop the bill.
+The king asked more than this. He demanded a written and
+positive engagement that this ministry would never, under any
+circumstances, propose to him &ldquo;any measure of concession to
+the Catholics, or even connected with the question.&rdquo; The
+ministers very properly refused to bind themselves for the future.
+They were consequently turned out of office, and a new ministry
+was formed with the duke of Portland as first lord of the treasury
+and Mr Perceval as its real leader. The spirit of the new ministry
+was distinct hostility to the Catholic claims. On the 27th of April
+1807 a dissolution of parliament was announced, and a majority
+in favour of the king&rsquo;s ministry was returned in the elections
+which speedily followed.</p>
+
+<p>The elections of 1807, like the elections of 1784, gave the
+king the mastery of the situation. In other respects they were
+the counterpart of one another. In 1784 the country declared,
+though perhaps without any clear conception of what it was
+doing, for a wise and progressive policy. In 1807 it declared
+for an unwise and retrogressive policy, with a very clear understanding
+of what it meant. It is in his reliance upon the prejudices
+and ignorance of the country that the constitutional significance
+of the reign of George III. appears. Every strong government
+derives its power from its representative character. At a time
+when the House of Commons was less really representative than
+at any other, a king was on the throne who represented the
+country in its good and bad qualities alike, in its hatred of
+revolutionary violence, its moral sturdiness, its contempt of
+foreigners, and its defiance of all ideas which were in any way
+strange. Therefore it was that his success was not permanently
+injurious to the working of the constitution as the success of
+Charles I. would have been. If he were followed by a king
+less English than himself, the strength of representative
+power would pass into other hands than those which held
+the sceptre.</p>
+
+<p>The overthrow of the ministry of All the Talents was the last
+political act of constitutional importance in which George III.
+took part. The substitution of Perceval for Portland as the
+nominal head of the ministry in 1809 was not an event of any
+real significance, and in 1811 the reign practically came to an end.
+The king&rsquo;s reason finally broke down after the death of the
+princess Amelia, his favourite child; and the prince of Wales
+(see GEORGE IV.) became prince regent. The remaining nine
+years of George III.&rsquo;s life were passed in insanity and blindness,
+and he died on the 29th of January 1820.</p>
+
+<p>His wife, Charlotte Sophia (1744-1818), was a daughter of
+Charles Louis of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (d. 1816), and was married
+to the king in London on the 8th of September 1761. After a
+peaceful and happy married life the queen died at Kew on the
+17th of November 1818.</p>
+
+<p>George III. had nine sons. After his successor came Frederick,
+duke of York and Albany (1763-1827); William Henry, duke
+of Clarence, afterwards King William IV. (1765-1837); Edward
+Augustus, duke of Kent (1767-1825), father of Queen Victoria;
+Ernest Augustus, duke of Cumberland, afterwards king of
+Hanover (1771-1851); Augustus Frederick, duke of Sussex
+(1773-1843); Adolphus Frederick, duke of Cambridge (1774-1850);
+Octavius (1779-1783); Alfred (1780-1782). He had
+also six daughters&mdash;Charlotte Augusta (1766-1828), married in
+1797 to Frederick, afterwards king of Württemberg; Augusta
+Sophia (1768-1840); Elizabeth (1770-1840), married Frederick,
+landgrave of Hesse-Homburg, 1818; Mary (1776-1857), married
+to William Frederick, duke of Gloucester, 1816; Sophia (1777-1848);
+Amelia (1783-1810).</p>
+<div class="author">(S. R. G.)</div>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The numerous contemporary memoirs and diaries are full of the
+best material for a picture of George III.&rsquo;s reign, apart from the
+standard histories. Thackeray&rsquo;s <i>Four Georges</i> must not be trusted
+so far as historical judgment is concerned; Jesse&rsquo;s <i>Memoirs of the
+Life and Reign of George III.</i> (2nd ed., 1867) is chiefly concerned with
+personalities. See also Beckles Willson, <i>George III., as Man,
+Monarch and Statesman</i> (1907).</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1c" id="ft1c" href="#fa1c"><span class="fn">1</span></a> See Lord Fitzmaurice&rsquo;s <i>Life of Shelburne</i>, iii. 393.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE IV.<a name="ar6" id="ar6"></a></span> [George Augustus Frederick] (1762-1830), king
+of Great Britain and Ireland, eldest son of George III., was born
+at St James&rsquo;s Palace, London, on the 12th of August 1762. He
+was naturally gifted, was well taught in the classics, learnt to
+speak French, Italian and German fluently, and had considerable
+taste for music and the arts; and in person he was remarkably
+handsome. His tutor, Bishop Richard Hurd, said of him when
+fifteen years old that he would be &ldquo;either the most polished
+gentleman or the most accomplished blackguard in Europe&mdash;possibly
+both&rdquo;; and the latter prediction was only too fully
+justified. Reaction from the strict and parsimonious style of
+his parents&rsquo; domestic life, which was quite out of touch with the
+gaiety and extravagance of London &ldquo;society,&rdquo; had its natural
+effect in plunging the young prince of Wales, flattered and
+courted as he was, into a whirl of pleasure-seeking. At the outset
+his disposition was brilliant and generous, but it was essentially
+unstable, and he started even before he came of age on a career of
+dissipation which in later years became wholly profligate. He
+had an early amour with the actress Mary (&ldquo;Perdita&rdquo;) Robinson,
+and in the choice of his friends he opposed and annoyed the king,
+with whom he soon became (and always remained) on the worst
+of terms, by associating himself with Fox and Sheridan and the
+Whig party. When in 1783 he came of age, a compromise
+between the coalition ministry and the king secured him an
+income of Ł50,000 from the Civil List, and Ł60,000 was voted
+by parliament to pay his debts and start his separate establishment
+at Carlton House. There, under the auspices of C.J. Fox
+and Georgiana, duchess of Devonshire, he posed as a patron of
+Whig politics and a leader in all the licence and luxury of gay
+society&mdash;the &ldquo;First gentleman in Europe,&rdquo; as his flatterers
+described him as years went on. And at this early age he fell
+seriously in love with the famous Mrs Fitzherbert.</p>
+
+<p>His long connexion with this lady may most conveniently
+be summarized here. It was indeed for some time the one redeeming
+and restraining factor in his life, though her devotion
+and self-sacrificing conduct were in marked contrast with his
+unscrupulousness and selfishness. Mary Anne (or as she always
+called herself, Maria) Fitzherbert (1756-1837) was the daughter
+of Walter Smythe, the second son of Sir John Smythe, Bart.,
+of Acton Burnell Park, Shropshire, and came of an old Roman
+Catholic family. Educated at a French convent, she married
+first in 1775 Edward Weld, who died within the year, and
+secondly in 1778 Thomas Fitzherbert, who died in 1781, leaving
+his widow with a comfortable fortune. A couple of years later
+she became a prominent figure in London society, and her beauty
+and charm at once attracted the young prince, who wooed her
+with all the ardour of a violent passion. She herself was distracted
+between her desire to return his love, her refusal to contemplate
+becoming his mistress, and her knowledge that state reasons
+made a regular marriage impossible. The Act of Settlement
+(1689) entailed his forfeiture of the succession if he married a
+Roman Catholic, apart from the fact that the Royal Marriage
+Act of 1772 made any marriage illegal without the king&rsquo;s consent,
+which was out of the question. But after trying for a while
+to escape his attentions, her scruples were overcome. In Mrs
+Fitzherbert&rsquo;s eyes the state law was, after all, not everything.
+To a Roman Catholic, and equally to any member of the Christian
+church, a formal marriage ceremony would be ecclesiastically
+and sacramentally binding; and after a period of passionate
+importunacy on his part they were secretly married by the Rev.
+R. Burt, a clergyman of the Church of England, on the 15th
+of December 1785.<a name="fa1d" id="fa1d" href="#ft1d"><span class="sp">1</span></a> There is no doubt as to Mrs Fitzherbert&rsquo;s
+belief, supported by ecclesiastical considerations, in her correct
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page744" id="page744"></a>744</span>
+and binding, though admittedly illegal, relationship to the prince
+as his canonical wife; and though that relationship was not, and
+for political reasons could not be, publicly admitted, it was in
+fact treated by their intimates on the footing of a morganatic
+marriage. The position nevertheless was inevitably a false one;
+Mrs Fitzherbert had promised not to publish the evidence of the
+marriage (which, according to a strict interpretation of the Act
+of Settlement might have barred succession to the crown), and
+the rumours which soon got about led the prince to allow it to be
+disavowed by his political friends. He lived in the most extravagant
+way, became heavily involved in debt, and as the king
+would not assist him, shut up Carlton House, and went to live
+with Mrs Fitzherbert at Brighton. In 1787 a proposal was
+brought before the House of Commons by Alderman Newnham
+for a grant in relief of his embarrassments. It was on this
+occasion that Fox publicly declared in the House of Commons,
+as on the prince&rsquo;s own authority, in answer to allusions to the
+marriage, that the story was a malicious falsehood. A little
+later Sheridan, in deference to Mrs Fitzherbert&rsquo;s pressure and
+to the prince&rsquo;s own compunction, made a speech guardedly
+modifying Fox&rsquo;s statement; but though in private the denial was
+understood, it effected its object, the House voting a grant of
+Ł221,000 to the prince and the king adding Ł10,000 to his income;
+and Mrs Fitzherbert, who at first thought of severing her
+connexion with the prince, forgave him. Their union&mdash;there was
+no child of the marriage&mdash;was brutally broken off in June 1794
+by the prince, when further pressure of debts (and the influence of
+a new Egeria in Lady Jersey) made him contemplate his official
+marriage with princess Caroline; in 1800, however, it was
+renewed, after urgent pleading on the prince&rsquo;s part, and after
+Mrs Fitzherbert had obtained a formal decision from the pope
+pronouncing her to be his wife, and sanctioning her taking him
+back; her influence over him continued till shortly before the
+prince became regent, when his relations with Lady Hertford
+brought about a final separation. For the best years of his life
+he had at least had in Mrs Fitzherbert the nearest approach to
+a real wife, and this was fully recognized by the royal family.<a name="fa2d" id="fa2d" href="#ft2d"><span class="sp">2</span></a>
+But his dissolute nature was entirely selfish, and his various
+liaisons ended in the dominance of Lady Conyngham, the &ldquo;Lady
+Steward&rdquo; of his household, from 1821 till his death.</p>
+
+<p>Notorious as the prince of Wales had become by 1788, it
+was in that year that his father&rsquo;s first attack of insanity made
+his position in the state one of peculiar importance. Fox maintained
+and Pitt denied that the prince of Wales, as the heir-apparent,
+had a right to assume the regency independently
+of any parliamentary vote. Pitt, with the support of both
+Houses, proposed to confer upon him the regency with certain
+restrictions. The recovery of the king in February 1789 put an
+end, however, to the prince&rsquo;s hopes. In 1794 the prince consented
+to a marriage with a German Protestant princess, because
+his father would not pay his debts on any other terms, and his
+cousin, Princess Caroline of Brunswick, was brought over from
+Germany and married to him in 1795. Her behaviour was
+light and flippant, and he was brutal and unloving. The ill-assorted
+pair soon parted, and soon after the birth of their
+only child, the princess Charlotte, they were formally separated.
+With great unwillingness the House of Commons voted fresh
+sums of money to pay the prince&rsquo;s debts.</p>
+
+<p>In 1811 he at last became prince regent in consequence of his
+father&rsquo;s definite insanity. No one doubted at that time that it
+was in his power to change the ministry at his pleasure. He had
+always lived in close connexion with the Whig opposition, and
+he now empowered Lord Grenville to form a ministry. There
+soon arose differences of opinion between them on the answer
+to be returned to the address of the Houses, and the prince
+regent then informed the prime minister, Mr Perceval, that he
+should continue the existing ministry in office. The ground
+alleged by him for this desertion of his friends was the fear lest
+his father&rsquo;s recovery might be rendered impossible if he should
+come to hear of the advent of the opposition to power. Lord
+Wellesley&rsquo;s resignation in February 1812 made the reconstruction
+of the ministry inevitable. As there was no longer any hope of
+the king&rsquo;s recovery, the former objection to a Whig administration
+no longer existed. Instead of taking the course of inviting
+the Whigs to take office, he asked them to join the existing
+administration. The Whig leaders, however, refused to join,
+on the ground that the question of the Catholic disabilities was
+too important to be shelved, and that their difference of opinion
+with Mr Perceval was too glaring to be ignored. The prince
+regent was excessively angry, and continued Perceval in office
+till that minister&rsquo;s assassination on the 11th of May, when he
+was succeeded by Lord Liverpool, after a negotiation in which
+the proposition of entering the cabinet was again made to the
+Whigs and rejected by them. In the military glories of the
+following years the prince regent had no share. When the
+allied sovereigns visited England in 1814, he played the part of
+host to perfection. So great was his unpopularity at home that
+hisses were heard in the streets as he accompanied his guests
+into the city. The disgust which his profligate and luxurious
+life caused amongst a people suffering from almost universal
+distress after the conclusion of the war rapidly increased. In
+1817 the windows of the prince regent&rsquo;s carriage were broken
+as he was on his way to open parliament.</p>
+
+<p>The death of George III. on the 29th of January 1820, gave to
+his son the title of king without in any way altering the position
+which he had now held for nine years. Indirectly, however,
+this change brought out a manifestation of popular feeling such
+as his father had never been subjected to even in the early days
+of his reign, when mobs were burning jack-boots and petticoats.
+The relations between the new king and his wife unavoidably
+became the subject of public discussion. In 1806 a charge
+against the princess of having given birth to an illegitimate
+child had been conclusively disproved, and the old king had
+consequently refused to withdraw her daughter, the princess
+Charlotte, from her custody. When in the regency the prince
+was able to interfere, and prohibited his wife from seeing her
+daughter more than once a fortnight. On this, in 1813, the
+princess addressed to her husband a letter setting forth her
+complaints, and receiving no answer published it in the <i>Morning
+Chronicle</i>. The prince regent then referred the letter, together
+with all papers relating to the inquiry of 1806, to a body of
+twenty-three privy councillors for an opinion whether it was fit
+that the restrictions on the intercourse between the princess
+Charlotte and her mother should continue in force. All except
+two answered as the regent wished them to answer. But if the
+official leaning was towards the husband, the leaning of the general
+public was towards the wife of a man whose own life had not been
+such as to justify him in complaining of her whom he had thrust
+from him without a charge of any kind. Addresses of sympathy
+were sent up to the princess from the city of London and
+other public bodies. The discord again broke out in 1814 in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page745" id="page745"></a>745</span>
+consequence of the exclusion of the princess from court during the
+visit of the allied sovereigns. In August in that year she left
+England, and after a little time took up her abode in Italy. The
+accession of George IV. brought matters to a crisis. He ordered
+that no prayer for his wife as queen should be admitted into the
+Prayer Book. She at once challenged the accusation which was
+implied in this omission by returning to England. On the 7th of
+June she arrived in London. Before she left the continent she
+had been informed that proceedings would be taken against her
+for adultery if she landed in England. Two years before, in 1818,
+commissioners had been sent to Milan to investigate charges
+against her, and their report, laid before the cabinet in 1819,
+was made the basis of the prosecution. On the day on which
+she arrived in London a message was laid before both Houses
+recommending the criminating evidence to parliament. A
+secret committee in the House of Lords after considering this
+evidence brought in a report on which the prime minister founded
+a Bill of Pains and Penalties to divorce the queen and to deprive
+her of her royal title. The bill passed the three readings with
+diminished majorities, and when on the third reading it obtained
+only a majority of nine, it was abandoned by the Government.
+The king&rsquo;s unpopularity, great as it had been before, was now
+greater than ever. Public opinion, without troubling itself
+to ask whether the queen was guilty or not, was roused to
+indignation by the spectacle of such a charge being brought by a
+husband who had thrust away his wife to fight the battle of life
+alone, without protection or support, and who, whilst surrounding
+her with spies to detect, perhaps to invent, her acts of infidelity,
+was himself notorious for his adulterous life. In the following
+year (1821) she attempted to force her way into Westminster
+Abbey to take her place at the coronation. On this occasion
+the popular support failed her; and her death in August relieved
+the king from further annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after the death of the queen, the king set out for
+Ireland. He remained there but a short time, and his effusive
+declaration that rank, station, honours were nothing compared
+with the exalted happiness of living in the hearts of his Irish
+subjects gained him a momentary popularity which was beyond
+his attainment in a country where he was better known. His
+reception in Dublin encouraged him to attempt a visit to Edinburgh
+in the following year (August 1822). Since Charles II.
+had come to play the sorry part of a covenanting king in 1650
+no sovereign of the country had set foot on Scottish soil. Sir
+Walter Scott took the leading part in organizing his reception.
+The enthusiasm with which he was received equalled, if it did
+not surpass, the enthusiasm with which he had been received in
+Dublin. But the qualities which enabled him to fix the fleeting
+sympathies of the moment were not such as would enable him
+to exercise the influence in the government which had been
+indubitably possessed by his father. He returned from Edinburgh
+to face the question of the appointment of a secretary of
+state which had been raised by the death of Lord Londonderry
+(Castlereagh). It was upon the question of the appointment of
+ministers that the battle between the Whigs and the king had
+been fought in the reign of George III. George IV. had neither
+the firmness nor the moral weight to hold the reins which his
+father had grasped. He disliked Canning for having taken his
+wife&rsquo;s side very much as his father had disliked Fox for taking
+his own. But Lord Liverpool insisted on Canning&rsquo;s admission
+to office, and the king gave way. Tacitly and without a struggle
+the constitutional victory of the last reign was surrendered.
+But it was not surrendered to the same foe as that from which
+it had been won. The coalition ministry in 1784 rested on the
+great landowners and the proprietors of rotten boroughs. Lord
+Liverpool&rsquo;s ministry had hitherto not been very enlightened,
+and it supported itself to a great extent upon a narrow constituency.
+But it did appeal to public opinion in a way that the
+coalition did not, and what it wanted itself in popular support
+would be supplied by its successors. What one king had gained
+from a clique another gave up to the nation. Once more, on
+Lord Liverpool&rsquo;s death in 1827, the same question was tried
+with the same result. The king not only disliked Canning
+personally, but he was opposed to Canning&rsquo;s policy. Yet after
+some hesitation he accepted Canning as prime minister; and
+when, after Canning&rsquo;s death and the short ministry of Lord
+Goderich, the king in 1828 authorized the duke of Wellington to
+form a ministry, he was content to lay down the principle that the
+members of it were not expected to be unanimous on the Catholic
+question. When in 1829 the Wellington ministry unexpectedly
+proposed to introduce a Bill to remove the disabilities of the
+Catholics, he feebly strove against the proposal and quickly
+withdrew his opposition. The worn-out debauchee had neither
+the merit of acquiescing in the change nor the courage to
+resist it.</p>
+
+<p>George IV. died on the 26th of June 1830, and was succeeded
+by his brother, the duke of Clarence, as William IV. His only
+child by Queen Caroline, the princess Charlotte Augusta, was
+married in 1816 to Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, afterwards king of
+the Belgians, and died in childbirth on the 6th of November
+1817.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>George IV. was a bad king, and his reign did much to disgust the
+country with the Georgian type of monarchy; but libertine and
+profligate as he became, the abuse which has been lavished on his
+personal character has hardly taken into sufficient consideration
+the loose morals of contemporary society, the political position of
+the Whig party, and his own ebullient temperament. Thackeray,
+in his <i>Four Georges</i>, is frequently unfair in this respect. The just
+condemnation of the moralist and satirist requires some qualification
+in the light of the picture of the period handed down in the memoirs
+and diaries of the time, such as Greville&rsquo;s, Croker&rsquo;s, Creevey&rsquo;s, Lord
+Holland&rsquo;s, Lord Malmesbury&rsquo;s, &amp;c. Among later works see <i>The
+First Gentleman of Europe</i>, by Lewis Melville (1906), a book for the
+general reader.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(S. R. G.; H. Ch.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1d" id="ft1d" href="#fa1d"><span class="fn">1</span></a> For a discussion of the ecclesiastical validity of the marriage
+see W.H. Wilkins, <i>Mrs Fitzherbert and George IV.</i> (1905), chs. vi.
+and vii.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2d" id="ft2d" href="#fa2d"><span class="fn">2</span></a> Mrs Fitzherbert herself, after her final separation from the prince,
+with an annuity of Ł6000 a year, lived an honoured and more or less
+retired life mainly at Brighton, a town which owed its rapid development
+in fashionable popularity and material wealth to its selection
+by the prince and herself as a residence from the earliest years of
+their union; and there she died, seven years after the death of
+George IV., in 1837. William IV. on his accession offered to create
+her a duchess, but she declined; she accepted, however, his permission
+to put her servants in royal livery. William IV. in fact did
+all he could, short of a public acknowledgment (which the duke of
+Wellington opposed on state grounds), to recognize her position
+as his brother&rsquo;s widow. Charles Greville, writing of her after her
+death, says in his <i>Diary</i>, &ldquo;She was not a clever woman, but of a very
+noble spirit, disinterested, generous, honest and affectionate.&rdquo;
+The actual existence of a marriage tie and the documentary evidence
+of her rights were not definitely established for many years; but in
+1905 a sealed packet, deposited at Coutts&rsquo;s bank in 1833, was at
+length opened by royal permission, and the marriage certificate
+and other conclusive proofs therein contained were published in
+Mr W.H. Wilkins&rsquo;s <i>Mrs Fitzherbert and George IV</i>. In 1796 the
+prince had made a remarkable will in Mrs Fitzherbert&rsquo;s favour,
+which he gave her in 1799, and it is included among these documents
+(now in the private archives at Windsor). In this he speaks of her
+emphatically throughout as &ldquo;my wife.&rdquo; It also contained directions
+that at his death a locket with her miniature, which he always wore,
+should be interred with him; and Mrs Fitzherbert was privately
+assured, on the duke of Wellington&rsquo;s authority, that when the king
+was buried at Windsor the miniature was on his breast.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE V.<a name="ar7" id="ar7"></a></span> [<span class="sc">George Frederick Ernest Albert</span>], king of
+Great Britain and Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond
+the Seas, emperor of India (1865-&emsp;&emsp;), second son of King
+Edward VII., was born at Marlborough House, London, on the
+3rd of June 1865. When four years old, he and his elder brother,
+Prince Albert Victor, two years his senior, were placed under
+the tutorship of John Neale Dalton, then curate of Sandringham.
+In 1877 the two princes became naval cadets on the
+&ldquo;Britannia&rdquo; at Spithead, where they passed through the
+ordinary curriculum, and in 1879 they joined H.M.S. &ldquo;Bacchante&rdquo;
+under the command of Captain Lord Charles Scott,
+making a voyage to the West Indies, in the course of which
+they were rated midshipmen. After a month at home in 1880
+they returned to the ship to make another prolonged cruise in
+H.M.S. &ldquo;Bacchante,&rdquo; in the course of which they visited South
+America, South Africa, Australia, the Fiji Islands, Japan, Ceylon,
+Egypt, Palestine and Greece. A narrative of this voyage,
+<i>The Cruise of H.M.S. &ldquo;Bacchante</i>,&rdquo; compiled from the letters,
+diaries and notebooks of the princes, was published in 1886.
+At the close of this tour in 1882 the brothers separated. Prince
+George, who remained in the naval service, was appointed to
+H.M.S. &ldquo;Canada,&rdquo; commanded by Captain Durrant, on the
+North American and West Indian station, and was promoted
+sub-lieutenant. On his return home he passed through the
+Royal Naval College at Greenwich and the gunnery and torpedo
+schools, being promoted lieutenant in 1885. A year later he
+was appointed to H.M.S. &ldquo;Thunderer&rdquo; of the Mediterranean
+squadron, and was subsequently transferred to H.M.S. &ldquo;Dreadnaught&rdquo;
+and H.M.S. &ldquo;Alexandra.&rdquo; In 1889 he joined the
+flagship of the Channel squadron, H.M.S. &ldquo;Northumberland,&rdquo;
+and in that year was in command of torpedo boat No. 79 for
+the naval man&oelig;uvres. In 1890 he was put in command of
+the gunboat H.M.S. &ldquo;Thrush&rdquo; for service on the North American
+and West Indian station. After his promotion as commander
+in 1891 he commissioned H.M.S. &ldquo;Melampus,&rdquo; the command
+of which he relinquished on the death of his brother, Albert
+Victor, the duke of Clarence, in January 1892, since his duties
+as eventual heir to the crown precluded him from devoting
+himself exclusively to the navy. He was promoted captain
+in 1893, rear-admiral in 1901, and vice-admiral in 1903. He
+was created duke of York, earl of Inverness, and Baron Killarney
+in 1892, and on the 6th of July 1893 he married Princess Victoria
+Mary (b. 26th May 1867), daughter of Francis, duke of Teck,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page746" id="page746"></a>746</span>
+and Princess Mary Adelaide, duchess of Teck, daughter of
+Adolphus Frederick, duke of Cambridge. Their eldest son,
+Prince Edward Albert, was born at White Lodge, Richmond,
+on the 23rd of June 1894; Prince Albert Frederick George was
+born at Sandringham on the 14th of December 1895; Princess
+Victoria Alexandra on the 25th of April 1897; Prince Henry
+William Frederick Albert on the 31st of March 1900; Prince
+George Edward Alexander Edmund on the 20th of December
+1902; and Prince John Charles Francis on the 12th of July 1905.
+The duke and duchess of York visited Ireland in 1899, and
+it had been arranged before the death of Queen Victoria that
+they should make a tour in the colonies. On the accession of
+King Edward VII. (1901) this plan was confirmed. They sailed
+in the &ldquo;Ophir&rdquo; on the 16th of March 1901, travelling by the
+ordinary route, and landed at Melbourne in May, when they
+opened the first parliament of the Commonwealth. They then
+proceeded to New Zealand, returning by way of South Africa
+and Canada. An official account of the tour was published by
+Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace as <i>The Web of Empire</i> (1902). In
+November 1901 the duke was created prince of Wales. On the
+death of Edward VII. (May 6, 1910) he succeeded to the Crown
+as George V., his consort taking the style of Queen Mary.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE V.<a name="ar8" id="ar8"></a></span>, king of Hanover (1819-1878), was the only son
+of Ernest Augustus, king of Hanover and duke of Cumberland,
+and consequently a grandson of the English king George III.
+Born in Berlin on the 27th of May 1819, his youth was passed
+in England and in Berlin until 1837, when his father became
+king of Hanover and he took up his residence in that country.
+He lost the sight of one eye during a childish illness, and the
+other by an accident in 1833. Being thus totally blind there
+were doubts whether he was qualified to succeed to the government
+of Hanover; but his father decided that he should do so,
+as the law of the dissolved empire only excluded princes who
+were born blind. This decision was a fatal one to the dynasty.
+Both from his father and from his maternal uncle, Charles
+Frederick, prince of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1785-1837), one of
+the most influential men at the Prussian court, George had learned
+to take a very high and autocratic view of royal authority. His
+blindness prevented him from acquiring the shrewdness and
+knowledge of the world which had assisted his father, and he
+easily fell into the hands of unwise, and perhaps dishonest and
+disloyal, advisers. A man of deep religious feeling, he formed
+a fantastic conception of the place assigned to the house of Guelph
+in the divine economy, and had ideas of founding a great Guelph
+state in Europe. It is, therefore, not surprising that from the
+time of his accession in November 1851 he was constantly
+engaged in disputes with his <i>Landtag</i> or parliament, and was
+consequently in a weak and perilous position when the crisis
+in the affairs of Germany came in 1866. Having supported
+Austria in the diet of the German confederation in June 1866,
+he refused, contrary to the wishes of his parliament, to assent
+to the Prussian demand that Hanover should observe an unarmed
+neutrality during the war. As a result his country and his
+capital were at once occupied by the Prussians, to whom his
+army surrendered on the 29th of June 1866, and in the following
+September Hanover was formally annexed by Prussia. From
+his retreat at Hietzing near Vienna, George appealed in vain
+to the powers of Europe; and supported by a large number of
+his subjects, an agitation was carried on which for a time caused
+some embarrassment to Prussia. All these efforts, however,
+to bring about a restoration were unavailing, and the king passed
+the remainder of his life at Gmünden in Austria, or in France,
+refusing to the last to be reconciled with the Prussian government.
+Whilst visiting Paris for medical advice he died in that city on
+the 12th of June 1878, and was buried in St George&rsquo;s chapel,
+Windsor. In February 1843 he had married Marie, daughter
+of Joseph, duke of Saxe-Altenburg, by whom he left a son and
+two daughters. His son, Ernest Augustus, duke of Cumberland
+(b. 1845), continued to maintain the claim of his house to the
+kingdom of Hanover.</p>
+
+<p>By the capitulation of 1866 the king was allowed to retain
+his personal property, which included money and securities
+equal to nearly Ł1,500,000, which had been sent to England
+before the Prussian invasion of Hanover. The crown jewels
+had also been secretly conveyed to England. His valuable
+plate, which had been hidden at Herrenhausen, was restored
+to him in 1867; his palace at Herrenhausen, near Hanover,
+was reserved as his property; and in 1867 the Prussian government
+agreed to compensate him for the loss of his landed estates,
+but owing to his continued hostility the payment of the interest
+on this sum was suspended in the following year (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Hanover</a></span>).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See O. Klopp, <i>König Georg V.</i> (Hanover, 1878); O. Theodor,
+<i>Erinnerungen an Georg V.</i> (Bremerhaven, 1878); and O. Meding,
+<i>Memoiren zur Zeitgeschichte</i> (Leipzig, 1881-1884).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE I.<a name="ar9" id="ar9"></a></span>, king of the Hellenes (1845-&emsp;&emsp;), second son of
+King Christian IX. of Denmark, was born at Copenhagen on
+the 24th of December 1845. After the expulsion of King Otho
+in 1862, the Greek nation, by a plebiscite, elected the British
+prince, Alfred, duke of Edinburgh (subsequently duke of Coburg),
+to the vacant throne, and on his refusal the national assembly
+requested Great Britain to nominate a candidate. The choice
+of the British government fell on Prince Christian William
+Ferdinand Adolphus George of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg,
+whose election as king of the Hellenes, with the
+title George I., was recognized by the powers (6th of June 1863).
+The sister of the new sovereign, Princess Alexandra, had a few
+months before (10th March) married the prince of Wales, afterwards
+King Edward VII., and his father succeeded to the crown
+of Denmark in the following November. Another sister, Princess
+Dagmar, subsequently married the grand duke Alexander
+Alexandrovitch, afterwards Emperor Alexander III. of Russia.
+On his accession, King George signed an act resigning his right
+of succession to the Danish throne in favour of his younger
+brother Prince Waldemar. He was received with much enthusiasm
+by the Greeks. Adopting the motto, &ldquo;My strength is the love
+of my people,&rdquo; he ruled in strict accordance with constitutional
+principles, though not hesitating to make the fullest use of the
+royal prerogative when the intervention of the crown seemed to
+be required by circumstances. For the events of his reign see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Greece</a></span>: <i>History</i>.</p>
+
+<p>King George married, on the 27th of October 1867, the grand
+duchess Olga Constantinovna of Russia, who became distinguished
+in Greece for her activity on behalf of charitable objects. Their
+children were Prince Constantine, duke of Sparta (b. 1868), who
+married in 1889 Princess Sophia of Prussia, daughter of the
+emperor Frederick, and granddaughter of Queen Victoria;
+Prince George (b. 1869), from November 1898 to October 1906
+high commissioner of the powers in Crete; Prince Nicholas
+(b. 1872), who married in 1902 the grand duchess Helen-Vladimirovna
+of Russia; Prince Andrew (b. 1882), who married in
+1903 Princess Alice of Battenberg; Prince Christopher (b. 1888);
+and a daughter, Princess Marie (b. 1876), who married in 1900
+the grand duke George Michailovich of Russia.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE,<a name="ar10" id="ar10"></a></span> king of Saxony (1832-1904), the youngest son of
+King John of Saxony (d. 1873) and Queen Amelia, was born at
+Dresden on the 8th of August 1832. From an early age he
+received a careful scientific and military training, and in 1846
+entered the active army as a lieutenant of artillery. In 1849-1850
+he was a student at the university of Bonn, but soon returned
+to military life, for which he had a predilection. In the Austro-Prussian
+War of 1866 he commanded a Saxon cavalry brigade,
+and in the early part of the war of 1870-71 a division, but
+later succeeded to the supreme command of the XII. (Saxon)
+army corps in the room of his brother, the crown prince Albert
+(afterwards king) of Saxony. His name is inseparably associated
+with this campaign, during which he showed undoubted military
+ability and an intrepidity which communicated itself to all
+ranks under his command, notably at the battles of St Privat
+and Beaumont, in which he greatly distinguished himself. On
+his brother succeeding to the throne he became commander-in-chief
+of the Saxon army, and was in 1888 made a Prussian
+field marshal by the emperor William I. He married in 1859
+the infanta Maria, sister of King Louis of Portugal, and King
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page747" id="page747"></a>747</span>
+Albert&rsquo;s marriage being childless, succeeded on his death in 1902
+to the throne of Saxony. He died on the 15th of October 1904,
+at Pillnitz.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE OF LAODICEA<a name="ar11" id="ar11"></a></span> in Syria, often called &ldquo;the Cappadocian,&rdquo;
+from 356 to 361 Arian archbishop of Alexandria, was
+born about the beginning of the 4th century. According to
+Ammianus (xxii. 11), he was a native of Epiphania, in Cilicia.
+Gregory Nazianzen tells us that his father was a fuller, and that
+he himself soon became notorious as a parasite of so mean a
+type that he would &ldquo;sell himself for a cake.&rdquo; After many
+wanderings, in the course of which he seems to have amassed
+a considerable fortune, first as an army-contractor and then as
+a receiver of taxes, he ultimately reached Alexandria. It is not
+known how or when he obtained ecclesiastical orders; but,
+after Athanasius had been banished in 356, George was promoted
+by the influence of the then prevalent Arian faction to the
+vacant see. His theological attitude was that known as semi-Arian
+or Homoiousian, and his associates were Eustathius of
+Sebaste and Basil of Ancyra. At George&rsquo;s instigation the
+second Sirmian formula (promulgated by the third council of
+Sirmium 357), which was conciliatory towards strict Arianism,
+was opposed at the council of Ancyra in 358 (Harnack, <i>Hist.
+of Dogma</i>, iv. 76). His persecutions and oppressions of the
+orthodox ultimately raised a rebellion which compelled him to
+flee for his life; but his authority was restored, although with
+difficulty, by a military demonstration. Untaught by experience,
+he resumed his course of selfish tyranny over Christians and
+heathen alike, and raised the irritation of the populace to such
+a pitch that when, on the accession of Julian, his downfall was
+proclaimed and he was committed to prison, they dragged him
+thence and killed him, finally casting his body into the sea
+(24th of December 361). With much that was sordid and
+brutal in his character George combined a highly cultivated
+literary taste, and in the course of his chequered career he had
+found the means of collecting a splendid library, which Julian
+ordered to be conveyed to Antioch for his own use. An anonymous
+work against the Manicheans discovered by Lagarde in
+1859 in a MS. of Titus of Bostra has been attributed to him.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The original sources for the facts of the life of George of Laodicea
+are Ammianus, Gregory Nazianzen, Epiphanius and Athanasius.
+His character has been drawn with graphic fidelity by Gibbon in
+the 23rd chapter of the <i>Decline and Fall</i>; but the theory, accepted
+by Gibbon, which identifies him with the patron saint of England is
+now rejected (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">George, Saint</a></span>). See C.S. Hulst, <i>St George of
+Cappadocia in Legend and History</i> (1910).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE OF TREBIZOND<a name="ar12" id="ar12"></a></span> (1395-1484), Greek philosopher
+and scholar, one of the pioneers of the revival of letters in the
+Western world, was born in the island of Crete, and derived
+his surname Trapezuntios from the fact that his ancestors were
+from Trebizond. At what period he came to Italy is not certain;
+according to some accounts he was summoned to Venice about
+1430 to act as amanuensis to Francesco Barbaro, who appears
+to have already made his acquaintance; according to others he
+did not visit Italy till the time of the council of Florence (1438-1439).
+He learned Latin from Vittorino da Feltre, and made
+such rapid progress that in three years he was able to teach
+Latin literature and rhetoric. His reputation as a teacher and
+a translator of Aristotle was very great, and he was selected as
+secretary by Pope Nicholas V., an ardent Aristotelian. The
+needless bitterness of his attacks upon Plato (in the <i>Comparatio
+Aristotelis et Platonis</i>), which drew forth a powerful response
+from Bessarion (<i>q.v.</i>), and the manifestly hurried and inaccurate
+character of his translations of Plato, Aristotle and other classical
+authors, combined to ruin his fame as a scholar, and to endanger
+his position as a teacher of philosophy. The indignation against
+him on account of his first-named work was so great that he
+would probably have been compelled to leave Italy had not
+Alphonso V. given him protection at the court of Naples. He
+subsequently returned to Rome, where he died in great poverty
+on the 12th of August 1484. He had long outlived his
+reputation, and towards the end of his life his intellect failed him.
+From all accounts he was a man of very disagreeable character,
+conceited and quarrelsome.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See G. Voigt, <i>Die Wiederbelebung des klassischen Altertums</i> (1893),
+and article by C.F. Bähr in Ersch and Gruber&rsquo;s <i>Allgemeine Encyklopädie</i>.
+For a complete list of his numerous works, consisting of
+translations from Greek into Latin (Plato, Aristotle and the Fathers)
+and original essays in Greek (chiefly theological) and Latin (grammatical
+and rhetorical), see Fabricius, <i>Bibliotheca Graeca</i> (ed.
+Harles), xii.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE THE MONK<a name="ar13" id="ar13"></a></span> [<span class="sc">Georgios Monachos</span>], called Hamartolos
+(Greek for &ldquo;sinner&rdquo;), Byzantine chronicler, lived during
+the reign of Michael III. (842-867). He wrote a <i>Chronicle</i> of
+events, in four books, from the creation of the world to the death
+of the emperor Theophilus (842), whose widow Theodora restored
+the worship of images in the same year. It is the only original
+contemporary authority for the years 813-842, and therefore
+so far indispensable; the early parts of the work are merely a
+compilation. In the introduction the author disclaims all pretensions
+to literary style, and declares that his only object was
+to relate such things as were &ldquo;useful and necessary&rdquo; with a
+strict adherence to truth. Far too much attention, however,
+is devoted to religious matters; the iconoclasts are fiercely
+attacked, and the whole is interlarded with theological discussions
+and quotations from the fathers. The work was very popular,
+and translations of it served as models for Slavonic writers.
+The MSS. give a continuation down to 948, the author of which
+is indicated simply as &ldquo;the logothete,&rdquo; by whom probably
+Symeon Metaphrastes (second half of the 10th century) is meant.
+In this religious questions are relegated to the background,
+more attention is devoted to political history, and the language
+is more popular. Still further continuations of little value go
+down to 1143. The large circulation of the work and its subsequent
+reissues, with alterations and interpolations, make it
+very difficult to arrive at the original text.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Editions</span>: E. de Muralt (St Petersburg, 1859); J.P. Migne,
+<i>Patrologia Graeca</i>, cx.; C. de Boor (in Teubner series, 1904-&emsp;&emsp;).
+See F. Hirsch, <i>Byzantinische Studien</i> (1876); C. de Boor in <i>Historische
+Untersuchungen</i> (in honour of Arnold Schäfer, Bonn, 1882);
+C. Krumbacher, <i>Geschichte der byzantinischen Litteratur</i> (1897).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE THE SYNCELLUS<a name="ar14" id="ar14"></a></span> [<span class="sc">Georgios Synkellos</span>], of
+Constantinople, Byzantine chronicler and ecclesiastic, lived
+at the end of the 8th and the beginning of the 9th century <span class="scs">A.D.</span>
+He was the <i>syncellus</i> (cell-mate, the confidential <span class="correction" title="amended from campanion">companion</span>
+assigned to the patriarchs, sometimes little more than a spy;
+see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Syncellus</a></span>) or private secretary of Tara(u)sius, patriarch
+of Constantinople (784-806), after whose death he retired to a
+convent, and wrote his <i>Chronicle</i> of events from Adam to Diocletian
+(285). At his earnest request, the work, which he doubtless
+intended to bring down to his own times, was continued after
+his death by his friend Theophanes Confessor. The <i>Chronicle</i>,
+which, as its title implies, is rather a chronological table (with
+notes) than a history, is written with special reference to pre-Christian
+times and the introduction of Christianity, and exhibits
+the author as a staunch upholder of orthodoxy. But in spite of
+its religious bias and dry and uninteresting character, the fragments
+of ancient writers and apocryphal books preserved in it
+render it specially valuable. For instance, considerable portions
+of the original text of the <i>Chronicle</i> of Eusebius have been
+restored by the aid of Syncellus. His chief authorities were
+Annianus of Alexandria (5th century) and Panodorus, an
+Egyptian monk, who wrote about the year 400 and drew largely
+from Eusebius, Dexippus and Julius Africanus.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Editio princeps, by J. Goar (1652); in Bonn <i>Corpus scriptorum
+hist. Byz.</i>, by W. Dindorf (1829). See also H. Gelzer, <i>Sextus Julius
+Africanus</i>, ii. 1 (1885); C. Krumbacher, <i>Geschichte der byzantinischen
+Litteratur</i> (1897).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE, HENRY<a name="ar15" id="ar15"></a></span> (1839-1897), American author and political
+economist, was born in Philadelphia, Penn., on the 2nd of September
+1839. He settled in California in 1858; removed to
+New York, 1880; was first a printer, then an editor, but finally
+devoted all his life to economic and social questions. In 1871
+he published <i>Our Land Policy</i>, which, as further developed in
+1879 under the title of <i>Progress and Poverty</i>, speedily attracted
+the widest attention both in America and in Europe. In 1886
+he published <i>Protection or Free Trade</i>. Henry George had no
+political ambition, but in 1886 he received an independent
+nomination as mayor of New York City, and became so popular
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page748" id="page748"></a>748</span>
+that it required a coalition of the two strongest political parties
+to prevent his election. He received 68,000 votes, against
+90,000 for the coalition candidate. His death on the 29th of
+October 1897 was followed by one of the greatest demonstrations
+of popular feeling and general respect that ever attended the
+funeral of any strictly private citizen in American history.
+The fundamental doctrine of Henry George, the equal right of
+all men to the use of the earth, did not originate with him; but
+his clear statement of a method by which it could be enforced,
+without increasing state machinery, and indeed with a great
+simplification of government, gave it a new form. This method
+he named the <i>Single Tax</i>. His doctrine may be condensed as
+follows: The land of every country belongs of right to all the
+people of that country. This right cannot be alienated by one
+generation, so as to affect the title of the next, any more than
+men can sell their yet unborn children for slaves. Private
+ownership of land has no more foundation in morality or reason
+than private ownership of air or sunlight. But the private
+occupancy and use of land are right and indispensable. Any
+attempt to divide land into equal shares is impossible and undesirable.
+Land should be, and practically is now, divided for
+private use in parcels among those who will pay the highest price
+for the use of each parcel. This price is now paid to some persons
+annually, and it is called <i>rent</i>. By applying the rent of land,
+exclusive of all improvements, to the equal benefit of the whole
+community, absolute justice would be done to all. As rent is
+always more than sufficient to defray all necessary expenses of
+government, those expenses should be met by a tax upon rent
+alone, to be brought about by the gradual abolition of all other
+taxes. Landlords should be left in undisturbed possession and
+nominal ownership of the land, with a sufficient margin over the
+tax to induce them to collect their rents and pay the tax. They
+would thus be transformed into mere land agents. Obviously
+this would involve absolute free trade, since all taxes on imports,
+manufactures, successions, documents, personal property, buildings
+or improvements would disappear. Nothing made by man
+would be taxed at all. The right of private property in all things
+made by man would thus be absolute, for the owner of such
+things could not be divested of his property, without full compensation,
+even under the pretence of taxation. The idea of
+concentrating all taxes upon ground-rent has found followers
+in Great Britain, North America, Australia and New Zealand.
+In practical politics this doctrine is confined to the &ldquo;Single Tax,
+Limited,&rdquo; which proposes to defray only the needful public
+expenses from ground-rent, leaving the surplus, whatever it
+may be, in the undisturbed possession of landowners.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The principal books by Henry George are: <i>Progress and Poverty</i>
+(1879), <i>The Irish Land Question</i> (1881), <i>Social Problems</i> (1884),
+<i>Protection or Free Trade</i> (1886), <i>The Condition of Labor</i> (1891),
+<i>A Perplexed Philosopher</i> (1892), <i>Political Economy</i> (1898). His son,
+Henry George (b. 1862), has written a <i>Life</i> (1900). For the Single
+Tax theory see Shearman&rsquo;s <i>Natural Taxation</i> (1899).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(T. G. S.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE PISIDA<a name="ar16" id="ar16"></a></span> [<span class="sc">Georgios Pisides</span>], Byzantine poet, born in
+Pisidia, flourished during the 7th century <span class="scs">A.D.</span> Nothing is known
+of him except that he was a deacon and chartophylax (keeper
+of the records) of the church of St Sophia. His earliest work,
+in three cantos (<span class="grk" title="akroaseis">&#7936;&#954;&#961;&#959;&#940;&#963;&#949;&#953;&#962;</span>), on the campaign of the emperor
+Heraclius against the Persians, seems to be the work of an eyewitness.
+This was followed by the <i>Avarica</i>, an account of a
+futile attack on Constantinople by the Avars (626), said to have
+been repulsed by the aid of the Virgin Mary; and by the <i>Heraclias</i>,
+a general survey of the exploits of Heraclius both at home and
+abroad down to the final overthrow of Chosroes in 627. George
+Pisida was also the author of a didactic poem, <i>Hexaëmeron</i> or
+<i>Cosmourgia</i>, upon the creation of the world; a treatise on the
+vanity of life, after the manner of <i>Ecclesiastes</i>; a controversial
+composition against Severus, bishop of Antioch; two short poems
+upon the resurrection of Christ and on the recovery of the sacred
+crucifix stolen by the Persians. The metre chiefly used is the
+iambic. As a versifier Pisida is correct and even elegant; as a
+chronicler of contemporary events he is exceedingly useful;
+and later Byzantine writers enthusiastically compared him with,
+and even preferred him to Euripides. Recent criticism, however,
+characterizes his compositions as artificial and almost uniformly
+dull.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Complete works in J.P. Migne, <i>Patrologia Graeca</i>, xcii.; see also
+<i>De Georgii Pisidae apud Theophanem aliosque historicos reliquiis</i>.
+(1900), by S.L. Sternbach, who has edited several new poems for
+the first time from a Paris MS. in <i>Wiener Studien</i>, xiii., xiv. (1891-1892);
+C. Krumbacher, <i>Geschichte der byzantinischen Litteratur</i>
+(1897); C.F. Bähr in Ersch and Gruber&rsquo;s <i>Allgemeine Encyklopädie</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE, LAKE,<a name="ar17" id="ar17"></a></span> a lake in the E. part of New York, U.S.A.,
+among the S.E. foothills of the Adirondack Mountains. It
+extends from N.N.E. to S.S.W. about 34 m., and varies in width
+from 2 to 4 m. It has a maximum depth of about 400 ft., and is
+323 ft. above the sea and 227 ft. above Lake Champlain, into
+which it has an outlet to the northward through a narrow channel
+and over falls and rapids. The lake is fed chiefly by mountain
+brooks and submerged springs; its bed is for the most part
+covered with a clean sand; its clear water is coloured with
+beautiful tints of blue and green; and its surface is studded with
+about 220 islands and islets, all except nineteen of which belong
+to the state and constitute a part of its forest reserve. Near the
+head of the lake is Prospect Mountain, rising 1736 ft. above the
+sea, while several miles farther down the shores is Black Mountain,
+2661 ft. in height. Lake George has become a favourite summer
+resort. Lake steamers ply between the village of Lake George
+(formerly Caldwell) at the southern end of the lake and Baldwin,
+whence there is rail connexion with Lake Champlain steamers.</p>
+
+<p>Lake George was formed during the Glacial period by glacial
+drift which clogged a pre-existing valley. According to Prof. J.F.
+Kemp the valley occupied by Lake George was a low pass before
+the Glacial period; a dam of glacial drift at the southern end
+and of lacustrine clays at the northern end formed the lake which
+has submerged the pass, leaving higher parts as islands. Before
+the advent of the white man the lake was a part of the war-path
+over which the Iroquois Indians frequently made their way
+northward to attack the Algonquins and the Hurons, and during
+the struggle between the English and the French for supremacy
+in America, waterways being still the chief means of communication,
+it was of great strategic importance (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Champlain</a></span>, <i>Lake</i>).
+Father Isaac Jogues, René Goupil and Guillaume Couture
+seem to have been the first white men to see the lake (on the 9th
+of August 1642) as they were being taken by their Iroquois
+captors from the St Lawrence to the towns of the Mohawks,
+and in 1646 Father Jogues, having undertaken a half-religious,
+half-political mission to the Mohawks, was again at the lake,
+to which, in allusion to his having reached it on the eve of Corpus
+Christi, he gave the name Lac Saint Sacrement. This name
+it bore until the summer of 1755, when General William Johnson
+renamed it Lake George in honour of King George II.</p>
+
+<p>General Johnson was at this time in command of a force of
+colonists and Indians sent against the French at Crown Point on
+Lake Champlain. The expedition, however, had proceeded
+no farther than to the head of Lake George when Johnson was
+informed that a force of French and Indians under Baron Ludwig
+August Dieskau was pushing on from Crown Point to Fort
+Lyman (later Fort Edward), 14 m. to the S. of their encampment.
+Accordingly, on the morning of the 8th of September a detachment
+of 1000 colonials under Colonel Ephraim Williams (1715-1755)
+and 200 Indians under Hendrick, a Mohawk chief, was
+sent to aid Fort Lyman, but when about 3 m. S. of the lake this
+detachment fell into an ambuscade prepared for it by Dieskau
+and both Williams and Hendrick were killed. The survivors
+were pursued to their camp, and then followed on the same day
+the main battle of Lake George, in which 1000 colonials fighting
+at first behind a hastily prepared barricade defeated about 1400
+French and Indians. Both commanders were wounded; Dieskau
+was captured; the French lost about 300; and the colonials
+nearly the same (including those who fell earlier in the day).
+Johnson now built on the lake shore, near the battlefield, a fort
+of gravel and logs and called it Fort William Henry (the site was
+occupied by the Fort William Henry Hotel till it was burned
+in 1909). In the meantime the French entrenched themselves
+at Ticonderoga at the foot of the lake. In March 1757
+Fort William Henry successfully withstood an attack of 1600
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page749" id="page749"></a>749</span>
+men sent out by the marquis de Vaudreuil, governor of Canada,
+but on the 9th of August of the same year its garrison, after
+being reduced to desperate straits, surrendered to the marquis de
+Montcalm. By the terms of surrender the garrison was to be
+allowed to march out with the honours of war and was to be
+escorted to Fort Edward, but the guard provided by Montcalm
+was inadequate to protect them from his Indian allies and on the
+day following the surrender many were massacred or taken
+prisoners. The fort was razed to the ground. In 1758 General
+James Abercrombie proceeded by way of Lake George against
+Fort Ticonderoga, and in 1759 Baron Jeffrey Amherst, while on
+his way to co-operate with General James Wolfe against Quebec,
+built near the site of Fort William Henry one bastion of a fort
+since known as Fort George, the ruins of which still remain.</p>
+
+<p>A monument commemorative of the battle of Lake George
+was unveiled on the 8th of September 1903, on the site of the
+battle, and within the state reservation of 35 acres known as
+Fort George Battle Park. Horicon is a name that was given
+to the lake by James Fenimore Cooper. The Indian name of
+the lake was Andia-ta-roc-te.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Francis Parkman, <i>Montcalm and Wolfe</i> (Boston, 1884); and
+E.E. Seelye, <i>Lake George in History</i> (Lake George, 1897).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGE JUNIOR REPUBLIC,<a name="ar18" id="ar18"></a></span> an American industrial
+institution, situated near the small village of Freeville, in Tompkins
+county, New York, U.S.A., 9 m. E.N.E. of Ithaca, at the
+junction of the Sayre-Auburn and the Elmira-Cortland branches
+of the Lehigh Valley railway. The George Junior Republic
+forms a miniature state whose economic, civic and social conditions,
+as nearly as possible, reproduce those of the United States,
+and whose citizenship is vested in young people, especially those
+who are neglected or wayward, who are thus taught self-reliance,
+self-control and morality. The founder, William Reuben George
+(b. 1866), was a native of West Dryden, a village near Freeville,
+who as a business man in New York City became interested in
+the Fresh Air Fund charity supervised by the New York <i>Tribune</i>,
+took charge of summer outings for city children (1890-1894),
+and, becoming convinced that such charities tended to promote
+pauperism and crime among the older of their protégés, devised
+first (1894) the plan of requiring payment by the children in
+labour for all they received during these summer jaunts, then
+(1895) self-government for a summer colony near Freeville,
+and finally a permanent colony, in which the children stay for
+several years. The Republic was founded on the 10th of July
+1895; the only check on the powers of executive, representative
+and judicial branches of the government lies in the veto of the
+superintendent. &ldquo;Nothing without labour&rdquo; is the motto of
+the community, so strictly carried out that a girl or boy in the
+Republic who has not money<a name="fa1e" id="fa1e" href="#ft1e"><span class="sp">1</span></a> to pay for a night&rsquo;s lodging must
+sleep in jail and work the next day for the use of the cell. The
+legislative body, originally a House of Representatives and a
+Senate, in 1899 became more like the New England town meeting.
+The respect for the law that follows its enactment by the citizens
+themselves is remarkable in a class so largely of criminal tendencies;
+and it is particularly noticeable that positions on the
+police force are eagerly coveted. Fifteen is the age of majority;
+suffrage is universal, children under fifteen must be in charge of a
+citizen guardian. The average age of citizens was seventeen in
+1908. The proportion of girls to boys was originally small, but
+gradually increased; in 1908 there were about 70 girls and 90 boys.
+The tendency is to admit only those aged at least sixteen and
+physically well equipped. In the Republic&rsquo;s earlier years the
+citizens lived in boarding-houses of different grades, but later in
+family groups in cottages (there were in 1910 twelve cottages)
+under the care of &ldquo;house-mothers.&rdquo; The labour of the place is
+divided into sewing, laundry work, cooking and domestic service
+for the girls, and furniture making, carpentry, farm work, baking
+bread and wafers (the business of an Auburn biscuit factory was
+bought in 1903), plumbing and printing for the boys. Masonry and
+shoe and harness making were tried for a few years. There is
+an efficient preparatory and high school, from which students
+enter directly leading colleges. The religious influence is strong,
+wholesome and unsectarian; students in Auburn Theological
+Seminary have assisted in the religious work; Roman Catholic
+and Hebrew services are also held; and attendance at church
+services is compulsory only on convicts and prisoners.</p>
+
+<p>There are &ldquo;Woman&rsquo;s Aid&rdquo; societies in New York City,
+Ithaca, Syracuse, Buffalo, Boston and elsewhere, to promote
+the work of the Republic. A &ldquo;republic&rdquo; for younger boys,
+begun at Freeville, was established in Litchfield, Connecticut;
+and a National Junior Republic near Annapolis Junction,
+Maryland, and a Carter Junior Republic at Readington, near
+Easton, Pennsylvania, are modelled on the George Junior
+Republic. In 1908-1910 new &ldquo;states&rdquo; were established at
+Chino, California, Grove City, Pennsylvania, and Flemington
+Junction, New Jersey. In February 1908 the National Association
+of Junior Republics was formed with Mr George (its founder)
+as its director, its aims being to establish at least one &ldquo;republic&rdquo;
+in each state of the Union, and in other countries similar institutions
+for youth and miniature governments modelled on that of
+the country in which each &ldquo;state&rdquo; is established, and to establish
+colonies for younger children, to be sent at the age of fifteen
+to the Junior Republic. At the time of its formation the National
+Association included the &ldquo;states&rdquo; at Freeville, N.Y., Litchfield,
+Conn., and Annapolis Junction, Md.; others joined the federation
+later.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See William R. George, <i>The Junior Republic: its History and
+Ideals</i> (New York, 1910); <i>The Junior Republic Citizen</i> (Freeville,
+1895 sqq.), written and printed by &ldquo;citizens&rdquo;; <i>Nothing Without
+Labor, George Junior Republic</i> (7th ed., Freeville, 1909), a manual;
+J.R. Commons, &ldquo;The Junior Republic,&rdquo; in <i>The American Journal
+of Sociology</i> (1898); D.F. Lincoln, &ldquo;The George Junior Republic,&rdquo;
+in <i>The Coming Age</i> (1900); and Lyman Abbott, &ldquo;A Republic
+within a Republic,&rdquo; in the <i>Outlook</i> for February 15, 1908.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1e" id="ft1e" href="#fa1e"><span class="fn">1</span></a> The &ldquo;government&rdquo; issued its own currency in tin and later
+in aluminium, and &ldquo;American&rdquo; money could not be passed within
+the 48 acres of the Republic until 1906, when depreciation forced the
+Republic&rsquo;s coinage out of use and &ldquo;American&rdquo; coin was made legal
+tender.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGETOWN,<a name="ar19" id="ar19"></a></span> the capital of British Guiana (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Guiana</a></span>),
+and the seat of the colonial government, situated on the left
+bank of the Demerara river at its mouth, in 6° 29&prime; 24&Prime; N. and
+58° 11&prime; 30&Prime; W. It was known during the Dutch occupation
+as Stabroek, and was established as the seat of government
+of the combined colonies of Essequibo and Demerara (now with
+Berbice forming the three counties of British Guiana) in 1784,
+its name being changed to Georgetown in 1812. It is one of
+the finest towns in this part of the world, the streets being wide
+and straight, intersecting each other at right angles, several
+having double roadways with lily-covered canals in the centre,
+the grass banks on either side carrying rows of handsome shade
+trees. In Main Street, the finest street in Georgetown, the canal
+has been filled in to form a broad walk, an obvious precedent
+for the treatment of the other canals, which (however beautiful)
+are useless and merely act as breeding grounds for mosquitoes.
+The principal residences, standing in their own gardens surrounded
+by foliage and flowers, are scattered over the town, as are also
+the slums, almost the worst of which abut on the best residential
+quarters. Water Street, the business centre, runs parallel to
+the river for about 2˝ m. and contains the stores of the wholesale
+and retail merchants, their wharves running out into the river
+to allow steamers to come alongside. Most of the houses and
+public buildings are constructed of wood, the former generally
+raised on brick pillars some 4 ft. to 10 ft. from the ground, the
+bright colouring of the wooden walls, jalousies and roofs adding
+to the beauty of the best streets. The large structure known
+as the Public Buildings in the centre of the city, containing
+the offices of the executive government and the hall of the
+court of policy, was erected between 1829 and 1834. It is a
+handsome, <span class="f150" style="font-family: 'verdana';">E</span>-shaped, brick-plastered building of considerable
+size, with deep porticos and marble-paved galleries carried on
+cast-iron columns. The law courts, built in the &rsquo;eighties, have
+a ground floor of concrete and iron, the upper storey being of
+hardwood. Among other public buildings are the town hall,
+the Anglican and Roman Catholic cathedrals, several handsome
+churches, the local banks and insurance offices, and the almshouse.
+The public hospital consists of several large blocks. The Royal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page750" id="page750"></a>750</span>
+Agricultural and Commercial Society has a large reading-room
+and lending library. The assembly rooms, above and owned
+by the Georgetown club, has a good stage and is admirably
+adapted to dramatic and musical entertainments. A museum
+(free), belonging to the Royal Agricultural and Commercial
+Society, is chiefly devoted to the fauna of British Guiana, but
+also contains an instructive collection of local economic, mineralogical
+and botanical exhibits, a miscellaneous collection of
+foreign birds and mammals, and an interesting series of views
+of the colony. The botanical gardens to the east of the city
+are of considerable extent and admirably laid out. The nurseries
+cover a large area and are devoted chiefly to the raising of plants
+of economic importance which can be purchased at nominal
+rates. The collections of ferns and orchids are very fine. In the
+gardens are also located the fields of the board of agriculture,
+where experimental work in the growth of sugar-cane, rice,
+cotton and all tropical plants of economic importance is carried
+on. Other popular resorts are the sea wall and the promenade
+gardens in the centre of the city.</p>
+
+<p>The local government of Georgetown is vested in a mayor and
+town council elected under a very restricted franchise. The
+city is divided into fourteen wards each with one representative.
+A councillor must possess, either personally or through his wife,
+premises within the city of the appraised value of at least $1500.
+A voter must either own house property of the appraised value
+of $250 or occupy premises of an annual rental of $240. There
+are indeed only 297 municipal voters in a population of nearly
+50,000. The revenue, just over Ł50,000 annually, is mainly
+derived from a direct rate on house property. The colonial
+government pays rates on its property and also gives a grant-in-aid
+towards the upkeep of the streets. The expenditure is
+principally on sanitation, fire brigade, streets, water-supply,
+street lighting and drainage. Street lighting is carried out under
+contract by the Demerara Electric Company, which has a
+monopoly of private lighting and works an excellent tram service.
+Water for public and domestic purposes is taken from the conservancy
+of the east coast and is delivered by pumping throughout
+the city, but drinking-water is collected in tanks attached to
+the dwellings from the rain falling on the roofs. The fire brigade
+is a branch of the police force, half the cost being borne by the
+rates and half by the general revenue. There is an excellent
+service of telephones, a branch of the post office, and halfpenny
+postage within the city boundaries. There are in Georgetown
+two well-equipped foundries, a dry dock, and factories for the
+manufacture of rice, cigars, soap, boots, chocolate, candles,
+aerated waters and ice. Georgetown is connected by rail and
+ferry with New Amsterdam, by ferry and rail with the west
+coast of Demerara, and by steamer with all the country districts
+along the coast and up the navigable reaches of the principal
+rivers.</p>
+<div class="author">(A. G. B.*)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGETOWN,<a name="ar20" id="ar20"></a></span> formerly a city of the District of Columbia,
+U.S.A., and now part (sometimes called West Washington)
+of the city of Washington, U.S.A., at the confluence of the
+Potomac river and Rock Creek, and on the Chesapeake and Ohio
+Canal, about 2˝ m. W.N.W. of the National Capitol. Pop.
+(1890) 14,046; (1900) 14,549. The streets are old-fashioned,
+narrow and well shaded. On the &ldquo;Heights&rdquo; are many fine
+residences with beautiful gardens; the Monastery and Academy
+(for girls) of Visitation, founded in 1799 by Leonard Neale,
+second archbishop of Baltimore; and the college and the
+astronomical observatory (1842) of Georgetown University.
+The university was founded as a Roman Catholic Academy in
+1789, was opened in 1791, transferred to the Society of Jesus
+in 1805, authorized in 1815 by Congress to confer college or
+university degrees, and by the Holy See in 1833 to confer degrees
+in philosophy and theology, incorporated as Georgetown College
+by Act of Congress in 1844, and began graduate work about
+1856. The college library includes the historical collection of
+James Gilmary Shea. A school of medicine was opened in 1851,
+a dental school in 1901 and a school of law in 1870. In 1909-1910
+the university had an enrolment of 859 students. Rising
+in terraces from Rock Creek is Oak Hill Cemetery, a beautiful
+burying-ground containing the graves of John Howard Payne,
+the author of &ldquo;Home, Sweet Home,&rdquo; Edwin McMasters Stanton
+and Joseph Henry. On the bank of the Potomac is a brick house
+which was for several years the home of Francis Scott Key, author
+of &ldquo;The Star-Spangled Banner&rdquo;; on Analostan Island in the
+river was a home of James Murray Mason; Georgetown Heights
+was the home of the popular novelist, Mrs Emma Dorothy
+Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899). Before the advent of
+railways Georgetown had an important commerce by way of the
+Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, by which considerable coal as well
+as some grain is still brought hither, and of which Georgetown
+is now a terminus; the canal formerly crossed the Potomac
+at this point on an aqueduct bridge (1446 ft. long), but in 1887
+the crossing was abandoned and the old bridge was purchased
+by the United States government, which in 1889 constructed
+a new steel bridge upon the old masonry piers. Chief among the
+manufactories are several large flour mills&mdash;Georgetown flour
+was long noted for its excellence. There is a very large fish-market
+here. Georgetown was settled late in the 17th century,
+was laid out as a town in 1751, chartered as a city in 1789,
+merged in the District of Columbia in 1871, and annexed
+to the city of Washington in 1878. In the early days of
+Washington it was a social centre of some importance, where
+many members of Congress as well as some cabinet officers
+and representatives of foreign countries lived and the President
+gave state dinners; and here were the studio, for two years, of
+Gilbert Stuart, and &ldquo;Kalorama,&rdquo; the residence of Joel Barlow.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGETOWN,<a name="ar21" id="ar21"></a></span> a city and the county-seat of Scott county,
+Kentucky, U.S.A., about 11 miles N. of Lexington. Pop.
+(1900) 3823 (1677 negroes); (1910) 4533. Georgetown is served
+by the Cincinnati Southern (Queen &amp; Crescent Route), the
+Frankfort &amp; Cincinnati, and the Southern railways, and is
+connected with Lexington by an electric line. It is the seat
+of Georgetown College (Baptist, co-educational), chartered in
+1829 as the successor of Rittenhouse Academy, which was founded
+in 1798. Georgetown is situated in the Blue Grass region of
+Kentucky, and the surrounding country is devoted to agriculture
+and stock-raising. One of the largest independent oil refineries
+in the country (that of the Indian Refining Co.) is in Georgetown,
+and among manufactures are bricks, flour, ice, bagging and hemp.
+The remarkable &ldquo;Royal Spring,&rdquo; which rises near the centre
+of the city, furnishes about 200,000 gallons of water an hour
+for the city&rsquo;s water supply, and for power for the street railway
+and for various industries. The first settlement was made in
+1775, and was named McClellan&rsquo;s, that name being changed to
+Lebanon a few years afterwards. In 1790 the place was incorporated
+as a town under its present name (adopted in honour
+of George Washington), and Georgetown was chartered as a city
+of the fourth class in 1894. Bacon College, which developed into
+Kentucky (now Transylvania) University (see Lexington, Ky.),
+was established here by the Disciples of Christ in 1836, but in
+1839 was removed to Harrodsburg.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGETOWN,<a name="ar22" id="ar22"></a></span> a city, a port of entry and the county-seat
+of Georgetown county, South Carolina, U.S.A., at the head of
+Winyah Bay, and at the mouth of the Pedee river, about 15 m.
+from the Atlantic Ocean, and about 55 m. N.E. of Charleston.
+Pop. (1890) 2895; (1900) 4138 (2718 negroes); (1910) 5530.
+Georgetown is served by the Georgetown &amp; Western railway,
+has steamship communication with Charleston, Wilmington,
+New York City and other Atlantic ports, and, by the Pedee
+river and its tributaries (about 1000 m. of navigable streams),
+has trade connexions with a large area of South Carolina and part
+of North Carolina. The principal public buildings are the post
+office and custom house. Among the city&rsquo;s manufactures are
+lumber, foundry and machine-shop products, naval stores and
+oars; and there are shad and sturgeon fisheries. The growing
+of cotton and truck-gardening are important industries in the
+neighbouring region, and there is considerable trade in such
+products. The first settlement here was made about 1700;
+and the town was laid out a short time before 1734. The Winyah
+Indigo Society grew out of a social club organized about 1740,
+and was founded in 1757 by a group of planters interested in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page751" id="page751"></a>751</span>
+raising indigo; It long conducted a school (discontinued during
+the Civil War) which eventually became part of the city&rsquo;s public
+school system. In 1780 Georgetown was occupied by a body
+of Loyalist troops, with whom the American troops had several
+skirmishes, but on the 10th of August 1781 General Francis
+Marion forced the evacuation of the town and took possession
+of it. A few days later, an American named Manson, who had
+joined the British forces, attacked the town from an armed
+vessel, and burned about forty houses, the small body of militia
+being unable to make an effective resistance. General Lafayette
+first landed on American soil at Georgetown on the 24th of April
+1777. Georgetown was incorporated as a town in 1805, and was
+chartered as a city in 1895.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGETOWN,<a name="ar23" id="ar23"></a></span> a city and the county-seat of Williamson
+county, Texas, U.S.A., on the San Gabriel river, about 25 m. N.
+by E. of Austin. Pop. (1890) 2447; (1900) 2790 (608 negroes);
+(1910) 3096. The city is served by the International
+&amp; Great Northern, and the Missouri, Kansas &amp; Texas railways.
+Georgetown is the seat of the Southwestern University
+(Methodist Episcopal, South, co-educational), formed in 1873
+(chartered 1875) by the combination of Ruterville College
+(Methodist Episcopal, at Ruterville, Texas, chartered in 1840,
+and closed in 1850), McKenzie College (at Clarksville, Texas,
+founded in 1841 and closed in 1872), Wesleyan College at San
+Augustine (chartered in 1844, burned a few years later, and not
+rebuilt), and Soule University at Chapel Hill (chartered in 1856,
+but closed in 1870). The university includes a fitting school
+at Georgetown, and a medical department at Dallas, Texas;
+in 1909 it had an enrolment of 1037 students. The principal
+manufactures of Georgetown are cotton and cotton-seed oil,
+and planing-mill products. In Page Park are mineral springs,
+whose waters have medicinal qualities similar to the famous
+Karlsbad waters. The first settlement was made here in 1848;
+and Georgetown was incorporated as a town in 1866, and was
+chartered as a city in 1890.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGIA,<a name="ar24" id="ar24"></a></span> a southern state of the United States of America,
+one of the thirteen original states, situated between 30° 31&prime; 39&Prime;
+and 35° N., and between 81° and 85° 53&prime; 38&Prime; W. It is bounded
+N. by Tennessee and North Carolina, E. by South Carolina and
+the Atlantic Ocean, S. by Florida, and W. by Alabama. The
+total area of the state is 59,265 sq. m., of which 540 sq. m. are
+water surface.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The surface of Georgia is divided into five physiographic zones.
+From the sea coast, which is skirted by fertile, semi-tropical islands,
+a plain of 35,000 sq. m., known as South Georgia, extends northward
+to the &ldquo;fall-line&rdquo; passing from Augusta, through Milledgeville
+and Macon, to Columbus. This is a part of the great Atlantic
+Coastal Plain. For 20 m. from the coast its elevation is 10 ft.,
+then it rises abruptly 70 ft. higher, and 20 m. farther N. another
+elevation begins, which reaches 575 ft. at Milledgeville, the average
+elevation of the entire region being 250 ft. North of the line mentioned,
+and collectively known as North Georgia, are the four other
+regions, each with well-defined characteristics. The largest and
+southernmost, a broad belt extending from the &ldquo;fall-line&rdquo; to a
+line passing through Clarkesville, Habersham county, Cartersville,
+Bartow county and Buchanan, Haralson county (approximately),
+is known as the Piedmont Belt or Plateau, being a region of faint
+relief eroded on highly complicated crystalline rocks. The Blue
+Ridge escarpment, a striking topographic feature in Virginia and
+the Carolinas, extends into Georgia along the north-eastern border
+of this belt, but is less strongly developed here than elsewhere,
+dying out entirely towards the south-west. North of the Piedmont
+Belt lie the Appalachian Mountains Region and the Great Valley
+Region, the former to the east, the latter to the west of a dividing
+line from Cartersville northward. The former region consists of
+detached mountain masses of crystalline rocks, not yet eroded
+down to the level of the Piedmont Belt. In Towns county, in the
+Appalachian Region, is the highest point in the state, Brasstown Bald,
+also called Enota Mountain (4768 ft.). The Great Valley Region
+consists of folded sedimentary rocks, extensive erosion having
+removed the soft layers to form valleys, leaving the hard layers
+as ridges, both layers running in a N.E.-S.W. direction. In the
+extreme north-west corner of the state is a small part of the Cumberland
+Plateau, represented by Lookout and Sand Mts.</p>
+
+<p>On the Blue Ridge escarpment near the N.E. corner of the state
+is a water-parting separating the waters which find their way
+respectively N.W. to the Tennessee river, S.W. to the Gulf of Mexico
+and S.E. to the Atlantic Ocean; indeed, according to B.M. and
+M.R. Hall (<i>Water Resources of Georgia</i>, p. 2), &ldquo;there are three
+springs in north-east Georgia within a stone&rsquo;s throw of each other
+that send out their waters to Savannah, Ga., to Apalachicola, Fla.,
+and to New Orleans, La.&rdquo; The water-parting between the waters
+flowing into the Atlantic and those flowing into the Gulf extends
+from this point first S.E. for a few miles, then turns S.W. to Atlanta,
+and from there extends S.S.E. to the Florida line. West of where
+the escarpment dies out, the Great Valley Region and a considerable
+portion of the Appalachian Mountains Region are drained by the
+Coosa, the Tallapoosa and their tributaries, into Mobile Bay, but
+the Cumberland Plateau, like that part of the Appalachian Mountains
+Region which lies directly N. of the Blue Ridge escarpment,
+constitutes a part of the Tennessee Basin. The principal rivers
+of the state are the Chattahoochee and the Flint, which unite in
+the S.W. corner to form the Apalachicola; the Ocmulgee (whose
+western tributary, the Towaliga, falls 96 ft. in less than a quarter
+of a mile), and the Oconee, which unite in the S.E. to form the
+Altamaha; and the Savannah, which forms the boundary between
+Georgia and South Carolina. All of these rise in the upper part of the
+Piedmont Plateau, through which they pursue a rapid course over
+rocky beds, and are navigable only south of the &ldquo;fall-line,&rdquo; at
+which and north of which they furnish an abundance of water-power.
+The upper Savannah river first flows S.W., then turns abruptly
+S.E., while the Chattahoochee river rises near this point and continues
+S.W. This is because the upper Savannah<a name="fa1f" id="fa1f" href="#ft1f"><span class="sp">1</span></a> was formerly
+part of the Chattahoochee, but was captured and turned S.E. by
+headward growth of the Savannah. As a result of the capture
+there is a deep gorge along the upper Savannah, especially along the
+branch called the Tallulah river; and the upper Tallulah, in a series
+of cascades, 2<span class="spp">2</span>&frasl;<span class="suu">3</span> m. long, falls 525 ft. from the former higher level
+down to the main bed of the upper Savannah, at Tallulah Falls, a
+summer resort.</p>
+
+<p>The fauna and flora have no distinctive features. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">United
+States</a></span>.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Climate and Soils.</i>&mdash;The climate of Georgia, though temperate,
+differs considerably in different parts of the state. All the nine
+climate belts in the United States, except that of southern
+Florida, are represented within its borders. The lowest mean
+annual temperature, 40° F. and below, is that of some of the
+mountain tops of northern Georgia; from the mountain-sides
+to the Piedmont Plateau this mean temperature varies from
+45° to 60°; on the Piedmont Plateau from 60° to 65°; and on the
+Coastal Plain from 60° to 70°. The July isotherm of 80° crosses
+the state a little N. of Augusta and Macon, touching the W.
+boundary at West Point, Troup county. The mean July temperature
+for the whole state is 81.8°; for the part S. of the 80°
+isotherm the average temperature for July is between 80° and
+85°. The average rainfall for the state is 49.3 in.; the maximum
+is 71.7 in., at Rabun Gap in the extreme N.E. part of the state;
+the minimum is 39.4 at Swainsboro, Emanuel county, a little S.E.
+of the centre of the state.</p>
+
+<p>Georgia is also notable for the variety of its soils. In the
+Cumberland Plateau and Great Valley Regions are a red or brown
+loam, rich in decomposed limestone and calcareous shales, and
+sandy or gravelly loams. In the Piedmont Plateau and Appalachian
+Mountains Regions the surface soil is generally sandy, but
+in considerable areas the subsoil is a red clay derived largely
+from the decomposition of hornblende. By far the greatest
+variety of soils is found in the Coastal Plain Region. Here the
+Central Cotton Belt, extending from the &ldquo;fall-line&rdquo; as far S.
+as a line bisecting Early county in the W. and passing through
+Baker, Worth, Dooly, Dodge, Laurens, Johnson, Jefferson
+and Burke counties, has three distinct kinds of soil; a sand,
+forming what is known as the sand-hill region; red clay derived
+from silicious rock in the red hills; and grey, sandy soils with
+a subsoil of yellow loam. South of the Cotton Belt is the Lime
+Sink Region, which includes Miller, Baker, Mitchell, Colquitt
+and Worth counties, the northern portions of Decatur, Grady,
+Thomas, Brooks and Lowndes, the eastern parts of Dooly and
+Lee, and the eastern portions of Berrien, Irwin, Wilcox, Dodge,
+and some parts of Burke, Screven and Bulloch. The soft limestone
+underlying this region is covered, in the uplands, with
+grey, sandy soils, which have a subsoil of loam; in the lowlands
+the surface soils are loams, the subsoils clays. Adjoining this
+region are the pine barrens, which extend S. to a line passing
+through the northern portions of Pierce, Wayne, Liberty, Bryan
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page752" id="page752"></a>752</span>
+and Effingham counties. Here the prevailing soils are grey and
+sandy with a subsoil of loam, but they are less fertile than those
+of the Lime Sink or Cotton Belts. The coast counties of the S.E.
+and generally those on the Florida frontier are not suitable for
+cultivation, on account of the numerous marshes and swamps,
+Okefinokee Swamp being 45 m. long and approximately 30 m.
+wide; but the southern portions of Decatur, Grady, Thomas and
+Brooks counties are sufficiently elevated for agriculture, and the
+islands off the coast are exceedingly productive.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Minerals.</i>&mdash;The mineral resources of Georgia are as varied as its
+climate and soils, a total of thirty-nine different mineral products
+being found within its borders. The most important is stone: in
+1905 the value of the granite quarried in the state was $971,207
+(Georgia ranking fifth in the United States), of the marble $774,550
+(Georgia ranking third in the United States, Vermont and New York
+being first and second); in 1908 the granite was valued at $970,832
+(Georgia ranking fifth in the United States), and the marble at
+$916,281 (Georgia ranking second in the United States, Vermont being
+first). Generally more than one-fourth of the granite is used for paving;
+curb, building and monument stone are next in importance in
+the order named. Stone Mountain (1686 ft.) in De Kalb county near
+Atlanta is a remarkable mass of light-coloured muscovite granite,
+having a circumference at its base of 7 m. Stone Mountain granite
+was first quarried about 1850; it is extensively used as building
+material in Georgia and other southern states. A laminated granite,
+otherwise like the Stone Mountain granite, is found in De Kalb,
+Rockdale and Gwinnett counties, and is used for curbing and building.
+Biotite granites, which take a good polish and are used for
+monuments and for decoration, are quarried in Oglethorpe and
+Elbert counties. Georgia marble was first quarried on a large scale
+in Pickens county in 1884; the pure white marble of this county
+had been worked for tombstones near Tate, the centre of the marble
+belt, in 1840; after its commercial exploitation it was used in the
+capitol buildings of Georgia, Rhode Island, Mississippi and Minnesota,
+in the Corcoran Art Gallery, Washington, D.C., and in St
+Luke&rsquo;s Hospital, New York City. It is sometimes used for the
+entire building, and sometimes only for decoration. Other colours
+than the snowy white are found in the main marble belt of the
+state, which runs from Canton, Cherokee county, 60 m. generally
+N. to the northern boundary of the state. Other deposits, less well
+known, are the dark brown and light grey marbles of Whitfield
+county, which resemble the stone quarried in eastern Tennessee.
+Limestone and slate are quarried at Rock Mart, Polk county, and
+there are cement quarries at Cement, near Kingston, Bartow county.
+Iron deposits occur in Bartow, Polk and Floyd counties, where are
+the more important brown ores, and (red ores) in Walker and
+Chattooga counties. The quantity of iron ore mined in Georgia
+declined from 1890 to 1900; it was 200,842 long tons in 1905 and
+321,060 long tons in 1908, when 319,812 tons were brown haematite
+and 1248 tons were red haematite. Before the discovery of gold
+in California the Georgia &ldquo;placers&rdquo; were very profitable, the earliest
+mining being in 1829 by placer miners from the fields of Burke
+county, North Carolina, who began work in what is now White
+county, and went thence to Habersham and Lumpkin counties.
+Dahlonega and Auraria, the latter named by John C. Calhoun, who
+owned a mine there, were the centres of this early gold mining.
+Work was summarily stopped by Federal troops enforcing the
+governor&rsquo;s proclamation in 1831, because of the disorder in the
+mining region; but it was soon renewed and a mint was established
+at Dahlonega in 1838. After the discovery of gold in California,
+mining in Georgia was not renewed on anything but the smallest
+scale until the early &rsquo;eighties. In 1908 the gold product was valued
+at $56,207 (it was $96,910 in 1905) and the silver product at
+$106. Up to 1909 the gold product of Georgia (see State Geol.
+Survey <i>Bulletin 19</i>) was about $17,500,000. Extensive clay deposits
+occur in all parts of the state, and are remarkable for their comparative
+freedom from impurities and for their high fusion point;
+the most valuable are sedimentary, and form a belt several miles
+wide across the middle of the state from Augusta to Columbus.
+In 1908 the clay products of the state were valued at $1,928,611.
+More asbestos has been found in Georgia than in any other state of
+the Union; it occurs in the amphibole form throughout the N. part
+of the state, and most of the country&rsquo;s domestic supply comes from
+the Sall Mountain mine in White county. Manganese ores, found
+in Bartow, Polk and Floyd counties, were formerly important;
+in 1896 4096 long tons were mined, in 1905 only 150 tons, and in
+1908 none. Bauxite was found in Georgia first of the United States,
+near Rome, in 1887; the output, principally from Floyd, Bartow
+and Polk counties, was the entire product of the United States until
+1891, and in 1902 was more than half the country&rsquo;s product, but in
+1908, even when combined with the Alabama output, was less than
+the amount mined in Arkansas. Coal is not extensively found, but
+the mine on Sand Mountain, in Walker county, was one of the first
+opened S. of the Ohio river; in 1908 the value of the coal mined in the
+state was $364,279 (264,822 short tons), the value of coke at the ovens
+was $137,524 (39,422 short tons), and the value of ammonium sulphate,
+coal tar, illuminating gas and gas coke was more than $800,000.
+Copper was mined in Fannin and Cherokee counties before the Civil
+War. In 1906 the copper mined was valued at $5057. Corundum
+was discovered on Laurel Creek in Rabun county in 1871, and was
+worked there and at Trackrock, Union county, especially between
+1880 and 1893, but in later years low prices closed most of the mines.
+The limestone formations furnished most of the lime for domestic
+use. Sandstone, ochre, slate, soapstone, graphite are also mined,
+and lead, zinc, barytes, gypsum and even diamonds have been
+discovered but not exploited.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Agriculture.</i>&mdash;The principal occupation in Georgia is agriculture,
+which in 1900 engaged seven-tenths of the land surface of the
+state and the labour of three-fifths of the population, ten years
+old and over, who are employed in profitable occupations. The
+products are so diversified that, with the exception of some
+tropical fruits of California and Florida, almost everything
+cultivated in the United States can be produced. The chief
+staple is cotton, of which a valuable hybrid called the Floradora,
+a cross of long and short staple, has been singularly successful.
+Cotton is raised in all counties of the state except Rabun, Towns
+and Fannin in the extreme north, and about one-third of the
+total cultivated land of the state was devoted to it in 1900-1907.
+In 1899-1904 the crop exceeded that of the other cotton-producing
+states except Texas, and in 1899, 1900 and 1903 Mississippi,
+averaging 1,467,121 commercial bales per annum; the crop
+in 1904 was 1,991,719 bales, and in 1907-1908 the crop was
+1,815,834 bales, second only to the crop of Texas. The cause of
+this extensive cultivation of cotton is not a high average yield
+per acre, but the fact that before 1860 &ldquo;Cotton was King,&rdquo;
+and that the market value of the staple when the Civil War
+closed was so high that farmers began to cultivate it to the exclusion
+of the cereals, whose production, Indian corn excepted,
+showed a decline during each decade from 1879 to 1899. But
+in the &rsquo;nineties the price of the cotton fell below the cost of production,
+owing to the enormous supply, and this was accompanied
+by economic depression. These conditions have caused some
+diversification of crops, and successful experiments in cattle-raising,
+movements encouraged by the Department of Agriculture
+and the leading newspapers.</p>
+
+<p>The principal cereals cultivated are Indian corn (product,
+53,750,000 bushels in 1908) and wheat; the cultivation of the
+latter, formerly remunerative, declined on account of the competition
+of the Western States, but revived after 1899, largely
+owing to the efforts of the Georgia Wheat Growers&rsquo; Association
+(organized in 1897), and in 1908 the yield was 2,208,000 bushels.
+The sugar-cane crop declined in value after 1890, and each
+year more of it was made into syrup. In 1908 the tobacco crop
+was 2,705,625 &#8468;, and the average farm price was 35 cents,
+being nearly as high as that of the Florida crop; Sumatra leaf
+for wrappers is grown successfully. The acreage and product of
+tobacco and peanuts increased from 1890 to 1900 respectively
+188% and 319.2%, and 92.6% and 129.9%, and in the production
+of sweet potatoes Georgia was in 1899 surpassed only
+by North Carolina. Alfalfa and grasses grow well. Truck
+farming and the cultivation of orchard and small fruits have
+long been remunerative occupations; the acreage devoted to
+peaches doubled between 1890 and 1900. Pecan nuts are an
+increasingly important crop.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Agriculture in Georgia was in a state of transition at the beginning
+of the 20th century. Owing to the abundance of land and to negro
+slavery, exploitative methods of cultivation were employed before
+the Civil War, and such methods, by which lands after being worked
+to exhaustion are deserted for new fields, had not yet been altogether
+abandoned. One reason for this was that, according to the census
+of 1900, 36.9% of the farms were operated by negroes, of whom
+86% were tenants who desired to secure the greatest possible product
+without regard to the care of the soil. Consequently there were
+large tracts of untilled &ldquo;waste&rdquo; land; but these rapidly responded
+to fertilization and rotation of crops, often yielding 800 to 1200 &#8468;
+of cotton per acre, and Georgia in 1899 used more fertilizers than any
+other state in the Union. Another feature of agriculture in Georgia
+was the great increase in the number of farms, the average size of
+plantations having declined from 440 acres in 1860 to 117.5 in 1900,
+or almost 75%, while the area in cultivation increased only 15.6%
+between 1850 and 1900. The tenantry system was also undergoing a
+change&mdash;the share system which developed in the years succeeding
+the Civil War being replaced by a system of cash rental.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="center pt2"><img style="width:850px; height:1087px; vertical-align: middle;" src="images/img752.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p class="noind f80"><a href="images/img752a.jpg">(Click to enlarge.)</a></p>
+
+<p class="pt2"><i>Manufactures.</i>&mdash;Although excelled by Alabama in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page753" id="page753"></a>753</span>
+manufacture of mineral products, and by North Carolina and
+South Carolina in the number and output of cotton mills, in 1900
+and in 1905 Georgia surpassed each of those states in the total
+value of factory products, which was, however, less than the value
+of the factory products of Louisiana and Virginia among the
+southern states. The chief features of this industrial activity
+are its early beginning and steady, constant development. As
+far back as 1850 there were 1522 manufacturing establishments
+(35 of which were cotton mills) in the state, whose total product
+was valued at $7,082,075. Despite the Civil War, there was
+some advance during each succeeding decade, the most prosperous
+relatively being that from 1880 to 1890. In 1900 the number of
+establishments was 7504, an increase of 75.1% over the number
+in 1890; the capital invested was $89,789,656, an increase of
+57.7%, and the value of products ($106,654,527) was 54.8%
+more than in 1890. Of the 7504 establishments in 1900, 3015
+were conducted under the &ldquo;factory system,&rdquo; and had a capital
+of $79,303,316 and products valued at $94,532,368. In 1905
+there were 3219 factories, with a capital of $135,211,551 (an
+increase of 70.5% over 1900), and a gross product valued at
+$151,040,455 (59.8% greater than the value of the factory
+product in 1900).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The most important manufacturing industries are those that
+depend upon cotton for raw material, with a gross product in 1900
+valued at $26,521,757. In that year<a name="fa2f" id="fa2f" href="#ft2f"><span class="sp">2</span></a> there were 67 mills engaged
+in the manufacture of cotton goods, with a capital of $24,158,159,
+and they yielded a gross product valued at $18,457,645; the increase
+between 1900 and 1905 was actually much larger (and proportionately
+very much larger) than between 1890 and 1900; the number
+of factories in 1905 was 103 (an increase of 53.7% over 1900);
+their capital was $42,349,618 (75.3% more than in 1900); and their
+gross product was valued at $35,174,248 (an increase of 90.6% since
+1900). The rank of Georgia among the cotton manufacturing
+states was seventh in 1900 and fourth in 1905. Cotton-seed oil and
+cake factories increased in number from 17 to 43 from 1890 to 1900,
+and to 112 in 1905, and the value of their product increased from
+$1,670,196 to $8,064,112, or 382.8% in 1890-1900, and to $13,539,899
+in 1905, or an increase of 67.9% over 1900, and in 1900 and in 1905
+the state ranked second (to Texas) in this industry in the United
+States. This growth in cotton manufactures is due to various
+causes, among them being the proximity of raw material, convenient
+water-power, municipal exemption from taxation and the cheapness
+of labour. The relation between employer and employee is in the
+main far more personal and kindly than in the mills of the Northern
+States.</p>
+
+<p>The forests of Georgia, next to the fields, furnish the largest
+amount of raw material for manufactures. The yellow pines of the
+southern part of the state, which have a stand of approximately
+13,778,000 ft., yielded in 1900 rosin and turpentine valued at
+$8,110,468 (more than the product of any other state in the Union)
+and in 1905 valued at $7,705,643 (second only to the product of
+Florida). From the same source was derived most of the lumber
+product valued<a name="fa3f" id="fa3f" href="#ft3f"><span class="sp">3</span></a> in 1900 at $13,341,160 (more than double what it
+was in 1890) and in 1905 at $16,716,594. The other important
+woods are cypress, oak and poplar.</p>
+
+<p>Fourth in value in 1905 (first, cotton goods; second, lumber and
+timber; third, cotton-seed oil and cake) were fertilizers, the value of
+which increased from $3,367,353 in 1900 to $9,461,415 in 1905, when
+the state ranked first of the United States in this industry; in 1900
+it had ranked sixth.</p>
+
+<p><i>Communications.</i>&mdash;Means of transportation for these products
+are furnished by the rivers, which are generally navigable as far
+north as the &ldquo;fall line&rdquo; passing through Augusta, Milledgeville,
+Macon and Columbus; by ocean steamship lines which have piers
+at St Mary&rsquo;s, Brunswick, Darien and Savannah; and by railways
+whose mileage in January 1909 was 6,871.8 m. The most important
+of the railways are the Central of Georgia, the Southern, the Atlantic
+Coast Line, the Seaboard Air Line, the Georgia and the Georgia
+Southern &amp; Florida. In 1878 a state railway commission was established
+which has mandatory power for the settlement of all traffic
+problems and makes annual reports.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Population.</i>&mdash;The population of Georgia in 1880 was 1,542,180;
+in 1890 1,837,353, an increase of 19.1%; in 1900 2,216,331, a further
+increase of 20.6%<a name="fa4f" id="fa4f" href="#ft4f"><span class="sp">4</span></a>; in 1910, 2,609,121. Of the 1900 population,
+53.3% were whites and 46.7% were negroes,<a name="fa5f" id="fa5f" href="#ft5f"><span class="sp">5</span></a> the centre of the
+black population being a little south of the &ldquo;fall line.&rdquo; Here the
+negroes increased, from 1890 to 1900, faster than the whites in
+eighteen counties, but in northern Georgia, where the whites
+are in the majority, the negro population declined in twelve
+counties. Also the percentage of negro illiteracy is higher
+in northern Georgia than in other parts of the state, the percentage
+of negro male illiterates of voting age being 38.3% in
+Atlanta in 1900, and in Savannah only 30.7%. The population
+of Georgia has a very slight foreign-born element (.6% in 1900)
+and a small percentage (1.7% in 1900) of people of foreign
+parentage. The urban population (<i>i.e.</i> the population in places
+of 2500 inhabitants and over) was 15.6% of the total in 1900,
+and the number of incorporated cities, towns and villages was
+372. Of these only forty had a population exceeding 2000, and
+thirteen exceeding 5000. The largest city in 1900 was Atlanta,
+the capital since 1868 (Louisville, Jefferson county, was the
+capital in 1795-1804, and Milledgeville in 1804-1868), with
+89,872 inhabitants. Savannah ranked second with 54,244,
+and Augusta third with 39,441. In 1900 the other cities in the
+state with a population of more than 5000 were: Macon (23,272),
+Columbus (17,614), Athens (10,245), Brunswick (9081), Americus
+(7674), Rome (7291), Griffin (6857), Waycross (5919), Valdosta
+(5613), and Thomasville (5322).</p>
+
+<p>The total membership of the churches in 1906 was about
+1,029,037, of whom 596,319 were Baptists, 349,079 were Methodists,
+24,040 were Presbyterians, 19,273 were Roman Catholics,
+12,703 were Disciples of Christ, 9790 were Protestant
+Episcopalians, and 5581 were Congregationalists.</p>
+
+<p><i>Government.</i>&mdash;The present constitution, which was adopted
+in 1877,<a name="fa6f" id="fa6f" href="#ft6f"><span class="sp">6</span></a> provides for a system of government similar in general
+to that of the other states (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">United States</a></span>). The executive
+officials are elected for a term of two years, and the judges of
+the Supreme Court and of the court of appeals for six years,
+while those of the superior court and of the ordinaries and the
+justices of the peace are chosen every four years. Before 1909
+all male citizens of the United States at least twenty-one years
+of age (except those mentioned below), who had lived in the state
+for one year immediately preceding an election and in the county
+six months, and had paid their taxes, were entitled to vote.
+From the suffrage and the holding of office are excluded idiots
+and insane persons and all those who have been convicted of
+treason, embezzlement, malfeasance in office, bribery or larceny,
+or any crime involving moral turpitude and punishable under
+the laws of the state by imprisonment in the penitentiary&mdash;this
+last disqualification, however, is removable by a pardon for
+the offence. Before 1909 there was no constitutional discrimination
+aimed against the exercise of the suffrage by the negro,
+but in fact the negro vote had in various ways been greatly
+reduced. By a constitutional amendment adopted by a large
+majority at a special election in October 1908, new requirements
+for suffrage, designed primarily to exclude negroes, especially
+illiterate negroes, were imposed (supplementary to the requirements
+mentioned above concerning age, residence and the
+payment of taxes), the amendment coming into effect on the
+1st of January 1909: in brief this amendment requires that
+the voter shall have served in land or naval forces of the United
+States or of the Confederate States or of the state of Georgia
+in time of war, or be lawfully descended from some one who did
+so serve; or that he be a person of good character who proves
+to the satisfaction of the registrars of elections that he understands
+the duties and obligations of a citizen; or that he read
+correctly in English and (unless physically disabled) write any
+paragraph of the Federal or state constitution; or that he own
+40 acres of land or property valued at $500 and assessed for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page754" id="page754"></a>754</span>
+taxation. After the 1st of January 1915 no one may qualify
+as a voter under the first or second of these clauses (the &ldquo;grandfather&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;understanding&rdquo; clauses); but those who shall
+have registered under their requirements before the 1st of
+January 1915 thus become voters for life.</p>
+
+<p>The governor, who receives a salary of $5000, must be at least
+thirty years old, must at the time of his election have been a
+citizen of the United States for fifteen years and of the state for
+six years, and &ldquo;shall not be eligible to re-election after the
+expiration of a second term, for the period of four years.&rdquo; In
+case of his &ldquo;death, removal or disability,&rdquo; the duties of his
+office devolve in the first instance upon the president of the
+Senate, and in the second upon the speaker of the House of
+Representatives. The governor&rsquo;s power of veto extends to
+separate items in appropriation bills, but in every case his veto
+may be <span class="correction" title="amended from overriden">overridden</span> by a two-thirds vote of the legislature. An
+amendment to the constitution may be proposed by a two-thirds
+vote of the legislature, and comes into effect on receiving
+a majority of the popular vote. Members of the Senate must
+be at least twenty-five years old, must be citizens of the United
+States, and must, at the time of their election, have been citizens
+of the state for four years, and of the senatorial district for one
+year; representatives must be at least twenty-one years old,
+and must, at the time of their election, have been citizens of the
+state for two years. By law, in Georgia, lobbying is a felony.</p>
+
+<p>Habitual intoxication, wilful desertion for three years, cruel
+treatment, and conviction for an offence the commission of
+which involved moral turpitude and for which the offender
+has been sentenced to imprisonment for at least two years, are
+recognized as causes for divorce. All petitions for divorce
+must be approved by two successive juries, and a woman holds
+in her own name all property acquired before and after marriage.
+Marriage between the members of the white and negro races
+is prohibited by law.</p>
+
+<p>As the result of the general campaign against child labour, an
+act was passed in 1906 providing that no child under 10 shall
+be employed or allowed to labour in or about any factory, under
+any circumstances; after the 1st of January 1907 no child
+under 12 shall be so employed, unless an orphan with no
+other means of support, or unless a widowed mother or disabled
+or aged father is dependent on the child&rsquo;s labour, in which case
+a certificate to the facts, holding good for one year only, is
+required; after the 1st of January 1908 no child under 14
+shall be employed in a factory between the hours of 7 <span class="scs">P.M.</span> and
+6 <span class="scs">A.M.</span>; after the same date no child under 14 shall be employed
+in any factory without a certificate of school attendance
+for 12 weeks (of which 6 weeks must be consecutive) of
+the preceding year; no child shall be employed without the
+filing of an affidavit as to age. Making a false affidavit as to
+age or as to other facts required by the act, and the violation
+of the act by any agent or representative of a factory or by any
+parent or guardian of a child are misdemeanours.</p>
+
+<p>In 1907 a state law was passed prohibiting after the 1st of
+January 1908 the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors;
+nine-tenths of the counties of the state, under local option laws,
+were already &ldquo;dry&rdquo; at the passage of this bill. The law permits
+druggists to keep for sale no other form of alcoholic drink than
+pure alcohol; physicians prescribing alcohol must fill out a
+blank, specifying the patient&rsquo;s ailment, and certifying that
+alcohol is necessary; the prescription must be filled the day
+it is dated, must be served directly to the physician or to the
+patient, must not call for more than a pint, and may not be
+refilled.<a name="fa7f" id="fa7f" href="#ft7f"><span class="sp">7</span></a></p>
+
+<p>The state supports four benevolent institutions: a lunatic
+asylum for the whites and a similar institution for the negroes,
+both at Milledgeville, an institute for the deaf and dumb at
+Cave Spring, and an academy for the blind at Macon. There are
+also a number of private charitable institutions, the oldest being
+the Bethesda orphan asylum, near Savannah, founded by George
+Whitefield in 1739. The Methodist, Baptist, Roman Catholic
+and Protestant Episcopal Churches, and the Hebrews of the state
+also support homes for orphans. A penitentiary was established
+in 1817 at Milledgeville. In 1866 the lease system was introduced,
+by which the convicts were leased for a term of years to private
+individuals. In 1897 this was supplanted by the contract
+system, by which a prison commission accepted contracts for
+convict labour, but the prisoners were cared for by state officials.
+But the contract system for convicts and the peonage system
+(under which immigrants were held in practical slavery while
+they &ldquo;worked out&rdquo; advances made for passage-money, &amp;c.)
+were still sources of much injustice. State laws made liable
+to prosecution for misdemeanour any contract labourer who,
+having received advances, failed for any but good cause to
+fulfil the contract; or any contract labourer who made a second
+contract without giving notice to his second employer of a prior
+and unfulfilled contract; or any employer of a labourer who had
+not completed the term of a prior contract. In September 1908,
+after an investigation which showed that many wardens had
+been in the pay of convict lessees and that terrible cruelty had
+been practised in convict camps, an extra session of the legislature
+practically put an end to the convict lease or contract system;
+the act then passed provided that after the 31st of March 1909,
+the date of expiration of leases in force, no convicts may be
+leased for more than twelve months and none may be leased
+at all unless there are enough convicts to supply all demands
+for convict labour on roads made by counties, each county to
+receive its <i>pro rata</i> share on a population basis, and to satisfy
+all demands made by municipalities which thus secure labour
+for $100 per annum (per man) paid into the state treasury,
+and all demands made by the state prison farm and factory
+established by this law.</p>
+
+<p><i>Education.</i>&mdash;Georgia&rsquo;s system of public instruction was not
+instituted until 1870, but as early as 1817 the legislature provided
+a fund for the education in the private schools of the state of
+children of indigent parents. The constitution of 1868 authorized
+&ldquo;a thorough system of general education, to be for ever free
+to all children of the State,&rdquo; and in 1870 the first public school
+law was enacted. Education, however, has never been made
+compulsory. The constitution, as amended in 1905, provides
+that elections on the question of local school taxes for counties
+or for school districts may be called upon a petition signed by
+one-fourth of the qualified voters of the county, or district, in
+question; under this provision several counties and a large
+number of school districts are supplementing the general fund.
+But the principal source of the annual school revenue is a state
+tax; the fund derived from this tax, however, is not large
+enough. In 1908 the common school fund approximated
+$3,786,830, of which amount the state paid $2,163,200 and
+about $1,010,680 was raised by local taxation. In 1908 69%
+of the school population (79% of whites; 58% of negroes)
+were enrolled in the schools; in 1902 it was estimated that the
+negroes, 52.3% of whom (10 years of age and over) were illiterates
+(<i>i.e.</i> could not write or could neither read nor write) in 1900
+(81.6% of them were illiterate in 1880), received the benefit
+of only about a fifth of the school fund. Of the total population,
+10 years of age and over, 30.5% were illiterates in 1900&mdash;49.9%
+were illiterates in 1880&mdash;and as regards the whites of native
+birth alone, Georgia ranked ninth in illiteracy, in 1900, among
+the states and territories of the Union. Of the illiterates about
+four-fifths were negroes in 1900. In addition to the public
+schools, the state also supports the University of Georgia; and
+in 1906 $235,000 was expended for the support of higher education.
+In 1906-1907 eleven agricultural and mechanical arts
+colleges were established, one in each congressional district of
+the state. Of the colleges of the university, Franklin was the
+first state college chartered in America (1785); the Medical
+College of Georgia, at Augusta, was opened in 1829; the State
+College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts was established at
+Athens in 1872; the North Georgia Agricultural College, at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page755" id="page755"></a>755</span>
+Dahlonega, was opened in 1873; the Georgia School of Technology,
+at Atlanta, in 1888; the Georgia Normal and Industrial
+College (for women), in Milledgeville, in 1899; the Georgia
+State Normal School, at Athens, in 1895; the Georgia State
+Industrial College for Coloured Youth, near Savannah, in 1890;
+the School of Pharmacy, at Athens, in 1903; and the School
+of Forestry, and the Georgia State College of Agriculture, at
+Athens, in 1906. Affiliated with the university, but not receiving
+state funds, are three preparatory schools, the South Georgia
+Military and Agricultural College at Thomasville, the Middle
+Georgia Military and Agricultural College at Milledgeville,
+and the West Georgia Agricultural and Mechanical College at
+Hamilton. Among the institutions generally grouped as denominational
+are&mdash;Baptist: Mercer University, at Macon (Penfield,
+1837; Macon, 1871), Shorter College (1877) at Rome, Spelman
+Seminary (1881) in Atlanta for negro women and girls, and
+Bessie Tift College, formerly Monroe College (1849) for women,
+at Forsyth; Methodist Episcopal: Emory College (1836), at
+Oxford, and Wesleyan Female College (1836) at Macon, both
+largely endowed by George Ingraham Seney (1837-1893), and
+the latter one of the earliest colleges for women in the country;
+Methodist Episcopal Church, South: Young Harris College
+(1855) at Young Harris, Andrew Female College (1854) at
+Cuthbert, and Dalton Female College (1872) at Dalton; Presbyterian:
+Agnes Scott College at Decatur; and African Methodist
+Episcopal: Morris Brown College (1885) at Atlanta. A famous
+school for negroes is the non-sectarian Atlanta University
+(incorporated in 1867, opened in 1869), which has trained many
+negroes for teaching and other professions. Non-sectarian
+colleges for women are: Lucy Cobb Institute (1858) at Athens,
+Cox College (1843) at College Park, near Atlanta, and Brenau
+College Conservatory (1878) at Gainesville.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Finance.</i>&mdash;The assessed value of taxable property in 1910 was
+about $735,000,000. A general property tax, which furnishes about
+four-fifths of the public revenue, worked so inequitably that a
+Board of Equalization was appointed in 1901. By the Constitution
+the tax rate is limited to $5 on the thousand, and, as the rate of
+taxation has increased faster than the taxable property, the state
+has been forced to contract several temporary loans since 1901,
+none of which has exceeded $200,000, the limit for each year set by
+the Constitution. On the 1st of January 1910 the bonded debt
+was $6,944,000, mainly incurred by the extravagance of the Reconstruction
+administration (see <i>History</i>, below). Each year
+$100,000 of this debt is paid off, and there are annual appropriations
+for the payment of interest (about $303,260 in 1910). The state
+owns the Western &amp; Atlantic railway (137 m. long) from Chattanooga,
+Tennessee, to Atlanta, which has valuable terminal facilities in both
+cities, and which in 1910 was estimated to be worth $8,400,240
+(more than the amount of the bonded debt); this railway the state
+built in 1841-1850, and in 1890 leased for 29 years, at an annual
+rental of $420,012, to the Nashville, Chattanooga &amp; St Louis railway.</p>
+
+<p>Banking in Georgia is in a prosperous condition. The largest
+class of depositors are the farmers, who more and more look to the
+banks for credit, instead of to the merchants and cotton speculators.
+Hence the number of banks in agricultural districts is increasing.
+The state treasurer is the bank examiner, and to him all banks must
+make a quarterly statement and submit their books for examination
+twice a year. The legal rate of interest is 7%, but by contract
+it may be 8%.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>History.</i>&mdash;Georgia derives its name from King George II. of
+Great Britain. It was the last to be established of the English
+colonies in America. Its formation was due to a desire of the
+British government to protect South Carolina from invasion
+by the Spaniards from Florida and by the French from Louisiana,
+as well as to the desire of James Edward Oglethorpe (<i>q.v.</i>) to
+found a refuge for the persecuted Protestant sects and the
+unfortunate but worthy indigent classes of Europe. A charter
+was granted in 1732 to &ldquo;the Trustees for establishing the colony
+of Georgia in America,&rdquo; and parliament gave Ł10,000 to the
+enterprise. The first settlement was made at Savannah in 1733
+under the personal supervision of Oglethorpe. The early colonists
+were German Lutherans (Salzburgers), Piedmontese, Scottish
+Highlanders, Swiss, Portuguese Jews and Englishmen; but
+the main tide of immigration, from Virginia and the Carolinas,
+did not set in until 1752. As a bulwark against the Spanish,
+the colony was successful, but as an economic experiment it
+was a failure. The trustees desired that there should be grown
+in the colony wine grapes, hemp, silk and medical plants (barilla,
+kali, cubeb, caper, madder, &amp;c.) for which England was dependent
+upon foreign countries; they required the settlers to plant
+mulberry trees, and forbade the sale of rum, the chief commercial
+staple of the colonies. They also forbade the introduction of
+negro slaves. Land was leased by military tenure, and until
+1739 grants were made only in male tail and alienations were
+forbidden. The industries planned for the colony did not thrive,
+and as sufficient labour could not be obtained, the importation
+of slaves was permitted under certain conditions in 1749. About
+the same time the House of Commons directed the trustees
+to remove the prohibition on the sale of rum. In 1753 the
+charter of the trustees expired and Georgia became a royal
+province.</p>
+
+<p>Under the new regime the colony was so prosperous that
+Sir James Wright (1716-1785), the last of the royal governors,
+declared Georgia to be &ldquo;the most flourishing colony on the
+continent.&rdquo; The people were led to revolt against the mother
+country through sympathy with the other colonies rather than
+through any grievance of their own. The centre of revolutionary
+ideas was St John&rsquo;s Parish, settled by New Englanders (chiefly
+from Dorchester, Massachusetts). The Loyalist sentiment was
+so strong that only five of the twelve parishes sent representatives
+to the First Provincial Congress, which met on the
+18th of January 1775, and its delegates to the Continental
+Congress therefore did not claim seats in that assembly. But
+six months later all the parishes sent representatives to another
+Provincial Congress which met on the 4th of July 1775. Soon
+afterward the royal government collapsed and the administration
+of the colony was assumed by a council of safety.</p>
+
+<p>The war that followed was really a severe civil conflict, the
+Loyalist and Revolutionary parties being almost equal in
+numbers. In 1778 the British seized Savannah, which they
+held until 1782, meanwhile reviving the British civil administration,
+and in 1779 they captured Augusta and Sunbury; but
+after 1780 the Revolutionary forces were generally successful.
+Civil affairs also fell into confusion. In 1777 a state constitution
+was adopted, but two factions soon appeared in the government,
+led by the governor and the executive council respectively, and
+harmony was not secured until 1781.</p>
+
+<p>Georgia&rsquo;s policy in the formation of the United States government
+was strongly national. In the constitutional convention
+of 1787 its delegates almost invariably gave their support to
+measures designed to strengthen the central government.
+Georgia was the fourth state to ratify (January 2, 1788), and one
+of the three that ratified unanimously, the Federal Constitution.
+But a series of conflicts between the Federal government and the
+state government caused a decline of this national sentiment
+and the growth of States Rights theories.</p>
+
+<p>First of these was the friction involved in the case, before the
+Supreme Court of the United States, of <i>Chisolm</i> v. <i>Georgia</i>, by
+which the plaintiff, one Alexander Chisolm, a citizen of South
+Carolina, secured judgment in 1793 against the state of Georgia
+(see 2 Dallas Reports 419). In protest, the Georgia House of
+Representatives, holding that the United States Supreme Court
+had no constitutional power to try suits against a sovereign state,
+resolved that any Federal marshal who should attempt to execute
+the court&rsquo;s decision would be &ldquo;guilty of felony, and shall suffer
+death, without benefit of clergy, by being hanged.&rdquo; No effort
+was made to execute the decision, and in 1798 the Eleventh
+Amendment to the Federal Constitution was adopted, taking
+from Federal courts all jurisdiction over any suit brought
+&ldquo;against one of the United States by citizens of another state,
+or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The position of Congress and of the Supreme Court with
+reference to Georgia&rsquo;s policy in the Yazoo Frauds also aroused
+distrust of the Federal government. In 1795 the legislature
+granted for $500,000 the territory extending from the Alabama
+and Coosa rivers to the Mississippi river and between 35° and
+31° N. lat. (almost all of the present state of Mississippi and more
+than half of the present state of Alabama) to four land companies,
+but in the following year a new legislature rescinded the contracts
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page756" id="page756"></a>756</span>
+on the ground that they had been fraudulently and corruptly
+made, as was probably the case, and the rescindment was embodied
+in the Constitution of 1798., In the meantime the United
+States Senate had appointed a committee to inquire into Georgia&rsquo;s
+claim to the land in question, and as this committee pronounced
+that claim invalid, Congress in 1800 established a Territorial
+government over the region. The legislature of Georgia remonstrated
+but expressed a willingness to cede the land to the United
+States, and in 1802 the cession was ratified, it being stipulated
+among other things that the United States should pay to the
+state $1,250,000, and should extinguish &ldquo;at their own expense,
+for the use of Georgia, as soon as the same can be peaceably
+obtained on reasonable terms,&rdquo; the Indian title to all lands
+within the state of Georgia. Eight years later the Supreme
+Court of the United States decided in the case of <i>Fletcher</i> v. <i>Peck</i>
+(6 Cranch 87) that such a rescindment as that in the new state
+constitution was illegal, on the ground that a state cannot
+pass a law impairing the obligation of contracts; and at an
+expense of more than four millions of dollars the Federal government
+ultimately extinguished all claims to the lands.</p>
+
+<p>This decision greatly irritated the political leaders of Georgia,
+and the question of extinguishing the Indian titles, on which
+there had long been a disagreement, caused further and even more
+serious friction between the Federal and state authorities. The
+National government, until the administration of President
+Jackson, regarded the Indian tribes as sovereign nations with
+whom it alone had the power to treat, while Georgia held that the
+tribes were dependent communities with no other right to the
+soil than that of tenants at will. In 1785 Georgia made treaties
+with the Creeks by which those Indians ceded to the state their
+lands S. and W. of the Altamaha river and E. of the Oconee
+river, but after a remonstrance of one of their half-breed chiefs
+Congress decided that the cessions were invalid, and the National
+government negotiated, in 1790, a new treaty which ceded only
+the lands E. of the Oconee. The state appealed to the National
+government to endeavour to secure further cessions, but none
+had been made when, in 1802, the United States assumed its
+obligation to extinguish all Indian titles within the state. Several
+cessions were made between 1802 and 1824, but the state in
+the latter year remonstrated in vigorous terms against the
+dilatory manner in which the National government was discharging
+its obligation, and the effect of this was that in 1825 a treaty
+was negotiated at Indian Springs by which nearly all the Lower
+Creeks agreed to exchange their remaining lands in Georgia
+for equal territory beyond the Mississippi. But President
+J.Q. Adams, learning that this treaty was not approved by the
+entire Creek nation, authorized a new one, signed at Washington
+in 1826, by which the treaty of 1825 was abrogated and the
+Creeks kept certain lands W. of the Chattahoochee. The Georgia
+government, under the leadership of Governor George M. Troup
+(1780-1856), had proceeded to execute the first treaty, and the
+legislature declared the second treaty illegal and unconstitutional.
+In reply to a communication of President Adams early in 1827
+that the United States would take strong measures to enforce its
+policy, Governor Troup declared that he felt it his duty to resist
+to the utmost any military attack which the government of the
+United States should think proper to make, and ordered the
+military companies to prepare to resist &ldquo;any hostile invasion
+of the territory of this state.&rdquo; But the strain produced by these
+conditions was relieved by information that new negotiations
+had been begun for the cession of all Creek lands in Georgia.
+These negotiations were completed late in the year.</p>
+
+<p>There was similar conflict in the relation of the United States
+and Georgia with the Cherokees. In 1785 the Cherokees of
+Georgia placed themselves under the protection of the Federal
+government, and in 1823 their chiefs, who were mostly half-breeds,
+declared: &ldquo;It is the fixed and unalterable determination of this
+nation never again to cede one foot more of land,&rdquo; and that they
+could not &ldquo;recognize the sovereignty of any state within the
+limits of their territory&rdquo;; in 1827 they framed a constitution
+and organized a representative government. President Monroe
+and President J.Q. Adams treated the Cherokees with the
+courtesy due to a sovereign nation, and held that the United States
+had done all that was required to meet the obligation assumed
+in 1802. The Georgia legislature, however, contended that the
+United States had not acted in good faith, declared that all
+land within the boundaries of the state belonged to Georgia,
+and in 1828 extended the jurisdiction of Georgia law to the
+Cherokee lands. Then President Jackson, holding that Georgia
+was in the right on the Indian question, informed the Cherokees
+that their only alternative to submission to Georgia was emigration.
+Thereupon the chiefs resorted to the United States
+Supreme Court, which in 1832 declared that the Cherokees
+formed a distinct community &ldquo;in which the laws of Georgia
+have no force,&rdquo; and annulled the decision of a Georgia court
+that had extended its jurisdiction into the Cherokee country
+(<i>Worcester</i> v. <i>Georgia</i>). But the governor of Georgia declared
+that the decision was an attempt at usurpation which would
+meet with determined resistance, and President Jackson refused
+to enforce the decree. The President did, however, work for
+the removal of the Indians, which was effected in 1838.</p>
+
+<p>On account of these conflicts a majority of Georgians adopted
+the principles of the Democratic-Republican party, and early
+in the 19th century the people were virtually unanimous in
+their political ideas. Local partisanship centred in two factions:
+one, led by George M. Troup, which represented the interests
+of the aristocratic and slave-holding communities; the other,
+formed by John Clarke (1766-1832) and his brother Elijah,
+found support among the non-slave-holders and the frontiersmen.
+The cleavage of these factions was at first purely personal;
+but by 1832 it had become one of principle. Then the Troup
+faction under the name of States Rights party, endorsed the
+nullification policy of South Carolina, while the Clarke faction,
+calling itself a Union party, opposed South Carolina&rsquo;s conduct,
+but on the grounds of expediency rather than of principle.
+On account, however, of its opposition to President Jackson&rsquo;s
+attitude toward nullification, the States Rights party affiliated
+with the new Whig party, which represented the national
+feeling in the South, while the Union party was merged into
+the Democratic party, which emphasized the sovereignty of
+the states.</p>
+
+<p>The activity of Georgia in the slavery controversy was important.
+As early as 1835 the legislature adopted a resolution
+which asserted the legality of slavery in the Territories, a principle
+adopted by Congress in the Kansas Bill in 1854, and in 1847
+ex-Governor Wilson Lumpkin (1783-1870) advocated the
+organization of the Southern states to resist the aggression of
+the North. Popular opinion at first opposed the Compromise
+of 1850, and some politicians demanded immediate secession from
+the Union; and the legislature had approved the Alabama
+Platform of 1848. But Congressmen Robert Toombs, Alexander
+H. Stephens, Whigs, and Howell Cobb, a Democrat, upon their
+return from Washington, contended that the Compromise was
+a great victory for the South, and in a campaign on this issue
+secured the election of such delegates to the state convention
+(at Milledgeville) of 1850 that that body adopted on the 10th
+of December, by a vote of 237 to 19, a series of conciliatory
+resolutions, since known as the &ldquo;Georgia Platform,&rdquo; which
+declared in substance: (1) that, although the state did not
+wholly approve of the Compromise, it would &ldquo;abide by it as a
+permanent adjustment of this sectional controversy,&rdquo; to preserve
+the Union, as the thirteen original colonies had found compromise
+necessary for its formation; (2) that the state &ldquo;will and ought
+to resist, even (as a last resort) to the disruption of every tie
+that binds her to the Union,&rdquo; any attempt to prohibit slavery
+in the Territories or a refusal to admit a slave state. The adoption
+of this platform was accompanied by a party reorganization,
+those who approved it organizing the Constitutional Union party,
+and those who disapproved, mostly Democrats, organizing the
+Southern Rights party; the approval in other states of the
+Georgia Platform in preference to the Alabama Platform (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Alabama</a></span>) caused a reaction in the South against secession.
+The reaction was followed for a short interval by a return to
+approximately the former party alignment, but in 1854 the rank
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page757" id="page757"></a>757</span>
+and file of the Whigs joined the American or Know-Nothing party
+while most of the Whig leaders went over to the Democrats.
+The Know-Nothing party was nearly destroyed by its crushing
+defeat in 1856 and in the next year the Democrats by a large
+majority elected for governor Joseph Emerson Brown (1821-1894)
+who by three successive re-elections was continued in
+that office until the close of the Civil War. Although Governor
+Brown represented the poorer class of white citizens he had
+taken a course in law at Yale College, had practised law, and at
+the time of his election was judge of a superior court; although
+he had never held slaves he believed that the abolition of
+slavery would soon result in the ruin of the South, and he was
+a man of strong convictions. The Kansas question and the
+attitude of the North toward the decision in the Dred Scott
+case were arousing the South when he was inaugurated the first
+time, and in his inaugural address he clearly indicated that he
+would favour secession in the event of any further encroachment
+on the part of the North. In July 1859 Senator Alfred Iverson
+(1798-1874) declared that in the event of the election of a Free-Soil
+resident in 1860 he would favour the establishment of an
+independent confederacy; later in the same year Governor
+Brown expressed himself to a similar effect and urged the improvement
+of the military service. On the 7th of November following
+the election of President Lincoln the governor, in a special
+message to the legislature, recommended the calling of a convention
+to decide the question of secession, and Alexander H.
+Stephens was about the only prominent political leader who
+contended that Lincoln&rsquo;s election was insufficient ground for
+such action. On the 17th of November the legislature passed
+an act directing the governor to order an election of delegates
+on the 2nd of January 1861 and their meeting in a convention
+on the 16th. On the 19th this body passed an ordinance of
+secession by a vote of 208 to 89. Already the first regiment of
+Georgia Volunteers, under Colonel Alexander Lawton (1818-1896)
+had seized Fort Pulaski at the mouth of the Savannah
+river and now Governor Brown proceeded to Augusta and seized
+the Federal arsenal there. Toward the close of the same year,
+however, Federal warships blockaded Georgia&rsquo;s ports, and early
+in 1862 Federal forces captured Tybee Island, Fort Pulaski,
+St Mary&rsquo;s, Brunswick and St Simon Island. Georgia had
+responded freely to the call for volunteers, but when the Confederate
+Congress had passed, in April 1862, the Conscript Law
+which required all white men (except those legally exempted
+from service) between the ages of 18 and 35 to enter
+the Confederate service, Governor Brown, in a correspondence
+with President Davis which was continued for several months,
+offered serious objections, his leading contentions being that
+the measure was unnecessary as to Georgia, unconstitutional,
+subversive of the state&rsquo;s sovereignty, and therefore &ldquo;at war
+with the principles for the support of which Georgia entered
+into this revolution.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In 1863 north-west Georgia was involved in the Chattanooga
+campaign. In the following spring Georgia was invaded from
+Tennessee by a Federal army under General William T. Sherman;
+the resistance of General Joseph E. Johnston and General J.B.
+Hood proved ineffectual; and on the 1st of September Atlanta
+was taken. Then Sherman began his famous &ldquo;march to the sea,&rdquo;
+from Atlanta to Savannah, which revealed the weakness of the
+Confederacy. In the spring of 1865, General J.H. Wilson with
+a body of cavalry entered the state from Alabama, seized
+Columbus and West Point on the 16th of April, and on the 10th
+of May captured Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederacy,
+at Irwinville in Irwin county.</p>
+
+<p>In accord with President Andrew Johnson&rsquo;s plan for reorganizing
+the Southern States, a provisional governor, James Johnson,
+was appointed on the 17th of June 1865, and a state convention
+reformed the constitution to meet the new conditions, rescinding
+the ordinance of secession, abolishing slavery and formally
+repudiating the state debt incurred in the prosecution of the war.
+A governor and legislature were elected in November 1865, the
+legislature ratified the Thirteenth Amendment on the 9th of
+December and five days later the governor-elect was inaugurated.
+But both the convention and legislature incurred the suspicion
+and ill-will of Congress; the convention had congratulated the
+president on his policy, memorialized him on behalf of Jefferson
+Davis, and provided pensions for disabled Confederate soldiers
+and the widows of those who had lost their lives during the war,
+while the legislature passed apprenticeship, labour and vagrancy
+laws to protect and regulate the negroes, and rejected the
+Fourteenth Amendment. Although the civil rights were conferred
+upon the freedmen, Congress would not tolerate the
+political incapacity and social inferiority which the legislature
+had assigned to them, and therefore Georgia was placed under
+military government, as part of the third military district, by the
+Reconstruction Act of the 2nd of March 1867. Under the auspices
+of the military authorities registration of electors for a new state
+convention was begun and 95,168 negroes and 96,333 whites
+were registered. The acceptance of the proposition to call the
+convention and the election of many conscientious and intelligent
+delegates were largely due to the influence of ex-Governor
+Brown, who was strongly convinced that the wisest course for
+the South was to accept quickly what Congress had offered.
+The convention met in Atlanta on the 9th of December 1867
+and by March 1868 had revised the constitution to meet the
+requirements of the Reconstruction Acts. The constitution
+was duly adopted by popular vote, and elections were held for
+the choice of a governor and legislature. Rufus Brown Bullock
+(b. 1834), Republican, was chosen governor, the Senate had a
+majority of Republicans, but in the House of Representatives
+a tie vote was cast for the election of a speaker. On the 21st of
+July the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, and a section of
+the state constitution (which denied the power of state courts
+to entertain against any resident of the state suits founded on
+contracts existing on the 15th of June 1865) was repealed by the
+legislature in pursuance of the congressional &ldquo;Omnibus Bill&rdquo;
+of the 25th of June 1868, and as evidence of the restoration of
+Georgia to the Union the congressmen were seated on the 25th
+of July in that year.</p>
+
+<p>But in September of the same year the Democrats in the
+state legislature, being assisted by some of the white
+Republicans, expelled the 27 negro members and seated their
+defeated white contestants, relying upon the legal theory that
+the right to hold office belonged only to those citizens designated
+by statute, the common law or custom. In retaliation the 41st
+Congress excluded the state&rsquo;s representatives on a technicality,
+and, on the theory that the government of Georgia was a provisional
+organization, passed an act requiring the ratification of
+the Fifteenth Amendment before the admission of Georgia&rsquo;s
+senators and representatives. The war department now concluded
+that the state was still subject to military authority, and
+placed General A.H. Terry in command. With his aid, and that
+of Congressional requirements that all members of the legislature
+must take the Test Oath and none be excluded on account of
+colour, a Republican majority was secured for both houses,
+and the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified. Georgia was now
+finally admitted to the Union by Act of Congress, on the 15th of
+July 1870.</p>
+
+<p>The Reconstruction period in Georgia is remarkable for its
+comparative moderation. Although there was great political
+excitement, there was not as much extravagance in public
+administration as there was in other Southern States, the
+state debt increasing approximately from $6,600,000 to
+$16,000,000. The explanation lies in the fact that there were
+comparatively few &ldquo;carpet-baggers&rdquo; or adventurers in the
+state, and that a large number of conservative citizens, under the
+leadership of ex-Governor Brown, supported the Reconstruction
+policy of Congress and joined the Republican party.</p>
+
+<p>The election of 1871 gave the Democrats a majority in the
+legislature; Governor Bullock, fearing impeachment, resigned,
+and at a special election James M. Smith was chosen to fill the
+unexpired term. After that the control of the Democrats was
+complete. In 1891 the Populist party was organized, but it
+never succeeded in securing a majority of the votes in the
+state.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page758" id="page758"></a>758</span></p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">List of Governors</span></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc pt1" colspan="2">I. <i>Administration of the Trustees.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl">James Edward Oglethorpe<a name="fa8f" id="fa8f" href="#ft8f"><span class="sp">8</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1732-1743</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">William Stephens<a name="fa9f" id="fa9f" href="#ft9f"><span class="sp">9</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1743-1751</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Henry Parker<a href="#ft9f"><span class="sp">9</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1751-1753</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Patrick Graham<a href="#ft9f"><span class="sp">9</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1753-1754</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc pt1" colspan="2">II. <i>Royal Administration.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl">John Reynolds</td> <td class="tcc">1754-1757</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Henry Ellis</td> <td class="tcc">1757-1760</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Sir James Wright</td> <td class="tcc">1760-1782</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc pt1" colspan="2">III. <i>Provincial Administration.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl">William Ewen<a name="fa10f" id="fa10f" href="#ft10f"><span class="sp">10</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1775</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Archibald Bulloch<a name="fa11f" id="fa11f" href="#ft11f"><span class="sp">11</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1776</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Button Gwinnett<a href="#ft11f"><span class="sp">11</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1777</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Jonathan Bryan<a href="#ft11f"><span class="sp">11</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1777</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc pt1" colspan="2">IV. <i>Georgia as a State.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl">John A. Treutlen<a name="fa12f" id="fa12f" href="#ft12f"><span class="sp">12</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1777-1778</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">John Houston</td> <td class="tcc">1778-1779</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">John Wereat<a name="fa13f" id="fa13f" href="#ft13f"><span class="sp">13</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1779</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George Walton</td> <td class="tcc">1779-1780</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Richard Hawley</td> <td class="tcc">1780</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Stephen Heard<a href="#ft13f"><span class="sp">13</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1780-1781</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Myrick Davies<a href="#ft13f"><span class="sp">13</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1781</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Nathan Brownson</td> <td class="tcc">1781-1782</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">John Martin</td> <td class="tcc">1782-1783</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Lyman Hall</td> <td class="tcc">1783-1785</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Samuel Elbert</td> <td class="tcc">1785-1786</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Edward Telfair</td> <td class="tcc">1786-1787</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George Matthews</td> <td class="tcc">1787-1788</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George Handley</td> <td class="tcc">1788-1789</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">George Walton</td> <td class="tcc">1789-1790</td> <td class="tcl">Democratic-Republican</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Edward Telfair</td> <td class="tcc">1790-1793</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George Matthews</td> <td class="tcc">1793-1796</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Jared Irwin</td> <td class="tcc">1796-1798</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">James Jackson</td> <td class="tcc">1798-1801</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">David Emanuel</td> <td class="tcc">1801</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Josiah Tattnall</td> <td class="tcc">1801-1802</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">John Milledge</td> <td class="tcc">1802-1806</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Jared Irwin</td> <td class="tcc">1806-1809</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">David B. Mitchell</td> <td class="tcc">1809-1813</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Peter Early</td> <td class="tcc">1813-1815</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">David B. Mitchell</td> <td class="tcc">1815-1817</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">William Rabun<a name="fa14f" id="fa14f" href="#ft14f"><span class="sp">14</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1817-1819</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Matthew Talbot<a href="#ft14f"><span class="sp">14</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1819</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">John Clarke</td> <td class="tcc">1819-1823</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George M. Troup</td> <td class="tcc">1823-1827</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">John Forsyth</td> <td class="tcc">1827-1829</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&emsp; &rdquo; &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George R. Gilmer</td> <td class="tcc">1829-1831</td> <td class="tcl">National Republican</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Wilson Lumpkin</td> <td class="tcc">1831-1835</td> <td class="tcl">Democratic-Republican</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">William Schley</td> <td class="tcc">1835-1837</td> <td class="tcl">Union</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George Gilmer</td> <td class="tcc">1837-1839</td> <td class="tcl">Democrat</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Charles J. McDonald</td> <td class="tcc">1839-1843</td> <td class="tcl">Union</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George W. Crawford</td> <td class="tcc">1843-1847</td> <td class="tcl">Whig</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">George W.B. Towns</td> <td class="tcc">1847-1851</td> <td class="tcl">Democrat</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Howell Cobb</td> <td class="tcc">1851-1853</td> <td class="tcl">Constitutional Union</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Herschell V. Johnson</td> <td class="tcc">1853-1856</td> <td class="tcl">Democrat</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Joseph E. Brown</td> <td class="tcc">1857-1865</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">James Johnson<a name="fa15f" id="fa15f" href="#ft15f"><span class="sp">15</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1865</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Charles J. Jenkins</td> <td class="tcc">1865-1868</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Thomas H. Ruger</td> <td class="tcc">1868</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Rufus B. Bullock</td> <td class="tcc">1868-1871</td> <td class="tcl">Republican</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Benjamin Conley<a href="#ft14f"><span class="sp">14</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1871-1872</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">James M. Smith</td> <td class="tcc">1872-1876</td> <td class="tcl">Democrat</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Alfred H. Colquitt</td> <td class="tcc">1876-1882</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Alexander H. Stephens</td> <td class="tcc">1882-1883</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">James S. Boynton<a href="#ft14f"><span class="sp">14</span></a></td> <td class="tcc">1883</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Henry D. McDaniel</td> <td class="tcc">1883-1886</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">John B. Gordon</td> <td class="tcc">1886-1890</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">W.J. Northen</td> <td class="tcc">1890-1894</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">W.Y. Atkinson</td> <td class="tcc">1894-1898</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">A.D. Candler</td> <td class="tcc">1898-1902</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Joseph M. Terrell</td> <td class="tcc">1902-1907</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Hoke Smith</td> <td class="tcc">1907-1909</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Joseph M. Brown</td> <td class="tcc">1909-1911</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Hoke Smith</td> <td class="tcc">1911- &emsp;&ensp;</td> <td class="tcl"> &emsp;&ensp; &rdquo;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>A brief bibliography, chiefly of historical materials, is given by
+U.B. Phillips in his monograph &ldquo;Georgia and State Rights,&rdquo; in
+vol. ii. of the <i>Annual Report of the American Historical Association
+for 1901</i> (Washington, 1902). Valuable information concerning the
+resources and products of the state is given in the publications of
+the Department of Agriculture, which include weekly and monthly
+<i>Bulletins</i>, biennial <i>Reports</i> and a volume entitled <i>Georgia, Historical
+and Industrial</i> (Atlanta, 1901). The Reports of the United States
+Census (especially the Twelfth Census for 1900 and the special census
+of manufactures for 1905) should be consulted, and <i>Memoirs of
+Georgia</i> (2 vols., Atlanta, Ga., 1895) contains chapters on industrial
+conditions.</p>
+
+<p>The principal sources for public administration are the annual
+reports of the state officers, philanthropic institutions, the prison
+commission and the railroad commission, and the revised Code of
+Georgia (Atlanta, 1896), adopted in 1895; see also L.F. Schmeckebier&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Taxation in Georgia&rdquo; (<i>Johns Hopkins University Studies</i>, vol.
+xviii.) and &ldquo;Banking in Georgia&rdquo; (<i>Banker&rsquo;s Magazine</i>, vol. xlviii.).
+Education and social conditions are treated in C.E. Jones&rsquo;s <i>History
+of Education in Georgia</i> (Washington, 1890), the Annual Reports of
+the School Commissioner, and various magazine articles, such as
+&ldquo;Georgia Cracker in the Cotton Mill&rdquo; (<i>Century Magazine</i>, vol. xix.)
+and &ldquo;A Plea for Light&rdquo; (<i>South Atlantic Quarterly</i>, vol. iii.). The
+view of slavery given in Frances A. Kemble&rsquo;s <i>Journal of a Residence
+on a Georgia Plantation in 1838-1839</i> (New York, 1863) should be compared
+with R.Q. Mallard&rsquo;s <i>Plantation Life before Emancipation</i>
+(Richmond, Va., 1897), and with F.L. Olmsted&rsquo;s <i>A Journey in the
+Seaboard Slave States</i> (New York, 1856).</p>
+
+<p>The best book for the entire field of Georgia history is Lawton
+B. Evans&rsquo;s <i>A Student&rsquo;s History of Georgia</i> (New York, 1898), a textbook
+for schools. This should be supplemented by C.C. Jones&rsquo;s
+<i>Antiquities of the Southern Indians, particularly of the Georgia Tribes</i>
+(New York, 1873), for the aborigines; W.B. Stevens&rsquo;s <i>History of
+Georgia to 1798</i> (2 vols., Philadelphia, 1847-1859) and C.C. Jones, jun.,
+History of Georgia (2 vols., Boston, 1883) for the Colonial and Revolutionary
+periods; C.H. Haskins&rsquo;s <i>The Yazoo Land Companies</i>
+(Washington, 1891); the excellent monograph (mentioned above)
+by U.B. Phillips for politics prior to 1860; Miss Annie H. Abel&rsquo;s
+monograph &ldquo;The History of Events Resulting in Indian Consolidation
+West of the Mississippi,&rdquo; in vol. i. of the <i>Annual Report of the
+American Historical Association for 1906</i> (Washington, 1908) for a
+good account of the removal of the Indians from Georgia; the
+judicious monograph by E.C. Woolley, <i>Reconstruction in Georgia</i>
+(New York, 1901); and I.W. Avery&rsquo;s <i>History of Georgia from 1850
+to 1881</i> (New York, 1881), which is marred by prejudice but contains
+material of value. <i>The Confederate Records of the State of Georgia</i> were
+published at Atlanta in 1909. See also: E.J. Harden&rsquo;s <i>Life of George
+M. Troup</i> (Savannah, 1840); R.M. Johnston and W.H. Browne, <i>Life
+of Alexander H. Stephens (Philadelphia, 1878), and Louis Pendleton,
+Life of Alexander H. Stephens</i> (Philadelphia, 1907); P.A. Stovall&rsquo;s
+<i>Robert Toombs</i> (New York, 1892); H. Fielder&rsquo;s <i>Life, Times and
+Speeches of Joseph E. Brown</i> (Springfield, Mass., 1883) and C.C.
+Jones, jun., <i>Biographical Sketches of Delegates from Georgia to the
+Continental Congress</i> (New York, 1891). There is much valuable
+material, also, in the publications (beginning with 1840) of the
+Georgia Historical Society (see the list in vol. ii. of the <i>Report of the
+American Historical Association</i> for 1905).</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1f" id="ft1f" href="#fa1f"><span class="fn">1</span></a> According to the usual nomenclature, the branch flowing S.W.
+is called the Chattooga; this unites with the Tallulah to form the
+Tugaloo, which in turn unites with the Kiowee to form the Savannah
+proper.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2f" id="ft2f" href="#fa2f"><span class="fn">2</span></a> The manufacturing statistics for 1900 which follow are not
+those given in the Twelfth Census, but are taken from the <i>Census
+of Manufactures</i>, 1905, the 1900 figures here given being only for
+&ldquo;establishments on a factory basis,&rdquo; and thus being comparable
+with those of 1905. In 1890 there were 53 mills with a capital of
+$17,664,675 and a product valued at $12,035,629.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3f" id="ft3f" href="#fa3f"><span class="fn">3</span></a> In these valuations for 1900 and for 1905 the rough lumber
+dressed or remanufactured in planing mills enters twice into the value
+of the product.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft4f" id="ft4f" href="#fa4f"><span class="fn">4</span></a> The population of the state was 82,548 in 1790, 162,686 in 1800,
+252,433 in 1810, 340,989 in 1820, 516,823 in 1830, 691,392 in 1840,
+906,185 in 1850, 1,057,286 in 1860, and 1,184,100 in 1870.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft5f" id="ft5f" href="#fa5f"><span class="fn">5</span></a> This negro percentage includes 211 Chinese, Japanese and
+Indians.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft6f" id="ft6f" href="#fa6f"><span class="fn">6</span></a> The state has had four other constitutions&mdash;those of 1777, 1789,
+1798 and 1868.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft7f" id="ft7f" href="#fa7f"><span class="fn">7</span></a> Owing to the custom which holds in Georgia of choosing state
+senators in rotation from each of the counties making up a senatorial
+district, it happened in 1907 that few cities were represented directly
+by senators chosen from municipalities. It is believed that this fact
+contributed to the passage of the prohibition law.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft8f" id="ft8f" href="#fa8f"><span class="fn">8</span></a> <i>De facto.</i></p>
+
+<p><a name="ft9f" id="ft9f" href="#fa9f"><span class="fn">9</span></a> President of the Colony.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft10f" id="ft10f" href="#fa10f"><span class="fn">10</span></a> President of the Council of Safety.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft11f" id="ft11f" href="#fa11f"><span class="fn">11</span></a> President of Georgia.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft12f" id="ft12f" href="#fa12f"><span class="fn">12</span></a> First Governor under a State Constitution.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft13f" id="ft13f" href="#fa13f"><span class="fn">13</span></a> President Executive Council and <i>de facto</i> Governor.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft14f" id="ft14f" href="#fa14f"><span class="fn">14</span></a> President of Senate.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft15f" id="ft15f" href="#fa15f"><span class="fn">15</span></a> Provisional.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGIA,<a name="ar25" id="ar25"></a></span> a former kingdom of Transcaucasia, which existed
+historically for more than 2000 years. Its earliest name was
+Karthli or Karthveli; the Persians knew it as Gurjistan, the
+Romans and Greeks as Iberia, though the latter placed Colchis
+also in the west of Georgia. Vrastan is the Armenian name and
+Gruzia the Russian. Georgia proper, which included Karthli
+and Kakhetia, was bounded on the N. by Ossetia and Daghestan,
+on the S. by the principalities of Erivan and Kars, and on the
+W. by Guria and Imeretia; but the kingdom also included at
+different times Guria, Mingrelia, Abkhasia, Imeretia and Daghestan,
+and extended from the Caucasus range on the N. to the
+Aras or Araxes on the S. It is now divided between the Russian
+governments of Tiflis and Kutais, under which headings further
+geographical particulars are given. (See also <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Caucasia</a></span>.)</p>
+
+<p><i>History.</i>&mdash;According to traditional accounts, the Georgian
+(Karthlian), Kakhetian, Lesghian, Mingrelian and other races of
+Transcaucasia are the descendants of Thargamos, great-grandson
+of Japheth, son of Noah, though Gen. x. 3 makes Togarmah to
+be the son of Gomer, who was the son of Japheth. These various
+races were subsequently known under the general name of
+Thargamosides. Karthlos, the second son of Thargamos, is the
+eponymous king of his race, their country being called Karthli
+after him. Mtskhethos, son of Karthlos, founded the city of
+Mtskhetha (the modern Mtskhet) and made it the capital of his
+kingdom. We come, however, to firmer historic ground when
+we read that Georgia was conquered by Alexander the Great,
+or rather by one of his generals. The Macedonian yoke was
+shaken off by Pharnavaz or Pharnabazus, a prince of the royal
+race, who ruled from 302 to 237 <span class="scs">B.C.</span> All through its history
+Georgia, being on the outskirts of Armenia and Persia, both of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page759" id="page759"></a>759</span>
+them more powerful neighbours than itself, was at times more
+or less closely affected by their destinies. In this way it was
+sometimes opposed to Rome, sometimes on terms of friendship
+with Byzantium, according as these were successively friendly
+or hostile to the Armenians and the Persians. In the end of the
+2nd century <span class="scs">B.C.</span> the last Pharnavazian prince was dethroned
+by his own subjects and the crown given to Arsaces, king of
+Armenia, whose son Arshag, ascending the throne of Georgia
+in 93 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>, established there the Arsacid dynasty. This close
+association with Armenia brought upon the country an invasion
+(65 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>) by the Roman general Pompey, who was then at war
+with Mithradates, king of Pontus and Armenia; but Pompey
+did not establish his power permanently over Iberia. A hundred
+and eighty years later the Emperor Trajan penetrated (<span class="scs">A.D.</span> 114)
+into the heart of the country, and chastised the Georgians; yet
+his conquest was only a little more permanent than Pompey&rsquo;s.
+During one of the internecine quarrels, which were not infrequent
+in Georgia, the throne fell to Mirhan or Mirian (265-342), a son
+of the Persian king, who had married a daughter of Asphagor,
+the last sovereign of the Arsacid dynasty.</p>
+
+<p>With Mirian begins the Sassanian dynasty. He and his subjects
+were converted to Christianity by a nun Nuno (Nino), who had
+escaped from the religious persecutions of Tiridates, king of
+Armenia. Mirian erected the first Christian church in Georgia on
+the site now occupied by the cathedral of Mtskhet. In or about
+the year 371 Georgia was overrun by the Persian king Shapur
+or Sapor II., and in 379 a Persian general built the stronghold
+of Tphilis (afterwards Tiflis) as a counterpoise to Mtskhet. The
+Persian grasp upon Georgia was loosened by Tiridates, who
+reigned from 393 to 405. One of Mirian&rsquo;s successors, Vakhtang
+(446-499), surnamed Gurgaslan or Gurgasal, the Wolf-Lion,
+established a patriarchate at Mtskhet and made Tphilis his
+capital. This sovereign, having conquered Mingrelia and
+Abkhasia, and subdued the Ossetes, made himself master of a
+large part of Armenia. Then, co-operating for once with the
+king of Persia, he led an army into India; but towards the
+end of his reign there was enmity between him and the Persians,
+against whom he warred unsuccessfully. His son Dachi or
+Darchil (499-514) upon ascending the throne transferred the
+seat of government permanently from Mtskhet to Tphilis (Tiflis).
+Again Persia stretched out her hand over Georgia, and proved a
+formidable menace to the existence of the kingdom, until, owing
+to the severe pressure of the Turks on the one side and of the
+Byzantine Greeks on the other, she found it expedient to relax
+her grasp. The Georgians, seizing the opportunity, appealed
+(571) to the Byzantine emperor, Justin II. who gave them a king
+in the person of Guaram, a prince of the Bagratid family of
+Armenia, conferring upon him the title, not of king, but of viceroy.
+Thus began the dynasty of the Bagratids, who ruled until 1803.</p>
+
+<p>This was not, however, the first time that Byzantine influence
+had been effectively exercised in Georgia. As early as the
+reign of Mirian, in the 3rd century, the organizers of the early
+Georgian church had looked to Byzantium, the leading Christian
+power in the East, for both instruction and guidance, and the
+connexion thus begun had been strengthened as time went on.
+From this period until the Arab (<i>i.e.</i> Mahommedan) invasions
+began, the authority of Byzantium was supreme in Georgia.
+Some seventy years after the Bagratids began to rule in Georgia
+the all-conquering Arabs appeared on the frontiers of the country,
+and for the next one hundred and eighty years they frequently
+devastated the land, compelling its inhabitants again and again
+to accept Islam at the sword&rsquo;s point. But it was not until the
+death of the Georgian king Ashod (787-826) that they completely
+subdued the Caucasian state and imposed their will upon it.
+Nevertheless they were too much occupied elsewhere or too
+indifferent to its welfare to defend it against alien aggressors,
+for in 842 Bogha, a Turkish chief, invaded the country, and early
+in the 10th century the Persians again overran it. But a period
+of relief from these hostile incursions was afforded by the reign
+of Bagrat III. (980-1014). During his father&rsquo;s lifetime he had
+been made king of Abkhasia, his mother belonging to the royal
+house of that land, and after ascending the Georgian throne he
+made his power felt far beyond the frontiers of his hereditary
+dominions, until his kingdom extended from the Black Sea
+to the Caspian, while Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kirman all
+paid him tribute. Not only did he encourage learning and
+patronize the fine arts, but he built, in 1003, the cathedral at
+Kutais, one of the finest examples extant of Georgian architecture.
+During the reign of Bagrat IV. (1027-1072) the Seljuk Turks
+more than once burst, after 1048, into the country from Asia
+Minor, but they were on the whole successfully repulsed, although
+they plundered Tiflis. During the reign of the next king, George
+II., they again devastated Tiflis. But once more fortune changed
+after the accession of David II. (1089-1125), surnamed the
+Renovator, one of the greatest of Georgian kings. With the help
+of the Kipchaks, a Mongol or Turkish race, from the steppe
+lands to the north of the Caucasus, whom he admitted into his
+country, David drove the Seljuks out of his domains and forced
+them back over the Armenian mountains. Under George III.
+(1156-1184), a grandson of David II., Armenia was in part
+conquered, and Ani, one of its capitals, taken. George&rsquo;s daughter
+Thamar or Tamara, who succeeded him, reigned over the kingdom
+as left by David II. and further extended her power over
+Trebizond, Erzerum, Tovin (in Armenia) and Kars. These
+successes were continued by her son George IV. (1212-1223),
+who conquered Ganja (now Elisavetpol) and repulsed the attacks
+of the Persians; but in the last years of his reign there appeared
+(1220 and 1222) the people who were to prove the ruin of Georgia,
+namely the Mongol hosts of Jenghiz Khan, led by his sons.
+George IV. was succeeded by his sister Rusudan, whose capital
+was twice captured by the Persians and her kingdom overrun
+and fearfully devastated by the Mongols in 1236. Then, after a
+period of wonderful recovery under George V. (1318-1346),
+who conquered Imeretia and reunited it to his crown, Georgia
+was again twice (1386 and 1393-1394) desolated by the Mongols
+under Timur (Tamerlane), prince of Samarkand, who on the
+second occasion laid waste the entire country with fire and
+sword, and crushed it under his relentless heel until the year
+1403. Alexander I. (1413-1442) freed his country from the last
+of the Mongols, but at the end of his reign divided his territory
+between his three sons, whom he made sovereigns of Imeretia,
+Kakhetia and Karthli (Georgia) respectively. The first mentioned
+remained a separate state until its annexation to Russia
+in 1810; the other two were soon reunited.</p>
+
+<p>Political relations between Russia and Georgia began in the
+end of the same century, namely in 1492, when the king of
+Kakhetia sought the protection of Ivan III. during a war between
+the Turks and the Persians. In the 17th century the two
+states were brought into still closer relationship. In 1619,
+when Georgia was harried by Shah Abbas of Persia, Theimuraz
+(1629-1634), king of Georgia, appealed for help to Michael,
+the first of the Romanov tsars of Russia, and his example was
+followed later in the century by the rulers of other petty Thargamosid
+or Caucasian states, namely Imeretia and Guria. In
+1638 the prince of Mingrelia took the oath of allegiance to the
+Russian tsar, and in 1650 the same step was taken by the prince
+of Imeretia. Vakhtang VI. of Georgia put himself under the
+protection of Peter the Great early in the 18th century. When
+Persia fell into the grip of the Afghans early in the 18th century
+the Turks seized the opportunity, and, ousting the Persians from
+Georgia, captured Tiflis and compelled Vakhtang to abdicate.
+But in 1735 they renounced all claim to supremacy over the
+Caucasian states. This left Persia with the predominating
+influence, for though Peter the Great extorted from Persia
+(1722) her prosperous provinces beside the Caspian, he left
+the mountaineers to their own dynastic quarrels. Heraclius II.
+of Georgia declared himself the vassal of Russia in 1783, and when,
+twelve years later, he was hard pressed by Agha Mahommed,
+shah of Persia, who seized Tiflis and laid it in ruins, he appealed
+to Russia for help. The appeal was again renewed by the next
+king of Georgia, George XIII., in 1798, and in the following
+year he renounced his crown in favour of the tsar, and in 1801
+Georgia was converted into a Russian province. The state of
+Guria submitted to Russia in 1829.</p>
+<div class="author">(J. T. Be.)</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page760" id="page760"></a>760</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Ethnology.</i>&mdash;Of the three main groups into which the Caucasian
+races are now usually divided, the Georgian is in every respect
+the most important and interesting. It has accordingly largely
+occupied the attention of Orientalists almost incessantly from
+the days of Klaproth. Yet such are the difficulties connected
+with the origin and mutual relations of the Caucasian peoples
+that its affinities are still far from being clearly established.
+Anton von Schiefner and P.V. Uslar, however, arrived at some
+negative conclusions valuable as starting-points for further
+research. In their papers, published in the <i>Memoirs</i> of the St
+Petersburg Imperial Academy of Sciences and elsewhere (1859
+et seq.), they finally disposed of the views of Bopp and
+Brosset (1836), who attempted on linguistic grounds to connect
+the Georgians with the Indo-European family. They also clearly
+show that Max Müller&rsquo;s &ldquo;Turanian&rdquo; theory is untenable,
+and they go a long way towards proving that the Georgian,
+with all the other Caucasian languages except the Ossetian,
+forms a distinct linguistic family absolutely independent of all
+others. This had already been suspected by Klaproth, and
+the same conclusion was arrived at by Fr. Müller and Zagarelli.</p>
+
+<p>Uslar&rsquo;s &ldquo;Caucasian Family&rdquo; comprises the following three
+great divisions:</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>1. Western Group. Typical races: Circassians and Abkhasians.</p>
+<p>2. Eastern Group. Typical races: Chechens and Lesghians.</p>
+<p>3. Southern Group. Typical race: Georgians.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Here the term &ldquo;family&rdquo; must be taken in a far more elastic
+sense than when applied, for instance, to the Indo-European,
+Semitic or Eastern Polynesian divisions of mankind. Indeed
+the three groups present at least as wide divergences as are found
+to exist between the Semitic and Hamitic linguistic families.
+Thus, while the Abkhasian of group 1 is still at the agglutinating,
+the Lesghian of group 2 has fairly reached the inflecting stage,
+and the Georgian seems still to waver between the two. In
+consequence of these different stages of development, Uslar
+hesitated finally to fix the position of Georgian in the family,
+regarding it as possibly a connecting link between groups 1 and
+2, but possibly also radically distinct from both.</p>
+
+<p>Including all its numerous ramifications, the Georgian or
+southern group occupies the greater part of Transcaucasia,
+reaching from about the neighbourhood of Batum on the Black
+Sea eastwards to the Caspian, and merging southwards with the
+Armenians of Aryan stock. It comprises altogether nine subdivisions,
+as in the subjoined table:</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<table class="reg" style="width: 90%;" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>1. The <span class="sc">Georgians Proper</span>, who are the Iberians of the ancients
+and the Grusians of the Russians, but who call themselves Karthlians,
+and who in medieval times were masters of the Rion and Upper
+Kura as far as its confluence with the Alazan.</p></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl" colspan="2"><p>2. The <span class="sc">Imeretians</span>, west of the Suram mountains as far as the
+river Tskheniz-Tskhali.</p></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl" colspan="2"><p>3. The <span class="sc">Gurians</span>, between the Rion and Lazistan.</p></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl" colspan="2"><p>4. The <span class="sc">Lazis</span> of Lazistan on the Black Sea.</p></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl" colspan="2"><p>5. The <span class="sc">Svanetians, Shvans</span> or <span class="sc">Swanians</span>, on the Upper Ingur
+and Tskheniz-Tskhali rivers.</p></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl" colspan="2"><p>6. The <span class="sc">Mingrelians</span>, between the rivers Tskheniz-Tskhali, Rion,
+Ingur and the Black Sea.</p></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>7. The <span class="sc">Tushes</span> or <span class="sc">Mosoks</span></p></td>
+ <td class="tclm cl" rowspan="3">about the headstreams of the Alazan and Yora rivers.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>8. The <span class="sc">Pshavs</span> or <span class="sc">Ph&rsquo;chavy</span></p></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>9. The <span class="sc">Khevsurs</span></p></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The representative branch of the race has always been the
+Karthlians. It is now pretty well established that the Georgians
+are the descendants of the aborigines of the Pambak highlands,
+and that they found their way to their present homes from the
+south-east some four or five thousand years ago, possibly under
+pressure from the great waves of Aryan migration flowing from
+the Iranian tableland westwards to Asia Minor and Europe.
+The Georgians proper are limited on the east by the Alazan, on
+the north by the Caucasus, on the west by the Meskes hills,
+separating them from the Imeretians, and on the south by the
+Kura river and Kara-dagh and Pambak mountains. Southwards,
+however, no hard and fast ethnical line can be drawn,
+for even immediately south of Tiflis, Georgians, Armenians and
+Tatars are found intermingled confusedly together.</p>
+
+<p>The Georgian race, which represents the oldest elements of
+civilization in the Caucasus, is distinguished by some excellent
+mental qualities, and is especially noted for personal courage and
+a passionate love of music. The people, however, are described
+as fierce and cruel, and addicted to intemperance, though Max
+von Thielmann (<i>Journey in the Caucasus</i>, &amp;c., 1875) speaks of
+them as &ldquo;rather hard drinkers than drunkards.&rdquo; Physically
+they are a fine athletic race of pure Caucasian type; hence
+during the Moslem ascendancy Georgia supplied, next to Circassia,
+the largest number of female slaves for the Turkish
+harems and of recruits for the Osmanli armies, more especially
+for the select corps of the famous Mamelukes.</p>
+
+<p>The social organization rested on a highly aristocratic basis,
+and the lowest classes were separated by several grades of
+vassalage from the highest. But since their incorporation
+with the Russian empire, these relations have become greatly
+modified, and a more sharply defined middle class of merchants,
+traders and artisans has been developed. The power of life
+and death, formerly claimed and freely exercised by the nobles
+over their serfs, has also been expressly abolished. The Georgians
+are altogether at present in a fairly well-to-do condition, and
+under Russian administration they have become industrious,
+and have made considerable moral and material progress.</p>
+
+<p>Missionaries sent by Constantine the Great introduced Christianity
+about the beginning of the 4th century. Since that time
+the people have, notwithstanding severe pressure from surrounding
+Mahommedan communities, remained faithful to the
+principles of Christianity, and are still amongst the most devoted
+adherents of the Orthodox Greek Church. Indeed it was their
+attachment to the national religion that caused them to call in
+the aid of the Christian Muscovites against the proselytizing
+attempts of the Shiite Persians&mdash;a step which ultimately brought
+about their political extinction.</p>
+
+<p>As already stated, the Karthli language is not only fundamentally
+distinct from the Indo-European linguistic family,
+but cannot be shown to possess any clearly ascertained affinities
+with either of the two northern Caucasian groups. It resembles
+them chiefly in its phonetic system, so that according to Rosen
+(<i>Sprache der Lazen</i>) all the languages of central and western
+Caucasus might be adequately rendered by the Georgian alphabet.
+Though certainly not so harsh as the Avar, Lesghian and other
+Daghestan languages, it is very far from being euphonious, and
+the frequent recurrence of such sounds as <i>ts, ds, thz, kh, khh, gh</i>
+(Arab. <span title="gh">&#1594;</span>), <i>q</i> (Arab. <span title="q">&#1602;</span>), for all of which there are distinct
+characters, renders its articulation rather more energetic and
+rugged than is agreeable to ears accustomed to the softer tones
+of the Iranian and western Indo-European tongues. It presents
+great facilities for composition, the laws of which are very
+regular. Its peculiar morphology, standing midway between
+agglutination and true inflexion, is well illustrated by its simple
+declension common to noun, adjective and pronoun, and its
+more intricate verbal conjugation, with its personal endings,
+seven tenses and incorporation of pronominal subject and
+object, all showing decided progress towards the inflecting
+structure of the Indo-European and Semitic tongues.</p>
+
+<p>Georgian is written in a native alphabet obviously based on
+the Armenian, and like it attributed to St Mesropius (Mesrop),
+who flourished in the 5th century. Of this alphabet there
+are two forms, differing so greatly in outline and even in the
+number of the letters that they might almost be regarded as two
+distinct alphabetic systems. The first and oldest, used exclusively
+in the Bible and liturgical works, is the square or monumental
+Khutsuri, <i>i.e.</i> &ldquo;sacerdotal,&rdquo; consisting of 38 letters, and approaching
+the Armenian in appearance. The second is the Mkhedr&#363;li
+kh&#275;li, <i>i.e.</i> &ldquo;soldier&rsquo;s hand,&rdquo; used in ordinary writing, and
+consisting of 40 letters, neatly shaped and full of curves, hence
+at first sight not unlike the modern Burmese form of the Pali.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Karthli language there are several varieties; and, besides
+those comprised in the above table, mention should be made
+of the Kakhetian current in the historic province of Kakhetia.
+A distinction is sometimes drawn between the Karthlians proper
+and the Kakhetians, but it rests on a purely political basis,
+having originated with the partition in 1424 of the ancient Iberian
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page761" id="page761"></a>761</span>
+estates into the three new kingdoms of Karthlinia, Kakhetia
+and Imeretia. On the other hand, both the Laz of Lazistan
+and the Svanetian present such serious structural and verbal
+differences from the common type that they seem to stand
+rather in the relation of sister tongues than of dialects to the
+Georgian proper. All derive obviously from a common source,
+but have been developed independently of each other. The
+Tush or Mosok appears to be fundamentally a Kistinian or
+Chechen idiom affected by Georgian influences.</p>
+
+<p>The Bible is said to have been translated into Georgian as
+early as the 5th century. The extant version, however, dates
+only from the 8th century, and is attributed to St Euthymius.
+But even so, it is far the most ancient work known to exist in
+the language. Next in importance is, perhaps, the curious
+poem entitled <i>The Amours of Turiel and Nestan Darejan</i>, or <i>The
+man clothed in the panther&rsquo;s skin</i>, attributed to Rustevel, who
+lived during the prosperous reign of Queen Thamar (11th
+century). Other noteworthy compositions are the national epics
+of the <i>Baramiani</i> and the <i>Rostomiani</i>, and the prose romances
+of <i>Visramiani</i> and <i>Darejaniani</i>, the former by Sarg of Thmogvi,
+the latter by Mosi of Khoni. Apart from these, the great bulk
+of Georgian literature consists of ecclesiastical writings, hymns
+sacred and profane, national codes and chronicles.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;The standard authority on the history is M.F.
+Brosset&rsquo;s translation of the Georgian chronicles under the title of
+<i>Histoire de la Géorgie</i> (5 vols., St Petersburg, 1849-1858); but compare
+also Khakanov, <i>Histoire de Géorgie</i> (Paris, 1900). See further
+A. Leist, <i>Das georgische Volk</i> (Dresden, 1903); M. de Villeneuve,
+<i>La Géorgie</i> (Paris, 1870); O. Wardrop, <i>The Kingdom of Georgia</i>
+(London, 1888); and Langlois, <i>Numismatique géorgienne</i> (Paris,
+1860). For the philology see Zagarelli, <i>Examen de la littérature
+relative ŕ la grammaire géorgienne</i> (1873); <i>Friedrich Müller, Grundriss
+der Sprachwissenschaft</i> (1887), iii. 2; Leist, <i>Georgische Dichter</i>
+(1887); Erskert, <i>Sprachen des kaukasischen Stammes</i> (1895). For
+other points as to anthropology, Michel Smirnow&rsquo;s paper in <i>Revue
+d&rsquo;anthropologie</i> (April 15, 1878); Chantre, <i>Recherches anthropologiques
+dans le Caucase</i> (1885-1887); and Erckert, <i>Der Kaukasus und seine
+Völker</i> (1887).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGIAN BAY,<a name="ar26" id="ar26"></a></span> the N.E. section of Lake Huron, separated
+from it by Manitoulin Island and the peninsula comprising
+the counties of Grey and Bruce, Ontario. It is about 100 m.
+long and 50 m. wide, and is said to contain 30,000 islands. It
+receives numerous rivers draining a large extent of country; of
+these the chief are the French river draining Lake Nipissing,
+the Maganatawan draining a number of small lakes, the Muskoka
+draining the Muskoka chain of lakes (Muskoka, Rosseau, Joseph,
+&amp;c.) and the Severn draining Lake Simcoe. Into its southern
+extremity, known as Nottawasaga Bay, flows the river of the
+same name. The Trent valley canal connects Georgian Bay
+with the Bay of Quinte and Lake Ontario, and a canal system
+has long been projected to Montreal by way of the French and
+Ottawa rivers and Lake Nipissing.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEORGSWALDE,<a name="ar27" id="ar27"></a></span> a town of Bohemia, Austria, 115 m. N.E.
+of Prague by rail. Pop. (1900) 8131, including Neu-Georgswalde,
+Wiesenthal and Philippsdorf, which form together a single
+commune. Georgswalde is one of the oldest industrial places
+of Bohemia, and together with the neighbouring town of Rumburg
+is the principal centre of the linen industry. The village
+of Philippsdorf, now incorporated with Georgswalde, has become
+since 1866 a famous place of pilgrimage, owing to the miracles
+attributed to an image of the Virgin, placed now in a magnificent
+new church (1885).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GEPHYREA,<a name="ar28" id="ar28"></a></span> the name used for several groups of worm-like
+animals with certain resemblances but of doubtful affinity. In
+the article &ldquo;Annelida&rdquo; in the 9th edition of this Encyclopaedia,
+W.C. McIntosh followed the accepted view in associating
+in this group the <i>Echiuridae</i>, <i>Sipunculidae</i> and <i>Priapulidae</i>.
+E. Ray Lankester, in the preface to the English translation of
+C. Gegenbaur&rsquo;s <i>Comparative Anatomy</i> (1878), added the <i>Phoronidae</i>
+to these forms. Afterwards the same author (article
+&ldquo;Zoology,&rdquo; <i>Ency. Brit.</i>, 9th ed.) recognized that the <i>Phoronidae</i>
+had other affinities, and placed the other &ldquo;gephyreans&rdquo; in
+association with the Polyzoa as the two classes of a phylum
+<i>Podaxonia</i>. In the present state of knowledge the old group
+<i>Gephyrea</i> is broken up into <i>Echiuroidea</i> (<i>q.v.</i>) or <i>Gephyrea
+armata</i>, which are certainly Annelids; the <i>Sipunculoidea</i> (<i>q.v.</i>) or
+<i>Gephyrea achaeta</i>, an independent group, certainly coelomate,
+but of doubtful affinity; the <i>Priapuloidea</i> (<i>q.v.</i>), equally of
+doubtful affinity; and the <i>Phoronidea</i> (<i>q.v.</i>), which are almost
+certainly <i>Hemichordata</i>.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERA,<a name="ar29" id="ar29"></a></span> a town of Germany, capital of the principality of Reuss-Schleiz
+(called also Reuss younger line), situated in a valley
+on the banks of the White Elster, 45 m. S.S.W. of Leipzig on
+the railway to Probstzella. Pop. (1885) 34,152; (1905) 47,455.
+It has been mostly rebuilt since a great fire in 1780, and the streets
+are in general wide and straight, and contain many handsome
+houses. There are three Evangelical churches and one Roman
+Catholic. Among other noteworthy buildings are the handsome
+town-hall (1576, afterwards restored) and the theatre (1902). Its
+educational establishments include a gymnasium, a commercial
+and a weaving school. The castle of Osterstein, the residence
+of the princes of Reuss, dates from the 9th century, but has been
+almost entirely rebuilt in modern times. Gera is noted for its
+industrial activity. Its industries include wool-weaving and
+spinning, dyeing, iron-founding, the manufacture of cotton and
+silk goods, machinery, sewing machines and machine oil, leather
+and tobacco, and printing (books and maps) and flower gardening.</p>
+
+<p>Gera (in ancient chronicles <i>Geraha</i>) was raised to the rank of
+a town in the 11th century, at which time it belonged to the
+counts of Groitch. In the 12th century it came into the possession
+of the lords of Reuss. It was stormed and sacked by the
+Bohemians in 1450, was two-thirds burned down by the Swedes
+in 1639 during the Thirty Years&rsquo; War, and suffered afterwards
+from great conflagrations in 1686 and 1780, being in the latter
+year almost completely destroyed.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERALDTON,<a name="ar30" id="ar30"></a></span> a town in the district of Victoria, West Australia,
+on Champion Bay, 306 m. by rail N.W. of Perth. Pop. (1901)
+2593. It is the seat of a Roman Catholic bishop, an important
+seaport carrying on a considerable trade with the surrounding
+gold-fields and agricultural districts, the centre of a considerable
+railway system and an increasingly popular seaside resort.
+The harbour is safe and extensive, having a pier affording
+accommodation for large steamers. The chief exports are gold,
+copper, lead, wool and sandalwood.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GÉRANDO, MARIE JOSEPH DE<a name="ar31" id="ar31"></a></span> (1772-1842), French
+philosopher, was born at Lyons on the 29th of February 1772.
+When the city was besieged in 1793 by the armies of the Republic,
+de Gérando took up arms, was made prisoner and with difficulty
+escaped with his life. He took refuge in Switzerland, whence he
+afterwards fled to Naples. In 1796 the establishment of the
+Directory allowed him to return to France. At the age of twenty-five
+he enlisted as a private in a cavalry regiment. About this
+time the Institute proposed as a subject for an essay this question,&mdash;&ldquo;What
+is the influence of symbols on the faculty of thought?&rdquo;
+De Gérando gained the prize, and heard of his success after the
+battle of Zürich, in which he had distinguished himself. This
+literary triumph was the first step in his upward career. In
+1799 he was attached to the ministry of the interior by Lucien
+Bonaparte; in 1804 he became general secretary under Champagny;
+in 1805 he accompanied Napoleon into Italy; in 1808
+he was nominated master of requests; in 1811 he received the
+title of councillor of state; and in the following year he was
+appointed governor of Catalonia. On the overthrow of the
+empire, de Gérando was allowed to retain this office; but having
+been sent during the hundred days into the department of the
+Moselle to organize the defence of that district, he was punished
+at the second Restoration by a few months of neglect. He
+was soon after, however, readmitted into the council of state,
+where he distinguished himself by the prudence and conciliatory
+tendency of his views. In 1819 he opened at the law-school of
+Paris a class of public and administrative law, which in 1822
+was suppressed by government, but was reopened six years
+later under the Martignac ministry. In 1837 he was made a
+baron. He died at Paris on the 9th of November 1842.</p>
+
+<p>De Gérando&rsquo;s best-known work is his <i>Histoire comparée des
+systčmes de philosophie relativement aux principes des connaissances
+humaines</i> (Paris, 1804, 3 vols.). The germ of this work
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page762" id="page762"></a>762</span>
+had already appeared in the author&rsquo;s <i>Mémoire de la génération
+des connaissances humaines</i> (Berlin, 1802), which was crowned
+by the Academy of Berlin. In it de Gérando, after a rapid
+review of ancient and modern speculations on the origin of our
+ideas, singles out the theory of primary ideas, which he endeavours
+to combat under all its forms. The latter half of the work,
+devoted to the analysis of the intellectual faculties, is intended
+to show how all human knowledge is the result of experience;
+and reflection is assumed as the source of our ideas of substance,
+of unity and of identity. It is divided into two parts, the first
+of which is purely historical, and devoted to an exposition of
+various philosophical systems; in the second, which comprises
+fourteen chapters of the entire work, the distinctive characters
+and value of these systems are compared and discussed. In
+spite of the disadvantage that it is impossible to separate
+advantageously the history and critical examination of any
+doctrine in the arbitrary manner which de Gérando chose, the
+work has great merits. In correctness of detail and comprehensiveness
+of view it was greatly superior to every work of the same kind
+that had hitherto appeared in France. During the Empire and
+the first years of the Restoration, de Gérando found time to
+prepare a second edition (Paris, 1822, 4 vols.), which is enriched
+with so many additions that it may pass for an entirely new
+work. The last chapter of the part published during the author&rsquo;s
+lifetime ends with the revival of letters and the philosophy
+of the 15th century. The second part, carrying the work down
+to the close of the 18th century, was published posthumously
+by his son in 4 vols. (Paris, 1847). Twenty-three chapters of this
+were left complete by the author in manuscript; the remaining
+three were supplied from other sources, chiefly printed but
+unpublished memoirs.</p>
+
+<p>His essay <i>Du perfectionnement moral et de l&rsquo;éducation de soi-męme</i>
+was crowned by the French Academy in 1825. The fundamental
+idea of this work is that human life is in reality only a great
+education, of which perfection is the aim.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Besides the works already mentioned, de Gérando left many
+others, of which we may indicate the following:&mdash;<i>Considérations sur
+diverses méthodes d&rsquo;observation des peuples sauvages</i> (Paris, 1801);
+<i>Éloge de Dumarsais,&mdash;discours qui a remporté le prix proposé par la
+seconde classe de l&rsquo;Institut National</i> (Paris, 1805); <i>Le Visiteur
+de pauvre</i> (Paris, 1820); <i>Instituts du droit administratif</i> (4 vols.,
+Paris, 1830); <i>Cours normal des instituteurs primaires ou directions
+relatives ŕ l&rsquo;éducation physique, morale, et intellectuelle dans les écoles
+primaires</i> (Paris, 1832); <i>De l&rsquo;éducation des sourds-muets</i> (2 vols.,
+Paris, 1832); <i>De la bienfaisance publique</i> (4 vols., 1838). A detailed
+analysis of the <i>Histoire comparée des systčmes</i> will be found in the
+<i>Fragments philosophiques</i> of M. Cousin. In connexion with his
+psychological studies, it is interesting that in 1884 the French
+Anthropological Society reproduced his instructions for the observation
+of primitive peoples, and modern students of the beginnings
+of speech in children and the cases of deaf-mutes have found useful
+matter in his works. See also J.P. Damiron, <i>Essai sur la philosophie
+en France au XIX<span class="sp">e</span> sičcle</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERANIACEAE,<a name="ar32" id="ar32"></a></span> in botany, a small but very widely distributed
+natural order of Dicotyledons belonging to the subclass Polypetalae,
+containing about 360 species in 11 genera. It is represented
+in Britain by two genera, <i>Geranium</i> (crane&rsquo;s-bill) and
+<i>Erodium</i> (stork&rsquo;s-bill), to which belong nearly two-thirds of the
+total number of species. The plants are mostly herbs, rarely
+becoming shrubby, with generally simple glandular hairs on
+the stem and leaves. The opposite or alternate leaves have a
+pair of small stipules at the base of the stalk and a palminerved
+blade. The flowers, which are generally arranged in a cymose
+inflorescence, are hermaphrodite, hypogynous, and, except in
+<i>Pelargonium</i>, regular. The parts are arranged in fives. There
+are five free sepals, overlapping in the bud, and, alternating with
+these, five free petals. In <i>Pelargonium</i> the flower is zygomorphic
+with a spurred posterior sepal and the petals differing in size
+or shape. In <i>Geranium</i> the stamens are obdiplostemonous, <i>i.e.</i>
+an outer whorl of five opposite the petals alternates with an
+inner whorl of five opposite the sepals; at the base of each of
+the antisepalous stamens is a honey-gland. In <i>Erodium</i> the
+members of the outer whorl are reduced to scale-like structures
+(staminodes), and in <i>Pelargonium</i> from two to seven only are
+fertile. There is no satisfactory explanation of this break in
+the regular alternation of successive whorls; the outer whorl
+of stamens arises in course of development before the inner, so
+that there is no question of subsequent displacement. There
+are five, or sometimes fewer, carpels, which unite to form an
+ovary with as many chambers, in each of which are one or two,
+rarely more, pendulous anatropous ovules, attached to the
+central column in such a way that the micropyle points outwards
+and the raphe is turned towards the placenta. The long beak-like
+style divides at the top into a corresponding number of slender
+stigmas.</p>
+
+<table class="pic" style="clear: both;" summary="Illustration">
+<tr><td class="figcenter" colspan="2"><img style="width:384px; height:599px" src="images/img762.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="caption" colspan="2">Meadow Crane&rsquo;s-bill, <i>Geranium pratense</i>. (After Curtis,
+<i>Flora Londinensis</i>.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="f90" style="width: 50%; vertical-align: top;"><p>1, Flower after removal of petals.</p>
+
+<p>2, Fruit after splitting. 1 and 2
+about natural size.</p></td>
+<td class="f90" style="width: 50%; vertical-align: top;"><p>3, Floral diagram, the dots
+opposite the inner stamens
+represent honey-glands.</p></td></tr></table>
+
+<p class="pt2">The larger-flowered species of <i>Geranium</i> are markedly protandrous,
+the outer stamens, inner stamens and stigmas becoming
+functional in succession. For instance, in meadow crane&rsquo;s-bill
+<i>G. pratense</i>, each whorl of stamens ripens in turn, becoming
+erect and shedding their pollen; as the anthers wither the filaments
+bend outwards, and when all the anthers have diverged
+the stigmas become mature and ready for pollination. By this
+arrangement self-pollination is prevented and cross-pollination
+ensured by the visits of bees which come for the honey secreted
+by the glands at the base of the inner stamens.</p>
+
+<p>In species with smaller and less conspicuous flowers, such as
+<i>G. molle</i>, the flowers of which are only <span class="spp">1</span>&frasl;<span class="suu">3</span> to ˝ in. in diameter,
+self-pollination is rendered possible, since the divisions of the
+stigma begin to separate before the outer stamens have shed
+all their pollen; the nearness of the stigmas to the dehiscing
+anthers favours self-pollination.</p>
+
+<p>In the ripe fruit the carpels separate into five one-seeded
+portions (<i>cocci</i>), which break away from the central column,
+either rolling elastically outwards and upwards or becoming
+spirally twisted. In most species of <i>Geranium</i> the cocci split
+open on the inside and the seeds are shot out by the elastic
+uptwisting (fig. 1); in <i>Erodium</i> and <i>Pelargonium</i> each coccus
+remains closed, and the long twisted upper portion separates
+from the central column, forming an awn, the distribution of
+which is favoured by the presence of bristles or hairs. The
+embryo generally fills the seed, and the cotyledons are rolled or
+folded on each other.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page763" id="page763"></a>763</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Geranium</i> is the most widely distributed genus; it has 160
+species and is spread over all temperate regions with a few
+species in the tropics. Three British species&mdash;<i>G. sylvaticum</i>,
+<i>G. pratense</i> and <i>G. Robertianum</i> (herb-Robert)&mdash;reach the
+arctic zone, while <i>G. patagonicum</i> and <i>G. magellanicum</i> are
+found in the antarctic. <i>Erodium</i> contains 50 species (three are
+British), most of which are confined to the Mediterranean
+region and west Asia, though others occur in America, in South
+Africa and West Australia. <i>Pelargonium</i>, with 175 species, has
+its centre in South Africa; the well-known garden and greenhouse
+&ldquo;geraniums&rdquo; are species of <i>Pelargonium</i> (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Geranium</a></span>).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERANIUM,<a name="ar33" id="ar33"></a></span> the name of a genus of plants, which is taken by
+botanists as the type of the natural order Geraniaceae. The
+name, as a scientific appellation, has a much more restricted
+application than when taken in its popular sense. Formerly
+the genus <i>Geranium</i> was almost conterminous with the order
+Geraniaceae. Then as now the geranium was very popular
+as a garden plant, and the species included in the original genus
+became widely known under that name, which has more or less
+clung to them ever since, in spite of scientific changes which
+have removed the large number of them to the genus <i>Pelargonium</i>.
+This result has been probably brought about in some
+degree by an error of the nurserymen, who seem in many cases
+to have acted on the conclusion that the group commonly
+known as <i>Scarlet Geraniums</i> were really geraniums and not
+pelargoniums, and were in consequence inserted under the
+former name in their trade catalogues. In fact it may be said
+that, from a popular point of view, the pelargoniums of the
+botanist are still better known as geraniums than are the
+geraniums themselves, but the term &ldquo;zonal Pelargonium&rdquo; is
+gradually making its way amongst the masses.</p>
+
+<p>The species of <i>Geranium</i> consist mostly of herbs, of annual or
+perennial duration, dispersed throughout the temperate regions
+of the world. They number about 160, and bear a considerable
+family resemblance. The leaves are for the most part palmately-lobed,
+and the flowers are regular, consisting of five sepals, five
+imbricating petals, alternating with five glandules at their base,
+ten stamens and a beaked ovary. Eleven species are natives
+of the British Isles and are popularly known as crane&rsquo;s-bill.
+<i>G. Robertianum</i> is herb-Robert, a common plant in hedgebanks.
+<i>G. sanguineum</i>, with flowers a deep rose colour, is often grown
+in borders, as are also the double-flowered varieties of <i>G. pratense</i>.
+Many others of exotic origin form handsome border plants in
+our gardens of hardy perennials; amongst these <i>G. armenum</i>,
+<i>G. Endressi</i>, <i>G. ibericum</i> and its variety <i>platypetalum</i> are conspicuous.</p>
+
+<p>From these regular-flowered herbs, with which they had
+been mixed up by the earlier botanists, the French botanist
+L&rsquo;Heritier in 1787 separated those plants which have since
+borne the name of <i>Pelargonium</i>, and which, though agreeing
+with them in certain points of structure, differ in others which
+are admitted to be of generic value. One obvious distinction of
+<i>Pelargonium</i> is that the flowers are irregular, the two petals
+which stand uppermost being different&mdash;larger, smaller or
+differently marked&mdash;from the other three, which latter are
+occasionally wanting. This difference of irregularity the modern
+florist has done very much to annul, for the increased size given
+to the flowers by high breeding has usually been accompanied
+by the enlargement of the smaller petals, so that a very near
+approach to regularity has been in some cases attained. Another
+well-marked difference, however, remains in <i>Pelargonium</i>: the
+back or dorsal sepal has a hollow spur, which spur is adnate, <i>i.e.</i>
+joined for its whole length with the flower-stalk; while in
+<i>Geranium</i> there is no spur. This peculiarity is best seen by
+cutting clean through the flower-stalk just behind the flower,
+when in <i>Pelargonium</i> there will be seen the hollow tube of the
+spur, which in the case of <i>Geranium</i> will not be found, but the
+stalk will appear as a solid mass. There are other characters
+which support those already pointed out, such as the absence of
+the glandules, and the declination of the stamens; but the
+features already described offer the most ready and obvious
+distinctions.</p>
+
+<p>To recapitulate, the geraniums properly so-called are regular-flowered
+herbs with the flower-stalks solid, while many geraniums
+falsely so-called in popular language are really pelargoniums,
+and may be distinguished by their irregular flowers and hollow
+flower-stalks. In a great majority of cases too, the pelargoniums
+so commonly met with in greenhouses and summer parterres
+are of shrubby or sub-shrubby habit.</p>
+
+<p>The various races of pelargoniums have sprung from the
+intermixture of some of the species obtained from the Cape.
+The older show-flowered varieties have been gradually acquired
+through a long series of years. The fancy varieties, as well as
+the French spotted varieties and the market type, have been
+evolved from them. The zonal or bedding race, on the other
+hand, has been more recently perfected; they are supposed
+to have arisen from hybrids between <i>Pelargonium inquinans</i>
+and <i>P. zonale</i>. In all the sections the varieties are of a highly
+ornamental character, but for general cultivation the market
+type is preferable for indoor purposes, while the zonals are
+effective either in the greenhouse or flower garden. Some of the
+Cape species are still in cultivation&mdash;the leaves of many of them
+being beautifully subdivided, almost fern-like in character,
+and some of them are deliciously scented; <i>P. quercifolium</i>
+is the oak-leaf geranium. The ivy-leaf geranium, derived
+from <i>P. peltatum</i>, has given rise to an important class of both
+double- and single-flowered forms adapted especially for pot
+culture, hanging baskets, window boxes and the greenhouse.
+Of late years the ivy-leaf &ldquo;geraniums&rdquo; have been crossed with
+the &ldquo;zonals,&rdquo; and a new race is being gradually evolved from
+these two distinct groups.</p>
+
+<p>The best soil for pelargoniums is a mellow fibrous loam with
+good well-rotted stable manure or leaf-mould in about the proportion
+of one-fifth; when used it should not be sifted, but
+pulled to pieces by the hand, and as much sand should be added
+as will allow the water to pass freely through it. The large-flowered
+and fancy kinds cannot bear so much water as most
+soft-wooded plants, and the latter should have a rather lighter
+soil.</p>
+
+<p>All the pelargoniums are readily increased by cuttings made
+from the shoots when the plants are headed down after flowering,
+or in the spring, when they will root freely in a temperature of
+65° to 70°. They must not be kept too close, and must be very
+moderately watered. When rooted they may be moved into
+well-drained 3-in. pots, and when from 6 to 8 in. high, should
+have the points pinched out in order to induce them to push
+out several shoots nearer the base. These shoots are, when long
+enough, to be trained in a horizontal direction; and when they
+have made three joints they should have the points again pinched
+out. These early-struck plants will be ready for shifting into
+6-in. pots by the autumn, and should still be trained outwards.
+The show varieties after flowering should be set out of doors in
+a sunny spot to ripen their wood, and should only get water
+enough to keep them from flagging. In the course of two or
+three weeks they will be ready to cut back within two joints
+of where these were last stopped, when they should be placed
+in a frame or pit, and kept close and dry until they have broken.
+When they have pushed an inch or so, turn them out of their
+pots, shake off the old soil, trim the straggling roots, and repot
+them firmly in smaller pots if practicable; keep them near the
+light, and as the shoots grow continue to train them outwardly.
+They require to be kept in a light house, and to be set well up
+to the glass; the night temperature should range about 45°;
+and air should be given on all mild days, but no cold currents
+allowed, nor more water than is necessary to keep the soil from
+getting parched. The young shoots should be topped about
+the end of October, and when they have grown an inch or two
+beyond this, they may be shifted into 7-in. pots for flowering.
+The shoots must be kept tied out so as to be fully exposed to
+the light. If required to flower early they should not be stopped
+again; if not until June they may be stopped in February.</p>
+
+<p>The zonal varieties, which are almost continuous bloomers,
+are of much value as decorative subjects; they seldom require
+much pruning after the first stopping. For winter flowering,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page764" id="page764"></a>764</span>
+young plants should be raised from cuttings about March, and
+grown on during the summer, but should not be allowed to
+flower. When blossoms are required, they should be placed
+close up to the glass in a light house with a temperature of 65°,
+only just as much water being given as will keep them growing.
+For bedding purposes the zonal varieties are best struck towards
+the middle of August in the open air, taken up and potted or
+planted in boxes as soon as struck, and preserved in frames or in
+the greenhouse during winter.</p>
+
+<p>The fancy varieties root best early in spring from the half-ripened
+shoots; they are slower growers, and rather more
+delicate in constitution than the zonal varieties, and very impatient
+of excess of water at the root.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERARD<a name="ar34" id="ar34"></a></span> (d. 1108), archbishop of York under Henry I., began
+his career as a chancery clerk in the service of William Rufus.
+He was one of the two royal envoys who, in 1095, persuaded
+Urban II. to send a legate and Anselm&rsquo;s pallium to England.
+Although the legate disappointed the king&rsquo;s expectations,
+Gerard was rewarded for his services with the see of Hereford
+(1096). On the death of Rufus he at once declared for Henry I.,
+by whom he was nominated to the see of York. He made difficulties
+when required to give Anselm the usual profession of
+obedience; and it was perhaps to assert the importance of his
+see that he took the king&rsquo;s side on the question of investitures.
+He pleaded Henry&rsquo;s cause at Rome with great ability, and claimed
+that he had obtained a promise, on the pope&rsquo;s part, to condone
+the existing practice of lay investiture. But this statement
+was contradicted by Paschal, and Gerard incurred the suspicion
+of perjury. About 1103 he wrote or inspired a series of tracts
+which defended the king&rsquo;s prerogative and attacked the oecumenical
+pretensions of the papacy with great freedom of language.
+He changed sides in 1105, becoming a stanch friend and supporter
+of Anselm. Gerard was a man of considerable learning
+and ability; but the chroniclers accuse him of being lax in his
+morals, an astrologer and a worshipper of the devil.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See the <i>Tractatus Eboracenses</i> edited by H. Bochmer in <i>Libelli de
+lite Sacerdotii et Imperii</i>, vol. iii. (in the <i>Monumenta hist. Germaniae</i>,
+quarto series), and the same author&rsquo;s <i>Kirche und Staat in England
+und in der Normandie</i> (Leipzig, 1899).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(H. W. C. D.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERARD<a name="ar35" id="ar35"></a></span> (<i>c.</i> 1040-1120), variously surnamed <span class="sc">Tum</span>, <span class="sc">Tunc</span>,
+<span class="sc">Tenque</span> or <span class="sc">Thom</span>, founder of the order of the knights of St John
+of Jerusalem (<i>q.v.</i>), was born at Amalfi about the year 1040.
+According to other accounts Martigues in Provence was his
+birthplace, while one authority even names the Château d&rsquo;Avesnes
+in Hainaut. Either as a soldier or a merchant, he found his way
+to Jerusalem, where a hospice had for some time existed for the
+convenience of those who wished to visit the holy places. Of
+this institution Gerard became guardian or provost at a date not
+later than 1100; and here he organized that religious order of
+St John which received papal recognition from Paschal II. in
+1113, by a bull which was renewed and confirmed by Calixtus II.
+shortly before the death of Gerard in 1120.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERARD OF CREMONA<a name="ar36" id="ar36"></a></span> (<i>c.</i> 1114-1187), the medieval translator
+of Ptolemy&rsquo;s Astronomy, was born at Cremona, Lombardy,
+in or about 1114. Dissatisfied with the meagre philosophies
+of his Italian teachers, he went to Toledo to study in Spanish
+Moslem schools, then so famous as depositories and interpreters
+of ancient wisdom; and, having thus acquired a knowledge of
+the Arabic language, he appears to have devoted the remainder
+of his life to the business of making Latin translations from its
+literature. The date of his return to his native town is uncertain,
+but he is known to have died there in 1187. His most celebrated
+work is the Latin version by which alone Ptolemy&rsquo;s <i>Almagest</i>
+was known to Europe until the discovery of the original <span class="grk" title="Megalę
+Suntaxis">&#924;&#949;&#947;&#940;&#955;&#951; &#931;&#973;&#957;&#964;&#945;&#958;&#953;&#962;</span>. In addition to this, he translated various other
+treatises, to the number, it is said, of sixty-six; among these
+were the <i>Tables</i> of &ldquo;Arzakhel,&rdquo; or Al Zarkala of Toledo, Al
+Farabi <i>On the Sciences</i> (<i>De scientiis</i>), Euclid&rsquo;s <i>Geometry</i>, Al
+Farghani&rsquo;s <i>Elements of Astronomy</i>, and treatises on algebra,
+arithmetic and astrology. In the last-named latitudes are
+reckoned from Cremona and Toledo. Some of the works, however,
+with which he has been credited (including the <i>Theoria</i>
+or <i>Theorica planetarum</i>, and the versions of Avicenna&rsquo;s <i>Canon
+of Medicine</i>&mdash;the basis of the numerous subsequent Latin
+editions of that well-known work&mdash;and of the <i>Almansorius</i> of
+Abu Bakr Razi) are probably due to a later Gerard, of the 13th
+century, also called Cremonensis but more precisely de Sabloneta
+(Sabbionetta). This writer undertook the task of interpreting
+to the Latin world some of the best work of Arabic physicians,
+and his translation of Avicenna is said to have been made by
+order of the emperor Frederic II.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Pipini, &ldquo;Cronica,&rdquo; in Muratori, <i>Script. rer. Ital.</i> vol. ix.;
+Nicol. Antonio, <i>Bibliotheca Hispana vetus</i>, vol. ii.; Tiraboschi,
+<i>Storia della letteratura Italiana</i>, vols. iii. (333) and iv.; Arisi,
+<i>Cremona literata</i>; Jourdain, Recherches sur ... <i>l&rsquo;origine des
+traductions latines d&rsquo;Aristote</i>; Chasles, <i>Aperçu historique des méthodes
+en géométrie</i>, and in <i>Comptes rendus de l&rsquo;Académie des Sciences</i>, vol.
+xiii. p. 506; J.T. Reinaud, <i>Géographie d&rsquo;Aboulféda</i>, introduction,
+vol. i. pp. ccxlvi.-ccxlviii.; Boncompagni, <i>Della vita e delle opere di
+Gherardo Cremonese e di Gherardo da Sabbionetta</i> (Rome, 1851). Much
+of the work of both the Gerards remains in manuscript, as in Paris,
+National Library, MSS. Lat. 7400, 7421; MSS. Suppl. Lat. 49; Rome,
+Vatican library, 4083, and Ottobon, 1826; Oxford, Bodleian library,
+Digby, 47, 61. The Vatican MS. 2392 is stated to contain a eulogy
+of &ldquo;Gerard of Cremona&rdquo; and a list of &ldquo;his&rdquo; translations, apparently
+confusing the two scholars. The former&rsquo;s most valuable work was
+in astronomy; the latter&rsquo;s in medicine.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(C. R. B.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GÉRARD, ÉTIENNE MAURICE,<a name="ar37" id="ar37"></a></span> <span class="sc">Count</span> (1773-1852), French
+general, was born at Damvilliers (Meuse), on the 4th of April
+1773. He joined a battalion of volunteers in 1791, and served
+in the campaigns of 1792-1793 under Generals Dumouriez and
+Jourdan. In 1795 he accompanied Bernadotte as aide-de-camp.
+In 1799 he was promoted <i>chef d&rsquo;escadron</i>, and in 1800 colonel.
+He distinguished himself at the battles of Austerlitz and Jena,
+and was made general of brigade in November 1806, and for his
+conduct in the battle of Wagram he was created a baron. In
+the Spanish campaign of 1810 and 1811 he gained special distinction
+at the battle of Fuentes d&rsquo;Onor; and in the expedition
+to Russia he was present at Smolensk and Valutina, and displayed
+such bravery and ability in the battle of Borodino that he was
+made general of division. He won further distinction in the
+disastrous retreat from Moscow. In the campaign of 1813, in
+command of a division, he took part in the battles of Lützen and
+Bautzen and the operations of Marshal Macdonald, and at the
+battle of Leipzig (in which he commanded the XI. corps) he was
+dangerously wounded. After the battle of Bautzen he was
+created by Napoleon a count of the empire. In the campaign
+of France of 1814, and especially at La Rothičre and Montereau,
+he won still greater distinction. After the first restoration he
+was named by Louis XVIII. grand cross of the Legion of Honour
+and chevalier of St Louis. In the Hundred Days Napoleon made
+Gérard a peer of France and placed him in command of the IV.
+corps of the Army of the North. In this capacity Gérard took
+a brilliant part in the battle of Ligny (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Waterloo Campaign</a></span>),
+and on the morning of the 18th of June he was foremost in advising
+Marshal Grouchy to march to the sound of the guns. Gérard
+retired to Brussels after the fall of Napoleon, and did not return
+to France till 1817. He sat as a member of the chamber of
+deputies in 1822-1824, and was re-elected in 1827. He took part
+in the revolution of 1830, after which he was appointed minister
+of war and named a marshal of France. On account of his
+health he resigned the office of war minister in the October
+following, but in 1831 he took the command of the northern army,
+and was successful in thirteen days in driving the army of Holland
+out of Belgium. In 1832 he commanded the besieging army in
+the famous scientific siege of the citadel of Antwerp. He was
+again chosen war minister in July 1834, but resigned in the
+October following. In 1836 he was named grand chancellor of
+the Legion of Honour in succession to Marshal Mortier, and in
+1838 commander of the National Guards of the Seine, an office
+which he held till 1842. He became a senator under the empire
+in 1852, and died on the 17th of April in the same year.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GÉRARD, FRANÇOIS,<a name="ar38" id="ar38"></a></span> <span class="sc">Baron</span> (1770-1837), French painter,
+was born on the 4th of May 1770, at Rome, where his father
+occupied a post in the house of the French ambassador. At the
+age of twelve Gérard obtained admission into the Pension du
+Roi at Paris. From the Pension he passed to the studio of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page765" id="page765"></a>765</span>
+Pajou (sculptor), which he left at the end of two years for that
+of the painter Brenet, whom he quitted almost immediately to
+place himself under David. In 1789 he competed for the Prix
+de Rome, which was carried off by his comrade Girodet. In the
+following year (1790) he again presented himself, but the death
+of his father prevented the completion of his work, and obliged
+him to accompany his mother to Rome. In 1791 he returned to
+Paris; but his poverty was so great that he was forced to forgo
+his studies in favour of employment which should bring in
+immediate profit. David at once availed himself of his help,
+and one of that master&rsquo;s most celebrated pictures&mdash;Le Pelletier
+de St Fargeau&mdash;may owe much to the hand of Gérard. This
+painting was executed early in 1793, the year in which Gérard,
+at the request of David, was named a member of the revolutionary
+tribunal, from the fatal decisions of which he, however,
+invariably absented himself. In 1794 he obtained the first prize
+in a competition, the subject of which was &ldquo;The Tenth of August,&rdquo;
+and, further stimulated by the successes of his rival and friend
+Girodet in the Salons of 1793 and 1794, Gérard (nobly aided
+by Isabey the miniaturist) produced in 1795 his famous &ldquo;Bélisaire.&rdquo;
+In 1796 a portrait of his generous friend (in the Louvre)
+obtained undisputed success, and the money received from
+Isabey for these two works enabled Gérard to execute in 1797
+his &ldquo;Psyché et l&rsquo;Amour.&rdquo; At last, in 1799, his portrait of
+Madame Bonaparte established his position as one of the first
+portrait-painters of the day. In 1808 as many as eight, in 1810
+no less than fourteen portraits by him, were exhibited at the
+Salon, and these figures afford only an indication of the enormous
+numbers which he executed yearly; all the leading figures of
+the empire and of the restoration, all the most celebrated men
+and women of Europe, sat to Gérard. This extraordinary
+vogue was due partly to the charm of his manner and conversation,
+for his <i>salon</i> was as much frequented as his studio; Madame
+de Staël, Canning, Talleyrand, the duke of Wellington, have all
+borne witness to the attraction of his society. Rich and famous,
+Gérard was stung by remorse for earlier ambitions abandoned;
+at intervals he had indeed striven to prove his strength with
+Girodet and other rivals, and his &ldquo;Bataille d&rsquo;Austerlitz&rdquo; (1810)
+showed a breadth of invention and style which are even more
+conspicuous in &ldquo;L&rsquo;Entrée d&rsquo;Henri IV&rdquo; (Versailles)&mdash;the work
+with which in 1817 he did homage to the Bourbons. After this
+date Gérard declined, watching with impotent grief the progress
+of the Romantic school. Loaded with honours&mdash;baron of the
+empire, member of the Institute, officer of the legion of honour,
+first painter to the king&mdash;he worked on sad and discouraged;
+the revolution of 1830 added to his disquiet; and on the 11th of
+January 1837, after three days of fever, he died. By his portraits
+Gérard is best remembered; the colour of his paintings has
+suffered, but his drawings show in uninjured delicacy the purity
+of his line; and those of women are specially remarkable for a
+virginal simplicity and frankness of expression.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>M. Ch. Lenormant published in 1846 <i>Essai de biographie et de
+critique sur François Gérard</i>, a second edition of which appeared
+in 1847; and M. Delécluze devoted several pages to the same subject
+in his work <i>Louis David, son école et son temps</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GÉRARD, JEAN IGNACE ISIDORE<a name="ar39" id="ar39"></a></span> (1803-1847), French
+caricaturist, generally known by the pseudonym of Grandville&mdash;the
+professional name of his grandparents, who were actors&mdash;was
+born at Nancy on the 13th of September 1803. He received
+his first instruction in drawing from his father, a miniature
+painter, and at the age of twenty-one came to Paris, where he
+soon afterwards published a collection of lithographs entitled
+<i>Les Tribulations de la petite propriété</i>. He followed this by Les
+Plaisirs de toutâge and <i>La Sibylle des salons</i>; but the work
+which first established his fame was <i>Métamorphoses du jour</i>,
+published in 1828, a series of seventy scenes in which individuals
+with the bodies of men and faces of animals are made to play a
+human comedy. These drawings are remarkable for the extraordinary
+skill with which human characteristics are represented
+in animal features. The success of this work led to his being
+engaged as artistic contributor to various periodicals, such as <i>La
+Silhouette</i>, <i>L&rsquo;Artiste</i>, <i>La Caricature</i>, <i>Le Charivari</i>; and his political
+caricatures, which were characterized by marvellous fertility of
+satirical humour, soon came to enjoy a general popularity.
+Besides supplying illustrations for various standard works,
+such as the songs of Béranger, the fables of La Fontaine, <i>Don
+Quixote</i>, <i>Gulliver&rsquo;s Travels</i>, <i>Robinson Crusoe</i>, he also continued
+the issue of various lithographic collections, among which may
+be mentioned <i>La Vie privée et publique des animaux</i>, <i>Les Cent
+Proverbes</i>, <i>L&rsquo;Autre Monde</i> and <i>Les Fleurs animées</i>. Though
+the designs of Gérard are occasionally unnatural and absurd,
+they usually display keen analysis of character and marvellous
+inventive ingenuity, and his humour is always tempered and
+refined by delicacy of sentiment and a vein of sober thoughtfulness.
+He died of mental disease on the 17th of March 1847.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>A short notice of Gérard, under the name of Grandville, is contained
+in Théophile Gautier&rsquo;s <i>Portraits contemporains</i>. See also
+Charles Blanc, <i>Grandville</i> (Paris, 1855).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERARD, JOHN<a name="ar40" id="ar40"></a></span> (1545-1612), English herbalist and surgeon,
+was born towards the end of 1545 at Nantwich in Cheshire. He
+was educated at Wisterson, or Willaston, 2 m. from Nantwich,
+and eventually, after spending some time in travelling, took up
+his abode in London, where he exercised his profession. For
+more than twenty years he also acted as superintendent of the
+gardens in London and at Theobalds, in Hertfordshire, of William
+Cecil, Lord Burghley. In 1596 he published a catalogue of
+plants cultivated in his own garden in Holborn, London, 1039 in
+number, inclusive of varieties of the same species. Their English
+as well as their Latin names are given in a revised edition of the
+catalogue issued in 1599. In 1597 appeared Gerard&rsquo;s well-known
+<i>Herball</i>, described by him in its preface as &ldquo;the first fruits of
+these mine own labours,&rdquo; but more truly an adaptation of the
+<i>Stirpium historiae pemptades</i> of Rembert Dodoens (1518-1585),
+published in 1583, or rather of a translation of the whole or part
+of the same by Dr Priest, with M. Lobel&rsquo;s arrangement. Of the
+numerous illustrations of the <i>Herball</i> sixteen appear to be
+original, the remainder are mostly impressions from the wood
+blocks employed by Jacob Theodorus Tabernaemontanus in
+his <i>Icones stirpium</i>, published at Frankfort in 1590. A second
+edition of the <i>Herball</i>, with considerable improvements and
+additions, was brought out by Thomas Johnson in 1633, and
+reprinted in 1636. Gerard was elected a member of the court of
+assistants of the barber-surgeons in 1595, by which company
+he was appointed an examiner in 1598, junior warden in 1605,
+and master in 1608. He died in February 1612, and was buried
+at St Andrews, Holborn.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Johnson&rsquo;s preface to his edition of the <i>Herball</i>; and <i>A Catalogue
+of Plants cultivated in the Garden of John Gerard in the years
+1596-1599, edited with Notes, References to Gerard&rsquo;s Herball, the
+Addition of modern Names, and a Life of the Author, by Benjamin
+Daydon Jackson, F.L.S.</i>, privately printed (London, 1876, 4to).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GÉRARDMER,<a name="ar41" id="ar41"></a></span> a town of north-eastern France, in the department
+of Vosges, 33 m. E.S.E. of Epinal by rail. Pop. (1906)
+of the town, 3993; of the commune, 10,041. Gérardmer is
+beautifully situated at a height of 2200 ft. at the eastern end
+of the small Lake of Gérardmer (285 acres in extent) among
+forest-clad mountains. It is the chief summer-resort of the
+French Vosges and is a centre for excursions, among which may
+be mentioned those to the Höhneck (4481 ft.), the second
+highest summit in the Vosges, the Schlucht, the mountain pass
+from France to Germany, and, nearer the town, the picturesque
+defile of Granges, watered by the Vologne, which at one point
+forms the cascade known as the Saut des Cuves. The town
+itself, in which the chief object of interest is the huge lime-tree
+in the market-place, carries on cloth-weaving, bleaching, wood-sawing
+and the manufacture of wooden goods; there is trade
+in the cheeses (<i>géromés</i>) manufactured in the neighbourhood.
+Gérardmer is said to owe its name to Gerard of Alsace, 1st duke
+of Lorraine, who in the 11th century built a tower on the bank
+of the lake or <i>mer</i>, near which, in 1285, a new town was founded.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERASA<a name="ar42" id="ar42"></a></span> (mod. <i>Gerash</i> or <i>Jerash</i>), a city of Palestine, and a
+member of the league known as the Decapolis (<i>q.v.</i>), situated amid
+the mountains of Gilead, about 1757 ft. above the sea, 20 m.
+from the Jordan and 21 m. N. of Philadelphia. Of its origin
+nothing is known; it has been suggested that it represents
+the biblical Ramoth Gilead. From Josephus we learn that it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page766" id="page766"></a>766</span>
+was captured by Alexander Jannaeus (<i>c.</i> 83 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>), rebuilt by the
+Romans (<i>c.</i> <span class="scs">A.D.</span> 65), burned by the Jews in revenge for the
+massacre at Caesarea, and again plundered and depopulated
+by Annius, the general of Vespasian; but, in spite of these
+disasters, it was still in the 2nd and 3rd centuries of the Christian
+era one of the wealthiest and most flourishing cities of Palestine.
+It was a centre of Greek civilization, devoted especially to the
+worship of Artemis, and producing famous teachers, of whom
+Stephen the Byzantine mentions Ariston, Kerykos and Plato.
+As late as 1121 the soldiers of Baldwin II. found it defended by
+a castle built by a king of Damascus; but at the beginning of
+the following century the Arabian geographer Yaqut speaks of
+it as deserted and overthrown. The ruins of Jerash, discovered
+about 1806, and since then frequently visited and described,
+still attest the splendour of the Roman city. They are distributed
+along both banks of the Kerwan, a brook which flows south
+through the Wadi-ed-D&#275;r to join the Zerka or Jabbok; but all
+the principal buildings are situated on the level ground to the
+right of the stream. The town walls, which can still be traced
+and indeed are partly standing, had a circuit of not more than
+2 m., and the main street was less than half a mile in length;
+but remains of buildings on the road for fully a mile beyond the
+south gate, show that the town had outgrown the limit of its
+fortifications. The most striking feature of the ruins is the profusion
+of columns, no fewer than 230 being even now in position;
+the main street is a continuous colonnade, a large part of which
+is still entire, and it terminates to the south in a forum of similar
+formation. Among the public buildings still recognizable are a
+theatre capable of accommodating 6000 spectators, a naumachia
+(circus for naval combats) and several temples, of which the
+largest was probably the grandest structure in the city, possessing
+a portico of Corinthian pillars 38 ft. high. The desolation of
+the city is probably due to earthquake; and the absence of
+Moslem erections or restorations seems to show that the disaster
+took place before the Mahommedan period.</p>
+
+<p>The town is now occupied by a colony of Circassians, whose
+houses have been built with materials from the earlier buildings,
+and there has been much destruction of the interesting ruins.
+&ldquo;The country of the Gerasenes&rdquo; (Matt. viii. 28 and parallels;
+other readings, Gadarenes, Gergesenes) must be looked for in
+another quarter&mdash;on the E. coast of the Sea of Galilee, probably
+in the neighbourhood of the modern Khersa (C.W. Wilson in
+<i>Recovery of Jerusalem</i>, p. 369).</p>
+<div class="author">(R. A. S. M.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GÉRAULT-RICHARD, ALFRED LÉON<a name="ar43" id="ar43"></a></span> (1860-&emsp;&emsp;), French
+journalist and politician, was born at Bonnétable in the department
+of Sarthe, of a peasant family. He began life as a working
+upholsterer, first at Mans, then at Paris (1880), where his peasant
+and socialist songs soon won him fame in the Montmartre quarter.
+Lissagaray, the communist, offered him a position on <i>La Bataille</i>,
+and he became a regular contributor to the advanced journals,
+especially to <i>La Petite République</i>, of which he became editor-in-chief
+in 1897. In 1893 he founded <i>Le Chambard</i>, and was imprisoned
+for a year (1894) on account of a personal attack upon
+the president, Casimir-Périer. In January 1895 he was elected
+to the chamber as a Socialist for the thirteenth arrondissement
+of Paris. He was defeated at the elections of 1898 at Paris,
+but was re-elected in 1902 and in 1906 by the colony of
+Guadeloupe.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERBER, ERNST LUDWIG<a name="ar44" id="ar44"></a></span> (1746-1819), German musician,
+author of a famous dictionary of musicians, was born at Sondershausen
+in the principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen on
+the 29th of September 1746. His father, Henry Nicolas Gerber
+(1702-1775), a pupil of J.S. Bach, was an organist and composer
+of some distinction, and under his direction Ernst Ludwig at
+an early age had made great progress in his musical studies.
+In 1765 he went to Leipzig to study law, but the claims of music,
+which had gained additional strength from his acquaintanceship
+with J.A. Hiller, soon came to occupy almost his sole attention.
+On his return to Sondershausen he was appointed music teacher
+to the children of the prince, and in 1775 he succeeded his father
+as court organist. Afterwards he devoted much of his time to
+the study of the literature and history of music, and with this
+view he made himself master of several modern languages. His
+<i>Historisch-biographisches Lexikon der Tonkünstler</i> appeared in
+1790 and 1792 in two volumes; and the first volume of what
+was virtually an improved and corrected edition of this work
+was published in 1810 under the title <i>Neues historisch-biographisches
+Lexikon der Tonkünstler</i>, followed by other three
+volumes in 1812, 1813 and 1814. Gerber also contributed a
+number of papers to musical periodicals, and published several
+minor musical compositions. He died at Sondershausen on the
+30th of June 1819.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERBERON, GABRIEL<a name="ar45" id="ar45"></a></span> (1628-1711), French Jansenist monk,
+was born on the 12th of August 1628 at St Calais, in the department
+of Sarthe. At the age of twenty he took the vows of the
+Benedictine order at the abbey of Ste Melaine, Rennes, and afterwards
+taught rhetoric and philosophy in several monasteries.
+His open advocacy of Jansenist opinions, however, caused his
+superiors to relegate him to the most obscure houses of the order,
+and finally to keep him under surveillance at the abbey of St
+Germain-des-Prés at Paris. Here he wrote a defence of the
+doctrine of the Real Presence against the Calvinists in the form
+of an apology for Rupert, abbot of Deutz (<i>Apologia pro Ruperto
+abbate Tuitensi</i>, Paris, 1669). In 1676 he published at Brussels,
+under the name of &ldquo;Sieur Flore de Ste Foi&rdquo; his <i>Miroir de la
+piété chrétienne</i>, an enlarged edition of which appeared at Liége
+in the following year. This was condemned by certain archbishops
+and theologians as the repetition of the five condemned
+propositions of Jansen, and Gerberon defended it, under the
+name of &ldquo;Abbé Valentin&rdquo; in <i>Le Miroir sans tache</i> (Paris, 1680).
+He had by this time aroused against him the full fury of the
+Jesuits, and at their instigation a royal provost was sent to
+Corbie to arrest him. He had, however, just time to escape,
+and fled to the Low Countries, where he lived in various towns.
+He was invited by the Jansenist clergy to Holland, where he
+wrote another controversial work against the Protestants:
+<i>Défense de l&rsquo;Église Romain contre la calomnie des Protestants</i>
+(Cologne, 1688-1691). This produced unpleasantness with the
+Reformed clergy, and feeling himself no longer safe he returned
+to Brussels. In 1700 he published his history of Jansenism
+(<i>Histoire générale du Jansénisme</i>), a dry work, by which, however,
+he is best remembered. He adhered firmly to the Augustinian
+doctrine of Predestination, and on the 30th of May 1703 he was
+arrested at Brussels at the instance of the archbishop of Malines,
+and ordered to subscribe the condemnation of the five sentences
+of Jansen. On his refusal, he was handed over to his superiors
+and imprisoned in the citadel of Amiens and afterwards at
+Vincennes. Every sort of pressure was brought to bear upon
+him to make his submission, and at last, broken in health and
+spirit, he consented to sign a formula which the cardinal de
+Noailles claimed as a recantation. Upon this he was released
+in 1710. The first use he made of his freedom was to write a
+work (which, however, his friends prudently prevented him from
+publishing), <i>Le Vaine Triomphe du cardinal de Noailles</i>, containing
+a virtual withdrawal of the compulsory recantation. He died
+at the abbey of St Denis on the 29th of March 1711.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERBERT, MARTIN<a name="ar46" id="ar46"></a></span> (1720-1793), German theologian,
+historian and writer on music, belonged to the noble family of
+Gerbert von Hornau, and was born at Horb on the Neckar,
+Württemberg, on the 12th (or 11th or 13th) of August 1720.
+He was educated at Freiburg in the Breisgau, at Klingenau in
+Switzerland and at the Benedictine abbey of St Blasien in the
+Black Forest, where in 1737 he took the vows. In 1744 he was
+ordained priest, and immediately afterwards appointed professor,
+first of philosophy and later of theology. Between 1754 and
+1764 he published a series of theological treatises, their main
+tendency being to modify the rigid scholastic system by an
+appeal to the Fathers, notably Augustine; from 1759 to 1762
+he travelled in Germany, Italy and France, mainly with a view
+to examining the collections of documents in the various monastic
+libraries. In 1764 he was elected prince-abbot of St Blasien,
+and proved himself a model ruler both as abbot and prince.
+His examination of archives during his travels had awakened
+in him a taste for historical research, and under his rule St
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page767" id="page767"></a>767</span>
+Blasien became a notable centre of the methodical study of
+history; it was here that Marquard Herrgott wrote his <i>Monumenta
+domus Austriacae</i>, of which the first two volumes were
+edited, for the second edition, by Gerbert, who also published a
+<i>Codex epistolaris Rudolphi I., Romani regis</i> (1772) and <i>De
+Rudolpho Suevico comite de Rhinfelden, duce et rege, deque ejus
+familia</i> (1785). It was, however, in sacramental theology,
+liturgiology, and notably ecclesiastical music that Gerbert was
+mainly interested. In 1774 he published two volumes <i>De cantu
+et musica sacra</i>; in 1777, <i>Monumenta veteris liturgiae Alemannicae</i>;
+and in 1784, in three volumes, <i>Scriptores ecclesiastici de musica
+sacra</i>, a collection of the principal writers on church music from
+the 3rd century till the invention of printing. The materials
+for this work he had gathered during his travels, and although
+it contains many textual errors, its publication has been of great
+importance for the history of music, by preserving writings
+which might either have perished or remained unknown. His
+interest in music led to his acquaintance with the composer
+Gluck, who became his intimate friend.</p>
+
+<p>As a prince of the Empire Gerbert was devoted to the interests
+of the house of Austria; as a Benedictine abbot he was opposed
+to Joseph II.&rsquo;s church policy. In the Febronian controversy
+(see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Febronianism</a></span>) he had early taken a mediating attitude,
+and it was largely due to his influence that Bishop Hontheim
+had been induced to retract his extreme views.</p>
+
+<p>In 1768 the abbey of St Blasien, with the library and church,
+was burnt to the ground, and the splendid new church which
+rose on the ruins of the old (1783) remained until its destruction
+by fire in 1874, at once a monument of Gerbert&rsquo;s taste in architecture
+and of his Habsburg sympathies. It was at his request
+that it was made the mausoleum of all the Austrian princes
+buried outside Austria, whose remains were solemnly transferred
+to its vaults. In connexion with its consecration he published
+his <i>Historia Nigrae Silvae, ordinis S. Benedicti coloniae</i> (3 vols.,
+St Blasien, 1783).</p>
+
+<p>Gerbert, who was beloved and respected by Catholics and
+Protestants alike, died on the 3rd of May 1793.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See Joseph Bader, <i>Das ehemalige Kloster St Blasien und seine
+Gelehrtenakademie</i> (Freiburg-im-Breisgau, 1874), which contains
+a chronological list of Gerbert&rsquo;s works.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERBIL,<a name="ar47" id="ar47"></a></span> or <span class="sc">Gerbille</span>, the name of a group of small, elegant,
+large-eyed, jumping rodents typified by the North African
+<i>Gerbillus aegyptiacus</i> (or <i>gerbillus</i>), and forming a special subfamily,
+<i>Gerbillinae</i>, of the rat tribe or <i>Muridae</i>. They are found
+over the desert districts of both Asia and Africa, and are classed
+in the genera <i>Gerbillus</i> (or <i>Tatera</i>), <i>Pachyuromys</i>, <i>Meriones</i>,
+<i>Psammomys</i> and <i>Rhombomys</i>, with further divisions into subgenera.
+They have elongated hind-limbs and long hairy tails;
+and progress by leaps, in the same manner as jerboas, from which
+they differ in having five hind-toes. The cheek-teeth have transverse
+plates of enamel on the crowns; the number of such plates
+diminishing from three in the first tooth to one or one and a half
+in the third. The upper incisor teeth are generally marked by
+grooves. Gerbils are inhabitants of open sandy plains, where
+they dwell in burrows furnished with numerous exits, and containing
+large grass-lined chambers. The Indian <i>G. indicus</i>
+produces at least a dozen young at a birth. All are more or less
+completely nocturnal.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERENUK,<a name="ar48" id="ar48"></a></span> the Somali name of a long-necked aberrant gazelle,
+commonly known as Waller&rsquo;s gazelle (<i>Lithocranius walleri</i>),
+and ranging from Somaliland to Kilimanjaro. The long neck
+and limbs, coupled with peculiarities in the structure of the skull,
+entitle the gerenuk, which is a large species, to represent a genus.
+The horns of the bucks are heavy, and have a peculiar forward
+curvature at the tips; the colour of the coat is red-fawn, with
+a broad brown band down the back. Gerenuk are browsing
+ruminants, and, in Somaliland, are found in small family-parties,
+and feed more by browsing on the branches and leaves of trees and
+shrubs than by grazing. Frequently they raise themselves by
+standing on their hind-legs with the fore-feet resting against the
+trunk of the tree on which they are feeding. Their usual pace is
+an awkward trot, not unlike that of a camel; and they seldom
+break into a gallop. The Somali form has been separated as
+<i>L. sclateri</i>, but is not more than a local race. (See <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Antelope</a></span>.)</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERGOVIA<a name="ar49" id="ar49"></a></span> (mod. <i>Gergovie</i>), in ancient geography, the chief
+town of the Arverni, situated on a hill in the Auvergne, about
+8 m. from the Puy de Dôme, France. Julius Caesar attacked
+it in 52 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>, but was beaten off; some walls and earthworks
+seem still to survive from this period. Later, when Gaul had been
+subdued, the place was dismantled and its Gaulish inhabitants
+resettled 4 m. away in the plain at the new Roman city of
+Augustonem&#277;tum (mod. <i>Clermont-Ferrand</i>).</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERHARD, FRIEDRICH WILHELM EDUARD<a name="ar50" id="ar50"></a></span> (1795-1867),
+German archaeologist, was born at Posen on the 29th of
+November 1795, and was educated at Breslau and Berlin. The
+reputation he acquired by his <i>Lectiones Apollonianae</i> (1816)
+led soon afterwards to his being appointed professor at the
+gymnasium of Posen. On resigning that office in 1819, on
+account of weakness of the eyes, he went in 1822 to Rome, where
+he remained for fifteen years. He contributed to Platner&rsquo;s
+<i>Beschreibung der Stadt Rom</i>, then under the direction of Bunsen,
+and was one of the principal originators and during his residence
+in Italy director of the <i>Instituto di corrispondenza archeologica</i>,
+founded at Rome in 1828. Returning to Germany in 1837 he was
+appointed archaeologist at the Royal Museum of Berlin, and in
+1844 was chosen a member of the Academy of Sciences, and a professor
+in the university. He died at Berlin on the 12th of May 1867.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Besides a large number of archaeological papers in periodicals, in
+the <i>Annali</i> of the Institute of Rome, and in the Transactions of the
+Berlin Academy, and several illustrated catalogues of Greek, Roman
+and other antiquities in the Berlin, Naples and Vatican Museums,
+Gerhard was the author of the following works: <i>Antike Bildwerke</i>
+(Stuttgart, 1827-1844); <i>Auserlesene griech. Vasenbilder</i> (1839-1858);
+<i>Etruskische Spiegel</i> (1839-1865); <i>Hyperboreisch-röm. Studien</i> (vol. i.,
+1833; vol. ii., 1852); <i>Prodromus mytholog. Kunsterklärung</i> (Stuttgart
+and Tübingen, 1828); and <i>Griech. Mythologie</i> (1854-1855). His
+<i>Gesammelte akademische Abhandlungen und kleine Schriften</i> were
+published posthumously in 2 vols., Berlin, 1867.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERHARD, JOHANN<a name="ar51" id="ar51"></a></span> (1582-1637), Lutheran divine, was born
+in Quedlinburg on the 17th of October 1582. In his fifteenth
+year, during a dangerous illness, he came under the personal
+influence of Johann Arndt, author of <i>Das wahre Christenthum</i>,
+and resolved to study for the church. He entered the university
+of Wittenberg in 1599, and first studied philosophy. He also
+attended lectures in theology, but, a relative having persuaded
+him to change his subject, he studied medicine for two years.
+In 1603, however, he resumed his theological reading at Jena,
+and in the following year received a new impulse from J.W.
+Winckelmann (1551-1626) and Balthasar Mentzer (1565-1627)
+at Marburg. Having graduated and begun to give lectures at
+Jena in 1605, he in 1606 accepted the invitation of John Casimir,
+duke of Coburg, to the superintendency of Heldburg and mastership
+of the gymnasium; soon afterwards he became general
+superintendent of the duchy, in which capacity he was engaged
+in the practical work of ecclesiastical organization until 1616,
+when he became theological professor at Jena, where the remainder
+of his life was spent. Here, with Johann Major and
+Johann Himmel, he formed the &ldquo;Trias Johannea.&rdquo; Though
+still comparatively young, Gerhard had already come to be
+regarded as the greatest living theologian of Protestant Germany;
+in the numerous &ldquo;disputations&rdquo; of the period he was always
+protagonist, while on all public and domestic questions touching
+on religion or morals his advice was widely sought. It is recorded
+that during the course of his lifetime he had received repeated
+calls to almost every university in Germany (<i>e.g.</i> Giessen, Altdorf,
+Helmstädt, Jena, Wittenberg), as well as to Upsala in Sweden.
+He died in Jena on the 20th of August 1637.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>His writings are numerous, alike in exegetical, polemical, dogmatic
+and practical theology. To the first category belong the
+<i>Commentarius in harmoniam historiae evangelicae de passione Christi</i>
+(1617), the <i>Comment, super priorem D. Petri epistolam</i> (1641), and
+also his commentaries on Genesis (1637) and on Deuteronomy
+(1658). Of a controversial character are the <i>Confessio Catholica</i>
+(1633-1637), an extensive work which seeks to prove the evangelical
+and catholic character of the doctrine of the Augsburg Confession
+from the writings of approved Roman Catholic authors; and the
+<i>Loci communes theologici</i> (1610-1622), his principal contribution
+to science, in which Lutheranism is expounded &ldquo;nervose, solide,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page768" id="page768"></a>768</span>
+et copiose,&rdquo; in fact with a fulness of learning, a force of logic and
+a minuteness of detail that had never before been approached.
+<i>The Meditationes sacrae</i> (1606), a work expressly devoted to the
+uses of Christian edification, has been frequently reprinted in Latin
+and has been translated into most of the European languages,
+including Greek. The English translation by R. Winterton (1631)
+has passed through at least nineteen editions. There is also an
+edition by W. Papillon in English blank verse (1801). His life,
+<i>Vita Joh. Gerhardi</i>, was published by E.R. Fischer in 1723, and by
+C.J. Böttcher, <i>Das Leben Dr Johann Gerhards</i>, in 1858. See also
+W. Gass, <i>Geschichte der protestantischen Dogmatik</i> (1854-1867), and
+the article in the <i>Allgemeine deutsche Biographie</i>.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERHARDT, CHARLES FRÉDÉRIC<a name="ar52" id="ar52"></a></span> (1816-1856), French
+chemist, was born at Strassburg on the 21st of August 1816.
+After attending the gymnasium at Strassburg and the polytechnic
+at Karlsruhe, he was sent to the school of commerce at Leipzig,
+where he studied chemistry under Otto Erdmann. Returning
+home in 1834 he entered his father&rsquo;s white lead factory, but soon
+found that business was not to his liking, and after a sharp
+disagreement with his father enlisted in a cavalry regiment.
+In a few months military life became equally distasteful, and he
+purchased his discharge with the assistance of Liebig, with whom,
+after a short interval at Dresden, he went to study at Giessen
+in 1836. But his stay at Giessen was also short, and in 1837
+he re-entered the factory. Again, however, he quarrelled with
+his father, and in 1838 went to Paris with introductions from
+Liebig. There he attended Jean Baptiste Dumas&rsquo; lectures and
+worked with Auguste Cahours (1813-1891) on essential oils,
+especially cumin, in Michel Eugéne Chevreul&rsquo;s laboratory, while
+he earned a precarious living by teaching and making translations
+of some of Liebig&rsquo;s writings. In 1841, by the influence of Dumas,
+he was charged with the duties of the chair of chemistry at the
+Montpellier faculty of sciences, becoming titular professor in
+1844. In 1842 he annoyed his friends in Paris by the matter and
+manner of a paper on the classification of organic compounds,
+and in 1845 he and his opinions were the subject of an attack
+by Liebig, unjustifiable in its personalities but not altogether
+surprising in view of his wayward disregard of his patron&rsquo;s
+advice. The two were reconciled in 1850, but his faculty for
+disagreeing with his friends did not make it easier for him to
+get another appointment after resigning the chair at Montpellier
+in 1851, especially as he was unwilling to go into the provinces.
+He obtained leave of absence from Montpellier in 1848 and from
+that year till 1855 resided in Paris. During that period he
+established an &ldquo;École de chimie pratique&rdquo; of which he had
+great hopes; but these were disappointed, and in 1855, after
+refusing the offer of a chair of chemistry at the new Zürich
+Polytechnic in 1854, he accepted the professorships of chemistry
+at the Faculty of Sciences and the École Polytechnique at
+Strassburg, where he died on the 19th of August in the following
+year. Although Gerhardt did some noteworthy experimental
+work&mdash;for instance, his preparation of acid anhydrides in 1852&mdash;his
+contributions to chemistry consist not so much in the discovery
+of new facts as in the introduction of new ideas that
+vitalized and organized an inert accumulation of old facts.
+In particular, with his fellow-worker Auguste Laurent (1807-1853),
+he did much to reform the methods of chemical formulation
+by insisting on the distinction between atoms, molecules
+and equivalents; and in his unitary system, directly opposed
+to the dualistic doctrines of Berzelius, he combined Dumas&rsquo;
+substitution theory with the old radicle theory and greatly
+extended the notion of types of structure. His chief works were
+<i>Précis de chimie organique</i> (1844-1845), and <i>Traité de chimie
+organique</i> (1853-1856).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See <i>Charles Gerhardt, sa vie, son &oelig;uvre, sa correspondance</i>, by
+his son, Charles Gerhardt, and E. Grimaux (Paris, 1900).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERHARDT, PAUL<a name="ar53" id="ar53"></a></span> (<i>c.</i> 1606-1676), German hymn-writer,
+was born of a good middle-class family at Gräfenhainichen, a
+small town on the railway between Halle and Wittenberg, in
+1606 or 1607&mdash;some authorities, indeed, give the date March 12,
+1607, but neither the year nor the day is accurately known.
+His education appears to have been retarded by the troubles
+of the period, the Thirty Years&rsquo; War having begun about the
+time he reached his twelfth year. After completing his studies
+for the church he is known to have lived for some years at
+Berlin as tutor in the family of an advocate named Berthold,
+whose daughter he subsequently married, on receiving his first
+ecclesiastical appointment at Mittelwald (a small town in the
+neighbourhood of Berlin) in 1651. In 1657 he accepted an
+invitation as &ldquo;diaconus&rdquo; to the Nicolaikirche of Berlin; but,
+in consequence of his uncompromising Lutheranism in refusing
+to accept the elector Frederick William&rsquo;s &ldquo;syncretistic&rdquo; edict
+of 1664, he was deprived in 1666. Though absolved from
+submission and restored to office early in the following year, on
+the petition of the citizens, his conscience did not allow him to
+retain a post which, as it appeared to him, could only be held on
+condition of at least a tacit repudiation of the Formula Concordiae,
+and for upwards of a year he lived in Berlin without fixed employment.
+In 1668 he was appointed archdeacon of Lübben in the
+duchy of Saxe-Merseburg, where, after a somewhat sombre
+ministry of eight years, he died on the 7th of June 1676. Gerhardt
+is the greatest hymn-writer of Germany, if not indeed of Europe.
+Many of his best-known hymns were originally published in
+various church hymn-books, as for example in that for Brandenburg,
+which appeared in 1658; others first saw the light in
+Johann Crüger&rsquo;s <i>Geistliche Kirchenmelodien</i> (1649) and <i>Praxis
+pietatis melica</i> (1656). The first complete set of them is the
+<i>Geistliche Andachten</i>, published in 1666-1667 by Ebeling, music
+director in Berlin. No hymn by Gerhardt of a later date than
+1667 is known to exist.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The life of Gerhardt has been written by Roth (1829), by Langbecker
+(1841), by Schultz (1842), by Wildenhahn (1845) and by
+Bachmann (1863); also by Kraft in Ersch u. Gruber&rsquo;s <i>Allg. Encycl.</i>
+(1855). The best modern edition of the hymns, published by
+Wackernagel in 1843, has often been reprinted. There is an English
+translation by Kelly (<i>Paul Gerhardt&rsquo;s Spiritual Songs</i>, 1867).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GÉRICAULT, JEAN LOUIS ANDRÉ THÉODORE<a name="ar54" id="ar54"></a></span> (1791-1824),
+French painter, the leader of the French realistic school, was
+born at Rouen in 1791. In 1808 he entered the studio of Charles
+Vernet, from which, in 1810, he passed to that of Guérin, whom
+he drove to despair by his passion for Rubens, and by the unorthodox
+manner in which he persisted in interpreting nature.
+At the Salon of 1812 Géricault attracted attention by his &ldquo;Officier
+de Chasseurs ŕ Cheval&rdquo; (Louvre), a work in which he personified
+the cavalry in its hour of triumph, and turned to account the
+solid training received from Guérin in rendering a picturesque
+point of view which was in itself a protest against the cherished
+convictions of the pseudo-classical school. Two years later
+(1814) he re-exhibited this work accompanied with the reverse
+picture &ldquo;Cuirassier blessé&rdquo; (Louvre), and in both subjects
+called attention to the interest of contemporary aspects of life,
+treated neglected types of living form, and exhibited that
+mastery of and delight in the horse which was a feature of his
+character. Disconcerted by the tempest of contradictory
+opinion which arose over these two pictures, Géricault gave way
+to his enthusiasm for horses and soldiers, and enrolled himself
+in the <i>mousquetaires</i>. During the Hundred Days he followed
+the king to Bethune, but, on his regiment being disbanded,
+eagerly returned to his profession, left France for Italy in 1816,
+and at Rome nobly illustrated his favourite animal by his great
+painting &ldquo;Course des Chevaux Libres.&rdquo; Returning to Paris,
+Géricault exhibited at the Salon of 1819 the &ldquo;Radeau de la
+Méduse&rdquo; (Louvre), a subject which not only enabled him to
+prove his zealous and scientific study of the human form, but
+contained those elements of the heroic and pathetic, as existing
+in situations of modern life, to which he had appealed in his
+earliest productions. Easily depressed or elated, Géricault
+took to heart the hostility which this work excited, and passed
+nearly two years in London, where the &ldquo;Radeau&rdquo; was exhibited
+with success, and where he executed many series of admirable
+lithographs now rare. At the close of 1822 he was again in Paris,
+and produced a great quantity of projects for vast compositions,
+models in wax, and a horse <i>écorché</i>, as preliminary to the production
+of an equestrian statue. His health was now completely
+undermined by various kinds of excess, and on the 26th of
+January 1824 he died, at the age of thirty-three.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Géricault&rsquo;s biography, accompanied by a <i>catalogue raisonné</i> of
+his works, was published by M.C. Clément in 1868.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page769" id="page769"></a>769</span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERIZIM,<a name="ar55" id="ar55"></a></span> a mountain in the hill-country of Samaria, 2849 ft.
+above the sea-level, and enclosing, with its companion Ebal,
+the valley in which lies the town of N&#257;blus (Shechem). It is the
+holy place of the community of the Samaritans, who hold that
+it was the scene of the sacrifice of Isaac&mdash;a tradition accepted
+by Dean Stanley but no other western writers of importance.
+Here, on the formal entrance of the Israelites into the possession
+of the Promised Land, were pronounced the blessings connected
+with a faithful observance of the law (Josh. viii. 33, 34; cf.
+Deut. xi. 29, 30, xxvii. 12-26), the six tribes, Simeon, Levi,
+Judah, Issachar, Joseph and Benjamin, standing here for the
+purpose while the remaining tribes stood on Ebal to accept
+the curses attached to specific violations thereof. Gerizim was
+probably chosen as the mount of blessing as being on the right
+hand, the fortunate side, of a spectator facing east. The counter-suggestion
+of Eusebius and Jerome that the Ebal and Gerizim
+associated with this solemnity were not the Shechem mountains
+at all, but two small hills near Jericho, is no longer considered
+important. From this mountain Jotham spoke his parable to
+the elders of Shechem (Judg. ix. 7). Manasseh, the son of the
+Jewish high-priest in the days of Nehemiah, married the daughter
+of Sanballat and, about 432 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>, erected on this mountain a
+temple for the Samaritans; it was destroyed by Hyrcanus about
+300 years afterwards. Its site is a small level plateau a little
+under the summit of the mountain. Close to this is the place
+where the Passover is still annually celebrated in exact accordance
+with the rites prescribed in the Pentateuch. On the summit of
+the mountain, which commands a view embracing the greater
+part of Palestine, are a small Moslem shrine and the ruins of a
+castle probably dating from Justinian&rsquo;s time. There was an
+octagonal Byzantine church here, but the foundations alone
+remain. Josephus describes it as the highest of the mountains of
+Samaria, but Ebal and Tell Azur are both higher.</p>
+<div class="author">(R. A. S. M.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERLACHE, ÉTIENNE CONSTANTIN,<a name="ar56" id="ar56"></a></span> <span class="sc">Baron de</span> (1785-1871),
+Belgian politician and historian, was born at Biourge,
+Luxemburg, on the 24th of December 1785. He studied law
+in Paris and practised there for some time, but settled at Liege
+after the establishment of the kingdom of the Netherlands.
+As member of the states-general he was an energetic member
+of the opposition, and, though he repudiated an ultramontane
+policy, he supported the alliance of the extreme Catholics with
+the Liberal party, which paved the way for the revolution of
+1830. On the outbreak of disturbance in August 1830 he still,
+however, thought the Orange-Nassau dynasty and the union
+with the Dutch states essential; but his views changed, and,
+after holding various offices in the provisional government, he
+became president of congress, and brought forward the motion
+inviting Leopold of Saxe-Coburg to become king of the Belgians.
+In 1832 he was president of the chamber of representatives, and
+for thirty-five years he presided over the court of appeal. He
+presided over the Catholic congresses held at Malines between
+1863 and 1867. That his early Liberal views underwent some
+modification is plain from the Conservative principles enunciated
+in his <i>Essai sur le mouvement des partis en Belgique</i> (Brussels,
+1852). As an historian his work was strongly coloured by his
+anti-Dutch prejudices and his Catholic predilections. His
+<i>Histoire des Pays-Bas depuis 1814 jusqu&rsquo;en 1830</i> (Brussels, 2
+vols., 1839), which reached a fourth edition in 1875, was a piece
+of special pleading against the Dutch domination. The most
+important of his other works were his <i>Histoire de Liége</i> (Brussels,
+1843) and his <i>Études sur Salluste et sur quelques-uns des principaux
+historiens de l&rsquo;antiquité</i> (Brussels, 1847).</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>A complete edition of his works (6 vols., Brussels, 1874-1875)
+contains a biography by M. Thonissen.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERLE, CHRISTOPHE ANTOINE<a name="ar57" id="ar57"></a></span> (1736-<i>c.</i> 1801), French
+revolutionist and mystic, was born at Riom in Auvergne. Entering
+the Carthusian order early in life, he became prior of Laval-Dieu
+in Perche, and afterwards of Pont-Sainte-Marie at Moulins.
+Elected deputy to the states-general in 1789, Gerle became very
+popular, and though he had no seat in the assembly until after
+the Tennis Court oath, being only deputy <i>suppléant</i>, he is represented
+in David&rsquo;s classic painting as taking part in it. In 1792
+he was chosen elector of Paris. In the revolutionary turmoil
+Gerle developed a strong vein of mysticism, mingled with ideas
+of reform, and in June 1790 the prophetic powers of Suzanne
+Labrousse (1747-1821), a visionary who had predicted the
+Revolution ten years before, were brought by him to the notice
+of the Convention. In Paris, where he lived first with a spiritualistic
+doctor and afterwards, like Robespierre, at the house of a
+cabinetmaker, his mystical tendencies were strengthened. The
+insane fancies of Catherine Théot, a convent servant turned
+prophetess, who proclaimed herself the Virgin, the &ldquo;Mother of
+God&rdquo; and the &ldquo;new Eve,&rdquo; were eminently attractive to Gerle;
+in the person of Robespierre he recognized the Messiah, and at the
+meetings of the Théotists he officiated with the aged prophetess
+as co-president. But the activities of Catherine and her adepts
+were short-lived. The Théotists&rsquo; cult of Robespierre was a
+weapon in the hands of his opponents; and shortly after the
+festival of the Supreme Being, Vadier made a report to the
+Convention calling for the prosecution of Catherine, Gerle and
+others as fanatics and conspirators. They were arrested, thrown
+into prison and, in the confusion of Robespierre&rsquo;s fall, apparently
+forgotten. Catherine died in prison, but Gerle, released by the
+Directory, became one of the editors of the <i>Messager du soir</i>, and
+was afterwards in the office of Pierre Bénézech (1775-1802),
+minister of the interior. Having renounced his monastic vows
+in Paris, he is thought to have married, towards the close of
+his life, Christine Raffet, aunt of the artist Denis Raffet. The
+date of his death is uncertain.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN BAPTIST BRETHREN,<a name="ar58" id="ar58"></a></span> or <span class="sc">German Brethren</span>, a
+sect of American Baptists which originated in Germany, and
+whose members are popularly known in the United States as
+&ldquo;Dunkers,&rdquo; &ldquo;Dunkards&rdquo; or &ldquo;Tunkers,&rdquo; corruptions of the
+German verb <i>tunken</i>, &ldquo;to dip,&rdquo; in recognition of the sect&rsquo;s
+continued adherence to the practice of trine immersion. The
+sect was the outcome of one of the many Pietistic movements
+of the 17th century, and was founded in 1708 by Andrew Mack
+of Swartzenau, Germany, and seven of his followers, upon the
+general issue that both the Lutheran and Reformed churches
+were taking liberties with the literal teachings of the Scriptures.
+The new sect was scarcely organized in Germany when its members
+were compelled by persecution to take refuge in Holland, whence
+they emigrated to Pennsylvania, in small companies, between
+1719 and 1729. The first congregation in America was organized
+on Christmas Day 1723 by Peter Becker at Germantown,
+Pennsylvania, and here in 1743 Christopher Sauer, one of the
+sect&rsquo;s first pastors, and a printer by trade, printed the first
+Bible (a few copies of which are still in existence) published in a
+European language in America. From Pennsylvania the sect
+spread chiefly westward, and, after various vicissitudes, caused
+by defections and divisions due to doctrinal differences, in 1908
+were most numerous in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, Ohio,
+Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas and North
+Dakota.</p>
+
+<p>There is much uncertainty about the early theological history
+of the sect, but it is probable that Mack and his followers were
+influenced by both the Greek Catholics and the Waldensians.
+P.H. Bashor in his historical sketch, read before the World&rsquo;s Fair
+Congress of the Brethren Church (1894), says: &ldquo;From the history
+of extended labour by Greek missionaries, from the active propaganda
+of doctrine by scattered Waldensian refugees, through
+parts of Germany and Bavaria, from the credence that may
+generally be given to local tradition, and from the strong similarity
+between the three churches in general features of circumstantial
+service, the conclusion, without additional evidence, is
+both reasonable and natural that the founders of the new church
+received their teaching, their faith and much of their church
+idea from intimate acquaintance with the established usages of
+both societies, and from their amplification and enforcement
+by missionaries and pastors.... In doctrine the church has
+been from the first contentious for believers&rsquo; baptism, holding
+that nowhere in the New Testament can be found any authority
+even by inference, precept or example for the baptism of infants.
+On questions of fundamental doctrine they held to the belief
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page770" id="page770"></a>770</span>
+in one self-existing supreme ruler of the Universe&mdash;the Divine
+Godhead&mdash;the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit&mdash;the tri-personality.&rdquo;
+Hence their practice of triple immersion, which
+provides that the candidate shall kneel in the water and be
+immersed, face first, three times&mdash;in the name of the Father,
+the Son and the Holy Spirit. (From this practice the sect
+received the less commonly used nickname &ldquo;Dompelaers,&rdquo;
+meaning &ldquo;tumblers.&rdquo;) They accept implicitly and literally the
+New Testament as the infallible guide in spiritual matters,
+holding it to be the inspired word of God, revealed through Jesus
+Christ and, by inspiration, through the Apostles. They also
+believe in the inspiration of the Old Testament. In their celebration
+of the communion service they aim exactly to imitate
+the forms observed by Christ. It is celebrated in the evening,
+and is accompanied by the ancient love feast (partaken by all
+communicants seated at a common table), by the ceremony of
+the washing of feet and by the salutation of the holy kiss, the
+three last-named ceremonies being observed by the sexes separately.
+They pray over their sick and, when so requested,
+anoint them with oil. They are rigid non-resistants, and will
+not bear arms or study the art of war; they refuse to take oaths,
+and discountenance going to law over issues that can possibly
+be settled out of the courts. The taking of interest was at first
+forbidden, but that prohibition is not now insisted upon. They
+&ldquo;testify&rdquo; against the use of intoxicating liquor and tobacco,
+and advocate simplicity in dress. In its earlier history the sect
+opposed voting or taking any active part in political affairs, but
+these restrictions have quite generally disappeared. Similarly
+the earlier prejudice against higher education, and the maintenance
+of institutions for that purpose, has given place to greater
+liberality along those lines. In 1782 the sect forbade slave-holding
+by its members.</p>
+
+<p>The church officers (generally unpaid) comprise bishops (or
+ministers), elders, teachers, deacons (or visiting brethren) and
+deaconesses&mdash;chiefly aged women who are permitted at times
+to take leading parts in church services. The bishops are chosen
+from the teachers; they are itinerant, conduct marriage and
+funeral services, and are present at communions, at ordinations,
+when deacons are chosen or elected, and at trials for the excommunication
+of members. The elders are the first or oldest
+teachers of congregations, for which there is no regular bishop.
+They have charge of the meetings of such congregations, and
+participate in excommunication proceedings, besides which
+they preach, exhort, baptize, and may, when needed, take the
+offices of the deacons. The teachers, who are chosen by vote,
+may also exhort or preach, when their services are needed for
+such purposes, and may, at the request of a bishop, perform
+marriage or baptismal ceremonies. The deacons have general
+oversight of the material affairs of the congregation, and are
+especially charged with the care of poor widows and their children.
+In the discharge of these duties they are expected to visit each
+family in the congregation at least once a year. The government
+of the church is chiefly according to the congregational
+principle, and the women have an equal voice with the men;
+but annual meetings, attended by the bishops, teachers and
+other delegates from the several congregations are held, and at
+these sessions the larger questions involving church polity are
+considered and decided by a committee of five bishops.</p>
+
+<p>An early secession from the general body of Dunkers was that
+of the Seventh Day Dunkers, whose distinctive principle was
+that the seventh day was the true Sabbath. Their founder
+was Johann Conrad Beissel (1690-1768), a native of Eberbach
+and one of the first emigrants, who, after living as a hermit for
+several years on Mill Creek, Lancaster county, Pennsylvania,
+founded the sect (1725), then again lived as a hermit in a cave
+(formerly occupied by another hermit, one Elimelech) on the
+Cocalico Creek in Pennsylvania, and in 1732-1735 established a
+semi-monastic community (the &ldquo;Order of the Solitary&rdquo;) with a
+convent (the &ldquo;Sister House&rdquo;) and a monastery (the &ldquo;Brother
+House&rdquo;) at Ephrata, in what is now Lancaster county, about
+55 m. W. by N. from Philadelphia. Among the industries of
+the men were printing (in both English and German), book-binding,
+tanning, quarrying, and the operation of a saw mill,
+a bark mill, and perhaps a pottery; the women did embroidery,
+quilting, and engrossing in a beautiful but peculiar hand, known
+as Fracturschrift.<a name="fa1g" id="fa1g" href="#ft1g"><span class="sp">1</span></a> The monastic feature was gradually abandoned,
+and in 1814 the Society was incorporated as the Seventh
+Day Baptists, its affairs being placed in the hands of a board
+of trustees. More important in the history of the modern
+church was the secession, in the decade between 1880 and 1890,
+of the Old Order Brethren, who opposed Sunday Schools and
+the missionary work of the Brethren, in Asia Minor and India,
+and in several European countries; and also in 1882 of the
+radicals, or Progressives, who objected to a distinctive dress and
+to the absolute supremacy of the yearly conferences. Higher
+education was long forbidden and is consistently opposed by
+the Old Order. The same element in the Brethren opposed a
+census, but according to Howard Miller&rsquo;s census of 1880 (<i>Record
+of the Faithful</i>) the number of Dunkers was 59,749 in that
+year; by the United States census of 1890 it was then 73,795;
+the figures for 1904 are given by Henry King Carroll in his
+&ldquo;Statistics of the Churches&rdquo; in the <i>Christian Advocate</i> (Jan.
+5, 1905): Conservatives, or German Baptist Brethren, 95,000;
+Old Order, 4000; Progressives or Brethren, 15,000; Seventh
+Day, 194; total, 114,194. In 1909 the German Baptist Brethren
+had an estimated membership of approximately 100,000, and the
+Brethren of 18,000. The main body, or Conservatives, support
+schools at Huntingdon, Pennsylvania; Mt. Morris, Illinois;
+Lordsburg, California; McPherson, Kansas; Bridgewater,
+Virginia; Canton, Ohio; Chicago, Illinois; North Manchester,
+Indiana; Plattsburg, Missouri; Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania;
+Union Bridge, Maryland; and Fruitdale, Alabama. They
+have a publishing house at Elgin, Illinois, and maintain missions
+in Denmark, Sweden, France, Italy, India and China. The
+Progressives have a college, a theological seminary and a publishing
+house at Ashland, Ohio; and they carry on missionary
+work in Canada, South America and Persia.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities.</span>&mdash;Lamech and Agrippa, <i>Chronicon Ephratense</i>, in
+German (Ephrata, Penn., 1786) and in English (Lancaster, 1889);
+G.N. Falkenstein, &ldquo;The German Baptist Brethren, or Dunkers,&rdquo;
+part 8 of &ldquo;Pennsylvania: The German Influence in its Settlement
+and Development,&rdquo; in vol. x. of the <i>Pennsylvania German Society,
+Proceedings and Addresses</i> (Lancaster, Penn., 1900); Julius Friedrich
+Sachse, <i>The German Sectarians of Pennsylvania, 1742-1800: A
+Critical and Legendary History of the Ephrata Cloister and the Dunkers</i>
+(Philadelphia, 1900); and John Lewis Gillin, <i>The Dunkers: A
+Sociological Interpretation</i> (New York, 1906), a doctor&rsquo;s dissertation,
+with full bibliography.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1g" id="ft1g" href="#fa1g"><span class="fn">1</span></a> Beissel (known in the community as &ldquo;Friedsam&rdquo;) was their
+leader until his death; he published several collections of hymns.
+The stone over his grave bears the inscription: &ldquo;Here rests an outgrowth
+of the love of God, &lsquo;Friedsam,&rsquo; a Solitary Brother, afterwards
+a leader of the Solitary and the Congregation of Grace in and
+around Ephrata ... Fell asleep July 6, 1768, in the 52nd year of
+his spiritual life, but the 72nd year and fourth month of his natural
+life.&rdquo; The borough of Ephrata was separated from the township
+in 1891. Pop. (1900) of the borough, 2451; of the township, 2390.
+The &ldquo;Brother House&rdquo; and the &ldquo;Sister House&rdquo; are still standing
+(though in a dilapidated condition). In 1777, after the battle of
+Brandywine, many wounded American soldiers were nursed here by
+the Sisters, and about 200 are buried here.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN CATHOLICS<a name="ar59" id="ar59"></a></span> (<i>Deutschkatholiken</i>), the name assumed
+in Germany towards the close of 1844 by certain dissentients
+from the Church of Rome. The most prominent leader of the
+German Catholic movement was Johann Ronge, a priest who
+in the <i>Sächsische Vaterlandsblätter</i> for the 15th of October 1844
+made a vigorous attack upon Wilhelm Arnoldi, bishop of Trier
+since 1842, for having ordered (for the first time since 1810) the
+exposition of the &ldquo;holy coat of Trier,&rdquo; alleged to be the seamless
+robe of Christ, an event which drew countless pilgrims to the
+cathedral. Ronge, who had formerly been chaplain at Grottkau,
+was then a schoolmaster at Laurahütte near the Polish border.
+The article made a great sensation, and led to Ronge&rsquo;s excommunication
+by the chapter of Breslau in December 1844. The
+ex-priest received a large amount of public sympathy, and a
+dissenting congregation was almost immediately formed at
+Breslau with a very simple creed, in which the chief articles
+were belief in God the Father, creator and ruler of the universe;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page771" id="page771"></a>771</span>
+in Jesus Christ the Saviour, who delivers from the bondage of sin
+by his life, doctrine and death; in the operation of the Holy
+Ghost; in a holy, universal, Christian church; in forgiveness
+of sins and the life everlasting. The Bible was made the sole rule,
+and all external authority was barred. Within a few weeks
+similar communities were formed at Leipzig, Dresden, Berlin,
+Offenbach, Worms, Wiesbaden and elsewhere; and at a
+&ldquo;council&rdquo; convened at Leipzig at Easter 1845, twenty-seven
+congregations were represented by delegates, of whom only two
+or at most three were in clerical orders.</p>
+
+<p>Even before the beginning of the agitation led by Ronge,
+another movement fundamentally distinct, though in some
+respects similar, had been originated at Schneidemühl, Posen,
+under the guidance of Johann Czerski (1813-1893), also a priest,
+who had come into collision with the church authorities on the
+then much discussed question of
+mixed marriages, and also on that
+of the celibacy of the clergy. The
+result had been his suspension from
+office in March 1844; his public
+withdrawal, along with twenty-four
+adherents, from the Roman communion
+in August; his excommunication;
+and the formation, in
+October, of a &ldquo;Christian Catholic&rdquo;
+congregation which, while rejecting
+clerical celibacy, the use of Latin
+in public worship, and the doctrines
+of purgatory and transubstantiation,
+retained the Nicene theology
+and the doctrine of the seven sacraments.
+Czerski had been at some of
+the sittings of the &ldquo;German Catholic&rdquo;
+council of Leipzig; but when a
+formula somewhat similar to that
+of Breslau had been adopted, he
+refused his signature because the
+divinity of Christ had been ignored,
+and he and his congregation continued
+to retain by preference the
+name of &ldquo;Christian Catholics,&rdquo;
+which they had originally assumed.
+Of the German Catholic congregations
+which had been represented at
+Leipzig some manifested a preference
+for the fuller and more positive creed
+of Schneidemühl, but a great majority
+continued to accept the comparatively
+rationalistic position of the
+Breslau school. The number of these
+rapidly increased, and the congregations
+scattered over Germany numbered
+nearly 200. External and internal
+checks, however, soon limited
+this advance. In Austria, and ultimately
+also in Bavaria, the use of the
+name German Catholics was officially prohibited, that of &ldquo;Dissidents&rdquo;
+being substituted, while in Prussia, Baden and Saxony
+the adherents of the new creed were laid under various disabilities,
+being suspected both of undermining religion and of encouraging
+the revolutionary tendencies of the age. Ronge himself was a
+foremost figure in the troubles of 1848; after the dissolution of
+the Frankfort parliament he lived for some time in London,
+returning in 1861 to Germany. He died at Vienna on the 26th of
+October 1887. In 1859 some of the German Catholics entered
+into corporate union with the &ldquo;Free Congregations,&rdquo; an association
+of free-thinking communities that had since 1844 been
+gradually withdrawing from the orthodox Protestant Church,
+when the united body took the title of &ldquo;The Religious Society
+of Free Congregations.&rdquo; Before that time many of the congregations
+which were formed in 1844 and the years immediately
+following had been dissolved, including that of Schneidemühl
+itself, which ceased to exist in 1857. There are now only about
+2000 strict German Catholics, all in Saxony. The movement
+has been superseded by the Old Catholic (<i>q.v.</i>) organization.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See G.G. Gervinus, <i>Die Mission des Deutschkatholicismus</i> (1846);
+F. Kampe, <i>Das Wesen des Deutschkatholicismus</i> (1860); Findel,
+<i>Der Deutschkatholicismus in Sachsen</i> (1895); Carl Mirbt, in Herzog-Hauck&rsquo;s
+<i>Realencyk. für prot. Theol.</i> iv. 583.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN EAST AFRICA,<a name="ar60" id="ar60"></a></span> a country occupying the east-central
+portion of the African continent. The colony extends
+at its greatest length north to south from 1° to 11° S., and west
+to east from 30° to 40° E. It is bounded E. by the Indian Ocean
+(the coast-line extending from 4° 20&prime; to 10° 40&prime; S.), N.E. and N.
+by British East Africa and Uganda, W. by Belgian Congo, S.W.
+by British Central Africa and S. by Portuguese East Africa.</p>
+
+<div class="center pt2"><img style="width:741px; height:790px; vertical-align: middle;" src="images/img771.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p class="pt2"><i>Area and Boundaries.</i>&mdash;On the north the boundary line runs N.W.
+from the mouth of the Umba river to Lake Jipe and Mount Kilimanjaro
+including both in the protectorate, and thence to Victoria
+Nyanza, crossing it at 1° S., which parallel it follows till it reaches
+30° E. In the west the frontier is as follows: From the point of
+intersection of 1° S. and 30° E., a line running S. and S.W. to the
+north-west end of Lake Kivu, thence across that lake near its
+western shore, and along the river Rusizi, which issues from it, to the
+spot where the Rusizi enters the north end of Lake Tanganyika;
+along the middle line of Tanganyika to near its southern end, when
+it is deflected eastward to the point where the river Kalambo enters
+the lake (thus leaving the southern end of Tanganyika to Great
+Britain). From this point the frontier runs S.E. across the plateau
+between Lakes Tanganyika and Nyasa, in its southern section following
+the course of the river Songwe. Thence it goes down the middle
+of Nyasa as far as 11° 30&prime; S. The southern frontier goes direct
+from the last-named point eastward to the Rovuma river, which
+separates German and Portuguese territory. A little before the
+Indian Ocean is reached the frontier is deflected south so as to leave
+the mouth of the Rovuma in German East Africa. These boundaries
+include an area of about 364,000 sq. m. (nearly double the size of
+Germany), with a population estimated in 1910 at 8,000,000. Of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page772" id="page772"></a>772</span>
+these above 10,000 were Arabs, Indians, Syrians and Goanese, and
+3000 Europeans (over 2000 being Germans). The island of Mafia
+(see below) is included in the protectorate.</p>
+
+<p><i>Physical Features.</i>&mdash;The coast of German East Africa (often
+spoken of as the Swahili coast, after the inhabitants of the seaboard)
+is chiefly composed of coral, is little indented, and is generally low,
+partly sandy, partly rich alluvial soil covered with dense bush or
+mangroves. Where the Arabs have established settlements the
+coco-palm and mango tree introduced by them give variety to the
+vegetation. The coast plain is from 10 to 30 m. wide and 620 m.
+long; it is bordered on the west by the precipitous eastern side of
+the interior plateau of Central Africa. This plateau, considerably
+tilted from its horizontal position, attains its highest elevation north
+of Lake Nyasa (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Livingstone Mountains</a></span>), where several peaks
+rise over 7000 ft., one to 9600, while its mean altitude is about
+3000 to 4000 ft. From this region the country slopes towards the
+north-west, and is not distinguished by any considerable mountain
+ranges. A deep narrow gorge, the so-called &ldquo;eastern rift-valley,&rdquo;
+traverses the middle of the plateau in a meridional direction. In
+the northern part of the country it spreads into several side valleys,
+from one of which rises the extinct volcano Kilimanjaro (<i>q.v.</i>), the
+highest mountain in Africa (19,321 ft.). Its glaciers send down a
+thousand rills which combine to form the Pangani river. About
+40 m. west of Kilimanjaro is Mount Meru (14,955 ft.), another
+volcanic peak, with a double crater. The greater steepness of its
+sides makes Meru in some aspects a more striking object than its taller
+neighbour. South-east of Mount Kilimanjaro are the Pare Mountains
+and Usambara highlands, separated from the coast by a comparatively
+narrow strip of plain. To the south of the Usambara
+hills, and on the eastern edge of the plateau, are the mountainous
+regions of Nguru (otherwise Unguru), Useguha and Usagara. As
+already indicated, the southern half of Victoria Nyanza and the
+eastern shores, in whole or in part, of Lakes Kivu, Tanganyika and
+Nyasa, are in German territory. (The lakes are separately described.)
+Several smaller lakes occur in parts of the eastern rift-valley.
+Lake Rukwa (<i>q.v.</i>) north-west of Nyasa is presumably
+only the remnant of a much larger lake. Its extent varies with
+the rainfall of each year. North-west of Kilimanjaro is a sheet of
+water known as the Natron Lake from the mineral alkali it contains.
+In the northern part of the colony the Victoria Nyanza is the dominant
+physical feature. The western frontier coincides with part of the
+eastern wall of another depression, the Central African or Albertine
+rift-valley, in which lie Tanganyika, Kivu and other lakes. Along
+the north-west frontier north of Kivu are volcanic peaks (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Mfumbiro</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p>The country is well watered, but with the exception of the Rufiji
+the rivers, save for a few miles from their mouths, are unnavigable.
+The largest streams are the Rovuma and Rufiji (<i>q.v.</i>), both rising
+in the central plateau and flowing to the Indian Ocean. Next in
+importance is the Pangani river, which, as stated above, has its head
+springs on the slopes of Kilimanjaro. Flowing in a south-easterly
+direction it reaches the sea after a course of some 250 m. The
+Wami and Kingani, smaller streams, have their origin in the mountainous
+region fringing the central plateau, and reach the ocean
+opposite the island of Zanzibar. Of inland river systems there are
+four&mdash;one draining to Victoria Nyanza, another to Tanganyika,
+a third to Nyasa and a fourth to Rukwa. Into Victoria Nyanza
+are emptied, on the east, the waters of the Mori and many smaller
+streams; on the west, the Kagera (<i>q.v.</i>), besides smaller rivers.
+Into Tanganyika flows the Malagarasi, a considerable river with
+many affluents, draining the west-central part of the plateau. The
+Kalambo river, a comparatively small stream near the southern
+end of Tanganyika, flows in a south-westerly direction. Not far
+from its mouth there is a magnificent fall, a large volume of water
+falling 600 ft. sheer over a rocky ledge of horse-shoe shape. Of
+the streams entering Nyasa the Songwe has been mentioned. The
+Ruhuhu, which enters Nyasa in 10° 30&prime; S., and its tributaries
+drain a considerable area west of 36° E. The chief feeders of Lake
+Rukwa are the Saisi and the Rupa-Songwe.</p>
+
+<p>Mafia Island lies off the coast immediately north of 8° N. It
+has an area of 200 sq. m. The island is low and fertile, and extensively
+planted with coco-nut palms. It is continued southwards
+by an extensive reef, on which stands the chief village, Chobe, the
+residence of a few Arabs and Banyan traders. Chobe stands on a
+shallow creek almost inaccessible to shipping.</p>
+
+<p><i>Geology.</i>&mdash;The narrow foot-plateau of British East Africa broadens
+out to the south of Bagamoyo to a width of over 100 m. This is
+covered to a considerable extent by rocks of recent and late Tertiary
+ages. Older Tertiary rocks form the bluffs of Lindi. Cretaceous
+marls and limestones appear at intervals, extending in places to the
+edge of the upper plateau, and are extensively developed on the
+Makonde plateau. They are underlain by Jurassic rocks, from
+beneath which sandstones and shales yielding <i>Glossopteris browniana</i>
+var. <i>indica</i>, and therefore of Lower Karroo age, appear in the south
+but are overlapped on the north by Jurassic strata. The central
+plateau consists almost entirely of metamorphic rocks with extensive
+tracts of granite in Unyamwezi. In the vicinity of Lakes Nyasa
+and Tanganyika, sandstones and shales of Lower Karroo age and
+yielding seams of coal are considered to owe their position and
+preservation to being let down by rift faults into hollows of the
+crystalline rocks. In Karagwe certain quartzites, slates and
+schistose sandstones resemble the ancient gold-bearing rocks of
+South Africa.</p>
+
+<p>The volcanic plateau of British East Africa extends over the
+boundary in the region of Kilimanjaro. Of the sister peaks, Kibo
+and Mawenzi, the latter is far the oldest and has been greatly denuded,
+while Kibo retains its crateriform shape intact. The rift-valley
+faults continue down the depression, marked by numerous volcanoes,
+in the region of the Natron Lake and Lake Manyara; while the
+steep walls of the deep depression of Tanganyika and Nyasa represent
+the western rift system at its maximum development.</p>
+
+<p>Fossil remains of saurians of gigantic size have been found; one
+thigh bone measures 6 ft. 10 in., the same bone in the <i>Diplodocus
+Carnegii</i> measuring only 4 ft. 11 in.</p>
+
+<p><i>Climate.</i>&mdash;The warm currents setting landwards from the Indian
+Ocean bring both moisture and heat, so that the Swahili coast has
+a higher temperature and heavier rainfall than the Atlantic seaboard
+under the same parallels of latitude. The mean temperature on the
+west and east coasts of Africa is 72° and 80° Fahr. respectively, the
+average rainfall in Angola 36 in., in Dar-es-Salaam 60 in. On the
+Swahili coast the south-east monsoon begins in April and the north-east
+monsoon in November. In the interior April brings south-east
+winds, which continue until about the beginning of October. During
+the rest of the year changing winds prevail. These winds are charged
+with moisture, which they part with on ascending the precipitous
+side of the plateau. Rain comes with the south-east monsoon, and
+on the northern part of the coast the rainy season is divided into
+two parts, the great and the little Masika: the former falls in the
+months of September, October, November; the latter in February
+and March. In the interior the climate has a more continental
+character, and is subject to considerable changes of temperature;
+the rainy season sets in a little earlier the farther west and north the
+region, and is well marked, the rain beginning in November and
+ending in April; the rest of the year is dry. On the highest parts
+of the plateau the climate is almost European, the nights being
+sometimes exceedingly cold. Kilimanjaro has a climate of its own;
+the west and south sides of the mountain receive the greatest rainfall,
+while the east and north sides are dry nearly all the year. Malarial
+diseases are rather frequent, more so on the coast than farther
+inland. The Kilimanjaro region is said to enjoy immunity. Smallpox
+is frequent on the coast, but is diminishing before vaccination;
+other epidemic diseases are extremely rare.</p>
+
+<p><i>Flora and Fauna.</i>&mdash;The character of the vegetation varies with
+and depends on moisture, temperature and soil. On the low littoral
+zone the coast produced a rich tropical bush, in which the mangrove
+is very prominent. Coco-palms and mango trees have been planted
+in great numbers, and also many varieties of bananas. The bush
+is grouped in copses on meadows, which produce a coarse tall grass.
+The river banks are lined with belts of dense forest, in which
+useful timber occurs. The <i>Hyphaene</i> palm is frequent, as
+well as various kinds of gum-producing mimosas. The slopes of
+the plateau which face the rain-bringing monsoon are in some
+places covered with primeval forest, in which timber is plentiful.
+The silk-cotton tree (<i>Bombax ceiba</i>), miomba, tamarisk, copal tree
+(<i>Hymenaea courbaril</i>) are frequent, besides sycamores, banyan trees
+(<i>Ficus indica</i>) and the deleb palm (<i>Borassus aethiopum</i>). It is
+here we find the <i>Landolphia florida</i>, which yields the best rubber.
+The plateau is partly grass land without bush and forest, partly
+steppe covered with mimosa bush, which sometimes is almost
+impenetrable. Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Meru exhibit on a
+vertical scale the various forms of vegetation which characterize
+East Africa (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Kilimanjaro</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p>East Africa is rich in all kinds of antelope, and the elephant,
+rhinoceros and hippopotamus are still plentiful in parts. Characteristic
+are the giraffe, the chimpanzee and the ostrich. Buffaloes and
+zebras occur in two or three varieties. Lions and leopards are
+found throughout the country. Crocodiles are numerous in all the
+larger rivers. Snakes, many venomous, abound. Of birds there are
+comparatively few on the steppe, but by rivers, lakes and swamps
+they are found in thousands. Locusts occasion much damage, and
+ants of various kinds are often a plague. The tsetse fly (<i>Glossina
+morsitans</i>) infests several districts; the sand-flea has been imported
+from the west coast. Land and water turtles are numerous.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Inhabitants.</i>&mdash;On the coast and at the chief settlements inland
+are Arab and Indian immigrants, who are merchants and agriculturists.
+The Swahili (<i>q.v.</i>) are a mixed Bantu and Semitic race
+inhabiting the seaboard. The inhabitants of the interior may be
+divided into two classes, those namely of Bantu and those of
+Hamitic stock. What may be called the indigenous population
+consists of the older Bantu races. These tribes have been subject
+to the intrusion from the south of more recent Bantu folk, such as
+the Yao, belonging to the Ama-Zulu branch of the race, while
+from the north there has been an immigration of Hamito-Negroid
+peoples. Of these the Masai and Wakuafi are found in the region
+between Victoria Nyanza and Kilimanjaro. The Masai (<i>q.v.</i>)
+and allied tribes are nomads and cattle raisers. They are warlike,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page773" id="page773"></a>773</span>
+and live in square mud-plastered houses called <i>tembe</i> which can be
+easily fortified and defended. The Bantu tribes are in general
+peaceful agriculturists, though the Bantus of recent immigration
+retain the warlike instincts of the Zulus. The most important
+group of the Bantus is the Wanyamwezi (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Unyamwezi</a></span>), divided
+into many tribes. They are spread over the central plains, and
+have for neighbours on the south-east, between Nyasa and the
+Rufiji, the warlike Wahehe. The Wangoni (Angoni), a branch
+of the Ama-Zulu, are widely spread over the central and Nyasa
+regions. Other well-known tribes are the Wasambara, who have
+given their name to the highlands between Kilimanjaro and the
+coast, and the Warundi, inhabiting the district between Tanganyika
+and the Kagera. In Karagwe, a region adjoining the south-west
+shores of Victoria Nyanza, the Bahima are the ruling caste.
+Formerly Karagwe under its Bahima kings was a powerful state.
+Many different dialects are spoken by the Bantu tribes, Swahili
+being the most widely known (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Bantu Languages</a></span>). Their
+religion is the worship of spirits, ancestral and otherwise, accompanied
+by a vague and undefined belief in a Supreme Being,
+generally regarded as indifferent to the doings of the people.</p>
+
+<p>The task of civilizing the natives is undertaken in various
+ways by the numerous Protestant and Roman Catholic missions
+established in the colony, and by the government. The slave
+trade has been abolished, and though domestic slavery is allowed,
+all children of slaves born after the 31st of December 1905 are
+free. For certain public works the Germans enforce a system of
+compulsory labour. Efforts are made by instruction in government
+and mission schools to spread a knowledge of the German
+language among the natives, in order to fit them for subordinate
+posts in administrative offices, such as the customs. Native
+chiefs in the interior are permitted to help in the administration
+of justice. The Mission du Sacré C&oelig;ur in Bagamoyo, the oldest
+mission in the colony, has trained many young negroes to be
+useful mechanics. The number of native Christians is small.
+The Moslems have vigorous and successful missions.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Chief Towns</i>.&mdash;The seaports of the colony are Tanga (pop. about
+6000), Bagamoyo 5000 (with surrounding district some 18,000),
+Dar-es-Salaam 24,000, Kilwa 5000, (these have separate notices),
+Pangani, Sadani, Lindi and Mikindani. Pangani (pop. about 3500)
+is situated at the mouth of the river of the same name; it serves a
+district rich in tropical products, and does a thriving trade with
+Zanzibar and Pemba. Sadani is a smaller port midway between
+Pangani and Bagamoyo. Lindi (10° 0&prime; S., 39° 40&prime; E.) is 80 m. north
+of Cape Delgado. Lindi (Swahili for The Deep Below) Bay runs
+inland 6 m. and is 3 m. across, affording deep anchorage. Hills to
+the west of the bay rise over 1000 ft. The town (pop. about 4000)
+is picturesquely situated on the north side of the bay. The Arab
+<i>boma</i>, constructed in 1800, has been rebuilt by the Germans, who
+have retained the fine sculptured gateway. Formerly a rendezvous
+for slave caravans Lindi now has a more legitimate trade in white
+ivory. Mikindani is the most southern port in the colony. Owing
+to the prevalence of malaria there, few Europeans live at the town,
+and trade is almost entirely in the hands of Banyans.</p>
+
+<p>Inland the principal settlements are Korogwe, Mrogoro, Kilossa,
+Mpapua and Tabora. Korogwe is in the Usambara hills, on the
+north bank of the Pangani river, and is reached by railway from
+Tanga. Mrogoro is some 140 m. due west of Dar-es-Salaam, and is
+the first important station on the road to Tanganyika. Kilossa and
+Mpapua are farther inland on the same caravan route. Tabora (pop.
+about 37,000), the chief town of the Wanyamwezi tribes, occupies an
+important position on the central plateau, being the meeting-place
+of the trade routes from Tanganyika, Victoria Nyanza and the
+coast. In the railway development of the colony Tabora is destined
+to become the central junction of lines going north, south, east and
+west.</p>
+
+<p>On Victoria Nyanza there are various settlements. Mwanza, on
+the southern shore, is the lake terminus of the route from Bagamoyo:
+Bukoba is on the western shore, and Schirati on the eastern shore;
+both situated a little south of the British frontier. On the German
+coast of Tanganyika are Ujiji (<i>q.v.</i>), pop. about 14,000, occupying a
+central position; Usumbura, at the northern end of the lake where
+is a fort built by the Germans; and Bismarckburg, near the southern
+end. On the shores of the lake between Ujiji and Bismarckburg are
+four stations of the Algerian &ldquo;White Fathers,&rdquo; all possessing
+churches, schools and other stone buildings. Langenburg is a
+settlement on the north-east side of Lake Nyasa. The government
+station, called New Langenburg, occupies a higher and more healthy
+site north-west of the lake. Wiedhafen is on the east side of Nyasa
+at the mouth of the Ruhuhu, and is the terminus of the caravan
+route from Kilwa.</p>
+
+<p><i>Productions</i>.&mdash;The chief wealth of the country is derived from
+agriculture and the produce of the forests. From the forests are
+obtained rubber, copal, bark, various kinds of fibre, and timber
+(teak, mahogany, &amp;c.). The cultivated products include coffee, the
+coco-nut palm, tobacco, sugar-cane, cotton, vanilla, sorghum, earth-nuts,
+sesame, maize, rice, beans, peas, bananas (in large quantities),
+yams, manioc and hemp. Animal products are ivory, hides, tortoise-shell
+and pearls. On the plateaus large numbers of cattle, goats and
+sheep are reared. The natives have many small smithies. Gold,
+coal, iron, graphite, copper and salt have been found. Garnets are
+plentiful in the Lindi district, and agates, topaz, moonstone and
+other precious stones are found in the colony. The chief gold and
+iron deposits are near Victoria Nyanza. In the Mwanza district
+are conglomerate reefs of great extent. Mining began in 1905,
+Mica is mined near Mrogoro. The chief exports are sisal fibre,
+rubber, hides and skins, wax, ivory, copra, coffee, ground-nuts and
+cotton. The imports are chiefly articles of food, textiles, and metals
+and hardware. More than half the entire trade, both export and
+import, is with Zanzibar. Germany takes about 30% of the trade.
+In the ten years 1896-1905 the value of the external trade increased
+from about Ł600,000 to over Ł1,100,000. In 1907 the imports were
+valued at Ł1,190,000, the exports at Ł625,000.</p>
+
+<p>Numerous companies are engaged in developing the resources of
+the country by trading, planting and mining. The most important
+is the <i>Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Gesellschaft</i>, founded in 1885, which
+has trading stations in each seaport, and flourishing plantations in
+various parts of the country. It is the owner of vast tracts of land.
+From 1890 to 1903 this company was in possession of extensive
+mining, railway, banking and coining rights, but in the last-named
+year, by agreement with the German government, it became a land
+company purely. The company has a right to a fifth part of the
+land within a zone of 10 m. on either side of any railway built in the
+colony previously to 1935. In addition to the companies a comparatively
+large number of private individuals have laid out plantations,
+Usambara and Pare having become favourite districts for
+agricultural enterprise. In the delta of the Rufiji and in the Kilwa
+district cotton-growing was begun in 1901. The plantations are all
+worked by native labour. The government possesses large forest
+reserves.</p>
+
+<p><i>Communications</i>.&mdash;Good roads for foot traffic have been made
+from the seaports to the trading stations on Lakes Nyasa, Tanganyika
+and Victoria. Caravans from Dar-es-Salaam to Tanganyika
+take 60 days to do the journey. The lack of more rapid means of
+communication hindered the development of the colony and led to
+economic crises (1898-1902), which were intensified, and in part
+created, by the building of a railway in the adjacent British protectorate
+from Mombasa to Victoria Nyanza, the British line securing
+the trade with the lake. At that time the only railway in the country
+was a line from Tanga to the Usambara highlands. This railway
+passes through Korogwe (52 m. from Tanga) and is continued via
+Mombo to Wilhelmstal, a farther distance of 56 m. The building
+of a trunk line from Dar-es-Salaam to Mrogoro (140 m.), and ultimately
+to Ujiji by way of Tabora, was begun in 1905. Another
+proposed line would run from Kilwa to Wiedhafen on Lake Nyasa.
+This railway would give the quickest means of access to British
+Central Africa and the southern part of Belgian Congo. On each
+of the three lakes is a government steamer. British steamers on
+Victoria Nyanza maintain communication between the German
+stations and the take terminus of the Uganda railway. The German
+East Africa Line of Hamburg runs a fleet of first-class steamers to
+East Africa, which touch at Tanga, Dar-es-Salaam and Zanzibar.
+There is a submarine cable from Dar-es-Salaam to Zanzibar, and an
+overland line connecting all the coast stations.</p>
+
+<p><i>Administration, Revenue, &amp;c</i>.&mdash;For administrative purposes the
+country is divided into districts (<i>Bezirksämter</i>), and stations (<i>Stationsbezirke</i>).
+Each station has a chief, who is subordinate to the official
+of his district, these in their turn being under the governor, who
+resides in Dar-es-Salaam. The governor is commander of the
+colonial force, which consists of natives under white officers. District
+councils are constituted, on which the European merchants and
+planters are represented. Revenue is raised by taxes on imports
+and exports, on licences for the sale of land and spirituous liquors,
+and for wood-cutting, by harbour and other dues, and a hut tax on
+natives. The deficiency between revenue and expenditure is met
+by a subsidy from the imperial government. In no case during the
+first twenty-one years&rsquo; existence of the colony had the local revenue
+reached 60% of the local expenditure, which in normal years amounted
+to about Ł500,000. In 1909, however, only the expenditure necessary
+for military purposes (Ł183,500) was received by way of subsidy.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>History</i>.&mdash;Until nearly the middle of the 19th century only the
+coast lands of the territory now forming German East Africa
+were known either to Europeans or to the Arabs. When at the
+beginning of the 16th century the Portuguese obtained possession
+of the towns along the East African coast, they had been, for
+periods extending in some cases fully five hundred years, under
+Arab dominion. After the final withdrawal of the Portuguese in
+the early years of the 18th century, the coast towns north of
+Cape Delgado fell under the sway of the Muscat Arabs, passing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page774" id="page774"></a>774</span>
+from them to the sultan of Zanzibar. From about 1830, or a
+little earlier, the Zanzibar Arabs began to penetrate inland,
+and by 1850 had established themselves at Ujiji on the eastern
+shore of Lake Tanganyika. The Arabs also made their way
+south to Nyasa. This extension of Arab influence was accompanied
+by vague claims on the part of the sultan of Zanzibar
+to include all these newly opened countries in his empire. How
+far from the coast the real authority of the sultan extended was
+never demonstrated. Zanzibar at this time was in semi-dependence
+on India, and British influence was strong at the
+court of Bargash, who succeeded to the sultanate in 1870.
+Bargash in 1877 offered to Sir (then Mr) William Mackinnon a
+lease of all his mainland territory. The offer, made in the year
+in which H.M. Stanley&rsquo;s discovery of the course of the Congo
+initiated the movement for the partition of the continent, was
+declined. British influence was, however, still so powerful
+in Zanzibar that the agents of the German Colonization Society,
+who in 1884 sought to secure for their country territory on the
+east coast, deemed it prudent to act secretly, so that both Great
+Britain and Zanzibar might be confronted with accomplished
+facts. Making their way inland, three young Germans, Karl
+Peters, Joachim Count Pfeil and Dr Jühlke, concluded a
+&ldquo;treaty&rdquo; in November 1884 with a chieftain in Usambara who
+was declared to be independent of Zanzibar. Other treaties
+followed, and on the 17th of February 1885, the German emperor
+granted a charter of protection to the Colonization Society.
+The German acquisitions were resented by Zanzibar, but were
+acquiesced in by the British government (the second Gladstone
+administration). The sultan was forced to acknowledge their
+validity, and to grant a German company a lease of his mainland
+territories south of the mouth of the Umba river, a British
+company formed by Mackinnon taking a lease of the territories
+north of that point. The story of the negotiations between
+Great Britain, Germany and France which led to this result is
+told elsewhere (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Africa</a></span>, section 5). By the agreement of the
+1st of July 1890, between the British and German governments,
+and by agreements concluded between Germany and Portugal in
+1886 and 1894, and Germany and the Congo Free State in 1884
+and later dates, the German sphere of influence attained its
+present area. On the 28th of October 1890 the sultan of Zanzibar
+ceded absolutely to Germany the mainland territories already
+leased to a German company, receiving as compensation Ł200,000.</p>
+
+<p>While these negotiations were going on, various German
+companies had set to work to exploit the country, and on the
+16th of August 1888 the German East African Company, the
+lessee of the Zanzibar mainland strip, took over the administration
+from the Arabs. This was followed, five days later, by a
+revolt of all the coast Arabs against German rule&mdash;the Germans,
+raw hands at the task of managing Orientals, having aroused
+intense hostility by their brusque treatment of the dispossessed
+rulers. The company being unable to quell the revolt, Captain
+Hermann Wissmann&mdash;subsequently Major Hermann von Wissmann
+(1853-1905)&mdash;was sent out by Prince Bismarck as imperial
+commissioner. Wissmann, with 1000 soldiers, chiefly Sudanese
+officered by Germans, and a German naval contingent, succeeded
+by the end of 1889 in crushing the power of the Arabs. Wissmann
+remained in the country until 1891 as commissioner, and later
+(1895-1896) was for eighteen months governor of the colony&mdash;as
+the German sphere had been constituted by proclamation
+(1st of January 1897). Towards the native population Wissmann&rsquo;s
+attitude was conciliatory, and under his rule the development
+of the resources of the country was pushed on. Equal
+success did not attend the efforts of other administrators; in
+1891-1892 Karl Peters had great trouble with the tribes in
+the Kilimanjaro district and resorted to very harsh methods,
+such as the execution of women, to maintain his authority.
+In 1896 Peters was condemned by a disciplinary court for a
+misuse of official power, and lost his commission. After 1891,
+in which year the Wahehe tribe ambushed and almost completely
+annihilated a German military force of 350 men under Baron
+von Zelewski, there were for many years no serious risings
+against German authority, which by the end of 1898 had been
+established over almost the whole of the hinterland. The
+development of the country was, however, slow, due in part to
+the disinclination of the Reichstag to vote supplies sufficient for
+the building of railways to the fertile lake regions. Count von
+Götzen (governor 1901-1906) adopted the policy of maintaining
+the authority of native rulers as far as possible, but as over the
+greater part of the colony the natives have no political organizations
+of any size, the chief burden of government rests on the
+German authorities. In August 1905 serious disturbances
+broke out among the Bantu tribes in the colony. The revolt
+was due largely to resentment against the restrictions enforced
+by the Germans in their efforts at civilization, including compulsory
+work on European plantations in certain districts.
+Moreover, it is stated that the Herero in rebellion in German
+South-west Africa sent word to the east coast natives to follow
+their example, an instance of the growing solidarity of the black
+races of Africa. Though the revolt spread over a very large
+area, the chief centre of disturbance was the region between
+Nyasa and the coast at Kilwa and Lindi. Besides a number of
+settlers a Roman Catholic bishop and a party of four missionaries
+and nuns were murdered in the Kilwa hinterland, while nearer
+Nyasa the warlike Wangoni held possession of the country.
+The Germans raised levies of Masai and Sudanese, and brought
+natives from New Guinea to help in suppressing the rising,
+besides sending naval and military contingents from Germany.
+In general, the natives, when encountered, were easily dispersed,
+but it was not until March 1906 that the coast regions were
+again quiet. In July following the Wangoni were beaten in a
+decisive engagement. It was officially stated that the death-roll
+for the whole war was not below 120,000 men, women and
+children. In 1907 a visit was paid to the colony by Herr B.
+Dernburg, the colonial secretary. As a result of this visit more
+humane methods in the treatment of the natives were introduced,
+and measures taken to develop more fully the economic resources
+of the country.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities</span>.&mdash;S. Passarge and others, <i>Das deutsche Kolonialreich</i>,
+Erster Band (Leipzig, 1909); P. Reichard, <i>Deutsch Ostafrika,
+das Land und seine Bewohner</i> (Leipzig, 1892); F. Stuhlmann, <i>Mit
+Emin Pasha im Herzen von Afrika</i> (Berlin, 1894); Brix Foerster,
+<i>Deutsch-Ostafrika; Geographie und Geschichte</i> (Leipzig, 1890); Oscar
+Baumann, In <i>Deutsch-Ostafrika während des Aufstands</i> (Vienna, 1890),
+<i>Usambara und seine Nachbargebiete</i> (Berlin, 1891), and <i>Durch
+Massailand zur Nilquelle</i> (Berlin, 1894). For special studies see P.
+Samassa, <i>Die Besiedelung Deutsch-Ostafrikas</i> (Leipzig, 1909); A.
+Engler, <i>Die Pflanzenwelt Ost-Afrikas und der Nachbargebiete</i> (Berlin,
+1895-1896) and other works by the same author; Stromer von
+Reichenbach, <i>Die Geologie der deutschen Schutzgebiete in Afrika</i>
+(Munich and Leipzig, 1896); W. Bornhardt, <i>Deutsch-Ostafrika</i>
+(Berlin, 1898); F. Fullerborn, <i>Beiträge zur physischen Anthropologie
+der Nord-Nyassaländer</i> (Berlin, 1902), a fine series of pictures of
+native types, and <i>Das Deutsche Nyassa- und Ruwuma-gebiet, Land
+und Leute</i> (Berlin, 1906); K. Weule, <i>Native Life in East Africa</i>
+(London, 1909); Hans Meyer, <i>Der Kilimandjaro</i> (Berlin, 1900) and
+<i>Die Eisenbahnen im tropischen Afrika</i> (Leipzig, 1902); J. Strandes,
+<i>Die Portugiesenzeit von Deutsch- u. Englisch-Ostafrika</i> (Berlin, 1899),
+a valuable monograph on the Portuguese period. See also British
+Official Reports on East Africa (specially No. 4221 ann. ser.), the
+German White Books and annual reports, the <i>Mitteilungen aus den
+deutschen Schutzgebiete</i>, and the <i>Deutsches Kolonialblatt</i>, published
+fortnightly at Berlin since 1890. The <i>Deutscher Kolonial-Atlas</i> has
+maps on the 1:1,000,000 scale.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(F. R. C.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN EVANGELICAL SYNOD OF NORTH AMERICA,<a name="ar61" id="ar61"></a></span>
+a Protestant church dating from October 1840, and known,
+in its early years, as the German Evangelical Association of the
+West. It was formed by six German ministers who had been
+ordained in Prussia and were engaged in missionary and pioneer
+work in Missouri and Illinois. The original organization was
+strengthened in 1858 by amalgamation with the German Evangelical
+Church Association of Ohio, and later by the inclusion of
+the German United Evangelical Synod of the East (1860), the
+Evangelical Synod of the North-West (1872) and the United
+Evangelical Synod of the East (1872). The church bases its
+position on the Bible as interpreted by the symbols of the
+Lutheran and Reformed churches so far as they are in agreement,
+points of difference being left to &ldquo;that liberty of conscience
+which, as a component part of the basis of man&rsquo;s ultimate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page775" id="page775"></a>775</span>
+responsibility to God himself, is the inalienable privilege of
+every believer.&rdquo; The church, which has (1909) 985 ministers
+and some 238,000 communicant members, is divided into seventeen
+districts, with officers responsible to the General Synod,
+which meets every four years. There are boards for home
+and foreign missions, the latter operating chiefly in the Central
+Provinces of India. The literature of the church is mainly in
+German, though English is rapidly gaining ground.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMANIC LAWS, EARLY.<a name="ar62" id="ar62"></a></span> Of those Germanic laws of
+the early middle ages which are known as <i>leges barbarorum</i>,
+we here deal with the principal examples other than Frankish,
+viz. (1) <i>Leges Wisigothorum</i>, (2) <i>Lex Burgundionum</i>, (3) <i>Pactus
+Alamannorum</i> and <i>Lex Alamannorum</i>, (4) <i>Lex Bajuvariorum</i>,
+(5) <i>Lex Saxonum</i>, (6) <i>Lex Frisionum</i>, (7) <i>Lex Angliorum et Werinorum,
+hoc est, Thuringorum</i>, and (8) <i>Leges Langobardorum</i>.
+All these laws may in general be described as codes of procedure
+and tariffs of compositions. They present somewhat similar
+features with the Salic law, but often differ from it in the date of
+compilation, the amount of fines, the number and nature of
+the crimes, the number, rank, duties and titles of the officers,
+&amp;c. For the Salic law and other Frankish laws, see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Salic Law</a></span>,
+and for the edict of Theodoric I., which was applicable to the
+Ostrogoths and Romans, see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Roman Law</a></span>.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>For the whole body of the Germanic laws see P. Canciani, <i>Barbarorum
+leges antiquae</i> (Venice, 1781-1789); F. Walter, <i>Corpus
+juris germanici antiqui</i> (Berlin, 1824); <i>Monumenta Germaniae
+historica, Leges</i>. For further information on the codes in general,
+see H.M. Zöpfl, <i>Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte</i> (4th ed., Heidelberg,
+1871-1876); J.E.O. Stobbe, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Rechtsquellen</i>
+(Brunswick, 1860-1864); Paul Viollet, <i>Histoire du droit civil français</i>
+(2nd ed., Paris, 1893); H. Brunner, <i>Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte</i>
+(2nd ed., Leipzig, 1906).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>1. <i>Leges Wisigothorum</i>.&mdash;Karl Zeumer&rsquo;s edition of these laws
+in the 4to series of the <i>Mon. Germ. Hist.</i> throws new light on all
+questions relating to their date and composition. It is now
+certain that the earliest written code of the Visigoths dates back
+to King Euric (466-485). Besides his own constitutions, Euric
+included in this collection constitutions of his predecessors,
+Theodoric I. (419-451), Thorismund (451-453), and Theodoric II.
+(453-466), and he arranged the whole in a logical order. Of
+this code fragments of chapters cclxxvi. to cccxxxvi.<a name="fa1h" id="fa1h" href="#ft1h"><span class="sp">1</span></a> have been
+discovered in a palimpsest MS. in the Bibliothčque Nationale
+at Paris (Latin coll., No. 12161), a fact which proves that the
+code ran over a large area. Euric&rsquo;s code was used for all cases
+between Goths, and between them and Romans; in cases
+between Romans, Roman law was used. At the instance of
+Euric&rsquo;s son, Alaric II., an examination was made of the Roman
+laws in use among Romans in his dominions, and the resulting
+compilation was approved in 506 at an assembly at Aire, in
+Gascony, and is known as the Breviary of Alaric, and sometimes
+as the <i>Liber Aniani</i>, from the fact that the authentic copies
+bear the signature of the <i>referendarius</i> Anian.</p>
+
+<p>Euric&rsquo;s code remained in force among the Visigoths of Spain
+until the reign of Leovigild (568-586), who made a new one,
+improving upon that of his predecessor. This work is lost, and
+we have no direct knowledge of any fragment of it. In the 3rd
+codification, however, many provisions have been taken from
+the 2nd, and these are designated by the word &ldquo;<i>antiqua</i>&rdquo;; by
+means of these &ldquo;<i>antiqua</i>&rdquo; we are enabled in a certain measure
+to reconstruct the work of Leovigild.</p>
+
+<p>After the reign of Leovigild the legislation of the Visigoths
+underwent a transformation. The new laws made by the kings
+were declared to be applicable to all the subjects in the kingdom,
+of whatever race&mdash;in other words, they became territorial;
+and this principle of territoriality was gradually extended to
+the ancient code. Moreover, the conversion of Reccared I.
+(586-601) to orthodoxy effaced the religious differences among
+his subjects, and all subjects, <i>qua</i> Christians, had to submit to
+the canons of the councils, which were made obligatory by the
+kings. After this change had been accepted, Recceswinth (649-672)
+made a new code, which was applicable to Visigoths and
+Romans alike. This code, known as the <i>Liber judiciorum</i>, is
+divided into 12 books, which are subdivided into <i>tituli</i> and
+chapters (<i>aerae</i>). It comprises 324 constitutions taken from
+Leovigild&rsquo;s collection, a few of the laws of Reccared and Sisebut,
+99 laws of Chindaswinth (642-653), and 87 of Recceswinth.
+A recension of this code of Recceswinth was made in 681 by
+King Erwig (680-687), and is known as the <i>Lex Wisigothorum
+renovata</i>; and, finally, some additamenta were made by Egica
+(687-702). In Zeumer&rsquo;s edition of the <i>Leges Wisigothorum</i> the
+versions of Recceswinth and Erwig, where they differ from each
+other, are shown in parallel columns, and the laws later than
+Erwig are denoted by the sign &ldquo;<i>nov</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>For further information see the preface to Zeumer&rsquo;s edition;
+H. Brunner, <i>Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte</i> (2nd ed., Leipzig, 1906);
+Ureńa y Smenyaud, <i>La Legislacion Gotico-hispana</i> (Madrid, 1905).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>2. <i>Lex Burgundionum</i>.&mdash;This code was compiled by King
+Gundobald (474-516), very probably after his defeat by Clovis
+in 500. Some additamenta were subsequently introduced either
+by Gundobald himself or by his son Sigismund. This law bears
+the title of <i>Liber Constitutionum</i>, which shows that it emanated
+from the king; it is also known as the <i>Lex Gundobada</i> or <i>Lex
+Gombata</i>. It was used for cases between Burgundians, but was
+also applicable to cases between Burgundians and Romans.
+For cases between Romans, however, Gundobald compiled the
+<i>Lex Romana Burgundionum</i>, called sometimes, through a misreading
+of the MSS., the <i>Liber Papiani</i> or simply <i>Papianus</i>.
+The barbarian law of the Burgundians shows strong traces of
+Roman influence. It recognizes the will and attaches great
+importance to written deeds, but on the other hand sanctions
+the judicial duel and the <i>cojuratores</i> (sworn witnesses). The
+vehement protest made in the 9th century by Agobard, bishop
+of Lyons, against the <i>Lex Gundobada</i> shows that it was still in
+use at that period. So late as the 10th and even the 11th
+centuries we find the law of the Burgundians invoked as personal
+law in Cluny charters, but doubtless these passages refer to
+accretions of local customs rather than to actual paragraphs
+of the ancient code.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The text of the <i>Lex Burgundionum</i> has been published by F.
+Bluhme in the <i>Mon. Germ. hist.</i>, <i>Leges</i>, iii. 525; by Karl Binding
+in the <i>Fontes rerum Bernensium</i> (vol. i., 1880); by J.E. Valentin
+Smith (Paris, 1889 seq.); and by von Salis (1892) in the 4to series
+of the <i>Mon. Germ. hist.</i> Cf. R. Dareste, &ldquo;La Loi Gombette,&rdquo; in the
+<i>Journal des savants</i> (July 1891).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>3. <i>Pactus Alamannorum</i> and <i>Lex Alamannorum</i>.&mdash;Of the
+laws of the Alamanni, who dwelt between the Rhine and the
+Lech, and spread over Alsace and what is now Switzerland to
+the south of Lake Constance, we possess two different texts.
+The earlier text, of which five short fragments have come down
+to us, is known as the <i>Pactus Alamannorum</i>, and from the persistent
+recurrence of the expression &ldquo;et sic convenit&rdquo; was most
+probably drawn up by an official commission. The reference to
+affranchisement <i>in ecclesia</i> shows that it was composed at a period
+subsequent to the conversion of the Alamanni to Christianity.
+There is no doubt that the text dates back to the reign of
+Dagobert I., <i>i.e.</i> to the first half of the 7th century. The later
+text, known as the <i>Lex Alamannorum</i>, dates from a period when
+Alamannia was independent under national dukes, but recognized
+the theoretical suzerainty of the Frankish kings. There seems
+no reason to doubt the St Gall MS., which states that the law
+had its origin in an agreement between the great Alamannic
+lords and Duke Landfrid, who ruled the duchy from 709 to 730.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The two texts have been published by J. Merkel in the <i>Mon.
+Germ. hist.</i>, <i>Leges</i>, iii., and by Karl Lehmann in the 4to series of
+the same collection.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>4. <i>Lex Bajuvariorum</i>.&mdash;We possess an important law of the
+Bavarians, whose duchy was situated in the region east of the
+Lech, and was an outpost of Germany against the Huns, known
+later as Avars. Parts of this law have been taken directly from
+the Visigothic law of Euric and from the law of the Alamanni.
+The Bavarian law, therefore, is later than that of the Alamanni.
+It dates unquestionably from a period when the Frankish
+authority was very strong in Bavaria, when the dukes were
+vassals of the Frankish kings. Immediately after the revolt of
+Bavaria in 743 the Bavarian duke Odilo was forced to submit
+to Pippin and Carloman, the sons of Charles Martel, and to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page776" id="page776"></a>776</span>
+recognize the Frankish suzerainty. About the same period, too,
+the church of Bavaria was organized by St Boniface, and the
+country divided into several bishoprics; and we find frequent
+references to these bishops (in the plural) in the law of the
+Bavarians. On the other hand, we know that the law is anterior
+to the reign of Duke Tassilo III. (749-788). The date of compilation
+must, therefore, be placed between 743 and 749.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>There is an edition of the <i>Lex Bajuvariorum</i> by J. Merkel in the
+<i>Mon. Germ. hist.</i>, <i>Leges</i>, iii. 183, and another was undertaken by
+E. von Schwind for the 4to series of the same collection. Cf. von
+Schwind&rsquo;s article in the <i>Neues Archiv</i>, vol. xxxi.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>5. <i>Lex Saxonum</i>.&mdash;Germany comprised two other duchies,
+Saxony and Frisia, of each of which we possess a text of law.
+The <i>Lex Saxonum</i> has come down to us in two MSS. and two old
+editions (those of B.J. Herold and du Tillet), and the text has
+been edited by Karl von Richthofen in the <i>Mon. Germ. hist.</i>,
+<i>Leges</i>, v. The law contains ancient customary enactments of
+Saxony, and, in the form in which it has reached us, is later than
+the conquest of Saxony by Charlemagne. It is preceded by two
+capitularies of Charlemagne for Saxony&mdash;the <i>Capitulatio de
+partibus Saxoniae</i> (A. Boretius i. 68), which dates undoubtedly
+from 782, and is characterized by great severity, death being the
+penalty for every offence against the Christian religion; and the
+<i>Capitulare Saxonicum</i> (A. Boretius i. 71), of the 28th of October
+797, in which Charlemagne shows less brutality and pronounces
+simple compositions for misdeeds which formerly entailed death.
+The <i>Lex Saxonum</i> apparently dates from 803, since it contains
+provisions which are in the <i>Capitulare legi Ribuariae additum</i>
+of that year. The law established the ancient customs, at the
+same time eliminating anything that was contrary to the spirit
+of Christianity; it proclaimed the peace of the churches, whose
+possessions it guaranteed and whose right of asylum it recognized.</p>
+
+<p>6. <i>Lex Frisionum</i>.&mdash;This consists of a medley of documents
+of the most heterogeneous character. Some of its enactments
+are purely pagan&mdash;thus one paragraph allows the mother to kill
+her new-born child, and another prescribes the immolation to
+the gods of the defiler of their temple; others are purely Christian,
+such as those which prohibit incestuous marriages and working
+on Sunday. The law abounds in contradictions and repetitions,
+and the compositions are calculated in different moneys. From
+this it would appear that the documents were merely materials
+collected from various sources and possibly with a view to the
+compilation of a homogeneous law. These materials were apparently
+brought together at the beginning of the 9th century, at a
+time of intense legislative activity at the court of Charlemagne.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>There are no MSS. of the document extant; our knowledge of it
+is based upon B.J. Herold&rsquo;s edition (<i>Originum ac Germanicarum
+antiquitatum libri</i>, Basel, 1557), which has been reproduced by
+Karl von Richthofen in the <i>Mon. Germ. hist.</i>, <i>Leges</i>, iii. 631.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>7. <i>Lex Angliorum el Werinorum, hoc est, Thuringorum</i>.&mdash;In
+early times there dwelt in Thuringia, south of the river Unstrut,
+the Angli, who gave their name to the <i>pagus Engili</i>, and to the
+east, between the Saale and the Elster, the Warni (Werini, or
+Varini), whose name is seen in Werenofeld. In the 9th century,
+however, this region (then called Werenofeld) was occupied by
+the Sorabi, and the Warni and Angli either coalesced with the
+Thuringi or sought an asylum in the north of Germany. A
+collection of laws has come down to us bearing the name of
+these two peoples, the <i>Lex Angliorum et Werinorum, hoc est,
+Thuringorum</i>. This text is a collection of local customs arranged
+in the same order as the law of the Ripuarians. Parts of it are
+based on the <i>Capitulare legi Ribuariae additum</i> of 803, and it
+seems to have been drawn up in the same conditions and circumstances
+as the law of the Saxons. There is an edition of this code
+by Karl von Richthofen in the <i>Mon. Germ. hist.</i>, <i>Leges</i>, v. 103.
+The old opinion that the law originated in south Holland is
+entirely without foundation.</p>
+
+<p>8. <i>Leges Langobardorum</i>.&mdash;We possess a fair amount of
+information on the origin of the last barbarian code, the laws
+of the Lombards. The first part, consisting of 388 chapters,
+is known as the <i>Edictus Langobardorum</i>, and was promulgated
+by King Rothar at a diet held at Pavia on the 22nd of November
+643. This work, composed at one time and arranged on a
+systematic plan, is very remarkable. The compilers knew Roman
+law, but drew upon it only for their method of presentation and
+for their terminology; and the document presents Germanic law
+in its purity. Rothar&rsquo;s edict was augmented by his successors;
+Grimoald (668) added nine chapters; Liutprand (713-735),
+fifteen volumes, containing a great number of ecclesiastical
+enactments; Ratchis (746), eight chapters; and Aistulf (755),
+thirteen chapters. After the union of the Lombards to the
+Frankish kingdom, the capitularies made for the entire kingdom
+were applicable to Italy. There were also special capitularies
+for Italy, called <i>Capitula Italica</i>, some of which were appended
+to the edict of Rothar.</p>
+
+<p>At an early date compilations were formed in Italy for the use
+of legal practitioners and jurists. Eberhard, duke and margrave
+of Rhaetia and Friuli, arranged the contents of the edict with its
+successive additamenta into a <i>Concordia de singulis causis</i>
+(829-832). In the 10th century a collection was made of the
+capitularies in use in Italy, and this was known as the <i>Capitulare
+Langobardorum</i>. Then appeared, under the influence of the
+school of law at Pavia, the <i>Liber legis Langobardorum</i>, also
+called <i>Liber Papiensis</i> (beginning of 11th century), and the
+<i>Lombarda</i> (end of 11th century) in two forms&mdash;that given in a
+Monte Cassino MS. and known as the <i>Lombarda Casinensis</i>, and
+the <i>Lombarda Vulgata</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>There are editions of the <i>Edictus</i>, the <i>Concordia</i>, and the <i>Liber
+Papiensis</i> by F. Bluhme and A. Boretius in the <i>Mon. Germ. hist.,
+Leges</i>, iv. Bluhme also gives the rubrics of the <i>Lombardae</i>, which
+were published by F. Lindenberg in his <i>Codex legum antiquarum</i> in
+1613. For further information on the laws of the Lombards see
+J. Merkel, <i>Geschichte des Langobardenrechts</i> (1850); A. Boretius,
+<i>Die Kapitularien im Langobardenreich</i> (1864); and C. Kier, <i>Edictus
+Rotari</i> (Copenhagen, 1898). Cf. R. Dareste in the <i>Nouvelle Revue
+historique de droit français et étranger</i> (1900, p. 143).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(C. Pf.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1h" id="ft1h" href="#fa1h"><span class="fn">1</span></a> The lacunae in these fragments have been filled in by the aid of
+the law of the Bavarians, where the chief provisions are reproduced.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMANICUS CAESAR<a name="ar63" id="ar63"></a></span> (15 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>-<span class="scs">A.D.</span> 19), a Roman general
+and provincial governor in the reign of Tiberius. The name
+Germanicus, the only one by which he is known in history, he
+inherited from his father, Nero Claudius Drusus, the famous
+general, brother of Tiberius and stepson of Augustus. His mother
+was the younger Antonia, daughter of Marcus Antonius and
+niece of Augustus, and he married Agrippina, the granddaughter
+of the same emperor. It was natural, therefore, that he should
+be regarded as a candidate for the purple. Augustus, it would
+seem, long hesitated whether he should name him as his successor,
+and as a compromise required his uncle Tiberius to adopt him,
+though Tiberius had a son of his own. Of his early years and
+education little is known. That he possessed considerable
+literary abilities, and that these were carefully trained, we gather,
+both from the speeches which Tacitus puts into his mouth, and
+from the reputation he left as an orator, as attested by Suetonius
+and Ovid, and from the extant fragments of his works.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of twenty he served his apprenticeship as a soldier
+under Tiberius, and was rewarded with the triumphal insignia
+for his services in crushing the revolt in Dalmatia and Pannonia.
+In <span class="scs">A.D.</span> 11 he accompanied Tiberius in his campaign on the Rhine,
+undertaken, in consequence of the defeat of Varus, with the
+object of securing the German frontier. In 12 he was made
+consul, and increased his popularity by appearing as an advocate
+in the courts of justice, and by the celebration of brilliant games.
+Soon afterwards he was appointed by Augustus to the important
+command of the eight legions on the Rhine. The news of the
+emperor&rsquo;s death (14) found Germanicus at Lugdunum (Lyons),
+where he was superintending the census of Gaul. Close upon this
+came the report that a mutiny had broken out among his legions
+on the lower Rhine. Germanicus hurried back to the camp,
+which was now in open insurrection. The tumult was with
+difficulty quelled, partly by well-timed concessions, for which
+the authority of the emperor was forged, but chiefly owing to
+his personal popularity. Some of the insurgents actually
+proposed that he should put himself at their head and secure
+the empire for himself, but their offer was rejected with indignation.
+In order to calm the excitement Germanicus determined
+at once on an active campaign. Crossing the Rhine, he attacked
+and routed the Marsi, and laid waste the valley of the Ems.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page777" id="page777"></a>777</span>
+In the following year he marched against Arminius, the conqueror
+of Varus, and performed the last rites over the remains of the
+Roman soldiers that still lay there unburied, erecting a barrow
+to mark the spot. Arminius, however, favoured by the marshy
+ground, was able to hold his own, and it required another
+campaign before he was finally defeated. A masterly combined
+movement by land and water enabled Germanicus to concentrate
+his forces against the main body of the Germans encamped on
+the Weser, and to crush them in two obstinately contested battles.
+A monument erected on the field proclaimed that the army of
+Tiberius had conquered every tribe between the Rhine and the
+Elbe. Great, however, as the success of the Roman arms had
+been, it was not such as to justify this boastful inscription; we
+read of renewed attacks from the barbarians, and plans of a
+fourth campaign for the next summer.</p>
+
+<p>But the success of Germanicus had already stirred the jealousy
+and fears of Tiberius, and he was reluctantly compelled to return
+to Rome. On the 26th of May 17 he celebrated a triumph.
+The enthusiasm with which he was welcomed, not only by the
+populace, but by the emperor&rsquo;s own praetorians, was so great
+that the earliest pretext was seized to remove him from the capital.
+He was sent to the East with extraordinary powers to settle a
+disputed succession in Parthia and Armenia. At the same time
+Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso, one of the most violent and ambitious
+of the old nobility, was sent as governor of Syria to watch his
+movements. Germanicus proceeded by easy stages to his
+province, halting on his way in Dalmatia, and visiting the battlefield
+of Actium, Athens, Ilium, and other places of historic interest.
+At Rhodes he met his coadjutor Piso, who was seeking everywhere
+to thwart and malign him. When at last he reached his destination,
+he found little difficulty in effecting the settlement of the
+disturbed provinces, notwithstanding Piso&rsquo;s violent and persistent
+opposition. At Artaxata Zeno, the popular candidate for the
+throne, was crowned king of Armenia. To the provinces of
+Cappadocia and Commagene Roman governors were assigned;
+Parthia was conciliated by the banishment of the dethroned
+king Vonones.</p>
+
+<p>After wintering in Syria Germanicus started for a tour in
+Egypt. The chief motive for his journey was love of travel and
+antiquarian study, and it seems never to have occurred to him,
+till he was warned by Tiberius, that he was thereby transgressing
+an unwritten law which forbade any Roman of rank to set foot
+in Egypt without express permission. On his return to Syria
+he found that all his arrangements had been upset by Piso.
+Violent recriminations followed, the result of which, it would
+seem, was a promise on the part of Piso to quit the province.
+But at this juncture Germanicus was suddenly attacked at
+Epidaphne near Antioch by a violent illness, which he himself
+and his friends attributed to poison administered by Plancina,
+the wife of Piso, at the instigation of Tiberius. Whether these
+suspicions were true is open to question; it seems more probable
+that his death was due to natural causes. His ashes were brought
+to Rome in the following year (20) by his wife Agrippina, and
+deposited in the grave of Augustus. He had nine children,
+six of whom, three sons and three daughters, survived him,
+amongst them the future emperor Gaius and the notorious
+Agrippina, the mother of Nero. The news of his death cast a
+gloom over the whole empire. Nor was Germanicus unworthy
+of this passionate devotion. He had wiped out a great national
+disgrace; he had quelled the most formidable foe of Rome.
+His private life had been stainless, and he possessed a singularly
+attractive personality. Yet there were elements of weakness
+in his character which his short life only half revealed: an
+impetuosity which made him twice threaten to take his own
+life; a superstitious vein which impelled him to consult oracles
+and shrink from bad omens; an amiable dilettantism which led
+him to travel in Egypt while his enemy was plotting his ruin;
+a want of nerve and resolution which prevented him from coming
+to an open rupture with Piso till it was too late.</p>
+
+<p>He possessed considerable literary abilities; his speeches and
+Greek comedies were highly spoken of by his contemporaries.
+But the only specimen of his work that has come down to us is
+the translation in Latin hexameters (generally attributed to
+him, although some consider Domitian the author), together with
+scholia, of the <i>Phaenomena</i> of Aratus, which is superior to those
+of Cicero and Avienus (best edition by A. Breysig, 1867; 1899,
+without the scholia). A few extant Greek and Latin epigrams
+also bear the name Germanicus.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>In addition to monographs by A. Zingerle (Trent, 1867) and
+A. Breysig (Erfurt, 1892), there are treatises on the German campaigns
+by E. von Wietersheim (1850), P. Höfer (1884), F. Knoke
+(1887, 1889), W. Fricke (1889), A. Taramelli (1891), Dahm (1902).</p>
+
+<p>See Tacitus, <i>Annals</i>, i.-iv. (ed. Furneaux); Suetonius, <i>Augustus,
+Tiberius</i>; J.C. Tarver, <i>Tiberius</i> (1902); Merivale, <i>Hist. of the Romans
+under the Empire</i>, chs. 42, 43; H. Schiller, <i>Geschichte der römischen
+Kaiserzeit</i>, i. 1 (1883), pp. 227, 258, 261-266, 270-276; M. Schanz,
+<i>Geschichte der römischen Litteratur</i>, pt. ii. (2nd ed., 1901), and Teuffel-Schwabe,
+<i>Hist. of Roman Literature</i> (Eng. tr., 1900), 275.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMANIUM<a name="ar64" id="ar64"></a></span> (symbol Ge, atomic weight 72.5); one of the
+metallic elements included in the same natural family as carbon,
+silicon, tin and lead. It was discovered in 1886 by C. Winkler
+in argyrodite, a mineral found at Freiberg in Saxony. On examination
+of the metal and its salts it was shown to be identical
+with the hypothetical element <i>ekasilicon</i>, whose properties
+had been predicted by D. Mendeléeff many years previously.
+The element is of extremely rare occurrence, being met with
+only in argyrodite and, to a very small extent, in euxenite. It
+may be obtained from argyrodite by heating the mineral in a
+current of hydrogen; or by heating the dioxide to redness with
+carbon. It forms grey coloured octahedra of specific gravity
+5.496 at 20° C., melting at 900° C.; it burns at a red heat, is
+insoluble in hydrochloric acid, but dissolves in <i>aqua regia</i>, and
+is also soluble in molten alkalis. Two oxides of germanium
+are known, the <i>dioxide</i>, GeO<span class="su">2</span>, being obtained by roasting the
+sulphide and treatment with nitric acid. It is a white powder,
+very slightly soluble in water, and possesses acid properties.
+By heating with a small quantity of magnesium it is converted
+into <i>germanious oxide</i>, GeO. By heating the metal with chlorine,
+<i>germanic chloride</i>, GeCl<span class="su">4</span>, is obtained as a colourless fuming
+liquid boiling at 86-87° C., it is decomposed by water forming
+a hydrated germanium dioxide. <i>Germanium dichloride</i>, GeCl<span class="su">2</span>,
+and <i>germanium chloroform</i>, GeHCl<span class="su">3</span>, have also been described.</p>
+
+<p>Germanium compounds on fusion with alkaline carbonates
+and sulphur form salts known as <i>thiogermanates</i>. If excess of
+a mineral acid be added to a solution of an alkaline thiogermanate
+a white precipitate of <i>germanium disulphide</i>, GeS<span class="su">2</span>, is obtained.
+It can also be obtained by passing sulphuretted hydrogen through
+a solution of the dioxide in hydrochloric acid. It is appreciably
+soluble in water, and also in solutions of the caustic alkalis and
+alkaline sulphides. By heating the disulphide in a current of
+hydrogen, <i>germanious sulphide</i>, GeS, is formed. It sublimes in
+thin plates of a dark colour and metallic lustre, and is soluble
+in solutions of the caustic alkalis. Alkyl compounds of germanium
+such as <i>germanium tetra-ethyl</i>, Ge(C<span class="su">2</span>H<span class="su">5</span>)<span class="su">4</span>, a liquid boiling
+at 160° C., have been obtained. The germanium salts are
+most readily recognized by the white precipitate of the disulphide,
+formed in acid solutions, on passing sulphuretted hydrogen.
+The atomic weight of the element was determined by C. Winkler
+by analysis of the pure chloride GeCl<span class="su">4</span>, the value obtained being
+72.32, whilst Lecoq de Boisbaudran (<i>Comptes rendus</i>, 1886, 103,
+452), by a comparison of the lines in the spark spectrum of
+the element, deduced the value 72.3.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN LANGUAGE.<a name="ar65" id="ar65"></a></span> Together with English and Frisian,
+the German language forms part of the West Germanic group
+of languages. To this group belongs also Langobardian, a
+dialect which died out in the 9th or 10th century, while Burgundian,
+traces of which are not met with later than the 5th century,
+is usually classed with the East Germanic group. Both these
+tongues were at an early stage crushed out by Romance dialects,
+a fate which also overtook the idiom of the Western Franks,
+who, in the so-called <i>Strassburg Oaths</i><a name="fa1i" id="fa1i" href="#ft1i"><span class="sp">1</span></a> of 842, use the
+Romance tongue, and are addressed in that tongue by Louis
+the German.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving English and Frisian aside, we understand by <i>Deutsche</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page778" id="page778"></a>778</span>
+<i>Sprache</i> the language of those West Germanic tribes, who,
+at their earliest appearance in history, spoke a Germanic tongue,
+and still speak it at the present day. The chief of these tribes
+are: the Saxons, the Franks (but with the restriction noted
+above), the Chatti (Hessians), Thuringians, Alemannians and
+Bavarians. This definition naturally includes the languages
+spoken in the Low Countries, Flemish and Dutch, which are
+offsprings of the Low Franconian dialect, mixed with Frisian
+and Saxon elements; but, as the literary development of these
+languages has been in its later stages entirely independent of
+that of the German language, they are excluded from the present
+survey.</p>
+
+<p>The German language, which is spoken by about seventy-one
+millions, and consequently occupies in this respect the third
+place among European languages, borders, in the west and south,
+on Romance languages (French, Italian), and also to some
+extent on Slavonic. On Italian and Slovenian territory there
+are several German-speaking &ldquo;islands,&rdquo; notably the Sette and
+Tredici Communi, east and north-east of the Lake of Garda,
+and the &ldquo;Gottschee Ländchen&rdquo; to the south of Laibach. The
+former of these is, however, on the point of dying out. Neighbours
+on the east, where the boundary line runs by no means as straight
+as on the west or south, are the Magyars and again Slavonic
+races. Here, too, there are numerous &ldquo;islands&rdquo; on Hungarian
+and Slavonic territory. Danes and Frisians join hands with
+the Germans in the north.<a name="fa2i" id="fa2i" href="#ft2i"><span class="sp">2</span></a></p>
+
+<p>In the west and south the German language has, compared
+with its status in earlier periods, undoubtedly lost ground,
+having been encroached upon by Romance tongues. This is
+the case in French Flanders, in Alsace and Lorraine, at any
+rate before the war of 1870, in the valleys south of Monte Rosa
+and in southern Tirol; in Styria and Carinthia the encroachment
+is less marked, but quite perceptible. On the east, on the other
+hand, German steadily spread from the days of Charles the
+Great down to recent times, when it has again lost considerable
+ground in Bohemia, Moravia and Livonia. At the time of
+Charles the Great the eastern frontier extended very little beyond
+the lower Elbe, following this river beyond Magdeburg, whence
+it passed over to the Saale, the Bohemian forest and the river
+Enns (cf. the map in F. Dahn, <i>Urgeschichte der germanischen
+und romanischen Völker</i>, vol. iii.). Partly as a result of victories
+gained by the Germans over the Avars and Slavs, partly owing to
+peaceful colonization, the eastern boundary was pushed forward
+in subsequent centuries; Bohemia was in this way won for the
+German tongue by German colonists in the 13th century, Silesia
+even a little earlier; in Livonia German gained the upper hand
+during the 13th century, while about the same time the country
+of the Prussians was conquered and colonized by the knights
+of the Teutonic order. The dialect which these colonists and
+knights introduced bore the Middle German character; and this,
+in various modifications, combined with Low German and even
+Dutch elements, formed the German spoken in these newly-won
+territories. In the north (Schleswig), where at the time of
+Charles the Great the river Eider formed the linguistic boundary,
+German has gained and is still gaining on Danish.</p>
+
+<p>Before considering the development of the language spoken
+within these boundaries, a word of explanation is perhaps
+necessary with regard to the word <i>deutsch</i>. As applied to the
+language, <i>deutsch</i> first appears in the Latin form <i>theotiscus</i>,
+<i>lingua theotisca</i>, <i>teutisca</i>, in certain Latin writings of the 8th and
+9th centuries, whereas the original Old High German word
+<i>thiudisc</i>, <i>tiutisc</i> (from <i>thiot</i>, <i>diot</i>, &ldquo;people,&rdquo; and the suffix <i>-isc</i>)
+signified only &ldquo;appertaining to the people,&rdquo; &ldquo;in the manner
+of the people.&rdquo; Cf. also Gothic <i>ţiudisko</i> as a translation of <span class="grk" title="ethnikôs">&#7952;&#952;&#957;&#953;&#954;&#8182;&#962;</span>
+(Gal. ii. 14). It, therefore, seems probable that if the application
+of the word to the language (<i>lingua theotisca</i>) was not exactly
+an invention of Latin authors of German nationality, its use
+in this sense was at least encouraged by them in order to
+distinguish their own vernacular (<i>lingua vulgaris</i>) from Latin as
+well as from the <i>lingua romana</i>.<a name="fa3i" id="fa3i" href="#ft3i"><span class="sp">3</span></a></p>
+
+<p>In the 8th and 9th centuries German or &ldquo;Deutsch&rdquo; first
+appears as a written language in the dialects of Old High German
+and Old Low German. Of an &ldquo;Urdeutsch&rdquo; or primitive
+German, <i>i.e.</i> the common language from which these sharply
+distinguished dialects of the earliest historical period must have
+developed, we have no record; we can only infer its character&mdash;and
+it was itself certainly not free from dialectic variations&mdash;by
+a study of the above-named and other Germanic dialects.
+It is usual to divide the history of the German language from
+this earliest period, when it appears only in the form of proper
+names and isolated words as glosses to a Latin text, down to
+the present day, into three great sections: (1) Old High German
+(<i>Althochdeutsch</i>) and Old Low German (Old Saxon; <i>Altniederdeutsch</i>,
+<i>Altsächsisch</i>); (2) Middle High German (<i>Mittelhochdeutsch</i>)
+and Middle Low German (Mittelniederdeutsch); and
+(3) Modern High German and Modern Low German (<i>Neuhochdeutsch</i>
+and <i>Neuniederdeutsch</i>). It is more difficult to determine
+the duration of the different periods, for it is obvious that the
+transition from one stage of a language to another takes place
+slowly and gradually.</p>
+
+<p>The first or Old High German period is commonly regarded
+as extending to about the year 1100. The principal characteristic
+of the change from Old High German to Middle High German
+is the weakening of the unaccented vowels in final syllables
+(cf. O.H.G. <i>tag&#257;</i>, <i>gesti</i>, <i>geban</i>, <i>g&#257;bum</i> and M.H.G. <i>tage</i>, <i>geste</i>,
+<i>geben</i>, <i>g&#257;ben</i>). But it must be remembered that this process
+began tentatively as early as the 10th century in Low German,
+and also that long, unaccented vowels are preserved in the
+Alemannic dialect as late as the 14th century and even later.
+Opinion is more at variance with regard to the division between
+the second and third periods. Some would date Modern High
+German from the time of Luther, that is to say, from about
+1500. But it must be noted that certain characteristics attributed
+to the Modern German vowel system, such as lengthening of
+Middle High German short vowels, the change from Middle
+High German <i>&#299;</i>, <i>&#363;</i>, <i>iu</i> to Modern High German <i>ei</i>, <i>au</i>, <i>eu</i> (<i>öu</i>),
+of Middle High German <i>ie</i>, <i>uo</i>, <i>üe</i> to Modern High German
+<i>&#299;</i>, <i>&#363;</i>, <i><span class="ov">ü</span></i>, made their appearance long before 1500. Taking this
+fact into consideration, others distinguish a period of classical
+Middle High German extending to about 1250, and a period
+of transition (sometimes called <i>Frühneuhochdeutsch</i>, or Early
+Modern High German) from 1250 to 1650. The principal
+characteristics of Modern High German would then consist in
+a greater stability of the grammatical and syntactical rules, due
+to the efforts of earlier grammarians, such as Schottelius,
+Gottsched and others, and the substitution of a single vowel
+sound for the varying vowels of the singular and plural of the
+preterite of strong verbs (cf. Middle High German <i>schreib</i>,
+<i>schriben</i>, and Modern High German <i>schrieb</i>, <i>schrieben</i>, &amp;c.).
+The much debated question of the origins of Modern High German
+has been recently reopened by O. Behaghel (<i>Geschichte der
+deutschen Sprache, l.c.</i> 661), who hopes that a more satisfactory
+solution may be arrived at by the study of certain syntactical
+peculiarities to be seen in the dialects of more recent
+periods.</p>
+
+<p>As the middle ages did not produce a German <i>Schriftsprache</i>
+or literary language in the modern sense of the word, which&mdash;as
+is undoubtedly the case in Modern German&mdash;might have
+influenced the spoken language (<i>Umgangssprache</i>), the history
+of the language in its earlier stages is a history of different
+dialects. These dialects will, therefore, claim our attention at
+some length.</p>
+
+<p>It may be assumed that the languages of the different West
+Germanic tribes enumerated above were, before the appearance
+of the tribes in history, distinguished by many dialectic variations;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page779" id="page779"></a>779</span>
+this was certainly the case immediately after the Migrations,
+when the various races began to settle down. But these differences,
+consisting presumably in matters of phonology and
+vocabulary, were nowhere so pronounced as to exclude a mutual
+understanding of individuals belonging to different tribes.
+One might compare the case of the Poles and Czechs of the
+present day. During the 6th century, however, a phonological
+process set in, which ultimately resulted in the separation of
+Germany into two great linguistic divisions, south and north,
+or, as the languages are called, High and Low German. This
+fundamental change, which is known as the second or High
+German Soundshifting (<i>Lautverschiebung</i>), spread northward
+from the mountainous districts in the south, and, whatever its
+cause may have been,<a name="fa4i" id="fa4i" href="#ft4i"><span class="sp">4</span></a> left behind it clear and easily recognizable
+effects on the Germanic voiced stop <i>d</i>, which became changed
+to <i>t</i>, and more especially on the voiceless stops <i>t</i>, <i>p</i> and <i>k</i>.
+Dialects which have shifted initial <i>t</i> and <i>tt</i> in the middle of a
+word to the affricate <i>tz</i> (written <i>z</i>, <i>tz</i>) and <i>p</i> and <i>k</i> in corresponding
+positions to the affricates <i>pf</i> and <i>k</i>&chi; (written <i>ch</i>), further, <i>t</i>, <i>p</i> and
+<i>k</i> in the middle of words between vowels, to the double spirant
+<i>zz</i> (now written <i>ss</i>, <i>sz</i>), <i>ff</i>, <i>hh</i> (written <i>ch</i>), are called High German;
+those in which these changes have not taken place form the
+Low German group, this group agreeing in this respect with
+English and Frisian.</p>
+
+<p>Of these sound changes, that of <i>t</i> to <i>tz</i> and <i>zz</i> (<i>ss</i>) is the most
+universal, extending over the whole region in which shifting
+occurs; that of <i>k</i> to <i>k</i>&chi; (<i>ch</i>), the most restricted, being only found
+in Old Bavarian, and in the Swiss pronunciation, <i>e.g.</i> in <i>chind</i>.
+The remaining dialects occupy positions between the two
+extremes of complete shifting and the absence of shifting. Some
+Franconian dialects, for instance, leave <i>p</i> unchanged under
+certain conditions, and in one dialect at least, Middle Franconian,
+<i>t</i> has remained after vowels in certain pronominal forms (<i>dat</i>,
+<i>wat</i>, <i>allet</i>, &amp;c.). On this ground a subdivision has been made in
+the High German dialects into (<i>a</i>) an Upper German (<i>Oberdeutsch</i>)
+and (<i>b</i>) a Middle German (<i>Mitteldeutsch</i>) group; and this subdivision
+practically holds good for all periods of the language,
+although in Old High German times the Middle German group
+is only represented, as far as the written language is concerned,
+by Franconian dialects.</p>
+
+<p>As the scientific study of the German language advanced
+there arose a keen revival of interest&mdash;and that not merely on the
+part of scholars&mdash;in the dialects which were so long held in contempt
+as a mere corruption of the <i>Schriftsprache</i>.<a name="fa5i" id="fa5i" href="#ft5i"><span class="sp">5</span></a> We are still in
+the midst of a movement which, under the guidance of scholars,
+has, during the last three decades, bestowed great care on many
+of the existing dialects; phonological questions have received
+most attention, but problems of syntax have also not been
+neglected. Monumental works like Wenker&rsquo;s <i>Sprachatlas des
+deutschen Reiches</i> and dialect dictionaries are either in course
+of publication or preparing;<a name="fa6i" id="fa6i" href="#ft6i"><span class="sp">6</span></a> while the difficult questions
+concerned with defining the boundaries of the various dialects
+and explaining the reasons for them form the subject of many
+monographs.<a name="fa7i" id="fa7i" href="#ft7i"><span class="sp">7</span></a></p>
+
+<p>Beginning in the north we shall now pass briefly in review the
+dialects spoken throughout the German-speaking area.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p class="pt2 center sc">A. The Low German Dialects</p>
+
+<p>The Low German dialects, as we have seen, stand nearest to the
+English and Frisian languages, owing to the total absence of the
+consonantal shifting which characterizes High German, as well as
+to other peculiarities of sounds and inflections, <i>e.g.</i> the loss of the
+nasals <i>m</i> and <i>n</i> before the spirants <i>f</i>, <i>s</i> and <i>p</i>. Cf. Old Saxon <i>fif</i> (five),
+<i>us</i> (us), <i>kup</i> (cf. uncouth). The boundary-line between Low and
+High German, the so-called <i>Benrather Linie</i>, may roughly be
+indicated by the following place-names, on the understanding,
+however, that the Ripuarian dialect (see below) is to be classed
+with High German: Montjoie (French border-town), Eupen,
+Aachen, Benrath, Düsseldorf, north of Siegen, Cassel, Heiligenstadt,
+Harzgerode, to the Elbe south of Magdeburg; this river forms the
+boundary as far as Wittenberg, whence the line passes to Lübben on
+the Spree, Fürstenwald on the Oder and Birnbaum near the river
+Warthe. Beyond this point the Low Germans have Slavs as their
+neighbours. Compared with the conditions in the 13th century,
+it appears that Low German has lost ground; down to the 14th
+and 15th centuries several towns, such as Mansfeld, Eisleben,
+Merseburg, Halle, Dessau and Wittenberg, spoke Low German.</p>
+
+<p>Low German falls into two divisions, a western division, namely,
+Low Franconian, the parent, as we have already said, of Flemish and
+Dutch, and an eastern division, Low Saxon (<i>Plattdeutsch</i>, or, as it
+is often simply called, Low German). The chief characteristic of
+the division is to be sought in the ending of the first and third person
+plural of the present indicative of verbs, this being in the former case
+<i>-en</i>, in the latter <i>-et</i>. Inasmuch as the south-eastern part of Low
+Franconian&mdash;inclusive of Gelderland and Cleves&mdash;shifts final <i>k</i> to
+<i>ch</i> (<i>e.g.</i> <i>ich</i>, <i>mich</i>, <i>auch</i>, <i>-lich</i>), it must obviously be separated from
+the rest, and in this respect be grouped with High German. Low
+Saxon is usually divided into Westphalian (to the west of the Weser)
+and Low Saxon proper, between Weser and Elbe. The south-eastern
+part of the latter has the verbal ending <i>-en</i> and further shows
+the peculiarity that the personal pronoun has the same form in the
+dative and accusative (<i>mik</i>, <i>dick</i>), whereas the remainder, as well
+as the Westphalian, has <i>mi</i>, <i>di</i> in the dative, and <i>mi</i>, <i>di</i> or <i>mik</i>, <i>dik</i>
+in the accusative. To these Low German dialects must also be
+added those spoken east of the Elbe on what was originally Slavonic
+territory; they have the ending <i>-en</i> in the first and third person plural
+of verbs.<a name="fa8i" id="fa8i" href="#ft8i"><span class="sp">8</span></a></p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">B. The High German Dialects</p>
+
+<p>1. <i>The Middle German Group.</i>&mdash;This group, which comprises the
+dialects of the Middle Rhine, of Hesse, Thuringia, Upper Saxony
+(Meissen), Silesia and East Prussia to the east of the lower Vistula
+between Bischofswerder, Marienburg, Elbing, Wormditt and
+Wartenberg&mdash;a district originally colonized from Silesia&mdash;may be
+most conveniently divided into an East and a West Middle German
+group. A common characteristic of all these dialects is the diminutive
+suffix <i>-chen</i>, as compared with the Low German form <i>-ken</i> and
+the Upper German <i>-lein</i> (O.H.G. <i>l&#299;n</i>). East Middle German consists
+of Silesian, Upper Saxon and Thuringian,<a name="fa9i" id="fa9i" href="#ft9i"><span class="sp">9</span></a> together with the linguistic
+colony in East Prussia. While these dialects have shifted
+initial Germanic <i>p</i> to <i>ph</i>, or even to <i>f</i> (<i>fert</i> = <i>Pferd</i>), the West Middle
+German dialects (roughly speaking to the west of the watershed of
+Werra and Fulda) have retained it. If, following a convincing
+article in the <i>Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum</i> (37, 288 ff.) by F.
+Wrede, we class East and South Franconian&mdash;both together may
+be called High Franconian&mdash;with the Upper German dialects, there
+only remain in the West Middle German group:<a name="fa10i" id="fa10i" href="#ft10i"><span class="sp">10</span></a> (<i>a</i>) Middle
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page780" id="page780"></a>780</span>
+Franconian and (<i>b</i>) Rhenish Franconian. The former of these,<a name="fa11i" id="fa11i" href="#ft11i"><span class="sp">11</span></a> which
+with its <i>dat</i>, <i>wat</i>, <i>allet</i>, &amp;c. (cf. above) and its retention of the voiced
+spirant <i>b</i> (written <i>v</i>) represents a kind of transition dialect to Low
+German, is itself divided into (&alpha;) Ripuarian or Low Rhenish with
+Cologne and Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) as centres, and (&beta;) Moselle
+Franconian<a name="fa12i" id="fa12i" href="#ft12i"><span class="sp">12</span></a> with Trier (Treves) as principal town. The latter is
+distinguished by the fact that in the Middle High German period
+it shifts Germanic <i>-rp-</i> and <i>-rd-</i>, which are retained in (<i>a</i>), to <i>-rf-</i> and
+<i>-rt-</i> (cf. <i>werfen</i>, <i>hirtin</i> with <i>werpen</i>, <i>hirdin</i>).<a name="fa13i" id="fa13i" href="#ft13i"><span class="sp">13</span></a> The Rhenish Franconian
+dialect is spoken in the Rhenish palatinate, in the northern part of
+Baden (Heidelberg), Hesse<a name="fa14i" id="fa14i" href="#ft14i"><span class="sp">14</span></a> and Nassau, and in the German-speaking
+part of Lorraine. A line drawn from Falkenberg at the
+French frontier to Siegen on the Lahn, touching the Rhine near
+Boppard, roughly indicates the division between Middle and Rhenish
+Franconian.</p>
+
+<p>2. <i>The Upper German Group.</i>&mdash;The Upper German dialects,
+which played the most important part in the literature of the early
+periods, may be divided into (<i>a</i>) a Bavarian-Austrian group and (<i>b</i>)
+a High Franconian-Alemannic group. Of all the German dialects
+the Bavarian-Austrian has carried the soundshifting to its furthest
+extreme; here only do we find the labial voiced stop <i>b</i> written <i>p</i>
+in the middle of a word, viz. old Bavarian <i>k&#257;pam&#275;s</i>, old Alemannic
+<i>k&#257;bam&#275;s</i> (&ldquo;we gave&rdquo;); here too, in the 12th century, we find the
+first traces of that broadening of <i>&#299;</i>, <i>&#363;</i>, <i>iu</i> (<i>ü</i>) to <i>ei</i>, <i>au</i>, <i>eu</i>, a change
+which, even at the present day, is still foreign to the greater part of
+the Alemannic dialects. Only in Bavarian do we still find the old
+pronominal dual forms <i>es</i> and <i>enk</i> (for <i>ihr</i> and <i>euch</i>). Finally,
+Bavarian forms diminutives in <i>-el</i> and <i>-erl</i> (<i>Mädel</i>, <i>Mäderl</i>), while
+the Franconian-Alemannic forms are <i>-la</i> and <i>-le</i> (<i>Mädle</i>). On the
+other hand, the pronunciation of <i>-s</i> as <i>-sch</i>, especially <i>-st</i> as <i>-scht</i>
+(cf. <i>Last</i>, <i>Haspel</i>, pronounced <i>Lascht</i>, <i>Haschpel</i>), may be mentioned
+as characteristic of the Alemannic, just as the <i>fortis</i> pronunciation
+of initial <i>t</i> is characteristic of High Franconian, while
+the other Franconian and Upper German dialects employ the
+<i>lenis</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The Alemannic dialect which, roughly speaking, is separated
+from Bavarian by the Lech and borders on Italian territory in the
+south and on French in the west, is subdivided into: (<i>a</i>) Swabian,
+the dialect of the kingdom of Württemberg and the north-western
+part of Tirol (cf. H. Fischer, <i>Geographie der schwäbischen Mundart</i>,
+1895); (<i>b</i>) High Alemannic (Swiss), including the German dialects
+of Switzerland, of the southern part of the Black Forest (the Basel-Breisgau
+dialect), and that of Vorarlberg; (<i>c</i>) Low Alemannic,
+comprising the dialects of Alsace and part of Baden (to the north
+of the Feldberg and south of Rastatt), also, at the present day, the
+town of Basel. Only Swabian has taken part in the change of <i>i</i> to
+<i>ei</i>, &amp;c., mentioned above, while initial Germanic <i>k</i> has been shifted
+to <i>ch</i> (&chi;) only in High Alemannic (cf. <i>chalt</i>, <i>chind</i>, <i>chorn</i>, for <i>kalt</i>,
+<i>kind</i>, <i>korn</i>). The pronunciation of <i>&#363;</i> as <i><span class="ov">ü</span></i>, <i>ü</i> (<i>Hüs</i> for <i>Haus</i>) is
+peculiar to Alsatian.</p>
+
+<p>The High Franconian dialects, that is to say, east and south (or
+south-Rhenish) Franconian, which are separated broadly speaking
+by the river Neckar, comprise the language spoken in a part of
+Baden, the dialects of the Main valley from Würzburg upwards to
+Bamberg, the dialect of Nuremberg and probably of the Vogtland
+(Plauen) and Egerland. During the older historical period the
+principal difference between East and South Franconian consisted
+in the fact that initial Germanic <i>d</i> was retained in the latter dialect,
+while East Franconian shifted it to <i>t</i>. Both, like Bavarian and
+Alemannic, shift initial German <i>p</i> to the affricate <i>pf</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, the Bavarian-Austrian dialect is spoken throughout the
+greater part of the kingdom of Bavaria (<i>i.e.</i> east of the Lech and a
+fine drawn from the point where the Lech joins the Danube to the
+sources of the rivers Elster and Mulde, this being the East Franconian
+border-line), in Austria, western Bohemia, and in the German
+linguistic &ldquo;islands&rdquo; embedded in Hungary, in Gottschee and the
+Sette and Tredici Communi (cf. above).<a name="fa15i" id="fa15i" href="#ft15i"><span class="sp">15</span></a></p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">The Old High German Period</p>
+
+<p>The language spoken during the Old High German period, that
+is to say, down to about the year 1050, is remarkable for the fulness
+and richness of its vowel-sounds in word-stems as well as in inflections.
+Cf. <i>elilenti</i>, <i>Elend</i>; <i>luginari</i>, <i>Lügner</i>; <i>karkari</i>, <i>Kerker</i>; <i>menniskono</i>
+<i>slahta</i>, <i>Menschengeschlecht</i>; <i>herzono</i>, <i>Herzen</i> (gen. pl.); <i>furisto</i>,
+<i>vorderste</i>; <i>hartost</i>, (<i>am</i>) <i>härtesten</i>; <i>sibunzug</i>, <i>siebzig</i>; <i>ziohemes</i>, (<i>wir</i>)
+<i>ziehen</i>; <i>salbota</i>, (<i>er</i>) <i>salbte</i>; <i>gaworahtos</i>, (<i>du</i>) <i>wirktest</i>, &amp;c. Of the
+consonantal changes which took place during this period that of
+the spirant th (preserved only in English) to d (<i>werthan</i>, <i>werdan</i>;
+<i>theob</i>, <i>deob</i>) deserves mention. It spread from Upper Germany,
+where it is noticeable as early as the 8th century to Middle and
+finally, in the 11th and 12th centuries, to Low Germany. Further,
+the initial <i>h</i> in <i>hl</i>, <i>hn</i>, <i>hr</i>, <i>hw</i> (cf. <i>hwer</i>, <i>wer</i>; <i>hreini</i>, <i>rein</i>; <i>hlahhan</i>,
+<i>lachen</i>) and <i>w</i> in <i>wr</i> (<i>wrecceo</i>, <i>Recke</i>) disappeared, this change also
+starting in Upper Germany and spreading slowly north. The most
+important vowel-change is the so-called mutation (<i>Umlaut</i>),<a name="fa16i" id="fa16i" href="#ft16i"><span class="sp">16</span></a> that
+is to say, the qualitative change of a vowel (except <i>i</i>) in a stem-syllable,
+owing to the influence of an <i>i</i> or <i>j</i> in the following syllable.
+This process commenced in the north where it seems to have been
+already fully developed in Low German as early as the 8th century.
+It is to be found, it may be noted, in Anglo-Saxon, as early as the
+6th century. It gradually worked its way southwards to Middle
+and Upper Germany where, however, certain consonants seem to
+have protected the stem syllable from the influence of <i>i</i> in a following
+syllable. Cf., for instance, Modern High German <i>drucken</i> and
+<i>drücken</i>; <i>glauben</i>, <i>kaufen</i>, <i>Haupt</i>, words which in Middle German
+dialects show mutation. Orthographically, however, this process
+is, during the first period, only to be seen in the change of <i>&#259;</i> to <i>e</i>;
+from the 10th century onwards there are, it is true, some traces
+of other changes, and vowels like <i><span class="ov">&#365;</span></i>, <i>&#333;</i>, <i>ou</i> must have already been
+affected, otherwise we could not account for the mutation of these
+vowels at a period when the cause of it, the <i>i</i> or <i>j</i>, no longer existed. A
+no less important change, for it helped to differentiate High from Low
+German, was that of Germanic <i>&#275;</i><span class="su">2</span> (a closed <i>&#275;</i>-sound) and &#333; diphthongs
+in Old High German, while they were retained in Old Low
+German. Cf. O.H.G. <i>h&#275;r</i>, <i>hear</i>, <i>hiar</i>, O.L.G. <i>h&#275;r</i>; O.H.G. <i>fuoz</i>, O.L.G.
+<i>f&#333;t</i>. The final result was that in the 10th century ie (older forms, <i>ia</i>,
+<i>ea</i>) and <i>uo</i> (older <i>ua</i>, <i>oa</i> in Alemannic, <i>ua</i> in South Franconian) had
+asserted themselves throughout all the High German dialects. Again
+while in Old High German the older diphthongs <i>ai</i> and <i>au</i> were preserved
+as <i>ei</i> and <i>ou</i>, unless they happened to stand at the end of a word
+or were followed by certain consonants (<i>h</i>, <i>w</i>, <i>r</i> in the one case, and
+<i>h</i>, <i>r</i>, <i>l</i>, <i>n</i>, <i>th</i>, <i>d</i>, <i>t</i>, <i>z</i>, <i>s</i> in the other; cf. <i>z&#275;h</i> from <i>z&#299;han</i>, <i>z&#333;h</i> from <i>ziohan</i>,
+<i>verlôs</i>, &amp;c.), the Old Low German shows throughout the monophthongs
+<i>&#275;</i> (in Middle Low German a closed sound) and <i>&#333;</i> (cf. O.L.G. <i>st&#275;n</i>,
+<i>&#333;ga</i>). These monophthongs are also to be heard in Rhenish Franconian,
+the greater part of East Franconian and the Upper Saxon
+and Silesian dialects of modern times (cf. <i>Stein</i>: <i>Steen</i> or <i>Stan</i>;
+<i>laufen</i>: <i>lofen</i> or <i>lopen</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Of the dialects enumerated above, Bavarian and Alemannic,
+High and Rhenish Franconian as well as Old Saxon are more or
+less represented in the literature of the first period. But this literature,
+the chief monuments of which are Otfrid&rsquo;s <i>Evangelienbuch</i>
+(in South Franconian), the Old Saxon <i>Heliand</i> (a life of Christ in
+alliterative verse), the translation of Tatian&rsquo;s <i>Gospel Harmony</i>
+(East Franconian) and that of a theological tract by Bishop Isidore
+of Seville and of parts of the Bible (Rhenish Franconian), is almost
+exclusively theological and didactic in character. One is consequently
+inclined to attach more value to the scanty remains of the <i>Hildebrandslied</i>
+and some interesting and ancient charms. The didactic
+spirit again pervades the translations and commentaries of Notker
+of St Gall in the early part of the 11th century, as well as a paraphrase
+of the <i>Song of Songs</i> by an abbot Williram of Ebersberg a
+little later. Latin, however, reigned supreme throughout this
+period, it being the language of the charters, the lawbooks (there is
+nothing in Germany to compare with the laws of the Anglo-Saxons),
+of science, medicine, and even poetry. It is thus needless to say that
+there was no recognized literary language (<i>Schriftsprache</i>) during
+this period, nor even any attempt to form one; at most, we might
+speak of schools in the large monasteries, such as Reichenau, St
+Gall, Fulda, which contributed to the spread and acceptance of
+certain orthographical rules.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">The Middle High German Period</p>
+
+<p>The following are the chief changes in sounds and forms which
+mark the development of the language in the Middle High German
+period. The orthography of the MSS. reveals a much more extensive
+employment of mutation (<i>Umlaut</i>) than was the case in the first
+period; we find, for instance, as the mutation of <i>o</i>, <i>ö</i>, of <i>&#333;</i>, <i>&oelig;</i>, <i>of &#363;</i>, <i>iu</i>
+(<i>ü</i>), of <i>uo</i>, <i>üe</i>, of <i>ou</i>, <i>öu</i>, and <i>eu</i> (cf. <i>höler</i>, <i>b&oelig;se</i>, <i>hiuser</i>, <i>güete</i>, <i>böume</i>),
+although many scribes, and more especially those of Middle and
+Low German districts, have no special signs for the mutation of
+<i>&#365;</i>, <i>&#363;</i>, and <i>o</i>. Of special interest is the so-called &ldquo;later (or weaker)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page781" id="page781"></a>781</span>
+mutation&rdquo; (<i>jüngerer oder schwächerer Umlaut</i>) of <i>&#259;</i> to a very open <i>e</i>
+sound, which is often written <i>ä</i>. Cf. <i>mähte</i> (O.H.G. <i>mahti</i>), <i>mägede</i>
+(O.H.G. <i>magadi</i>). The earlier mutation of this sound produced an
+<i>e</i>(<i>é</i>), a closed sound (<i>i.e.</i> nearer <i>i</i>). Cf. <i>geste</i> (O.H.G. <i>gesti</i>).</p>
+
+<p>The various Old High German vowels in unstressed syllables were
+either weakened to an indifferent <i>e</i> sound (<i>geben</i>, O.H.G. <i>geban</i>;
+<i>bote</i>, O.H.G. <i>boto</i>; <i>sige</i>, O.H.G. <i>sigu</i>) or disappeared altogether.
+The latter phenomenon is to be observed after <i>l</i> and <i>r</i>, and partly
+after <i>n</i> and <i>m</i> (cf. <i>ar</i>(<i>e</i>), O.H.G. <i>aro</i>; <i>zal</i>, O.H.G. <i>zala</i>; <i>wundern</i>,
+O.H.G. <i>wuntar&#333;n</i>, &amp;c.); but it by no means took place everywhere
+in the same degree and at the same time. It has been already
+noted that the Alemannic dialect (as well as the archaic poets of
+the German national epic) retained at least the long unstressed vowels
+until as late as the 14th century (<i>gemarter&#333;t</i>, <i>gekriuzeg&#333;t</i>, &amp;c., and
+Low and Middle German preserved the weakened <i>e</i> sound in many
+cases where Upper German dropped it. In this period the beginnings
+are also to be seen in Low and Middle German (Heinrich von Veldeke
+shows the first traces of it) of a process which became of great
+importance for the formation of the Modern German literary language.
+This is the lengthening of originally short vowels in open
+syllables,<a name="fa17i" id="fa17i" href="#ft17i"><span class="sp">17</span></a> for example, in Modern High German <i>T&#257;ges</i>, <i>W&#275;ges</i>, <i>l&#333;be</i>
+(Middle High German <i>t&#259;ges</i>, <i>w&#277;ges</i>, <i>l&#335;be</i>). In Austria, on the other
+hand, there began as far back as the first half of the 12th century
+another movement of equal importance for Modern High German,
+namely, the conversion of the long vowels, <i>&#299;</i>, <i>&#363;</i>, <i><span class="ov">ü</span></i>, into <i>ei</i> (<i>ou</i>), <i>au</i>,
+<i>eu</i> (<i>äu</i>).<a name="fa18i" id="fa18i" href="#ft18i"><span class="sp">18</span></a> It is, therefore, in MSS. written in the south-east that we
+find forms like <i>zeit</i>, <i>lauter</i> (<i>löter</i>), <i>heute</i>, &amp;c., for the first time. With
+the exception of Low German and Alemannic&mdash;Swabian, however,
+follows in this respect the majority&mdash;all the German dialects participated
+in this change between the 14th and 16th centuries,
+although not all to the same degree. The change was perhaps
+assisted by the influence of the literary language which had recognized
+the new sounds. In England the same process has led to the
+modern pronunciation of <i>time</i>, <i>house</i>, &amp;c., and in Holland to that of
+<i>tijd</i>, <i>huis</i>, &amp;c. F. Wrede (<i>Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum</i> xxxix.
+257 ff.) has suggested that the explanation of the change is to be
+sought in the apocope and syncope of the final <i>e</i>, and the greater
+stress which was in consequence put on the stem-syllable. The
+tendency to a change in the opposite direction, namely, the narrowing
+of diphthongs to monophthongs, is to be noticed in Middle German
+dialects, <i>i.e.</i> in dialects which resisted the apocope of the final <i>e</i>,
+where <i>ie</i>, <i>uo</i>, <i>üe</i> become <i>&#299;</i>, <i>&#363;</i>, <i><span class="ov">ü</span></i>; thus we have for <i>Brief</i>, <i>br&#299;f</i>, for
+<i>huon</i>, <i>h&#363;n</i>, for <i>brüeder</i>, <i>brüder</i>, and this too was taken over into the
+Modern High German literary language.<a name="fa19i" id="fa19i" href="#ft19i"><span class="sp">19</span></a></p>
+
+<p>No consonantal change was so widespread during this period as
+that of initial <i>s</i> to <i>sch</i> before <i>l</i>, <i>n</i>, <i>m</i>, <i>w</i>, <i>p</i> and <i>t</i>. Cf. <i>slingen</i>, <i>schlingen</i>;
+<i>swer</i> (<i>e</i>) <i>n</i>, <i>schwören</i>, &amp;c. The forms <i>scht</i>- and <i>schp</i>- are often to be
+met with in Alemannic MSS., but they were discarded again, although
+modern German recognizes the pronunciation <i>schp</i>, <i>scht</i>.<a name="fa20i" id="fa20i" href="#ft20i"><span class="sp">20</span></a>
+With regard to changes affecting the inflections of verbs and nouns,
+it must suffice here to point out that the weakening or disappearance
+of vowels in unstressed syllables necessarily affected the characteristic
+endings of the older language; groups of verbs and substantives
+which in Old High German were distinct now become confused.
+This is best seen in the case of the weak verbs, where the three
+Old High German classes (cf. <i>nerien</i>, <i>salb&#333;n</i>, <i>dag&#275;n</i>) were fused into
+one. Similarly in the declensions we find an increasing tendency of
+certain forms to influence substantives belonging to other classes;
+there is, for instance, an increase in the number of neuter nouns
+taking <i>-er</i> (<i>-ir</i>) in the plural, and of those which show mutation in
+the plural on the model of the <i>i-</i> stems (O.H.G. <i>gast</i>, pl. <i>gesti</i>; cf.
+forms like <i>ban</i>, <i>benne</i>; <i>hals</i>, <i>helse</i>; <i>wald</i>, <i>welde</i>). Of changes in
+syntax the gradual decay in the use of the genitive case dependent
+on a noun or governed by a verb (cf. constructions like <i>eine brünne
+rotes goldes</i>, or <i>des todes wünschen</i>) towards the end of the period,
+and also the disappearance of the Old High German sequence of
+tenses ought at least to be mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>In the Middle High German period, the first classical period of
+German poetry, the German language made great advances as a
+vehicle of literary expression; its power of expression was increased
+and it acquired a beauty of style hitherto unknown. This was the
+period of the <i>Minnesang</i> and the great popular and court epics, of
+Walther von der Vogelweide, Hartmann von Aue, Wolfram von
+Eschenbach and Gottfried von Strassburg; it was a period when
+literature enjoyed the fostering care of the courts and the nobility.
+At the same time German prose celebrated its first triumphs in the
+sermons of Berthold von Regensburg, and in the mystic writings
+and sermons of Meister Eckhart, Tauler and others. History (Eike
+von Repkow&rsquo;s <i>Weltchronik</i>) and law (<i>Sachsenspiegel</i>, <i>Schwabenspiegel</i>)
+no longer despised the vernacular, and from about the middle of
+the 13th century German becomes, in an ever-increasing percentage,
+the language of deeds and charters.</p>
+
+<p>It has been a much debated question how far Germany in Middle
+High German times possessed or aspired to possess a <i>Schriftsprache</i>
+or literary language.<a name="fa21i" id="fa21i" href="#ft21i"><span class="sp">21</span></a> About the year 1200 there was undoubtedly
+a marked tendency towards a unification of the literary language
+on the part of the more careful poets like Walther von der Vogelweide,
+Hartmann von Aue and Gottfried von Strassburg; they avoid,
+more particularly in their rhymes, dialectic peculiarities, such as the
+Bavarian dual forms <i>es</i> and <i>enk</i>, or the long vowels in unstressed
+syllables, retained in Alemannic, and they do not make use of
+archaic words or forms. We have thus a right to speak, if not of a
+Middle High German literary language in the widest sense of the
+word, at least of a Middle High German <i>Dichtersprache</i> or poetic
+language, on an Alemannic-Franconian basis. Whether, or in how
+far, this may have affected the ordinary speech of the nobility or
+courts, is a matter of conjecture; but it had an undeniable influence
+on Middle and Low German poets, who endeavoured at least to use
+High German forms in their rhymes. Attempts were also made in
+Low German districts, though at a later stage of this period, to unify
+the dialects and raise them to the level of an accepted literary language.
+It will be shown later why these attempts were unsuccessful.
+Unfortunately, however, the efforts of the High German poets to
+form a uniform language were also shortlived; by the end of the 13th
+century the <i>Dichtersprache</i> had disappeared, and the dialects again
+reigned supreme.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Modern High German</p>
+
+<p>Although the Middle High German period had thus not succeeded
+in effecting any permanent advance in the direction of a uniform
+literary language, the desire for a certain degree of uniformity was
+never again entirely lost. At the close of the 13th century literature
+had passed from the hands of the nobility to those of the middle
+classes of the towns; the number of writers who used the German
+tongue rapidly increased; later the invention of printing, the increased
+efficiency of the schools, and above all the religious movement
+of the Reformation, contributed to awakening the desire of being
+understood by those who stood outside the dialectic community of
+the individual. A single authoritative form of writing and spelling
+was felt on all sides to be particularly necessary. This was found in
+the language used officially by the various chanceries (<i>Kanzleien</i>),
+and more especially the imperial chancery. Since the days of
+Charles IV. (1347-1378) the latter had striven after a certain uniform
+language in the documents it issued, and by the time of Maximilian I.
+(1493-1519) all its official documents were characterized by pretty
+much the same phonology, forms and vocabulary, in whatever part
+of Germany they originated. And under Maximilian&rsquo;s successor,
+Charles V., the conditions remained pretty much the same. The
+fact that the seat of the imperial chancery had for a long time been
+in Prague, led to a mingling of Upper and Middle German sounds and
+inflections; but when the crown came with Frederick III. (1440-1493)
+to the Habsburgs, the Upper German elements were considerably
+increased. The chancery of the Saxon electorate, whose
+territory was exclusively Middle German, had to some extent,
+under the influence of the imperial chancery, allowed Upper German
+characteristics to influence its official language. This is clearly
+marked in the second half of the 15th century, and about the year
+1500 there was no essential difference between the languages of the
+two chanceries. Thuringia, Silesia and Brandenburg soon followed
+suit, and even Low German could not ultimately resist the accepted
+High German notation (<i>ö, &#7759;, ü, &#7803;, &#367;, ie</i>, &amp;c.). We have here very
+favourable conditions for the creation of a uniform literary language,
+and, as has already been said, the tendency to follow these authorities
+is clearly marked.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of this development arose the imposing figure of
+Luther, who, although by no means the originator of a common High
+German speech, helped very materially to establish it. He deliberately
+chose (cf. the often quoted passage in his <i>Tischreden</i>, ch. 69)
+the language of the Saxon chancery as the vehicle of his Bible
+translation and subsequently of his own writings. The differences
+between Luther&rsquo;s usage and that of the chancery, in phonology and
+inflection, are small; still he shows, in his writings subsequent to
+1524, a somewhat more pronounced tendency towards Middle
+German. But it is noteworthy that he, like the chancery, retained
+the old vowel-change in the singular and plural of the preterite of the
+strong verbs (<i>i.e.</i> <i>steig, stigen; starb, sturben</i>), although before
+Luther&rsquo;s time the uniformity of the modern preterite had already
+begun to show itself here and there. The adoption of the language
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page782" id="page782"></a>782</span>
+of the chancery gave rise to the mixed character of sounds and
+forms which is still a feature of the literary language of Germany.
+Thus the use of the monophthongs <i>&#299;</i>, <i>ü</i>, and <i><span class="ov">ü</span></i>, instead of the old
+diphthongs <i>ie</i>, <i>uo</i> and <i>üe</i>, comes from Middle Germany; the forms
+of the words and the gender of the nouns follow Middle rather than
+Upper German usage, whereas, on the other hand, the consonantal
+system (<i>p</i> to <i>pf</i>; <i>d</i> to <i>t</i>) betrays in its main features its Upper
+German (Bavarian-Austrian) origin.</p>
+
+<p>The language of Luther no doubt shows greater originality in its
+style and vocabulary (cf. its influence on Goethe and the writers of
+the <i>Sturm und Drang</i>), for in this respect the chancery could obviously
+afford him but scanty help. His vocabulary is drawn to a great
+extent from his own native Middle German dialect, and the fact
+that, since the 14th century, Middle German literature (cf. for instance,
+the writings of the German mystics, at the time of and
+subsequent to Eckhart) had exercised a strong influence over Upper
+Germany, stood him in good stead. Luther is, therefore, strictly
+speaking, not the father of the modern German literary language,
+but he forms the most important link in a chain of development
+which began long before him, and did not reach its final stage until
+long after him. To infer that Luther&rsquo;s language made any rapid
+conquest of Germany would not be correct. It was, of course,
+immediately acceptable to the eastern part of the Middle German
+district (Thuringia and Silesia), and it did not find any great difficulty
+in penetrating into Low Germany, at least into the towns and districts
+lying to the east of the Saale and Elbe (Magdeburg, Hamburg).
+One may say that about the middle of the 16th century Luther&rsquo;s
+High German was the language of the chanceries, about 1600 the
+language of the pulpit (the last Bible in Low German was printed at
+Goslar in 1621) and the printing presses. Thus the aspirations of
+Low Germany to have a literary language of its own were at an early
+stage crushed. Protestant Switzerland, on the other hand, resisted
+the &ldquo;uncommon new German&rdquo; until well into the 17th century.
+It was also natural that the Catholic Lower Rhine (Cologne) and
+Catholic South Germany held out against it, for to adopt the language
+of the reformer would have seemed tantamount to offering a helping
+hand to Protestant ideas. At the same time, geographical and
+political conditions, as well as the pronounced character of the Upper
+German dialects, formed an important obstacle to a speedy unification.
+South German grammarians of the 16th century, such as
+Laurentius Albertus, raise a warning voice against those who,
+although far distant from the proper use of words and the true
+pronunciation, venture to teach <i>nos puriores Germanos</i>, namely, the
+Upper Germans.</p>
+
+<p>In 1593 J. Helber, a Swiss schoolmaster and notary, spoke of three
+separate dialects as being in use by the printing presses:<a name="fa22i" id="fa22i" href="#ft22i"><span class="sp">22</span></a> (1)
+<i>Mitteldeutsch</i> (the language of the printers in Leipzig, Erfurt, Nuremberg,
+Würzburg, Frankfort, Mainz, Spires, Strassburg and Cologne;
+at the last mentioned place in the event of their attempting to
+print <i>Ober-Teutsch</i>); (2) <i>Donauisch</i> (the printers&rsquo; language in South
+Germany, but limited to Bavaria and Swabia proper&mdash;here more
+particularly the Augsburg idiom, which was considered to be particularly
+<i>zierlich</i>);<a name="fa23i" id="fa23i" href="#ft23i"><span class="sp">23</span></a> (3) <i>Höchst Reinisch</i>, which corresponds to Swiss
+German. Thus in the 16th century Germany was still far from real
+unity in its language; but to judge from the number and the
+geographical position of the towns which printed in <i>Mitteldeutsch</i>
+it is pretty clear which idiom would ultimately predominate. During
+the 17th century men like M. Opitz (<i>Buch von der deutschen Poeterey</i>)
+and J.G. Schottelius (<i>Teutsche Sprachkunst</i>, 1641, and <i>Von der
+teutschen Sprachkunst</i>, 1663), together with linguistic societies
+like the <i>Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft</i> and the Nuremberg <i>Pegnitzorden</i>,
+did a great deal to purify the German language from foreign (especially
+French) elements; they insisted on the claims of the vernacular
+to a place beside and even above Latin (in 1687 Christian Thomasius
+held for the first time lectures in the German language at the university
+of Leipzig), and they established a firm grammatical basis
+for Luther&rsquo;s common language, which especially in the hymnals
+had become modernized and more uniform. About the middle of
+the 17th century the disparity between the vowels of the singular
+and plural of the preterite of the strong verbs practically ceases;
+under East Middle German influence the final <i>e</i> is restored to words
+like <i>Knabe</i>, <i>Jude</i>, <i>Pfaffe</i>, which in South German had been <i>Knab</i>, &amp;c.;
+the mixed declension (<i>Ehre</i>, <i>Ehren</i>; <i>Schmerz</i>, <i>Schmerzen</i>) was
+established, and the plural in -<i>er</i> was extended to some masculine
+nouns (<i>Wald</i>, <i>Wälder</i>);<a name="fa24i" id="fa24i" href="#ft24i"><span class="sp">24</span></a> the use of the mutated sound has now
+become the rule as a plural sign (Väter, Bäume). How difficult,
+even in the first half of the 18th century, it was for a Swiss to write
+the literary language which Luther had established is to be seen
+from the often quoted words of Haller (1708-1777): &ldquo;I am a Swiss,
+the German language is strange to me, and its choice of words was
+almost unknown to me.&rdquo; The Catholic south clung firmly to its own
+literary language, based on the idiom of the imperial chancery,
+which was still an influential force in the 17th century or on local
+dialects. This is apparent in the writings of Abraham a Sancta
+Clara,<a name="fa25i" id="fa25i" href="#ft25i"><span class="sp">25</span></a> who died in 1709, or in the attacks of the Benedictine monk,
+Augustin Dornblüth, on the <i>Meissner Schriftsprache</i> in 1755.</p>
+
+<p>In the 18th century, to which these names have introduced us,
+the grammatical writings of J.C. Gottsched (<i>Deutsche Sprachkunst</i>,
+1748) and J.C. Adelung (<i>Grammatisch-kritisches Wörterbuch der
+hochdeutschen Mundart</i>, 1774-1786) exercised a decisive and far-reaching
+influence. Gottsched took as his basis the spoken language
+(<i>Umgangssprache</i>) of the educated classes of Upper Saxony (Meissen),
+which at this time approximated as nearly as possible to the literary
+language. His <i>Grammar</i> did enormous services to the cause of
+unification, ultimately winning over the resisting south; but he
+carried his purism to pedantic lengths, he would tolerate no archaic
+or dialectical words, no unusual forms or constructions, and consequently
+made the language unsuited for poetry. Meanwhile an
+interest in Old German literature was being awakened by Bodmer;
+Herder set forth better ideas on the nature of language, and insisted
+on the value of native idioms; and the <i>Sturm und Drang</i> led by
+Goethe encouraged all individualistic tendencies. All this gave rise
+to a movement counter to Gottsched&rsquo;s absolutism, which resulted
+in the revival of many obsolete German words and forms, these being
+drawn partly from Luther&rsquo;s Bible translation (cf. V. Hehn, &ldquo;Goethe
+und die Sprache der Bibel,&rdquo; in the <i>Goethe-Jahrbuch</i>, viii. p. 187 ff.),
+partly from the older language and partly from the vocabulary
+peculiar to different social ranks and trades.<a name="fa26i" id="fa26i" href="#ft26i"><span class="sp">26</span></a> The latter is still
+a source of linguistic innovations. German literary style underwent
+a similar rejuvenation, for we are on the threshold of the second
+classical period of German literature. It had strengthened Gottsched&rsquo;s
+hand as a linguistic reformer that the earlier leaders of
+German literature, such as Gellert, Klopstock and Lessing, were
+Middle Germans; now Wieland&rsquo;s influence, which was particularly
+strong in South Germany, helped materially towards the establishment
+of one accepted literary language throughout all German-speaking
+countries; and the movement reaches its culmination with
+Goethe and Schiller. At the same time this unification did not
+imply the creation of an unalterable standard; for, just as the language
+of Opitz and Schottelius differed from that of Luther, so&mdash;although
+naturally in a lesser degree&mdash;the literary language of our
+day differs from that of the classic writers of the 18th century.
+Local peculiarities are still to be met with, as is to be seen in the
+modern German literature that emanates from Switzerland or
+Austria.</p>
+
+<p>But this unity, imperfect as it is, is limited to the literary language.
+The differences are much more sharply accentuated in the <i>Umgangssprache</i>,<a name="fa27i" id="fa27i" href="#ft27i"><span class="sp">27</span></a>
+whereby we understand the language as it is spoken by
+educated people throughout Germany; this is not only the case
+with regard to pronunciation, although it is naturally most noticeable
+here, but also with regard to the choice of words and the construction
+of sentences. Compared with the times of Goethe and Schiller a
+certain advance towards unification has undoubtedly been made,
+but the differences between north and south are still very great.
+This is particularly noticeable in the pronunciation of <i>r</i>&mdash;either the
+uvular <i>r</i> or the <i>r</i> produced by the tip of the tongue; of the voiced
+and voiceless stops, <i>b</i>, <i>p</i>, <i>d</i>, <i>t</i>, <i>g</i> and <i>k</i>; of the <i>s</i> sounds; of the
+diphthongs; of the long vowels <i>&#275;</i> and <i>&#333;&#275;</i>, &amp;c. (cf. W. Vietor, <i>German
+Pronunciation</i>, 2nd ed., 1890). The question as to whether a unified
+pronunciation (<i>Einheitaussprache</i>) is desirable or even possible has
+occupied the attention of academies, scholars and the educated
+public during recent years, and in 1898 a commission made up of
+scholars and theatre directors drew up a scheme of pronunciation
+for use in the royal theatres of Prussia.<a name="fa28i" id="fa28i" href="#ft28i"><span class="sp">28</span></a> This scheme has since been
+recommended to all German theatres by the German <i>Bühnenverein</i>.
+Desirable as such a uniform pronunciation is for the national theatre,
+it is a much debated question how far it should be adopted in the
+ordinary speech of everyday life. Some scholars, such as W. Braune,
+declared themselves strongly in favour of its adoption;<a name="fa29i" id="fa29i" href="#ft29i"><span class="sp">29</span></a> Braune&rsquo;s
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page783" id="page783"></a>783</span>
+argument being that the system of modern pronunciation is based
+on the spelling, not on the sounds produced in speaking. The
+latter, he holds, is only responsible for the pronunciation of <i>-chs-</i> as
+<i>-ks-</i> in <i>wachsen</i>, <i>Ochse</i>, &amp;c., or for that of <i>sp-</i> and <i>st-</i> in <i>spielen</i>, <i>stehen</i>,
+&amp;c. Other scholars, again, such as K. Luick and O. Brenner, warn
+against any such attempts to create a living language on an artificial
+basis;<a name="fa30i" id="fa30i" href="#ft30i"><span class="sp">30</span></a> the <i>Bühnendeutsch</i> or &ldquo;stage-German&rdquo; they regard as
+little more than an abstract ideal. Thus the decision must be left
+to time.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities.</span>&mdash;<i>General Literature</i>: J. Grimm, <i>Geschichte der
+deutschen Sprache</i> (Leipzig, 1848; 4th ed., 1880); W. Scherer, <i>Zur
+Geschichte der deutschen Sprache</i> (Berlin, 1868; 2nd ed., 1878);
+E. Förstemann, <i>Geschichte des deutschen Sprachstammes</i> (Nordhausen,
+1874-1875); O. Behaghel, <i>Die deutsche Sprache</i> (Leipzig, 1886;
+2nd ed., 1902); the same, &ldquo;Geschichte der deutschen Sprache,&rdquo; in
+Paul&rsquo;s <i>Grundriss der germanischen Philologie</i> (2nd ed.), i. pp. 650 ff.;
+O. Weise, <i>Unsere deutsche Sprache, ihr Werden und ihr Wesen</i> (Leipzig,
+1898); K. von Raumer, <i>Geschichte der germanischen Philologie</i>
+(Munich, 1870); J. Grimm, <i>Deutsche Grammatik</i> (4 vols., vols. i.-iii.
+in new edition, 1870-1890); Dieter, <i>Laut- und Formenlehre der
+altgermanischen Dialekte</i> (2 vols., Leipzig, 1898-1900); F. Kauffmann,
+<i>Deutsche Grammatik</i> (2nd ed., 1895); W. Wilmanns, <i>Deutsche
+Grammatik</i>, so far, vols, i., ii. and iii., 1 (Strassburg, 1893-1906, vol. i.,
+2nd ed., 1897); O. Brenner, <i>Grundzüge der geschichtlichen Grammatik
+der deutschen Sprache</i> (Munich, 1896); H. Lichtenberger, <i>Histoire
+de la langue allemande</i> (Paris, 1895).</p>
+
+<p><i>Old and Middle High German Period</i>: W. Braune, <i>Althochdeutsche
+Grammatik</i> (2nd ed., Halle, 1891); the same, <i>Abriss der althochdeutschen
+Grammatik</i> (3rd ed., 1900); F. Holthausen, <i>Altsächsisches
+Elementarbuch</i> (Heidelberg, 1899); W. Schlüter, <i>Untersuchungen zur
+Geschichte der altsächsichen Sprache</i>, i. (Göttingen, 1892); O. Schade,
+<i>Altdeutsches Wörterbuch</i> (2nd ed., Halle, 1872-1882); G.E. Graff,
+<i>Althochdeutscher Sprachschatz</i> (6 vols., Berlin, 1834-1842) (Index by
+Massmann, 1846); E. Steinmeyer and E. Sievers, <i>Althochdeutsche
+Glossen</i> (4 vols., Berlin, 1879-1898); J.A. Schmeller, <i>Glossarium
+Saxonicum</i> (Munich, 1840); K. Weinhold, <i>Mittelhochdeutsche
+Grammatik</i> (3rd ed., Paderborn, 1892); H. Paul, <i>Mittelhochdeutsche
+Grammatik</i> (5th ed., Halle, 1900); V. Michels, <i>Mittelhochdeutsches
+Elementarbuch</i> (Heidelberg, 1900); O. Brenner, <i>Mittelhochdeutsche
+Grammatik</i> (3rd ed., Munich, 1894); K. Zwierzina, &ldquo;Mittelhochdeutsche
+Studien,&rdquo; in <i>Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum</i>, vols. xliv.
+and xlv.; A. Lübben, <i>Mittelniederdeutsche Grammatik</i> (Leipzig,
+1882); W. Müller and F. Zarncke, <i>Mittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch</i>
+(4 vols., Leipzig, 1854-1866); M. Lexer, <i>Mittelhochdeutsches Handwörterbuch</i>
+(3 vols., 1872-1878); the same, <i>Mittelhochdeutsches
+Taschenwörterbuch</i> (8th ed., 1906); K. Schiller and A. Lübben,
+<i>Mittelniederdeutsches Wörterbuch</i> (6 vols., Bremen, 1875-1881);
+A. Lübben, <i>Mittelniederdeutsches Handwörterbuch</i> (Norden, 1888);
+F. Seiler, <i>Die Entwicklung der deutsch. Kultur im Spiegel des deutschen
+Lehnworts</i> (Halle, i., 1895, 2nd ed., 1905, ii., 1900).</p>
+
+<p><i>Modern High German Period</i>: E. Wülcker, &ldquo;Die Entstehung der
+kursächsischen Kanzleisprache&rdquo; (in the <i>Zeitschrift des Vereins für
+kursächsische Geschichte</i>, ix. p. 349); the same, &ldquo;Luthers Stellung
+zur kursächsischen Kanzleisprache&rdquo; (in <i>Germania</i>, xxviii. pp. 191 ff.);
+P. Pietsch, <i>Martin Luther und die hochdeutsche Schriftsprache</i> (Breslau,
+1883); K. Burdach, <i>Die Einigung der neuhochdeutschen Schriftsprache</i>,
+(1883); E. Opitz, <i>Die Sprache Luthers</i> (Halle, 1869); J. Luther, <i>Die
+Sprache Luthers in der Septemberbibel</i> (Halle, 1887); F. Kluge, <i>Von
+Luther bis Lessing</i> (Strassburg, 1888) (cf. E. Schröder&rsquo;s review in the
+<i>Göttinger gelehrte Anzeiger</i>, 1888, 249); H. Rückert, <i>Geschichte der
+neuhochdeutschen Schriftsprache bis zur Mitte des 18. Jahrhunderts</i>
+(1875): J. Kehrein, <i>Grammatik der deutschen Sprache des 15. bis 17.
+Jahrhunderts</i> (Leipzig, 2nd ed., 1863); K. von Bahder, <i>Grundlagen
+des neuhochdeutschen Lautsystems</i> (Strassburg, 1890); R. Meyer,
+<i>Einführung in das ältere Neuhochdeutsche</i> (Leipzig, 1894); W. Scheel,
+<i>Beiträge zur Geschichte der neuhochdeutschen Gemeinsprache in Köln</i>
+(Marburg, 1892); R. Brandstetter, <i>Die Rezeption der neuhochdeutschen
+Schriftsprache in Stadt und Landschaft Luzern</i> (1892);
+K. Burdach, &ldquo;Zur Geschichte der neuhochdeutschen Schriftsprache&rdquo;
+(<i>Forschungen zur deutschen Philologie</i>, 1894); the same, &ldquo;Die Sprache
+des jungen Goethe&rdquo; (<i>Verhandlungen der Dessauer Philologenversammlung</i>,
+1884, p. 164 ff.); F. Kasch, <i>Die Sprache des jungen
+Schiller</i> (Dissertation, 1900); F. Kluge, &ldquo;Über die Entstehung
+unserer Schriftsprache&rdquo; (Beihefte zur <i>Zeitschrift des allgemeinen
+Sprachvereins</i>, Heft 6, 1894); A. Waag, <i>Bedeutungsentwickelung
+unseres Wortschatzes</i> (Lahr, 1901).</p>
+
+<p>Mention must also be made of the work of the German commission
+of the Royal Prussian Academy, which in 1904 drew up plans for
+making an inventory of all German literary MSS. dating from before
+the year 1600 and for the publication of Middle High German and
+early Modern High German texts. This undertaking, which has
+made considerable progress, provides rich material for the study of
+the somewhat neglected period between the 14th and 16th centuries;
+at the same time it provides a basis on which a monumental history
+of Modern High German may be built up, as well as for a <i>Thesaurus
+linguae germanicae</i>.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(R. Pr.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1i" id="ft1i" href="#fa1i"><span class="fn">1</span></a> K. Müllenhoff and W. Scherer, <i>Denkmäler deutscher Poesie und
+Prosa</i>, 3rd ed., by E. Steinmeyer, 1892, No. lxvii.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2i" id="ft2i" href="#fa2i"><span class="fn">2</span></a> For a detailed description of the boundary line cf. O. Behaghel&rsquo;s
+article in Paul&rsquo;s <i>Grundriss</i>, 2nd ed., pp. 652-657, where there is also
+a map, and a very full bibliography relative to the changes in the
+boundary.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3i" id="ft3i" href="#fa3i"><span class="fn">3</span></a> Cf. J. Grimm, <i>Deutsche Grammatik</i>, 3rd ed., i. p. 13; F. Kluge,
+<i>Etymologisches Wörterbuch</i>, 6th ed., pp. 75 ff.; K. Luick, &ldquo;Zur
+Geschichte des Wortes &lsquo;deutsch,&rsquo;&rdquo; in <i>Anzeiger für deutsches Altertum</i>,
+xv., pp. 135, 248; H. Fischer, &ldquo;Theotiscus, Deutsch,&rdquo; in Paul and
+Braune&rsquo;s <i>Beiträge</i>, xviii. p. 203; H. Paul, <i>Deutsches Wörterbuch</i>
+(1897), p. 93.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft4i" id="ft4i" href="#fa4i"><span class="fn">4</span></a> Cf. P. Kretschmer, <i>Einleitung in die Geschichte der griechischen
+Sprache</i> (Göttingen, 1896), who holds the mingling of Celtic and
+Germanic elements in southern and south-western Germany responsible
+for the change. It might also be mentioned here that
+H. Meyer (<i>Zeitschrift f. deut. Altertum</i>, xlv. pp. 101 ff.) endeavours to
+explain the first soundshifting by the change of abode of the Germanic
+tribes from the lowlands to the highlands of the Carpathian
+Mountains.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft5i" id="ft5i" href="#fa5i"><span class="fn">5</span></a> Of writers who have made extensive use of dialects, it must
+suffice to mention here the names of J.H. Voss, Hebel, Klaus Groth,
+Fritz Reuter, Usteri, G.D. Arnold, Holtei, Castelli, J.G. Seidl and
+Anzengruber, and in our own days G. Hauptmann.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft6i" id="ft6i" href="#fa6i"><span class="fn">6</span></a> Cf. F. Staub and L. Tobler, <i>Schweizerisches Idiotikon</i> (1881 ff.);
+E. Martin and F. Lienhart, <i>Wörterbuch der elsässischen Mundarten</i>
+(Strassburg, 1899 ff.); H. Fischer, <i>Schwäbisches Wörterbuch</i>
+(Tübingen, 1901 ff.). Earlier works, which are already completed,
+are J.A. Schmeller, <i>Bayrisches Wörterbuch</i> (2nd ed., 2 vols., Munich,
+1872-1877); J.B. Schöpf, <i>Tiroler Idiotikon</i> (Innsbruck, 1886);
+M. Lexer, <i>Kärntisches Wörterbuch</i> (1862); H. Gradl, <i>Egerländer
+Wörterbuch</i>, i. (Eger, 1883); A.F.C. Vilmar, <i>Idiotikon von Kurhessen</i>
+(Marburg, 1883) (with supplements by H. von Pfister);
+W. Crecelius, <i>Oberhessisches Wörterbuch</i> (Darmstadt, 1890-1898).
+Professor J. Franck is responsible for a <i>Rheinisches Wörterbuch</i> for
+the Prussian Academy.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft7i" id="ft7i" href="#fa7i"><span class="fn">7</span></a> Cf. the article &ldquo;Mundarten&rdquo; by R. Loewe in R. Bethge, <i>Ergebnisse
+und Fortschritte der germanistischen Wissenschaft</i> (Leipzig,
+1902), pp. 75-88; and F. Mentz, <i>Bibliographie der deutschen Mundartforschung</i>
+(Leipzig, 1892). Of periodicals may be mentioned
+Deutsche Mundarten, by J.W. Nagl (Vienna, 1896 ff.); <i>Zeitschrift
+für hochdeutsche Mundarten</i>, by O. Heilig and Ph. Lenz (Heidelberg,
+1900 ff.), continued as <i>Zeitschrift f. deutsche Mundarten</i>, Verlag des
+Allgemeinen Deutschen Sprachvereins. Owing to its importance as a
+model for subsequent monographs J. Kinteler&rsquo;s <i>Die Kerenzer Mundart
+des Kantons Glarus</i> (Leipzig, 1876) should not be passed unnoticed.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft8i" id="ft8i" href="#fa8i"><span class="fn">8</span></a> Cf. especially H. Tümpel, &ldquo;Die Mundarten des alten niedersächsischen
+Gebietes zwischen 1300 und 1500&rdquo; (Paul und Braune&rsquo;s
+Beiträge, vii. pp. 1-104); <i>Niederdeutsche Studien</i>, by the same writer
+(Bielefeld, 1898); Bahnke, &ldquo;Über Sprach- und Gaugrenzen zwischen
+Elbe und Weser&rdquo; (<i>Jahrbuch des Vereins für niederdeutsche Sprachforschung</i>,
+vii. p. 77).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft9i" id="ft9i" href="#fa9i"><span class="fn">9</span></a> Upper Saxon and Thuringian are sometimes taken as a separate
+group.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft10i" id="ft10i" href="#fa10i"><span class="fn">10</span></a> Cf. W. Braune, &ldquo;Zur Kenntnis des Fränkischen&rdquo; (<i>Beiträge</i>, i.
+pp. 1-56); O. Böhme, <i>Zur Kenntnis des Oberfränkischen im 13., 14.
+und 15. Jahrh.</i> (Dissertation) (Leipzig, 1893), where a good account
+of the differences between the Rhenish Franconian and South
+Franconian dialects will be found.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft11i" id="ft11i" href="#fa11i"><span class="fn">11</span></a> Cf. C. Nörrenberg, &ldquo;Lautverschiebungsstufe des Mittelfränkischen&rdquo;
+(<i>Beiträge</i>, ix. 371 ff.); R. Heinzel, <i>Geschichte der niederfränkischen
+Geschäftssprache</i> (Paderborn, 1874).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft12i" id="ft12i" href="#fa12i"><span class="fn">12</span></a> This is also the dialect of the so-called Siebenbürger Sachsen.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft13i" id="ft13i" href="#fa13i"><span class="fn">13</span></a> Cf. E. Sievers, <i>Oxforder Benediktinerregel</i> (Halle, 1887),
+p. xvi.; J. Meier, Jolande (1887), pp. vii. ff.; O. Böhme, l.c.
+p. 60.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft14i" id="ft14i" href="#fa14i"><span class="fn">14</span></a> Lower Hesse (the northern and eastern parts) goes, however,
+in many respects its own way.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft15i" id="ft15i" href="#fa15i"><span class="fn">15</span></a> On the High German dialects cf. K. Weinhold, <i>Alemannische
+Grammatik</i> (Berlin, 1863); F. Kauffmann, <i>Geschichte der schwäbischen
+Mundart</i> (Strassburg, 1870); E. Haendcke, <i>Die mundartlichen
+Elemente in den elsässischen Urkunden</i> (Strassburg, 1894); K.
+Weinhold, <i>Bairische Grammatik</i> (1867); J.A. Schmeller, <i>Die Mundarten
+Baierns</i> (Munich, 1821); J.N. Schwäbl, <i>Die altbairischen
+Mundarten</i> (München, 1903); O. Brenner, <i>Mundarten und Schriftsprache
+in Bayern</i> (Bamberg, 1890); J. Schatz, <i>Die Mundart von
+Imst</i> (Strassburg, 1897); J.W. Nagl, <i>Der Vocalismus der bairisch-österreichischen
+Mundarten</i> (1890-1891); W. Gradl, <i>Die Mundarten
+Westböhmens</i> (Munich, 1896); P. Lessiak, &ldquo;Die Mundart von Pernegg
+in Kärnten&rdquo; (Paul and Braune, <i>Beiträge</i>, vol. xxviii.).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft16i" id="ft16i" href="#fa16i"><span class="fn">16</span></a> Cf., for a hypothesis of two <i>Umlautsperioden</i> during the Old High
+German time, F. Kauffmann, <i>Geschichte der schwäbischen Mundart</i>
+(Strassburg, 1890), S. 152.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft17i" id="ft17i" href="#fa17i"><span class="fn">17</span></a> Cf. W. Wilmanns, <i>Deutsche Grammatik</i>, i. (2nd edition) pp.
+300-304.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft18i" id="ft18i" href="#fa18i"><span class="fn">18</span></a> Wilmanns, l.c. pp. 273-280. It might be mentioned that,
+in Modern High German, these new diphthongs are neither in spelling
+nor in educated pronunciation distinguished from the older ones.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft19i" id="ft19i" href="#fa19i"><span class="fn">19</span></a> Cf. Wilmanns, pp. 280-284.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft20i" id="ft20i" href="#fa20i"><span class="fn">20</span></a> Ibid. pp. 129-132.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft21i" id="ft21i" href="#fa21i"><span class="fn">21</span></a> Cf. K. Lachmann, <i>Kleinere Schriften</i>, i. p. 161 ff.; Müllenhoff
+and Scherer&rsquo;s <i>Denkmäler</i> (3rd ed.), i. p. xxvii.; H. Paul, <i>Gab es eine
+mhd. Schriftsprache?</i> (Halle, 1873); O. Behaghel, <i>Zur Frage nach
+einer mhd. Schriftsprache</i> (Basel, 1886) (Cf. Paul and Braune&rsquo;s
+<i>Beiträge</i>, xiii. p. 464 ff.); A. Socin, <i>Schriftsprache und Dialekte</i>
+(Heilbronn, 1888); H. Fischer, <i>Zur Geschichte des Mittelhochdeutschen</i>
+(Tübingen, 1889); O. Behaghel, <i>Schriftsprache und Mundart</i>
+(Giessen, 1896); K. Zwierzina, <i>Beobachtungen zum Reimgebrauch
+Hartmanns und Wolframs</i> (Haile, 1898); S. Singer, <i>Die mhd. Schriftsprache</i>
+(1900); C. Kraus, <i>Heinrich von Veldeke und die mhd.
+Dichtersprache</i> (Halle, 1899); G. Roethe, <i>Die Reimvorreden des
+Sachsenspiegels</i> (Berlin, 1899); H. Tümpel, <i>Niederdeutsche Studien</i>
+(1898).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft22i" id="ft22i" href="#fa22i"><span class="fn">22</span></a> For literature bearing on the complicated question of the
+<i>Druckersprachen</i>, readers are referred to the article &ldquo;Neuhochdeutsche
+Schriftsprache,&rdquo; by W. Scheel, in Bethge&rsquo;s <i>Ergebnisse ... der
+germanistischen Wissenschaft</i> (1902), pp. 47, 50 f. Cf. also K. von
+Bahder, <i>Grundlagen des nhd. Lautsystems</i> (1890), pp. 15 ff.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft23i" id="ft23i" href="#fa23i"><span class="fn">23</span></a> A German <i>Priamel</i> mentions as an essential quality in a beautiful
+woman: &ldquo;die red dort her von Swaben.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft24i" id="ft24i" href="#fa24i"><span class="fn">24</span></a> Cf. for a detailed discussion of the noun declension, K. Boiunga,
+<i>Die Entwicklung der mhd. Substantivflexion</i> (Leipzig, 1890); and,
+more particularly for the masculine and neuter nouns, two articles
+by H. Molz, &ldquo;Die Substantivflexion seit mhd. Zeit,&rdquo; in Paul and
+Braune&rsquo;s <i>Beiträge</i>, xxvii. p. 209 ff. and xxxi. 277 ff. For the changes
+in the gender of nouns, A. Polzin, <i>Geschlechtswandel der Substantiva
+im Deutschen</i> (Hildesheim, 1903).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft25i" id="ft25i" href="#fa25i"><span class="fn">25</span></a> Cf. C. Blanckenburg, <i>Studien über die Sprache Abrahams a S.
+Clara</i> (Halle, 1897); H. Strigl, &ldquo;Einiges über die Sprache des P.
+Abraham a Sancta Clara&rdquo; (<i>Zeitschr. f. deutsche Wortforschung</i>, viii.
+206 ff.).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft26i" id="ft26i" href="#fa26i"><span class="fn">26</span></a> Cf. F. Kluge, <i>Etymologisches Wörterbuch</i> (6th ed.), pp. 508 ff.
+One can speak of: <i>Studenten-, Soldaten-, Weidmanns-, Bergmanns-,
+Drucker-, Juristen-, und Zigeunersprache, und Rotwelsch</i>. Cf.
+F. Kluge, <i>Die deutsche Studentensprache</i> (Strassburg, 1894); <i>Rotwelsch</i>
+i. (Strassburg, 1901); R. Bethge, <i>Ergebnisse</i>, &amp;c., p. 55 f.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft27i" id="ft27i" href="#fa27i"><span class="fn">27</span></a> Cf. H. Wunderlich, <i>Unsere Umgangssprache</i> (Weimar, 1894).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft28i" id="ft28i" href="#fa28i"><span class="fn">28</span></a> Cf. Th. Siebs, <i>Deutsche Bühnenaussprache</i> (2nd ed., Berlin, 1901),
+and the same writer&rsquo;s <i>Grundzüge der Bühnensprache</i> (1900).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft29i" id="ft29i" href="#fa29i"><span class="fn">29</span></a> W. Braune, <i>Über die Einigung der deutschen Aussprache</i> (Halle,
+1905); and the review by O. Brenner, in the <i>Zeitschrift des allgemeinen
+deutschen Sprachvereins</i>, Beihefte iv. 27, pp. 228-232.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft30i" id="ft30i" href="#fa30i"><span class="fn">30</span></a> Cf. K. Luick, <i>Deutsche Lautlehre mit besonderer Berücksichtigung
+der Sprechweise Wiens und der österreichischen Alpenländer</i> (1904);
+O. Brenner, &ldquo;Zur Aussprache des Hochdeutschen&rdquo; l.c., pp. 218-228.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN LITERATURE.<a name="ar66" id="ar66"></a></span> Compared with other literatures,
+that of the German-speaking peoples presents a strangely broken
+and interrupted course; it falls into more or less isolated groups,
+separated from each other by periods which in intellectual
+darkness and ineptitude are virtually without a parallel in other
+European lands. The explanation of this irregularity of development
+is to be sought less in the chequered political history of
+the German people&mdash;although this was often reason enough&mdash;than
+in the strongly marked, one might almost say, provocative
+character of the national mind as expressed in literature. The
+Germans were not able, like their partially latinized English
+cousins&mdash;or even their Scandinavian neighbours&mdash;to adapt
+themselves to the various waves of literary influence which
+emanated from Italy and France and spread with irresistible
+power over all Europe; their literary history has been rather a
+struggle for independent expression, a constant warring against
+outside forces, even when the latter&mdash;like the influence of English
+literature in the 18th century and of Scandinavian at the close
+of the 19th&mdash;were hailed as friendly and not hostile. It is a
+peculiarity of German literature that in those ages when, owing
+to its own poverty and impotence, it was reduced to borrowing
+its ideas and its poetic forms from other lands, it sank to the
+most servile imitation; while the first sign of returning health
+has invariably been the repudiation of foreign influence and the
+assertion of the right of genius to untrammelled expression.
+Thus Germany&rsquo;s periods of literary efflorescence rarely coincide
+with those of other nations, and great European movements,
+like the Renaissance, passed over her without producing a single
+great poet.</p>
+
+<p>This chequered course, however, renders the grouping of German
+literature and the task of the historian the easier. The first
+and simplest classification is that afforded by the various stages
+of linguistic development. In accordance with the three divisions
+in the history of the High German language, there is an Old High
+German, a Middle High German and a New High German or
+Modern High German literary epoch. It is obvious, however,
+that the last of these divisions covers too enormous a period of
+literary history to be regarded as analogous to the first two.
+The present survey is consequently divided into six main
+sections:</p>
+
+<p>I. The Old High German Period, including the literature of
+the Old Saxon dialect, from the earliest times to the middle of
+the 11th century.</p>
+
+<p>II. The Middle High German Period, from the middle of the
+11th to the middle of the 14th century.</p>
+
+<p>III. The Transition Period, from the middle of the 14th century
+to the Reformation in the 16th century.</p>
+
+<p>IV. The Period of Renaissance and Pseudo-classicism, from
+the end of the 16th century to the middle of the 18th.</p>
+
+<p>V. The Classical Period of Modern German literature, from
+the middle of the 18th century to Goethe&rsquo;s death in 1832.</p>
+
+<p>VI. The Period from Goethe&rsquo;s death to the present day.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">I. The Old High German Period (<i>c.</i> 750-1050)</p>
+
+<p>Of all the Germanic races, the tribes with which we have more
+particularly to deal here were the latest to attain intellectual
+maturity. The Goths had, centuries earlier, under their famous
+bishop Ulfilas or Wulfila, possessed the Bible in their vernacular,
+the northern races could point to their <i>Edda</i>, the Germanic
+tribes in England to a rich and virile Old English poetry, before
+a written German literature of any consequence existed at all.
+At the same time, these continental tribes, in the epoch that lay
+between the Migrations of the 5th century and the age of Charles
+the Great, were not without poetic literature of a kind, but it
+was not committed to writing, or, at least, no record of such a
+poetry has come down to us. Its existence is vouched for by
+indirect historical evidence, and by the fact that the sagas, out
+of which the German national epic was welded at a later date,
+originated in the great upheaval of the 5th century. When the
+vernacular literature began to emerge from an unwritten state
+in the 8th century, it proved to be merely a weak reflection of
+the ecclesiastical writings of the monasteries; and this, with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page784" id="page784"></a>784</span>
+very few exceptions, Old High German literature remained.
+Translations of the liturgy, of Tatian&rsquo;s <i>Gospel Harmony</i> (<i>c.</i> 835),
+of fragments of sermons, form a large proportion of it. Occasionally,
+as in the so-called <i>Monsee Fragments</i>, and at the end of the
+period, in the prose of Notker Labeo (d. 1022), this ecclesiastical
+literature attains a surprising maturity of style and expression.
+But it had no vitality of its own; it virtually sprang into
+<span class="correction" title="amended from existance">existence</span> at the command of Charlemagne, whose policy with
+regard to the use of the vernacular in place of Latin was liberal
+and far-seeing; and it docilely obeyed the tastes of the rulers
+that followed, becoming severely orthodox under Louis the Pious,
+and consenting to immediate extinction when the Saxon emperors
+withdrew their favour from it. Apart from a few shorter poetic
+fragments of interest, such as the <i>Merseburg Charms</i> (<i>Zaubersprüche</i>),
+an undoubted relic of pre-Christian times, the <i>Wessobrunn
+Prayer</i> (<i>c.</i> 780), the <i>Muspilli</i>, an imaginative description
+of the Day of Judgment, and the <i>Ludwigslied</i> (881), which may
+be regarded as the starting point for the German historical
+ballad, the only High German poem of importance in this early
+period was the <i>Gospel Book</i> (<i>Liber evangeliorum</i>) of Otfrid of
+Weissenburg (<i>c.</i> 800-870). Even this work is more interesting
+as the earliest attempt to supersede alliteration in German
+poetry by rhyme, than for such poetic life as the monk of Weissenburg
+was able to instil into his narrative. In fact, for the only
+genuine poetry of this epoch we have to look, not to the High
+German but to the Low German races. They alone seemed
+able to give literary expression to the memories handed down
+in oral tradition from the 5th century; to Saxon tradition we
+owe the earliest extant fragment of a national saga, the <i>Lay
+of Hildebrand</i> (<i>Hildebrandslied</i>, <i>c.</i> 800), and a Saxon poet was the
+author of a vigorous alliterative version of the Gospel story, the
+<i>Heliand</i> (<i>c.</i> 830), and also of part of the Old Testament (<i>Genesis</i>).
+This alliterative epic&mdash;for epic it may be called&mdash;is the one
+poem of this age in which the Christian tradition has been adapted
+to German poetic needs. Of the existence of a lyric poetry we
+only know by hearsay; and the drama had nowhere in Europe
+yet emerged from its earliest purely liturgic condition. Such
+as it was, the vernacular literature of the Old High German
+period enjoyed but a brief existence, and in the 10th and 11th
+centuries darkness again closed over it. The dominant &ldquo;German&rdquo;
+literature in these centuries is in Latin; but that literature is
+not without national interest, for it shows in what direction the
+German mind was moving. The <i>Lay of Walter</i> (<i>Waltharilied</i>,
+<i>c.</i> 930), written in elegant hexameters by Ekkehard of St Gall,
+the moralizing dramas of Hrosvitha (Roswitha) of Gandersheim,
+the <i>Ecbasis captivi</i> (<i>c.</i> 940), earliest of all the Beast epics, and
+the romantic adventures of <i>Ruodlieb</i> (<i>c.</i> 1030), form a literature
+which, Latin although it is, foreshadows the future developments
+of German poetry.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">II. The Middle High German Period (1050-1350)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Early Middle High German Poetry.</i>&mdash;The beginnings of
+Middle High German literature were hardly less tentative than
+those of the preceding period. The Saxon emperors, with their
+Latin and even Byzantine tastes, had made it extremely
+difficult to take up the thread where Notker let it drop. Williram
+of Ebersberg, the commentator of the <i>Song of Songs</i> (<i>c.</i> 1063),
+did certainly profit by Notker&rsquo;s example, but he stands alone.
+The Church had no helping hand to offer poetry, as in the more
+liberal epoch of the great Charles; for, at the middle of the 11th
+century, when the linguistic change from Old to Middle High
+German was taking place, a movement of religious asceticism,
+originating in the Burgundian monastery of Cluny, spread across
+Europe, and before long all the German peoples fell under its
+influence. For a century there was no room for any literature
+that did not place itself unreservedly at the service of the Church,
+a service which meant the complete abnegation of the brighter
+side of life. Repellent in their asceticism are, for instance,
+poems like <i>Memento mori</i> (<i>c.</i> 1050), <i>Vom Glauben</i>, a verse commentary
+on the creed by a monk Hartmann (<i>c.</i> 1120), and a poem
+on &ldquo;the remembrance of death&rdquo; (<i>Von des todes gehugede</i>) by
+Heinreich von Melk (<i>c.</i> 1150); only rarely, as in a few narrative
+Poems on Old Testament subjects, are the poets of this time able
+to forget for a time their lugubrious faith. In the <i>Ezzolied</i>
+(<i>c.</i> 1060), a spirited lay by a monk of Bamberg on the life, miracles
+and death of Christ, and in the <i>Annolied</i> (<i>c.</i> 1080), a poem in
+praise of the archbishop Anno of Cologne, we find, however,
+some traces of a higher poetic imagination.</p>
+
+<p>The transition from this rigid ecclesiastic spirit to a freer,
+more imaginative literature is to be seen in the lyric poetry
+inspired by the Virgin, in the legends of the saints which bulk
+so largely in the poetry of the 12th century, and in the general
+trend towards mysticism. Andreas, Pilatus, Aegidius, Albanius
+are the heroes of monkish romances of that age, and the stories
+of Sylvester and Crescentia form the most attractive parts of
+the <i>Kaiserchronik</i> (<i>c.</i> 1130-1150), a long, confused chronicle of
+the world which contains many elements common to later Middle
+High German poetry. The national sagas, of which the poet
+of the <i>Kaiserchronik</i> had not been oblivious, soon began to assert
+themselves in the popular literature. The wandering <i>Spielleute</i>,
+the lineal descendants of the jesters and minstrels of the dark
+ages, who were now rapidly becoming a factor of importance in
+literature, were here the innovators; to them we owe the romance
+of <i>König Rother</i> (<i>c.</i> 1160), and the kindred stories of <i>Orendel</i>,
+<i>Oswald</i> and <i>Salomon und Markolf</i> (<i>Salman und Morolf</i>). All
+these poems bear witness to a new element, which in these years
+kindled the German imagination and helped to counteract the
+austerity of the religious faith&mdash;the Crusades. With what
+alacrity the Germans revelled in the wonderland of the East
+is to be seen especially in the <i>Alexanderlied</i> (<i>c.</i> 1130), and in
+<i>Herzog Ernst</i> (<i>c.</i> 1180), romances which point out the way to
+another important development of German medieval literature,
+the Court epic. The latter type of romance was the immediate
+product of the social conditions created by chivalry and, like
+chivalry itself, was determined and influenced by its French
+origin; so also was the version of the <i>Chanson de Roland</i> (<i>Rolandslied</i>,
+c. 1135), which we owe to another priest, Konrad of Regensburg,
+who, with considerable probability, has been identified
+with the author of the <i>Kaiserchronik</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The Court epic was, however, more immediately ushered in
+by Eilhart von Oberge, a native of the neighbourhood of Hildesheim
+who, in his <i>Tristant</i> (<i>c.</i> 1170), chose that Arthurian type
+of romance which from now on was especially cultivated by the
+poets of the Court epic; and of equally early origin is a knightly
+romance of <i>Floris und Blancheflur</i>, another of the favourite love
+stories of the middle ages. In these years, too, the Beast epic,
+which had been represented by the Latin <i>Ecbasis captivi</i>, was
+reintroduced into Germany by an Alsatian monk, Heinrich der
+Glichezćre, who based his <i>Reinhart Fuchs</i> (<i>c.</i> 1180) on the French
+<i>Roman de Renart</i>. Lastly, we have to consider the beginning
+of the <i>Minnesang</i>, or lyric, which in the last decades of the
+12th century burst out with extraordinary vigour in Austria
+and South Germany. The origins are obscure, and it is still
+debatable how much in the German Minnesang is indigenous
+and national, how much due to French and Provençal influence;
+for even in its earliest phases the Minnesang reveals correspondences
+with the contemporary lyric of the south of France. The
+freshness and originality of the early South German singers,
+such as Kürenberg, Dietmar von Eist, the Burggraf of Rietenburg
+and Meinloh von Sevelingen, are not, however, to be
+questioned; in spite of foreign influence, their verses make the
+impression of having been a spontaneous expression of German
+lyric feeling in the 12th century. The <i>Spruchdichtung</i>, a form
+of poetry which in this period is represented by at least two
+poets who call themselves Herger and &ldquo;Der Spervogel,&rdquo; was
+less dependent on foreign models; the pointed and satirical
+strophes of these poets were the forerunners of a vast literature
+which did not reach its highest development until after literature
+had passed from the hands of the noble-born knight to those of
+the burgher of the towns.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>The Flourishing of Middle High German Poetry.</i>&mdash;Such
+was the preparation for the extraordinarily brilliant, although
+brief epoch of German medieval poetry, which corresponded
+to the reigns of the Hohenstaufen emperors, Frederick I.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page785" id="page785"></a>785</span>
+Barbarossa, Henry VI. and Frederick II. These rulers, by their
+ambitious political aspirations and achievements, filled the
+German peoples with a sense of &ldquo;world-mission,&rdquo; as the leading
+political power in medieval Europe. Docile pupils of French
+chivalry, the Germans had no sooner learned their lesson than
+they found themselves in the position of being able to dictate
+to the world of chivalry. In the same way, the German poets,
+who, in the 12th century, had been little better than clumsy
+translators of French romances, were able, at the beginning
+of the 13th, to substitute for French <i>chansons de geste</i> epics
+based on national sagas, to put a completely German imprint
+on the French Arthurian romance, and to sing German songs
+before which even the lyric of Provence paled. National epic,
+Court epic and Minnesang&mdash;these three types of medieval
+German literature, to which may be added as a subordinate
+group didactic poetry, comprise virtually all that has come
+down to us in the Middle High German tongue. A Middle High
+German prose hardly existed, and the drama, such as it was,
+was still essentially Latin.</p>
+
+<p>The first place among the National or Popular epics belongs
+to the <i>Nibelungenlied</i>, which received its present form in Austria
+about the turn of the 12th and 13th centuries. Combining,
+as it does, elements from various cycles of sagas&mdash;the lower
+Rhenish legend of Siegfried, the Burgundian saga of Gunther
+and Hagen, the Gothic saga of Dietrich and Etzel&mdash;it stands out
+as the most representative epic of German medieval life. And
+in literary power, dramatic intensity and singleness of purpose
+its eminence is no less unique. The vestiges of gradual growth&mdash;of
+irreconcilable elements imperfectly welded together&mdash;may
+not have been entirely effaced, but they in no way lessen the
+impression of unity which the poem leaves behind it; whoever
+the welder of the sagas may have been, he was clearly a poet
+of lofty imagination and high epic gifts (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Nibelungenlied</a></span>).
+Less imposing as a whole, but in parts no less powerful in its
+appeal to the modern mind, is the second of the German national
+epics, <i>Gudrun</i>, which was written early in the 13th century.
+This poem, as it has come down to us, is the work of an Austrian,
+but the subject belongs to a cycle of sagas which have their
+home on the shores of the North Sea. It seems almost a freak
+of chance that Siegfried, the hero of the Rhineland, should occupy
+so prominent a position in the <i>Nibelungenlied</i>, whereas Dietrich
+von Bern (<i>i.e.</i> of Verona), the name under which Theodoric the
+Great had been looked up to for centuries by the German people
+as their national hero, should have left the stamp of his personality
+on no single epic of the intrinsic worth of the <i>Nibelungenlied</i>.
+He appears, however, more or less in the background of a number
+of romances&mdash;<i>Die Rabenschlacht</i>, <i>Dietrichs Flucht</i>, <i>Alpharts Tod</i>,
+<i>Biterolf und Dietlieb</i>, <i>Laurin</i>, &amp;c.&mdash;which make up what is
+usually called the <i>Heldenbuch</i>. It is tempting, indeed, to see
+in this very unequal collection the basis for what, under more
+favourable circumstances, might have developed into an epic
+even more completely representative of the German nation
+than the <i>Nibelungenlied</i>.</p>
+
+<p>While the influence of the romance of chivalry is to be traced
+on all these popular epics, something of the manlier, more
+primitive ideals that animated German national poetry passed
+over to the second great group of German medieval poetry,
+the Court epic. The poet who, following Eilhart von Oberge&rsquo;s
+tentative beginnings, established the Court epic in Germany
+was Heinrich von Veldeke, a native of the district of the lower
+Rhine; his <i>Eneit</i>, written between 1173 and 1186, is based on
+a French original. Other poets of the time, such as Herbort
+von Fritzlar, the author of a <i>Liet von Troye</i>, followed Heinrich&rsquo;s
+example, and selected French models for German poems on
+antique themes; while Albrecht von Halberstadt translated
+about the year 1210 the <i>Metamorphoses</i> of Ovid into German
+verse. With the three masters of the Court epic, Hartmann
+von Aue, Wolfram von Eschenbach and Gottfried von Strassburg&mdash;all
+of them contemporaries&mdash;the Arthurian cycle became
+the recognized theme of this type of romance, and the accepted
+embodiment of the ideals of the knightly classes. Hartmann
+was a Swabian, Wolfram a Bavarian, Gottfried presumably a
+native of Strassburg. Hartmann, who in his <i>Erec</i> and <i>Iwein</i>,
+<i>Gregorius</i> and <i>Der arme Heinrich</i> combined a tendency towards
+religious asceticism with a desire to imbue the worldly life of
+the knight with a moral and religious spirit, provided the Court
+epic of the age with its best models; he had, of all the medieval
+court poets, the most delicate sense for the formal beauty of
+poetry, for language, verse and style. Wolfram and Gottfried,
+on the other hand, represent two extremes of poetic temperament.
+Wolfram&rsquo;s <i>Parzival</i> is filled with mysticism and obscure
+spiritual significance; its flashes of humour irradiate, although
+they can hardly be said to illumine, the gloom; its hero is,
+unconsciously, a symbol and allegory of much which to the
+poet himself must have been mysterious and inexplicable; in
+other words, <i>Parzival</i>&mdash;and Wolfram&rsquo;s other writings, <i>Willehalm</i>
+and <i>Titurel</i>, point in the same direction&mdash;is an instinctive or,
+to use Schiller&rsquo;s word, a &ldquo;naďve&rdquo; work of genius. Gottfried,
+again, is hardly less gifted and original, but he is a poet of a
+wholly different type. His <i>Tristan</i> is even more lucid than
+Hartmann&rsquo;s <i>Iwein</i>, his art is more objective; his delight in
+it is that of the conscious artist who sees his work growing
+under his hands. Gottfried&rsquo;s poem, in other words, is free
+from the obtrusion of those subjective elements which are in
+so high a degree characteristic of <i>Parzival</i>; in spite of the tragic
+character of the story, <i>Tristan</i> is radiant and serene, and yet uncontaminated
+by that tone of frivolity which the Renaissance
+introduced into love stories of this kind.</p>
+
+<p><i>Parzival</i> and <i>Tristan</i> are the two poles of the German Court
+epic, and the subsequent development of that epic stands under
+the influence of the three poets, Hartmann, Wolfram and
+Gottfried; according as the poets of the 13th century tend to
+imitate one or other of these, they fall into three classes. To
+the followers and imitators of Hartmann belong Ulrich von
+Zatzikhoven, the author of a <i>Lanzelet</i> (<i>c.</i> 1195); Wirnt von
+Gravenberg, a Bavarian, whose <i>Wigalois</i> (<i>c.</i> 1205) shows considerable
+imaginative power; the versatile Spielmann, known as
+&ldquo;Der Stricker&rdquo;; and Heinrich von dem Türlin, author of an
+unwieldy epic, <i>Die Krone</i> (&ldquo;the crown of all adventures,&rdquo; c. 1220).
+The fascination of Wolfram&rsquo;s mysticism is to be seen in <i>Der
+jüngere Titurel</i> of a Bavarian poet, Albrecht von Scharfenberg
+(<i>c.</i> 1270), and in the still later <i>Lohengrin</i> of an unknown poet;
+whereas Gottfried von Strassburg dominates the <i>Flore und
+Blanscheflur</i> of Konrad Fleck (<i>c.</i> 1220) and the voluminous
+romances of the two chief poets of the later 13th century, Rudolf
+von Ems, who died in 1254, and Konrad von Würzburg, who lived
+till 1287. Of these, Konrad alone carried on worthily the traditions
+of the great age, and even his art, which excels within the
+narrow limits of romances like <i>Die Herzemoere</i> and <i>Engelhard</i>,
+becomes diffuse and wearisome on the unlimited canvas of
+<i>Der Trojanerkrieg</i> and <i>Partonopier und Meliur</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The most conspicuous changes which came over the narrative
+poetry of the 13th century were, on the one hand, a steady encroachment
+of realism on the matter and treatment of the epic,
+and, on the other, a leaning to didacticism. The substitution
+of the &ldquo;history&rdquo; of the chronicle for the confessedly imaginative
+stories of the earlier poets is to be seen in the work of Rudolf von
+Ems, and of a number of minor chroniclers like Ulrich von
+Eschenbach, Berthold von Holle and Jans Enikel; while for the
+growth of realism we may look to the <i>Pfaffe Amis</i>, a collection
+of comic anecdotes by &ldquo;Der Stricker,&rdquo; the admirable peasant
+romance <i>Meier Helmbrecht</i>, written between 1236 and 1250 by
+Wernher der Gartenaere in Bavaria, and to the adventures of
+Ulrich von Lichtenstein, as described in his <i>Frauendienst</i> (1255)
+and <i>Frauenbuch</i> (1257).</p>
+
+<p>More than any single poet of the Court epic, more even than
+the poet of the <i>Nibelungenlied</i>, Walther von der Vogelweide
+summed up in himself all that was best in the group of poetic
+literature with which he was associated&mdash;the Minnesang. The
+early Austrian singers already mentioned, poets like Heinrich
+von Veldeke, who in his lyrics, as in his epic, introduced the French
+conception of <i>Minne</i>, or like the manly Friedrich von Hausen,
+and the Swiss imitator of Provençal measures, Rudolf von
+Fenis appear only in the light of forerunners. Even more
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page786" id="page786"></a>786</span>
+original poets, like Heinrich von Morungen and Walther&rsquo;s own
+master, Reinmar von Hagenau, the author of harmonious but
+monotonously elegiac verses, or among immediate contemporaries,
+Hartmann von Aue and Wolfram von Eschenbach, whose few
+lyric strophes are as deeply stamped with his individuality as his
+epics&mdash;seem only tributary to the full rich stream of Walther&rsquo;s
+genius. There was not a form of the German Minnesang which
+Walther did not amplify and deepen; songs of courtly love
+and lowly love, of religious faith and delight in nature, patriotic
+songs and political <i>Sprüche</i>&mdash;in all he was a master. Of Walther&rsquo;s
+life we are somewhat better informed than in the case of his contemporaries:
+he was born about 1170 and died about 1230;
+his art he learned in Austria, whereupon he wandered through
+South Germany, a welcome guest wherever he went, although
+his vigorous championship of what he regarded as the national
+cause in the political struggles of the day won him foes as well as
+friends. For centuries he remained the accepted exemplar of
+German lyric poetry; not merely the Minnesänger who followed
+him, but also the Meistersinger of the 15th and 16th centuries
+looked up to him as one of the founders and lawgivers of their art.
+He was the most influential of all Germany&rsquo;s lyric poets, and
+in the breadth, originality and purity of his inspiration one of
+her greatest (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Walther von der Vogelweide</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p>The development of the German Minnesang after Walther&rsquo;s
+death and under his influence is easily summed up. Contemporaries
+had been impressed by the dual character of Walther&rsquo;s
+lyric; they distinguished a higher courtly lyric, and a lower
+more outspoken form of song, free from the constraint of social
+or literary conventions. The later Minnesang emphasized this
+dualism. Amongst Walther&rsquo;s immediate contemporaries, high-born
+poets, whose lives were passed at courts, naturally cultivated
+the higher lyric; but the more gifted and original singers of the
+time rejoiced in the freedom of Walther&rsquo;s poetry of <i>niedere
+Minne</i>. It was, in fact, in accordance with the spirit of the age
+that the latter should have been Walther&rsquo;s most valuable legacy
+to his successors; and the greatest of these, Neidhart von
+Reuental (<i>c.</i> 1180-<i>c.</i> 1250), certainly did not allow himself to
+be hampered by aristocratic prejudices. Neidhart sought the
+themes of his <i>höfische Dorfpoesie</i> in the village, and, as the mood
+happened to dictate, depicted the peasant with humorous banter
+or biting satire. The lyric poets of the later 13th century were
+either, like Burkart von Hohenfels, Ulrich von Winterstetten
+and Gottfried von Neifen, echoes of Walther von der Vogelweide
+and of Neidhart, or their originality was confined to some
+particular form of lyric poetry in which they excelled. Thus
+the singer known as &ldquo;Der Tannhäuser&rdquo; distinguished himself as
+an imitator of the French <i>pastourelle</i>; Reinmar von Zweter was
+purely a <i>Spruchdichter</i>. More or less common to all is the consciousness
+that their own ideas and surroundings were no longer
+in harmony with the aristocratic world of chivalry, which the
+poets of the previous generation had glorified. The solid
+advantages, material prosperity and increasing comfort of life
+in the German towns appealed to poets like Steinmar von
+Klingenau more than the unworldly ideals of self-effacing
+knighthood which Ulrich von Lichtenstein and Johann Hadlaub
+of Zürich clung to so tenaciously and extolled so warmly. On the
+whole, the Spruchdichter came best out of this ordeal of changing
+fashions; and the increasing interest in the moral and didactic
+applications of literature favoured the development of this
+form of verse. The confusion of didactic purpose with the
+lyric is common to all the later poetry, to that of the learned
+Marner, of Boppe, Rumezland and Heinrich von Meissen,
+who was known to later generations as &ldquo;Frauenlob.&rdquo; The
+<i>Spruchdichtung</i>, in fact, was one of the connecting links between
+the Minnesang of the 13th and the lyric and satiric poetry
+of the 15th and 16th centuries.</p>
+
+<p>The disturbing and disintegrating element in the literature
+of the 13th century was thus the substitution of a utilitarian
+didacticism for the idealism of chivalry. In the early decades of
+that century, poems like <i>Der Winsbeke</i>, by a Bavarian, and
+<i>Der welsche Gast</i>, written in 1215-1216 by Thomasin von Zirclaere
+(Zirclaria), a native of Friuli, still teach with uncompromising
+idealism the duties and virtues of the knightly life. But in the
+<i>Bescheidenheit</i> (<i>c.</i> 1215-1230) of a wandering singer, who called
+himself Freidank, we find for the first time an active antagonism
+to the unworldly code of chivalry and an unmistakable reflection
+of the changing social order, brought about by the rise of what
+we should now call the middle class. Freidank is the spokesman
+of the <i>Bürger</i>, and in his terse, witty verses may be traced the
+germs of German intellectual and literary development in the
+coming centuries&mdash;even of the Reformation itself. From the
+advent of Freidank onwards, the satiric and didactic poetry went
+the way of the epic; what it gained in quantity it lost in quality
+and concentration. The satires associated with the name of
+Seifried Helbling, an Austrian who wrote in the last fifteen
+years of the 13th century, and <i>Der Renner</i> by Hugo von Trimberg,
+written at the very end of the century, may be taken as characteristic
+of the later period, where terseness and incisive wit have
+given place to diffuse moralizing and allegory.</p>
+
+<p>There is practically no Middle High German literature in
+prose; such prose as has come down to us&mdash;the tracts of David
+of Augsburg, the powerful sermons of Berthold von Regensburg
+(d. 1272), Germany&rsquo;s greatest medieval preacher, and several legal
+codes, as the <i>Sachsenspiegel</i> and <i>Schwabenspiegel</i>&mdash;only prove
+that the Germans of the 13th century had not yet realized the
+possibilities of prose as a medium of literary expression.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">III. The Transition Period (1350-1600)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries.</i>&mdash;As is the case
+with all transitional periods of literary history, this epoch of
+German literature may be considered under two aspects: on
+the one hand, we may follow in it the decadence and disintegration
+of the literature of the Middle High German period; on
+the other, we may study the beginnings of modern forms of
+poetry and the preparation of that spiritual revolution, which
+meant hardly less to the Germanic peoples than the Renaissance
+to the Latin races&mdash;the Protestant Reformation.</p>
+
+<p>By the middle of the 14th century, knighthood with its
+chivalric ideals was rapidly declining, and the conditions under
+which medieval poetry had flourished were passing away.
+The social change rendered the courtly epic of Arthur&rsquo;s Round
+Table in great measure incomprehensible to the younger generation,
+and made it difficult for them to understand the spirit
+that actuated the heroes of the national epic; the tastes to which
+the lyrics of the great Minnesingers had appealed were vitiated
+by the more practical demands of the rising middle classes.
+But the stories of chivalry still appealed as stories to the people,
+although the old way of telling them was no longer appreciated.
+The feeling for beauty of form and expression was lost; the
+craving for a moral purpose and didactic aim had to be satisfied
+at the cost of artistic beauty; and sensational incident was
+valued more highly than fine character-drawing or inspired
+poetic thought. Signs of the decadence are to be seen in the
+<i>Karlmeinet</i> of this period, stories from the youth of Charlemagne,
+in a continuation of <i>Parzival</i> by two Alsatians, Claus Wisse
+and Philipp Colin (<i>c.</i> 1335), in an <i>Apollonius von Tyrus</i> by
+Heinrich von Neuenstadt (<i>c.</i> 1315), and a <i>Königstochter von
+Frankreich</i> by Hans von Bühel (<i>c.</i> 1400). The story of Siegfried
+was retold in a rough ballad, <i>Das Lied von hürnen Seyfried</i>, the
+<i>Heldenbuch</i> was recast in <i>Knittelvers</i> or doggerel (1472), and even
+the Arthurian epic was parodied. A no less marked symptom
+of decadence is to be seen in a large body of allegorical poetry
+analogous to the <i>Roman de la rose</i> in France; Heinzelein of
+Constance, at the end of the 13th, and Hadamar von Laber and
+Hermann von Sachsenheim, about the middle of the 15th century,
+were representatives of this movement. As time went on, prose
+versions of the old stories became more general, and out of these
+developed the <i>Volksbücher</i>, such as <i>Loher und Maller</i>, <i>Die
+Haimonskinder</i>, <i>Die schöne Magelone</i>, <i>Melusine</i>, which formed
+the favourite reading of the German people for centuries. As
+the last monuments of the decadent narrative literature of the
+middle ages, we may regard the <i>Buch der Abenteuer</i> of Ulrich
+Füetrer, written at the end of the 15th century, and <i>Der Weisskönig</i>
+and <i>Teuerdank</i> by the emperor Maximilian I. (1459-1519)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page787" id="page787"></a>787</span>
+printed in the early years of the 16th. At the beginning of the
+new epoch the Minnesang could still point to two masters able
+to maintain the great traditions of the 13th century, Hugo von
+Montfort (1357-1423) and Oswald von Wolkenstein (1367-1445);
+but as the lyric passed into the hands of the middle-class poets
+of the German towns, it was rapidly shorn of its essentially
+lyric qualities; <i>die Minne</i> gave place to moral and religious
+dogmatism, emphasis was laid on strict adherence to the rules
+of composition, and the simple forms of the older lyric were
+superseded by ingenious metrical distortions. Under the influence
+of writers like Heinrich von Meissen (&ldquo;Frauenlob,&rdquo; <i>c.</i> 1250-1318)
+and Heinrich von Mügeln in the 14th century, like Muskatblut
+and Michael Beheim (1416-<i>c.</i> 1480) in the 15th, the Minnesang
+thus passed over into the Meistergesang. In the later 15th and
+in the 16th centuries all the south German towns possessed
+flourishing Meistersinger schools in which the art of writing
+verse was taught and practised according to complicated rules,
+and it was the ambition of every gifted citizen to rise through
+the various grades from <i>Schüler</i> to <i>Meister</i> and to distinguish
+himself in the &ldquo;singing contests&rdquo; instituted by the schools.</p>
+
+<p>Such are the decadent aspects of the once rich literature of
+the Middle High German period in the 14th and 15th centuries.
+Turning now to the more positive side of the literary movement,
+we have to note a revival of a popular lyric poetry&mdash;the Volkslied&mdash;which
+made the futility and artificiality of the Meistergesang
+more apparent. Never before or since has Germany been able
+to point to such a rich harvest of popular poetry as is to be seen
+in the Volkslieder of these two centuries. Every form of popular
+poetry is to be found here&mdash;songs of love and war, hymns and
+drinking-songs, songs of spring and winter, historical ballads,
+as well as lyrics in which the old motives of the Minnesang
+reappear stripped of all artificiality. More obvious ties with
+the literature of the preceding age are to be seen in the development
+of the <i>Schwank</i> or comic anecdote. Collections of such
+stories, which range from the practical jokes of <i>Till Eulenspiegel</i>
+(1515), and the coarse witticisms of the <i>Pfaffe vom Kalenberg</i>
+(end of 14th century) and <i>Peter Leu</i> (1550), to the religious and
+didactic anecdotes of J. Pauli&rsquo;s <i>Schimpf und Ernst</i> (1522) or the
+more literary <i>Rollwagenbüchlein</i> (1555) of Jörg Wickram and the
+<i>Wendunmut</i> (1563 ff.) of H.W. Kirchhoff&mdash;these dominate in
+large measure the literature of the 15th and 16th centuries;
+they are the literary descendants of the medieval <i>Pfaffe Amis</i>,
+<i>Markolf</i> and <i>Reinhart Fuchs</i>. An important development of
+this type of popular literature is to be seen in the <i>Narrenschiff</i> of
+Sebastian Brant (1457-1521), where the humorous anecdote
+became a vehicle of the bitterest satire; Brant&rsquo;s own contempt
+for the vulgarity of the ignorant, and the deep, unsatisfied
+craving of all strata of society for a wider intellectual horizon
+and a more humane and dignified life, to which Brant gave
+voice, make the <i>Narrenschiff</i>, which appeared in 1494, a landmark
+on the way that led to the Reformation. Another form&mdash;the
+Beast fable and Beast epic&mdash;which is but sparingly represented
+in earlier times, appealed with peculiar force to the new generation.
+At the very close of the Middle High German period,
+Ulrich Boner had revived the Aesopic fable in his <i>Edelstein</i>
+(1349), translations of Aesop in the following century added to
+the popularity of the fable (<i>q.v.</i>), and in the century of the Reformation
+it became, in the hands of Burkard Waldis (<i>Esopus</i>,
+1548) and Erasmus Alberus (<i>Buch von der Tugend und Weisheit</i>,
+1550), a favourite instrument of satire and polemic. A still
+more attractive form of the Beast fable was the epic of <i>Reinke
+de Vos</i>, which had been cultivated by Flemish poets in the 13th
+and 14th centuries and has come down to us in a Low Saxon
+translation, published at Lübeck in 1498. This, too, like Brant&rsquo;s
+poem, is a powerful satire on human folly, and is also, like the
+<i>Narrenschiff</i>, a harbinger of the coming Reformation.</p>
+
+<p>A complete innovation was the drama (<i>q.v.</i>), which, as we have
+seen, had practically no existence in Middle High German
+times. As in all European literatures, it emerged slowly and
+with difficulty from its original subservience to the church liturgy.
+As time went on, the vernacular was substituted for the original
+Latin, and with increasing demands for pageantry, the scene
+of the play was removed to the churchyard or the market-place;
+thus the opportunity arose in the 14th and 15th centuries for
+developing the <i>Weihnachtsspiel</i>, <i>Osterspiel</i> and <i>Passionsspiel</i> on
+secular lines. The enlargement of the scope of the religious
+play to include legends of the saints implied a further step in
+the direction of a complete separation of the drama from ecclesiastical
+ceremony. The most interesting example of this encroachment
+of the secular spirit is the <i>Spiel von Frau Jutten</i>&mdash;Jutta
+being the notorious Pope Joan&mdash;by an Alsatian, Dietrich
+Schernberg, in 1480. Meanwhile, in the 15th century, a beginning
+had been made of a drama entirely independent of the church.
+The mimic representations&mdash;originally allegorical in character&mdash;with
+which the people amused themselves at the great festivals
+of the year, and more especially in spring, were interspersed
+with dialogue, and performed on an improvised stage. This
+was the beginning of the <i>Fastnachtsspiel</i> or Shrovetide-play,
+the subject of which was a comic anecdote similar to those of
+the many collections of <i>Schwänke</i>. Amongst the earliest cultivators
+of the <i>Fastnachtsspiel</i> were Hans Rosenplüt (fl. <i>c.</i> 1460)
+and Hans Folz (fl. <i>c.</i> 1510), both of whom were associated with
+Nuremberg.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>The Age of the Reformation.</i>&mdash;Promising as were these
+literary beginnings of the 15th century, the real significance
+of the period in Germany&rsquo;s intellectual history is to be sought
+outside literature, namely, in two forces which immediately
+prepared the way for the Reformation&mdash;mysticism and humanism.
+The former of these had been a more or less constant factor in
+German religious thought throughout the middle ages, but
+with Meister Eckhart (? 1260-1327), the most powerful and
+original of all the German mystics, with Heinrich Seuse or Suso
+(<i>c.</i> 1300-1366), and Johannes Tauler (<i>c.</i> 1300-1361), it became
+a clearly defined mental attitude towards religion; it was an
+essentially personal interpretation of Christianity, and, as such,
+was naturally conducive to the individual freedom which
+Protestantism ultimately realized. It is thus not to be wondered
+at that we should owe the early translations of the Bible into
+German&mdash;one was printed at Strassburg in 1466&mdash;to the mystics.
+Johann Geiler von Kaisersberg (1445-1510), a pupil of the
+humanists and a friend of Sebastian Brant, may be regarded
+as a link between Eckhart and the earlier mysticists and Luther.
+Humanism was transplanted to German soil with the foundation
+of the university of Prague in 1348, and it made even greater
+strides than mysticism. Its immediate influence, however,
+was restricted to the educated classes; the pre-Reformation
+humanists despised the vernacular and wrote and thought
+only in Latin. Thus although neither Johann Reuchlin of
+Pforzheim (1455-1522), nor even the patriotic Alsatian, Jakob
+Wimpfeling (or Wimpheling) (1450-1528)&mdash;not to mention the
+great Dutch humanist Erasmus of Rotterdam (1466-1536)&mdash;has
+a place in the history of German literature, their battle for
+liberalism in thought and scholarship against the narrow orthodoxy
+of the Church cleared the way for a healthy national
+literature among the German-speaking peoples. The incisive
+wit and irony of humanistic satire&mdash;we need only instance the
+<i>Epistolae obscurorum virorum</i> (1515-1517)&mdash;prevented the
+German satirists of the Reformation age from sinking entirely
+into that coarse brutality to which they were only too prone.
+To the influence of the humanists we also owe many translations
+from the Latin and Italian dating from the 15th century.
+Prominent among the writers who contributed to the group
+of literature were Niklas von Wyl, chancellor of Württemberg,
+and his immediate contemporary Albrecht von Eyb (1420-1475).</p>
+
+<p>Martin Luther (1483-1546), Germany&rsquo;s greatest man in this
+age of intellectual new-birth, demands a larger share of attention
+in a survey of literature than his religious and ecclesiastical
+activity would in itself justify, if only because the literary activity
+of the age cannot be regarded apart from him. From the
+Volkslied and the popular <i>Schwank</i> to satire and drama, literature
+turned exclusively round the Reformation which had been
+inaugurated on the 31st of October 1517 by Luther&rsquo;s publication
+of the <i>Theses against Indulgences</i> in Wittenberg. In his three
+tracts, <i>An den christlichen Adel deutscher Nation</i>, <i>De captivitate</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page788" id="page788"></a>788</span>
+<i>Babylonica ecclesiae</i>, and <i>Von der Freiheit eines Christenmenschen</i>
+(1520), Luther laid down his principles of reform, and in the
+following year resolutely refused to recant his heresies in a
+dramatic scene before the Council of Worms. Luther&rsquo;s Bible
+(1522-1534) had unique importance not merely for the religious
+and intellectual welfare of the German people, but also for their
+literature. It is in itself a literary monument, a German classic,
+and the culmination and justification of that movement which
+had supplanted the medieval knight by the burgher and swept
+away Middle High German poetry. Luther, well aware that his
+translation of the Bible must be the keystone to his work, gave
+himself endless pains to produce a thoroughly German work&mdash;German
+both in language and in spirit. It was important that the
+dialect into which the Bible was translated should be comprehensible
+over as wide an area as possible of the German-speaking
+world, and for this reason he took all possible care in choosing
+the vocabulary and forms of his <i>Gemeindeutsch</i>. The language
+of the Saxon chancery thus became, thanks to Luther&rsquo;s initiative,
+the basis of the modern High German literary language. As a
+hymn-writer (<i>Geistliche Lieder</i>, 1564), Luther was equally mindful
+of the importance of adapting himself to the popular tradition;
+and his hymns form the starting-point for a vast development
+of German religious poetry which did not reach its highest point
+until the following century.</p>
+
+<p>The most powerful and virile literature of this age was the
+satire with which the losing side retaliated on the Protestant
+leaders. Amongst Luther&rsquo;s henchmen, Philipp Melanchthon
+(1497-1560), the &ldquo;praeceptor Germaniae,&rdquo; and Ulrich von
+Hutten (1488-1523) were powerful allies in the cause, but their
+intellectual sympathies were with the Latin humanists; and
+with the exception of some vigorous German prose and still
+more vigorous German verse by Hutten, both wrote in Latin.
+The satirical dramas of Niklas Manuel, a Swiss writer and the
+polemical fables of Erasmus Alberus (<i>c.</i> 1500-1553), on the other
+hand, were insignificant compared with the fierce assault on
+Protestantism by the Alsatian monk, Thomas Murner (1475-1537).
+The most unscrupulous of all German satirists, Murner
+shrank from no extremes of scurrility, his attacks on Luther
+reaching their culmination in the gross personalities of <i>Von dem
+lutherischen Narren</i> (1522). It was not until the following
+generation that the Protestant party could point to a satirist
+who in genius and power was at all comparable to Murner,
+namely, to Johann Fischart (<i>c.</i> 1550-<i>c.</i> 1591); but when Fischart&rsquo;s
+Rabelaisian humour is placed by the side of his predecessor&rsquo;s
+work, we see that, in spite of counter-reformations, the Protestant
+cause stood in a very different position in Fischart&rsquo;s day from that
+which it had occupied fifty years before. Fischart took his stand
+on the now firm union between humanism and Protestantism.
+His chief work, the <i>Affentheuerlich Naupengeheurliche Geschichtklitterung</i>
+(1575), a Germanization of the first book of Rabelais&rsquo;
+satire, is a witty and ingenious monstrosity, a satirical comment
+on the life of the 16th century, not the virulent expression of
+party strife. The day of a personal and brutal type of satire
+was clearly over, and the writers of the later 16th century reverted
+more and more to the finer methods of the humanists. The
+satire of Bartholomaeus Ringwaldt (1530-1599) and of Georg
+Rollenhagen (1542-1609), author of the <i>Froschmeuseler</i> (1595),
+was more &ldquo;literary&rdquo; and less actual than even Fischart&rsquo;s.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, the form of literature which succeeded best in
+emancipating itself from the trammels of religious controversy
+in the 16th century was the drama. Protestantism proved
+favourable to its intellectual and literary development, and the
+humanists, who had always prided themselves on their imitations
+of Latin comedy, introduced into it a sense for form and
+proportion. The Latin school comedy in Germany was founded
+by J. Wimpfeling with his <i>Stylpho</i> (1470) and by J. Reuchlin
+with his witty adaptation of <i>Maître Patelin</i> in his <i>Henno</i> (1498).
+In the 16th century the chief writers of Latin dramas were
+Thomas Kirchmair or Naogeorgus (1511-1563), Caspar Brülow
+(1585-1627), and Nikodemus Frischlin (1547-1590), who also
+wrote dramas in the vernacular. The work of these men bears
+testimony in its form and its choice of subjects to the close
+relationship between Latin and German drama in the 16th century.
+One of the earliest focusses for a German drama inspired by the
+Reformation was Switzerland. In Basel, Pamphilus Gengenbach
+produced moralizing <i>Fastnachtsspiele</i> in 1515-1516; Niklas
+Manuel of Bern (1484-1530)&mdash;who has just been mentioned&mdash;employed
+the same type of play as a vehicle of pungent satire
+against the Mass and the sale of indulgences. But it was not
+long before the German drama benefited by the humanistic
+example: the <i>Parabell vam vorlorn Szohn</i> by Burkard Waldis
+(1527), the many dramas on the subject of <i>Susanna</i>&mdash;notably
+those of Sixt Birck (1532) and Paul Rebhun(1535)&mdash;and Frischlin&rsquo;s
+German plays are attempts to treat Biblical themes according
+to classic methods. In another of the important literary centres
+of the 16th century, however, in Nuremberg, the drama developed
+on indigenous lines. Hans Sachs (1494-1576), the Nuremberg
+cobbler and Meistersinger, the most productive writer of the age,
+went his own way; a voracious reader and an unwearied storyteller,
+he left behind him a vast literary legacy, embracing every
+form of popular literature from <i>Spruch</i> and <i>Schwank</i> to complicated
+<i>Meistergesang</i> and lengthy drama. He laid under
+contribution the rich Renaissance literature with which the
+humanistic translators had flooded Germany, and he became
+himself an ardent champion of the &ldquo;Wittembergisch Nachtigall&rdquo;
+Luther. But in the progressive movement of the German drama
+he played an even smaller role than his Swiss and Saxon contemporaries;
+for his tragedies and comedies are deficient in all
+dramatic qualities; they are only stories in dialogue. In the
+<i>Fastnachtsspiele</i>, where dramatic form is less essential than anecdotal
+point and brevity, he is to be seen at his best. Rich
+as the 16th century was in promise, the conditions for
+the development of a national drama were unfavourable. At
+the close of the century the influence of the English drama&mdash;brought
+to Germany by English actors&mdash;introduced the
+deficient dramatic and theatrical force into the humanistic
+and &ldquo;narrative&rdquo; drama which has just been considered. This
+is to be seen in the work of Jakob Ayrer (d. 1605) and Duke
+Henry Julius of Brunswick (1564-1613). But unfortunately
+these beginnings had hardly made themselves felt when the full
+current of the Renaissance was diverted across Germany, bringing
+in its train the Senecan tragedy. Then came the Thirty Years&rsquo;
+War, which completely destroyed the social conditions indispensable
+for the establishment of a theatre at once popular
+and national.</p>
+
+<p>The novel was less successful than the drama in extricating
+itself from satire and religious controversy. Fischart was
+too dependent on foreign models and too erratic&mdash;at one time
+adapting Rabelais, at another translating the old heroic romance
+of <i>Amadis de Gaula</i>&mdash;to create a national form of German fiction
+in the 16th century; the most important novelist was a much
+less talented writer, the Alsatian Meistersinger and dramatist
+Jörg Wickram (d. c. 1560), who has been already mentioned as
+the author of a popular collection of anecdotes, the <i>Rollwagenbüchlein</i>.
+His longer novels, <i>Der Knabenspiegel</i> (1554) and Der
+Goldfaden (1557), are in form, and especially in the importance
+they attach to psychological developments, the forerunners of
+the movement to which we owe the best works of German
+fiction in the 18th century. But Wickram stands alone. So
+inconsiderable, in fact, is the fiction of the Reformation age in
+Germany that we have to regard the old <i>Volksbücher</i> as its
+equivalent; and it is significant that of all the prose writings
+of this age, the book which affords the best insight into the
+temper and spirit of the Reformation was just one of these
+crude <i>Volksbücher</i>, namely, the famous story of the magician
+<i>Doctor Johann Faust</i>, published at Frankfort in 1587.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">IV. The Renaissance (1600-1740)</p>
+
+<p>The 17th century in Germany presents a complete contrast
+to its predecessor; the fact that it was the century of the Thirty
+Years&rsquo; War, which devastated the country, crippled the prosperity
+of the towns, and threw back by many generations the social
+development of the people, explains much, but it can hardly be
+held entirely responsible for the intellectual apathy, the slavery
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page789" id="page789"></a>789</span>
+to foreign customs and foreign ideas, which stunted the growth
+of the nation. The freedom of Lutheranism degenerated into
+a paralyzing Lutheran orthodoxy which was as hostile to the
+&ldquo;Freiheit eines Christenmenschen&rdquo; as that Catholicism it had
+superseded; the idealism of the humanists degenerated in the
+same way into a dry, pedantic scholasticism which held the German
+mind in fetters until, at the very close of the century, Leibnitz
+set it free. Most disheartening of all, literature which in the 16th
+century had been so full of promise and had conformed with such
+aptitude to the new ideas, was in all its higher manifestations
+blighted by the dead hand of pseudo-classicism. The unkempt
+literature of the Reformation age admittedly stood in need of
+<span class="correction" title="amended from guidauce">guidance</span> and discipline, but the 17th century made the fatal
+mistake of trying to impose the laws and rules of Romance
+literatures on a people of a purely Germanic stock.</p>
+
+<p>There were, however, some branches of German poetry which
+escaped this foreign influence. The church hymn, continuing
+the great Lutheran traditions, rose in the 17th century to extraordinary
+richness both in quality and quantity. Paul Gerhardt
+(1607-1676), the greatest German hymn-writer, was only one
+of many Lutheran pastors who in this age contributed to the
+German hymnal. On the Catholic side, Angelus Silesius, or
+Johann Scheffler (1624-1677) showed what a wealth of poetry
+lay in the mystic speculations of Jakob Boehme, the gifted
+shoemaker of Görlitz (1575-1624), and author of the famous
+<i>Aurora, oder Morgenröte im Aufgang</i> (1612); while Friedrich
+von Spee (1591-1635), another leading Catholic poet of the
+century, cultivated the pastoral allegory of the Renaissance.
+The revival of mysticism associated with Boehme gradually
+spread through the whole religious life of the 17th century,
+Protestant as well as Catholic, and in the more specifically
+Protestant form of pietism, it became, at the close of the period,
+a force of moment in the literary revival. Besides the hymn,
+the Volkslied, which amidst the struggles and confusion of the
+great war bore witness to a steadily growing sense of patriotism,
+lay outside the domain of the literary theorists and dictators,
+and developed in its own way. But all else&mdash;if we except certain
+forms of fiction, which towards the end of the 17th century rose
+into prominence&mdash;stood completely under the sway of the Latin
+Renaissance.</p>
+
+<p>The first focus of the movement was Heidelberg, which had
+been a centre of humanistic learning in the sixteenth century.
+Here, under the leadership of J.W. Zincgref (1591-1635), a
+number of scholarly writers carried into practice that interest
+in the vernacular which had been shown a little earlier by the
+German translator of Marot, Paul Schede or Melissus, librarian
+in Heidelberg. The most important forerunner of Opitz was
+G.R. Weckherlin (1584-1653), a native of Württemberg who had
+spent the best part of his life in England; his <i>Oden und Gesänge</i>
+(1618-1619) ushered in the era of Renaissance poetry in Germany
+with a promise that was but indifferently fulfilled by his successors.
+Of these the greatest, or at least the most influential, was Martin
+Opitz (1597-1639). He was a native of Silesia and, as a student in
+Heidelberg, came into touch with Zincgref&rsquo;s circle; subsequently,
+in the course of a visit to Holland, a more definite trend was given
+to his ideas by the example of the Dutch poet and scholar,
+Daniel Heinsius. As a poet, Opitz experimented with every form
+of recognized Renaissance poetry from ode and epic to pastoral
+romance and Senecan drama; but his poetry is for the most part
+devoid of inspiration; and his extraordinary fame among his
+contemporaries would be hard to understand, were it not that in
+his <i>Buch von der deutschen Poeterey</i> (1624) he gave the German
+Renaissance its theoretical textbook. In this tract, in which
+Opitz virtually reproduced in German the accepted dogmas of
+Renaissance theorists like Scaliger and Ronsard, he not merely
+justified his own mechanical verse-making, but also gave Germany
+a law-book which regulated her literature for a hundred years.</p>
+
+<p>The work of Opitz as a reformer was furthered by another
+institution of Latin origin, namely, literary societies modelled
+on the <i>Accademia della Crusca</i> in Florence. These societies,
+of which the chief were the <i>Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft</i> or
+<i>Palmenorden</i> (founded 1617), the <i>Elbschwanenorden</i> in Hamburg
+and the <i>Gekrönter Blumenorden an der Pegnitz or Gesellschaft
+der Pegnitzschäfer</i> in Nuremberg, were the centres of literary
+activity during the unsettled years of the war. Although they
+produced much that was trivial&mdash;such as the extraordinary
+<i>Nürnberger Trichter</i> (1647-1653) by G.P. Harsdörffer (1607-1658),
+a treatise which professed to turn out a fully equipped
+German poet in the space of six hours&mdash;these societies also
+did German letters an invaluable service by their attention to
+the language, one of their chief objects having been to purify
+the German language from foreign and un-German ingredients.
+J.G. Schottelius (1612-1676), for instance, wrote his epoch-making
+grammatical works with the avowed purpose of furthering
+the objects of the <i>Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft</i>. Meanwhile the
+poetic centre of gravity in Germany had shifted from Heidelberg
+to the extreme north-east, to Königsberg, where a group of
+academic poets gave practical expression to the Opitzian theory.
+Chief among them was Simon Dach (1605-1659), a gentle, elegiac
+writer on whom the laws of the <i>Buch von der deutschen Poeterey</i>
+did not lie too heavily. He, like his more manly and vigorous
+contemporary Paul Fleming (1609-1640), showed, one might say,
+that it was possible to write good and sincere poetry notwithstanding
+Opitz&rsquo;s mechanical rules.</p>
+
+<p>In the previous century the most advanced form of literature
+had been satire, and under the new conditions the satiric vein
+still proved most productive; but it was no longer the full-blooded
+satire of the Reformation, or even the rich and luxuriant
+satiric fancy of Fischart, which found expression in the 17th
+century. Satire pure and simple was virtually only cultivated
+by two Low German poets, J. Lauremberg (1590-1658) and
+J. Rachel (1618-1669), of whom at least the latter was accepted
+by the Opitzian school; but the satiric spirit rose to higher
+things in the powerful and scathing sermons of J.B. Schupp
+(1610-1661), an outspoken Hamburg preacher, and in the scurrilous
+wit of the Viennese monk Abraham a Sancta Clara (1644-1709),
+who had inherited some of his predecessor Murner&rsquo;s
+intellectual gifts. Best of all are the epigrams of the most gifted
+of all the Silesian group of writers, Friedrich von Logau (1604-1655).
+Logau&rsquo;s three thousand epigrams (<i>Deutsche Sinngedichte</i>,
+1654) afford a key to the intellectual temper of the 17th century;
+they are the epitome of their age. Here are to be seen reflected
+the vices of the time, its aping of French customs and its contempt
+for what was national and German; Logau held up to
+ridicule the vain bloodshed of the war in the interest of Christianity,
+and, although he praised Opitz, he was far from prostrating
+himself at the dictator&rsquo;s feet. Logau is an epigrammatist
+of the first rank, and perhaps the most remarkable product of
+the Renaissance movement in Germany.</p>
+
+<p>Opitz found difficulty in providing Germany with a drama
+according to the classic canon. He had not himself ventured
+beyond translations of Sophocles and Seneca, and Johann Rist
+(1607-1667) in Hamburg, one of the few contemporary dramatists,
+had written plays more in the manner of Duke Heinrich Julius of
+Brunswick than of Opitz. It was not until after the latter&rsquo;s
+death that the chief dramatist of the Renaissance movement
+came forward in the person of Andreas Gryphius (1616-1664).
+Like Opitz, Gryphius also was a Silesian, and a poet of no mean
+ability, as is to be seen from his lyric poetry; but his tragedies,
+modelled on the stiff Senecan pattern, suffered from the lack of
+a theatre, and from his ignorance of the existence of a more highly
+developed drama in France, not to speak of England. As it was,
+he was content with Dutch models. In the field of comedy,
+where he was less hampered by theories of dramatic propriety,
+he allowed himself to benefit by the freedom of the Dutch farce
+and the comic effects of the English actors in Germany; in his
+<i>Horribilicribrifax</i> and <i>Herr Peter Squentz</i>&mdash;the latter an adaptation
+of the comic scenes of the <i>Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream</i>&mdash;Gryphius
+has produced the best German plays of the 17th century.</p>
+
+<p>The German novel of the 17th century was, as has been
+already indicated, less hampered by Renaissance laws than other
+forms of literature, and although it was none the less at the
+mercy of foreign influence, that influence was more varied
+and manifold in its character. <i>Don Quixote</i> had been partly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page790" id="page790"></a>790</span>
+translated early in the 17th century, the picaresque romance
+had found its way to Germany at a still earlier date; while H.M.
+Moscherosch (1601-1669) in his <i>Gesichte Philanders von Sittewald</i>
+(1642-1643) made the <i>Sueńos</i> of Quevedo the basis for vivid
+pictures of the life of the time, interspersed with satire. The
+best German novel of the 17th century, <i>Der abenteurliche Simplicissimus</i>
+(1669) by H.J. Christoffel von Grimmelshausen (<i>c.</i> 1625-1676),
+is a picaresque novel, but one that owed little more than its
+form to the Spaniards. It is in great measure the autobiography
+of its author, and describes with uncompromising realism the
+social disintegration and the horrors of the Thirty Years&rsquo; War.
+But this remarkable book stands alone; Grimmelshausen&rsquo;s
+other writings are but further contributions to the same theme,
+and he left no disciples worthy of carrying on the tradition he
+had created. Christian Weise (1642-1708), rector of the Zittau
+gymnasium, wrote a few satirical novels, but his realism and satire
+are too obviously didactic. He is seen to better advantage in his
+dramas, of which he wrote more than fifty for performance by
+his scholars.</p>
+
+<p>The real successor of <i>Simplicissimus</i> in Germany was the
+English <i>Robinson Crusoe</i>, a novel which, on its appearance, was
+immediately translated into German (1721); it called forth an
+extraordinary flood of imitations, the so-called &ldquo;Robinsonaden,&rdquo;
+the vogue of which is even still kept alive by <i>Der schweizerische
+Robinson</i> of J.R. Wyss (1812 ff.). With the exception of J.G.
+Schnabel&rsquo;s <i>Insel Felsenburg</i> (1731-1743), the literary value of
+these imitations is slight. They represented, however, a healthier
+and more natural development of fiction than the &ldquo;galant&rdquo;
+romances which were introduced in the train of the Renaissance
+movement, and cultivated by writers like Philipp von Zesen
+(1619-1689), Duke Anton Ulrich of Brunswick (1633-1714),
+A.H. Buchholtz (1607-1671), H.A. von Ziegler (1653-1697)&mdash;author
+of the famous <i>Asiatische Banise</i> (1688)&mdash;and D.C. von
+Lohenstein (1635-1683), whose <i>Arminius</i> (1689-1690) is on the
+whole the most promising novel of this group. The last mentioned
+writer and Christian Hofmann von Hofmannswaldau
+(1617-1679) are sometimes regarded as the leaders of a &ldquo;second
+Silesian school,&rdquo; as opposed to the first school of Opitz. As the
+cultivators of the bombastic and Euphuistic style of the Italians
+Guarini and Marini, and of the Spanish writer Gongora, Lohenstein
+and Hofmannswaldau touched the lowest point to which
+German poetry ever sank.</p>
+
+<p>But this aberration of taste was happily of short duration.
+Although socially the recovery of the German people from the
+desolation of the war was slow and laborious, the intellectual
+life of Germany was rapidly recuperating under the influence
+of foreign thinkers. Samuel Pufendorf (1632-1694), Christian
+Thomasius (1655-1728), Christian von Wolff (1679-1754) and,
+above all, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibnitz (1646-1716), the first
+of the great German philosophers, laid the foundations of that
+system of rationalism which dominated Germany for the better
+part of the 18th century; while German religious life was
+strengthened and enriched by a revival of pietism, under mystic
+thinkers like Philipp Jakob Spener (1635-1705), a revival
+which also left its traces on religious poetry. Such hopeful signs
+of convalescence could not but be accompanied by an improvement
+in literary taste, and this is seen in the first instance in a
+substitution for the bombast and conceits of Lohehstein and
+Hofmannswaldau, of poetry on the stricter and soberer lines
+laid down by Boileau. The so-called &ldquo;court poets&rdquo; who
+opposed the second Silesian school, men like Rudolf von Canitz
+(1654-1699), Johann von Besser (1654-1729) and Benjamin
+Neukirch (1665-1729), were not inspired, but they had at least
+a certain &ldquo;correctness&rdquo; of taste; and from their midst sprang
+one gifted lyric genius, Johann Christian Günther (1695-1723),
+who wrote love-songs such as had not been heard in Germany
+since the days of the Minnesang. The methods of Hofmannswaldau
+had obtained considerable vogue in Hamburg, where
+the Italian opera kept the decadent Renaissance poetry alive.
+Here, however, the incisive wit of Christian Wernigke&rsquo;s (1661-1725)
+epigrams was an effective antidote, and Barthold Heinrich
+Brockes (1680-1747), a native of Hamburg, who had been deeply
+impressed by the appreciation of nature in English poetry, gave
+the artificialities of the Silesians their death-blow. But the
+influence of English literature was not merely destructive in
+these years; in the translations and imitations of the English
+<i>Spectator</i>, <i>Tatler</i> and <i>Guardian</i>&mdash;the so-called <i>moralische Wochenschriften</i>&mdash;it
+helped to regenerate literary taste, and to implant
+healthy moral ideas in the German middle classes.</p>
+
+<p>The chief representative of the literary movement inaugurated
+by the Silesian &ldquo;court poets&rdquo; was Johann Christoph Gottsched
+(1700-1766), who between 1724 and 1740 succeeded in establishing
+in Leipzig, the metropolis of German taste, literary reforms
+modelled on the principles of French 17th-century classicism.
+He reformed and purified the stage according to French ideas,
+and provided it with a repertory of French origin; in his
+<i>Kritische Dichtkunst</i> (1730) he laid down the principles according
+to which good literature was to be produced and judged. As
+Opitz had reformed German letters with the help of Ronsard,
+so now Gottsched took his standpoint on the principles of
+Boileau as interpreted by contemporary French critics and
+theorists. With Gottsched, whose services in purifying the
+German language have stood the test of time better than his
+literary or dramatic reforms, the period of German Renaissance
+literature reaches its culmination and at the same time its close.
+The movement of the age advanced too rapidly for the Leipzig
+dictator; in 1740 a new epoch opened in German poetry and he
+was soon left hopelessly behind.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">V. The Classical Period of Modern German Literature
+(1740-1832)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>From the Swiss Controversy to the</i> &ldquo;<i>Sturm und Drang.</i>&rdquo;&mdash;Between
+Opitz and Gottsched German literature passed successively
+through the various stages characteristic of all Renaissance
+literatures&mdash;from that represented by Trissino and the French
+Pléiade, by way of the aberrations of Marini and the <i>estilo culto</i>,
+to the <i>art poétique</i> of Boileau. And precisely as in France, the
+next advance was achieved in a battle between the &ldquo;ancients&rdquo;
+and the &ldquo;moderns,&rdquo; the German &ldquo;ancients&rdquo; being represented
+by Gottsched, the &ldquo;moderns&rdquo; by the Swiss literary reformers,
+J.J. Bodmer (1698-1783) and J.J. Breitinger (1701-1776).
+The latter in his <i>Kritische Dichtkunst</i> (1739) maintained doctrines
+which were in opposition to Gottsched&rsquo;s standpoint in his
+treatise of the same name, and Bodmer supported his friend&rsquo;s
+initiative; a pamphlet war ensued between Leipzig and Zürich,
+with which in 1740-1741 the classical period of modern German
+literature may be said to open. The Swiss, men of little originality,
+found their theories in the writings of Italian and English
+critics; and from these they learned how literature might be
+freed from the fetters of pseudo-classicism. Basing their arguments
+on Milton&rsquo;s <i>Paradise Lost</i>, which Bodmer had translated
+into prose (1732), they demanded room for the play of genius
+and inspiration; they insisted that the imagination should not
+be hindered in its attempts to rise above the world of reason and
+common sense. Their victory was due, not to the skill with
+which they presented their arguments, but to the fact that
+literature itself was in need of greater freedom. It was in fact
+a triumph, not of personalities or of leaders, but of ideas. The
+effects of the controversy are to be seen in a group of Leipzig
+writers of Gottsched&rsquo;s own school, the <i>Bremer Beiträger</i> as they
+were called after their literary organ. These men&mdash;C.F. Gellert
+(1715-1769), the author of graceful fables and tales in verse,
+G.W. Rabener (1714-1771), the mild satirist of Saxon provinciality,
+the dramatist J. Elias Schlegel (1719-1749), who in more
+ways than one was Lessing&rsquo;s forerunner, and a number of minor
+writers&mdash;did not set themselves up in active opposition to their
+master, but they tacitly adopted many of the principles which
+the Swiss had advocated. And in the <i>Bremer Beiträge</i> there
+appeared in 1748 the first instalment of an epic by F.G. Klopstock
+(1724-1803), <i>Der Messias</i>, which was the best illustration of
+that lawlessness against which Gottsched had protested. More
+effectively than Bodmer&rsquo;s dry and uninspired theorizing, Klopstock&rsquo;s
+<i>Messias</i>, and in a still higher degree, his <i>Odes</i>, laid the
+foundations of modern German literature in the 18th century.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page791" id="page791"></a>791</span>
+His immediate followers, it is true, did not help to advance
+matters; Bodmer and J.K. Lavater (1741-1801), whose
+&ldquo;physiognomic&rdquo; investigations interested Goethe at a later
+date, wrote dreary and now long forgotten epics on religious
+themes. Klopstock&rsquo;s rhapsodic dramas, together with Macpherson&rsquo;s
+<i>Ossian</i>, which in the &rsquo;sixties awakened a widespread
+enthusiasm throughout Germany, were responsible for the
+so-called &ldquo;bardic&rdquo; movement; but the noisy rhapsodies of
+the leaders of this movement, the &ldquo;bards&rdquo; H.W. von Gerstenberg
+(1737-1823), K.F. Kretschmann (1738-1809) and Michael
+Denis (1729-1800), had little of the poetic inspiration of Klopstock&rsquo;s
+<i>Odes</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The indirect influence of Klopstock as the first inspired poet
+of modern Germany and as the realization of Bodmer&rsquo;s theories
+can, however, hardly be over-estimated. Under Frederick the
+Great, who, as the docile pupil of French culture, had little
+sympathy for unregulated displays of feeling, neither Klopstock
+nor his imitators were in favour in Berlin, but at the university
+of Halle considerable interest was taken in the movement
+inaugurated by Bodmer. Here, before Klopstock&rsquo;s name was
+known at all, two young poets, J.I. Pyra (1715-1744) and S.G.
+Lange (1711-1781), wrote <i>Freundschaftliche Lieder</i> (1737), which
+were direct forerunners of Klopstock&rsquo;s rhymeless lyric poetry;
+and although the later Prussian poets, J.W.L. Gleim (1719-1803),
+J.P. Uz (1720-1796) and J.N. Götz (1721-1781), who
+were associated with Halle, and K.W. Ramler (1725-1798) in
+Berlin, cultivated mainly the Anacreontic and the Horatian
+ode&mdash;artificial forms, which kept strictly within the classic
+canon&mdash;yet Friedrich von Hagedorn (1708-1754) in Hamburg
+showed to what perfection even the Anacreontic and the lighter
+<i>vers de société</i> could be brought. The Swiss physiologist Albrecht
+von Haller (1708-1777) was the first German poet to give
+expression to the beauty and sublimity of Alpine scenery (<i>Die
+Alpen</i>, 1734), and a Prussian officer, Ewald Christian von Kleist
+(1715-1759), author of <i>Der Frühling</i> (1749), wrote the most
+inspired nature-poetry of this period. Klopstock&rsquo;s supreme
+importance lay, however, in the fact that he was a forerunner of
+the movement of <i>Sturm und Drang</i>. But before turning to that
+movement we must consider two writers who, strictly speaking,
+also belong to the age under consideration&mdash;Lessing and Wieland.</p>
+
+<p>As Klopstock had been the first of modern Germany&rsquo;s inspired
+poets, so Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729-1781) was the first
+critic who brought credit to the German name throughout
+Europe. He was the most liberal-minded exponent of 18th-century
+rationalism. Like his predecessor Gottsched, whom he
+vanquished more effectually than Bodmer had done, he had
+unwavering faith in the classic canon, but &ldquo;classic&rdquo; meant
+for him, as for his contemporary, J.J. Winckelmann (1717-1768),
+Greek art and literature, and not the products of French pseudo-classicism,
+which it had been Gottsched&rsquo;s object to foist on
+Germany. He went, indeed, still further, and asserted that
+Shakespeare, with all his irregularities, was a more faithful
+observer of the spirit of Aristotle&rsquo;s laws, and consequently a
+greater poet, than were the French classic writers. He looked
+to England and not to France for the regeneration of the German
+theatre, and his own dramas were pioneer-work in this direction.
+<i>Miss Sara Sampson</i> (1755) is a <i>bürgerliche Tragödie</i> on the lines
+of Lillo&rsquo;s <i>Merchant of London, Minna von Barnhelm</i> (1767), a
+comedy in the spirit of Farquhar; in <i>Emilia Galotti</i> (1772),
+again with English models in view, he remoulded the &ldquo;tragedy
+of common life&rdquo; in a form acceptable to the <i>Sturm und Drang</i>;
+and finally in <i>Nathan der Weise</i> (1779) he won acceptance for
+iambic blank verse as the medium of the higher drama. His
+two most promising disciples&mdash;J.F. von Cronegk (1731-1758),
+and J.W. von Brawe (1738-1758)&mdash;unfortunately died young,
+and C.F. Weisse (1726-1804) was not gifted enough to advance
+the drama in its literary aspects. Lessing&rsquo;s name is associated
+with Winckelmann&rsquo;s in <i>Laokoon</i> (1766), a treatise in which he
+set about defining the boundaries between painting, sculpture
+and poetry, and with those of the Jewish philosopher, Moses
+Mendelssohn (1729-1786) and the Berlin bookseller C.F. Nicolai
+(1733-1811) in the famous <i>Literaturbriefe</i>. Here Lessing identified
+himself with the best critical principles of the rationalistic movement&mdash;principles
+which, in the later years of his life, he employed
+in a fierce onslaught on Lutheran orthodoxy and intolerance.</p>
+
+<p>To the widening and deepening of the German imagination
+C.M. Wieland (1733-1813) also contributed, but in a different
+way. Although no enemy of pseudo-classicism, he broke with
+the stiff dogmatism of Gottsched and his friends, and tempered
+the pietism of Klopstock by introducing the Germans to the
+lighter poetry of the south of Europe. With the exception of his
+fairy epic <i>Oberon</i> (1780), Wieland&rsquo;s work has fallen into neglect;
+he did, however, excellent service to the development of German
+prose fiction with his psychological novel, <i>Agathon</i> (1766-1767),
+which may be regarded as a forerunner of Goethe&rsquo;s <i>Wilhelm
+Meister</i>, and with his humorous satire <i>Die Abderiten</i> (1774).
+Wieland had a considerable following, both among poets and
+prose writers; he was particularly looked up to in Austria,
+towards the end of the 18th century, where the literary movement
+advanced more slowly than in the north. Here Aloys Blumauer
+(1755-1789) and J.B. von Alxinger (1755-1797) wrote their
+travesties and epics under his influence. In Saxony, M.A. von
+Thümmel (1738-1817) showed his adherence to Wieland&rsquo;s
+school in his comic epic in prose, <i>Wilhelmine</i> (1764), and in the
+general tone of his prose writings; on the other hand, K.A.
+Kortum (1745-1824), author of the most popular comic epic of
+the time, <i>Die Jobsiade</i> (1784), was but little influenced by Wieland.
+The German novel owed much to the example of <i>Agathon</i>,
+but the groundwork and form were borrowed from English
+models; Gellert had begun by imitating Richardson in his
+<i>Schwedische Gräfin</i> (1747-1748), and he was followed by J.T.
+Hermes (1738-1821), by Wieland&rsquo;s friend Sophie von Laroche
+(1730-1807), by A. von Knigge (1752-1796) and J.K.A. Musäus
+(1735-1787), the last mentioned being, however, best known
+as the author of a collection of <i>Volksmärchen</i> (1782-1786).
+Meanwhile a rationalism, less materialistic and strict than that
+of Wolff, was spreading rapidly through educated middle-class
+society in Germany. Men like Knigge, Moses Mendelssohn,
+J.G. Zimmermann (1728-1795), T.G. von Hippel (1741-1796),
+Christian Garve (1742-1798), J.J. Engel (1741-1802), as well
+as the educational theorists J.B. Basedow (1723-1790) and
+J.H. Pestalozzi (1746-1827), wrote books and essays on &ldquo;popular
+philosophy&rdquo; which were as eagerly read as the <i>moralische
+Wochenschriften</i> of the preceding epoch; and with this group
+of writers must also be associated the most brilliant of German
+18th-century satirists, G.C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799).</p>
+
+<p>Such was the <i>milieu</i> from which sprang the most advanced
+pioneer of the classical epoch of modern German literature,
+J.G. Herder (1744-1803). The transition from the popular
+philosophers of the <i>Aufklärung</i> to Herder was due in the first
+instance to the influence of Rousseau; and in Germany itself
+that transition is represented by men like Thomas Abbt (1738-1766)
+and J.G. Hamann (1730-1788). The revolutionary
+nature of Herder&rsquo;s thought lay in that writer&rsquo;s antipathy to
+hard and fast systems, to laws imposed upon genius; he grasped,
+as no thinker before him, the idea of historical evolution. By
+regarding the human race as the product of a slow evolution from
+primitive conditions, he revolutionized the methods and standpoint
+of historical science and awakened an interest&mdash;for which,
+of course, Rousseau had prepared the way&mdash;in the early history
+of mankind. He himself collected and published the <i>Volkslieder</i>
+of all nations (1778-1779), and drew attention to those elements
+in German life and art which were, in the best and most precious
+sense, national&mdash;elements which his predecessors had despised
+as inconsistent with classic formulae and systems. Herder is
+thus not merely the forerunner, but the actual founder of the
+literary movement known as <i>Sturm und Drang</i>. New ground
+was broken in a similar way by a group of poets, who show the
+results of Klopstock&rsquo;s influence on the new literary movement:
+the Göttingen &ldquo;Bund&rdquo; or &ldquo;Hain,&rdquo; a number of young students
+who met together in 1772, and for several years published their
+poetry in the <i>Göttinger Musenalmanach</i>. With the exception
+of the two brothers, Ch. zu Stolberg (1748-1821) and F.L. zu
+Stolberg (1750-1819), who occupied a somewhat peculiar position
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page792" id="page792"></a>792</span>
+in the &ldquo;Bund,&rdquo; the members of this coterie were drawn from
+the peasant class of the lower <i>bourgeoisie</i>; J.H. Voss (1751-1826),
+the leader of the &ldquo;Bund,&rdquo; was a typical North German
+peasant, and his idyll, <i>Luise</i> (1784), gives a realistic picture of
+German provincial life. L.H.C. Hölty (1748-1776) and J.M.
+Miller (1750-1814), again, excelled in simple lyrics in the tone
+of the <i>Volkslied</i>. Closely associated with the Göttingen group
+were M. Claudius (1740-1815), the <i>Wandsbecker Bote</i>&mdash;as he was
+called after the journal he edited&mdash;an even more unassuming
+and homely representative of the German peasant in literature
+than Voss, and G.A. Bürger (1748-1794) who contributed to
+the <i>Göttinger Musenalmanach</i> ballads, such as the famous Lenore
+(1774), of the very first rank. These ballads were the best products
+of the Göttingen school, and, together with Goethe&rsquo;s Strassburg
+and Frankfort songs, represent the highest point touched by
+the lyric and ballad poetry of the period.</p>
+
+<p>But the Göttingen &ldquo;Bund&rdquo; stood somewhat aside from the
+main movement of literary development in Germany; it was
+only a phase of <i>Sturm und Drang</i>, and quieter, less turbulent
+than that on which Goethe had set the stamp of his personality.
+Johann Wolfgang Goethe (1749-1832) had, as a student in
+Leipzig (1765-1768), written lyrics in the Anacreontic vein and
+dramas in alexandrines. But in Strassburg, where he went
+to continue his studies in 1770-1771, he made the personal
+acquaintance of Herder, who won his interest for the new literary
+movement. Herder imbued him with his own ideas of the
+importance of primitive history and Gothic architecture and
+inspired him with a pride in German nationality; Herder
+convinced him that there was more genuine poetry in a simple
+Volkslied than in all the ingenuity of the German imitators
+of Horace or Anacreon; above all, he awakened his enthusiasm
+for Shakespeare. The pamphlet <i>Von deutscher Art und Kunst</i>
+(1773), to which, besides Goethe and Herder, the historian
+Justus Möser (1720-1794) also contributed, may be regarded
+as the manifesto of the <i>Sturm und Drang</i>. The effect on Goethe
+of the new ideas was instantaneous; they seemed at once to
+set his genius free, and from 1771 to 1775 he was extraordinarily
+fertile in poetic ideas and creations. His <i>Götz von Berlichingen</i>
+(1771-1773), the first drama of the <i>Sturm und Drang</i>, was followed
+within a year by the first novel of the movement, <i>Werthers
+Leiden</i> (1774); he dashed off <i>Clavigo</i> and <i>Stella</i> in a few weeks
+in 1774 and 1775, and wrote a large number of <i>Singspiele</i>,
+dramatic satires and fragments&mdash;including <i>Faust</i> in its earliest
+form (the so-called <i>Urfaust</i>)&mdash;not to mention love-songs which
+at last fulfilled the promise of Klopstock. Goethe&rsquo;s lyrics were
+no less epoch-making than his first drama and novel, for they
+put an end to the artificiality which for centuries had fettered
+German lyric expression. In all forms of literature he set the
+fashion to his time; the Shakespearian restlessness of <i>Götz von
+Berlichingen</i> found enthusiastic imitators in J.M.R. Lenz
+(1751-1792), whose <i>Anmerkungen übers Theater</i> (1774) formulated
+theoretically the laws, or defiance of laws, of the new drama, in
+F.M. von Klinger (1752-1831), J.A. Leisewitz (1752-1806), H.L.
+Wagner (1747-1779) and Friedrich Müller, better known as
+Maler Müller (1749-1825): The dramatic literature of the <i>Sturm
+und Drang</i> was its most characteristic product&mdash;indeed, the
+very name of the movement was borrowed from a play by
+Klinger; it was inspired, as <i>Götz von Berlichingen</i> had been, by the
+desire to present upon the stage figures of Shakespearian grandeur
+impelled and tortured by gigantic passions, all considerations of
+plot, construction and form being regarded as subordinate to
+the development of character. The fiction of the <i>Sturm und
+Drang</i>, again, was in its earlier stages dominated by <i>Werthers
+Leiden</i>, as may be seen in the novels of F.H. Jacobi (1743-1819)
+and J.M. Miller, who has been already mentioned. Later, in the
+hands of J.J.W. Heinse (1749-1803), author of <i>Ardinghello</i>
+(1787), Klinger, K. Ph. Moritz (1757-1793), whose <i>Anton Reiser</i>
+(1785) clearly foreshadows <i>Wilhelm Meister</i>, it reflected not
+merely the sentimentalism, but also the philosophic and artistic
+ideas of the period.</p>
+
+<p>With the production of <i>Die Räuber</i> (1781) by Johann Friedrich
+Schiller (1759-1805), the drama of the <i>Sturm und Drang</i> entered
+upon a new development. Although hardly less turbulent in
+spirit than the work of Klinger and Leisewitz, Schiller&rsquo;s tragedy
+was more skilfully adapted to the exigencies of the theatre; his
+succeeding dramas, <i>Fiesco</i> and <i>Kabale und Liebe</i>, were also
+admirable stage-plays, and in <i>Don Carlos</i> (1787) he abandoned
+prose for the iambic blank verse which Lessing had made acceptable
+in <i>Nathan der Weise</i>. The &ldquo;practical&rdquo; character of the
+new drama is also to be seen in the work of Schiller&rsquo;s contemporary,
+O. von Gemmingen (1755-1836), the imitator of Diderot,
+in the excellent domestic dramas of the actors F.L. Schröder
+(1744-1816) and A.W. Iffland (1759-1814), and even in the
+popular medieval plays, the so-called <i>Ritterdramen</i> of which
+<i>Götz von Berlichingen</i> was the model. Germany owes to the
+<i>Sturm und Drang</i> her national theatre; permanent theatres
+were established in these years at Hamburg, Mannheim, Gotha,
+and even at Vienna, which, as may be seen from the dramas of
+C.H. von Ayrenhoff (1733-1819), had hardly then advanced
+beyond Gottsched&rsquo;s ideal of a national literature. The Hofburgtheater
+of Vienna, the greatest of all the German stages, was
+virtually founded in 1776.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>German Classical Literature.</i>&mdash;The energy of the <i>Sturm
+und Drang</i>, which was essentially iconoclastic in its methods,
+soon exhausted itself. For Goethe this phase in his development
+came to an end with his departure for Weimar in 1775, while,
+after writing <i>Don Carlos</i> (1787), Schiller turned from poetry
+to the study of history and philosophy. These subjects occupied
+his attention almost exclusively for several years, and not until
+the very close of the century did he, under the stimulus of Goethe&rsquo;s
+friendship, return to the drama. The first ten years of Goethe&rsquo;s
+life in Weimar were comparatively unproductive; he had left
+the <i>Sturm und Drang</i> behind him; its developments, for which
+he himself had been primarily responsible, were distasteful to
+him; and he had not yet formed a new creed. Under the
+influence of the Weimar court, where classic or even pseudo-classic
+tastes prevailed, he was gradually finding his way to a
+form of literary art which should reconcile the humanistic ideals
+of the 18th century with the poetic models of ancient Greece.
+But he did not arrive at clearness in his ideas until after his
+sojourn in Italy (1786-1788), an episode of the first importance
+for his mental development. Italy was, in the first instance, a
+revelation to Goethe of the antique; he had gone to Italy to
+find realized what Winckelmann had taught, and here he conceived
+that ideal of a classic literature, which for the next twenty
+years dominated German literature and made Weimar its
+metropolis. In Italy he gave <i>Iphigenie auf Tauris</i> (1787) its
+final form, he completed <i>Egmont</i> (1788)&mdash;like the exactly contemporary
+<i>Don Carlos</i> of Schiller, a kind of bridge from <i>Sturm
+und Drang</i> to classicism&mdash;and all but finished <i>Torquato Tasso</i>
+(1790). <i>Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre</i> (1795-1796) bears testimony
+to the clear and decisive views which he had acquired on all
+questions of art and of the practical conduct of life.</p>
+
+<p>Long before <i>Wilhelm Meister</i> appeared, however, German
+thought and literature had arrived at that stability and self-confidence
+which are the most essential elements in a great
+literary period. In the year of Lessing&rsquo;s death, 1781, Immanuel
+Kant (1724-1804), the great philosopher, had published his
+<i>Kritik der reinen Vernunft</i>, and this, together with the two later
+treatises, <i>Kritik der praktischen Vernunft</i> (1788) and <i>Kritik der
+Urteilskraft</i> (1790), placed the Germans in the front rank of
+thinking nations. Under the influence of Kant, Schiller turned
+from the study of history to that of philosophy and more especially
+aesthetics. His philosophic lyrics, his treatises on <i>Anmut
+und Würde</i>, on the <i>Ästhetische Erziehung des Menschen</i> (1795),
+and <i>Über naive und sentimentalische Dichtung</i> (1795) show, on
+the philosophic and the critical side, the movement of the century
+from the irresponsible subjectivity of <i>Sturm und Drang</i> to the
+calm idealism of classic attainment. In the same way, German
+historical writing had in these years, under the leadership of
+men like Justus Möser, Thomas Abbt, I. Iselin, F.C. Schlosser,
+Schiller himself and, greatest of all, Johannes von Müller (1752-1809),
+advanced from disconnected, unsystematic chronicling
+to a clearly thought-out philosophic and scientific method. J.G.A.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page793" id="page793"></a>793</span>
+Forster (1754-1794), who had accompanied Cook round the
+world, and Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859), gave Germany
+models of clear and lucid descriptive writing. In practical
+politics and economics, when once the unbalanced vagaries of
+undiluted Rousseauism had fallen into discredit, Germany produced
+much wise and temperate thinking which prevented the
+spread of the French Revolution to Germany, and provided
+a practical basis on which the social and political fabric could
+be built up anew, after the Revolution had made the old régime
+impossible in Europe. Men like Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767-1835)
+and the philosopher J.G. Fichte (1762-1814) were, in
+two widely different spheres, representative of this type of
+intellectual eminence.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, in 1794, that friendship between Goethe and
+Schiller had begun, which lasted, unbroken, until the younger
+poet&rsquo;s death in 1805. These years mark the summit of Goethe
+and Schiller&rsquo;s classicism, and the great epoch of Weimar&rsquo;s history
+as a literary focus. Schiller&rsquo;s treatises had provided a theoretical
+basis; his new journal, <i>Die Horen</i>, might be called the literary
+organ of the movement&mdash;although in this respect the subsequent
+<i>Musenalmanach</i>, in which the two poets published their magnificent
+ballad poetry, had more value. Goethe, as director of the
+ducal theatre, could to a great extent control dramatic production
+in Germany. Under his encouragement, Schiller turned from
+philosophy to poetry and wrote the splendid series of classic
+dramas beginning with the trilogy of <i>Wallenstein</i> and closing
+with <i>Wilhelm Tell</i> and the fragment of <i>Demetrius</i>; while to
+Goethe we owe, above all, the epic of <i>Hermann und Dorothea</i>.
+Less important were the latter&rsquo;s severely classical plays <i>Die
+natürliche Tochter</i> and <i>Pandora</i>; but it must not be forgotten
+that it was chiefly owing to Schiller&rsquo;s stimulus that in those
+years Goethe brought the first part of <i>Faust</i> (1808) to a conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Although acknowledged leaders of German letters, Goethe
+and Schiller had considerable opposition to contend with. The
+<i>Sturm und Drang</i> had by no means exhausted itself, and the
+representatives of the once dominant rationalistic movement
+were particularly arrogant and overbearing. The literature
+associated with both <i>Sturm und Drang</i> and rationalism was at
+this period palpably decadent; no comparison could be made
+between the magnificent achievements of Goethe and Schiller,
+or even of Herder and Wieland with the &ldquo;family&rdquo; dramas of
+Iffland, still less with the extraordinarily popular plays of A. von
+Kotzebue (1761-1819), or with those bustling medieval <i>Ritterdramen</i>,
+which were especially cultivated in south Germany.
+There is a wide gap between Moritz&rsquo;s <i>Anton Reiser</i> or the philosophic
+novels which Klinger wrote in his later years, and Goethe&rsquo;s
+<i>Meister</i>; nor can the once so fervently admired novels of Jean
+Paul Richter (1763-1825) take a very high place. Neither the
+fantastic humour nor the penetrating thoughts with which
+Richter&rsquo;s books are strewn make up for their lack of artistic form
+and interest; they are essentially products of <i>Sturm und Drang</i>.
+Lastly, in the province of lyric and epic poetry, it is impossible
+to regard poets like the gentle F. von Matthisson (1761-1831),
+or the less inspired G.L. Kosegarten (1758-1818) and C.A.
+Tiedge (1752-1841), as worthily seconding the masterpieces
+of Goethe and Schiller. Thus when we speak of the greatness
+of Germany&rsquo;s classical period, we think mainly of the work of
+her two chief poets; the distance that separated them from
+their immediate contemporaries was enormous. Moreover, at
+the very close of the 18th century a new literary movement
+arose in admitted opposition to the classicism of Weimar, and
+to this movement, which first took definite form in the Romantic
+school, the sympathies of the younger generation turned. Just
+as in the previous generation the <i>Sturm und Drang</i> had been
+obliged to make way for a return to classic and impersonal
+principles of literary composition, so now the classicism of Goethe
+and Schiller, which had produced masterpieces like <i>Wallenstein</i>
+and <i>Hermann und Dorothea</i>, had to yield to a revival of individualism
+and subjectivity, which, in the form of Romanticism, profoundly
+influenced the literature of the whole 19th century.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>c</i>) <i>The Romantic Movement.</i>&mdash;The first Romantic school,
+however, was founded, not as a protest against the classicism of
+Weimar, with which its leaders were in essential sympathy,
+but against the shallow, utilitarian rationalism of Berlin.
+Ludwig Tieck (1773-1853), a leading member of the school,
+was in reality a belated <i>Stürmer und Dränger</i>, who in his early
+years had chafed under the unimaginative tastes of the Prussian
+capital, and sought for a positive faith to put in their place.
+Friedrich Hölderlin (1770-1843), one of the most gifted poets of
+this age, demonstrates no less clearly than Tieck the essential
+affinity between <i>Sturm und Drang</i> and Romanticism; he, too,
+forms a bridge from the one individualistic movement to the
+other. The theoretic basis of Romanticism was, however,
+established by the two brothers, August Wilhelm and Friedrich
+Schlegel (1767-1845 and 1772-1829), who, accepting, in great
+measure, Schiller&rsquo;s aesthetic conclusions, adapted them to the
+needs of their own more subjective attitude towards literature.
+While Schiller, like Lessing before him, insisted on the critic&rsquo;s
+right to sit in judgment according to a definite code of principles,
+these Romantic critics maintained that the first duty of criticism
+was to understand and appreciate; the right of genius to follow
+its natural bent was sacred. The <i>Herzensergiessungen eines
+kunstliebenden Klosterbruders</i> by Tieck&rsquo;s school-friend W.H.
+Wackenroder (1773-1798) contained the Romantic art-theory,
+while the hymns and fragmentary novels of Friedrich von
+Hardenberg (known as Novalis, 1772-1801), and the dramas
+and fairy tales of Tieck, were the characteristic products of
+Romantic literature. The universal sympathies of the movement
+were exemplified by the many admirable translations&mdash;greatest
+of all, Schlegel&rsquo;s <i>Shakespeare</i> (1797-1810)&mdash;which were produced
+under its auspices. Romanticism was essentially conciliatory in
+its tendencies, that is to say, it aimed at a reconciliation of poetry
+with other provinces of social and intellectual life; the hard and
+fast boundaries which the older critics had set up as to what
+poetry might and might not do, were put aside, and the domain
+of literature was regarded as co-extensive with life itself; painting
+and music, philosophy and ethics, were all accepted as constituent
+elements of or aids to Romantic poetry. Fichte, and to
+a much greater extent, F.W.J. von Schelling (1775-1854)
+were the exponents of the Romantic doctrine in philosophy,
+while the theologian F.E.D. Schleiermacher (1768-1834)
+demonstrated how vital the revival of individualism was for
+religious thought.</p>
+
+<p>The Romantic school, whose chief members were the brothers
+Schlegel, Tieck, Wackenroder and Novalis, was virtually founded
+in 1798, when the Schlegels began to publish their journal the
+<i>Athenaeum</i>; but the actual existence of the school was of very
+short duration. Wackenroder and Novalis died young, and by
+the year 1804 the other members were widely separated. Two
+years later, however, another phase of Romanticism became
+associated with the town of Heidelberg. The leaders of this
+second or younger Romantic school were K. Brentano (1778-1842),
+L.A. von Arnim (1781-1831) and J.J. von Görres (1776-1848),
+their organ, corresponding to the <i>Athenaeum</i>, was the
+<i>Zeitung für Einsiedler</i>, or <i>Tröst-Einsamkeit</i>, and their most
+characteristic production the collection of <i>Volkslieder</i>, published
+under the title <i>Des Knaben Wunderhorn</i> (1805-1808). Compared
+with the earlier school the Heidelberg writers were more practical
+and realistic, more faithful to nature and the commonplace life
+of everyday. They, too, were interested in the German past
+and in the middle ages, but they put aside the idealizing glasses
+of their predecessors and kept to historic truth; they wrote
+historical novels, not stories of an imaginary medieval world
+as Novalis had done, and when they collected <i>Volkslieder</i> and
+<i>Volksbücher</i>, they refrained from decking out the simple tradition
+with musical effects, or from heightening the poetic situation
+by &ldquo;Romantic irony.&rdquo; Their immediate influence on German
+intellectual life was consequently greater; they stimulated
+and deepened the interest of the German people in their own
+past; and we owe to them the foundations of the study of
+German philology and medieval literature, both the brothers
+Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm (1785-1863 and 1786-1859) having
+been in touch with this circle in their early days. Again, the
+Heidelberg poets strengthened the national and patriotic spirit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page794" id="page794"></a>794</span>
+of their people; they prepared the way for the rising against
+Napoleon, which culminated in the year 1813, and produced
+that outburst of patriotic song, associated with E.M. Arndt
+(1769-1860), K. Th. Körner (1791-1813) and M. von Schenkendorf
+(1783-1817).</p>
+
+<p>The subsequent history of Romanticism stands in close
+relation to the Heidelberg school, and when, about 1809, the
+latter broke up, and Arnim and Brentano settled in Berlin,
+the Romantic movement followed two clearly marked lines of
+development, one north German, the other associated with
+Württemberg. The Prussian capital, hotbed of rationalism
+as it was, had, from the first, been intimately associated with
+Romanticism; the first school had virtually been founded
+there, and north Germans, like Heinrich von Kleist (1777-1811)
+and Zacharias Werner (1768-1823)had done more for the development
+of the Romantic drama than had the members of either
+Romantic school. These men, and more especially Kleist,
+Prussia&rsquo;s greatest dramatic poet, showed how the capricious
+Romantic ideas could be brought into harmony with the classic
+tradition established by Schiller, how they could be rendered
+serviceable to the national theatre. At the same time, Berlin
+was not a favourable soil for the development of Romantic
+ideas, and the circle of poets which gathered round Arnim and
+Brentano there, either themselves demonstrated the decadence
+of these ideas, or their work contained elements which in subsequent
+years hastened the downfall of the movement. Friedrich
+de la Motte Fouqué (1777-1843), for instance, shows how easy
+it was for the medieval tastes of the Romanticists to degenerate
+into mediocre novels and plays, hardly richer in genuine poetry
+than were the productions of the later <i>Sturm und Drang</i>; and
+E.T.A. Hoffmann (1776-1822), powerful genius though he
+was, cultivated with preference in his stories, a morbid super-naturalism,
+which was only a decadent form of the early Romantic
+delight in the world of fairies and spirits. The lyric was less
+sensitive to baleful influences, but even here the north German
+Romantic circle could only point to one lyric poet of the first
+rank, J. von Eichendorff (1788-1857); while in the poetry of
+A. von Chamisso (1781-1838) the volatile Romantic spirituality
+is too often wanting. Others again, like Friedrich Rückert
+(1788-1866), sought the inspiration which Romanticism was no
+longer able to give, in the East; still another group, of which
+Wilhelm Müller (1794-1827) is the chief representative, followed
+Byron&rsquo;s example and awakened German sympathy for the
+oppressed Greeks and Poles.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from Eichendorff, the vital lyric poetry of the third
+and last phase of Romanticism must be looked for in the Swabian
+school, which gathered round Uhland. Ludwig Uhland (1787-1862)
+was himself a disciple of the Heidelberg poets, and, in his
+lyrics and especially in his ballads, he succeeded in grafting the
+lyricism of the Romantic school on to the traditions of German
+ballad poetry which had been handed down from Bürger, Schiller
+and Goethe. But, as was the case with so many other disciples
+of the Heidelberg Romanticists, Uhland&rsquo;s interest in the German
+past was the serious interest of the scholar rather than the purely
+poetic interest of the earlier Romantic poets. The merit of the
+Swabian circle, the chief members of which were J. Kerner
+(1786-1862), G. Schwab (1792-1850), W. Waiblinger (1804-1830),
+W. Hauff (1802-1827) and, most gifted of all, E. Mörike (1804-1875)
+was that these writers preserved the Romantic traditions
+from the disintegrating influences to which their north German
+contemporaries were exposed. They introduced few new notes
+into lyric poetry, but they maintained the best traditions intact,
+and when, a generation later, the anti-Romantic movement
+of &ldquo;Young Germany&rdquo; had run its course, it was to Württemberg
+Germany looked for a revival of the old Romantic ideas.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, in the background of all these phases of Romantic
+evolution, through which Germany passed between 1798 and
+1832, stands the majestic and imposing figure of Goethe.
+Personally he had in the early stages of the movement been
+opposed to that reversion to subjectivity and lawlessness which
+the first Romantic school seemed to him to represent; to the end
+of his life he regarded himself as a &ldquo;classic,&rdquo; not a &ldquo;romantic&rdquo;
+poet. But, on the other hand, he was too liberal-minded a
+thinker and critic to be oblivious to the fruitful influence of the
+new movement. Almost without exception he judged the young
+poets of the new century fairly, and treated them sympathetically
+and kindly; he was keenly alive to the new&mdash;and for the most
+part &ldquo;unclassical&rdquo;&mdash;development of literature in England,
+France and Italy; and his own published work, above all, the
+first part of <i>Faust</i> (1808), <i>Die Wahlverwandtschaften</i> (1809),
+<i>Dichtung und Wahrheit</i> (1811-1814, a final volume in 1833),
+<i>Westöstlicher Divan</i> (1819), <i>Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre</i>
+(1821-1829) and the second part of <i>Faust</i> (published in 1832
+after the poet&rsquo;s death), stood in no antagonism to the Romantic
+ideas of their time. One might rather say that Goethe was the
+bond between the two fundamental literary movements of the
+German classical age; that his work achieved that reconciliation
+of &ldquo;classic&rdquo; and &ldquo;romantic&rdquo; which, rightly regarded, was the
+supreme aim of the Romantic school itself.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">VI. German Literature since Goethe (1832-1906)</p>
+
+<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Young Germany</i>.&mdash;With Goethe&rsquo;s death a great age in
+German poetry came to a close. Long before 1832 Romanticism
+had, as we have seen, begun to lose ground, and the July revolution
+of 1830, the effects of which were almost as keenly felt in
+Germany as in France, gave the movement its death-blow.
+Meanwhile the march of ideas in Germany itself had not been
+favourable to Romanticism. Schelling had given place to G.
+W.F. Hegel (1770-1831), now the dominant force in German
+philosophy, and the Hegelian metaphysics proved as unfruitful
+an influence on literature as that of Fichte and Schelling had been
+fruitful. The transference of Romantic ideas to the domain
+of practical religion and politics had proved reactionary in its
+effects; Romanticism became the cloak for a kind of Neo-catholicism,
+and Romantic politics, as enunciated by men like
+F. von Gentz (1764-1832) and Adam Müller (1779-1829), served
+as an apology for the Metternich régime in Austria. Only at
+the universities&mdash;in Göttingen, Heidelberg and Berlin&mdash;did
+the movement continue, in the best sense, to be productive;
+German philology, German historical science and German
+jurisprudence benefited by Romantic ideas, long after Romantic
+poetry had fallen into decay. The day of Romanticism was
+clearly over; but a return to the classic and humanitarian spirit
+of the 18th century was impossible. The social condition of
+Europe had been profoundly altered by the French Revolution;
+the rise of industrialism had created new economic problems,
+the march of science had overturned old prejudices. And in a
+still higher degree were the ideas which lay behind the social
+upheaval of the July revolution incompatible with a reversion
+in Germany to the conditions of Weimar classicism. There was,
+moreover, no disguising the fact that Goethe himself did not
+stand high with the younger generation of German writers
+who came into power after his death.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Young Germany&rdquo; did not form a school in the sense in which
+the word was used by the early Romanticists; the bond of union
+was rather the consequence of political persecution. In December
+1835 the German &ldquo;Bund&rdquo; issued a decree suppressing the writings
+of the &ldquo;literary school&rdquo; known as &ldquo;Young Germany,&rdquo; and
+mentioned by name Heinrich Heine, Karl Gutzkow, Ludolf
+Wienbarg, Theodor Mundt and Heinrich Laube. Of these men,
+Heine (1797-1856) was by far the most famous. He had made
+his reputation in 1826 and 1827 with <i>Die Harzreise</i> and <i>Das
+Buch der Lieder</i>, both of which books show how deeply he was
+immersed in the Romantic traditions. But Heine felt perhaps
+more acutely than any other man of his time how the ground
+was slipping away from beneath his feet; he repudiated the
+Romantic movement and hailed the July revolution as the first
+stage in the &ldquo;liberation of humanity&rdquo;; while ultimately he
+sought in France the freedom and intellectual stimulus which
+Germany withheld from him. Heine suffered from having been
+born in an age of transition; he was unable to realize in a wholehearted
+way all that was good in the new movement, which he
+had embraced so warmly; his optimism was counteracted by
+doubts as to whether, after all, life had not been better in that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page795" id="page795"></a>795</span>
+old Romantic Germany of his childhood for which, to the last,
+he retained so warm an affection. Personal disappointments
+and unhappiness added to the bitterness of Heine&rsquo;s nature,
+and the supremely gifted lyric poet and the hardly less gifted
+satirist were overshadowed by the cynic from whose biting wit
+nothing was safe.</p>
+
+<p>Heine&rsquo;s contemporary and&mdash;although he was not mentioned
+in the decree against the school&mdash;fellow-fighter, Ludwig Börne
+(1786-1837), was a more characteristic representative of the
+&ldquo;Young German&rdquo; point of view; for he was free from Romantic
+prejudices. Börne gave vent to his enthusiasm for France in
+eloquent <i>Briefe aus Paris</i> (1830-1833), which form a landmark
+of importance in the development of German prose style. With
+Karl Gutzkow (1811-1878), who was considerably younger
+than either Heine or Börne, the more positive aspects of the
+&ldquo;Young German&rdquo; movement begin to be apparent. He, too,
+had become a man of letters under the influence of the July
+revolution, and with an early novel, <i>Wally, die Zweiflerin</i> (1835),
+which was then regarded as atheistic and immoral, he fought in
+the battle for the new ideas. His best literary work, however,
+was the comedies with which he enriched the German stage of
+the &rsquo;forties, and novels like <i>Die Ritter vom Geiste</i> (1850-1851),
+and <i>Der Zauberer von Rom</i> (1858-1861), which have to be considered
+in connexion with the later development of German
+fiction. Heinrich Laube (1806-1884), who, as the author of
+lengthy social novels, and <i>Reisenovellen</i> in the style of Heine&rsquo;s
+<i>Reisebilder</i>, was one of the leaders of the new movement, is
+now only remembered as Germany&rsquo;s greatest theatre-director.
+Laube&rsquo;s connexion (1850-1867) with the Burgtheater of Vienna
+forms one of the most brilliant periods in the history of the
+modern stage. Heine and Börne, Gutzkow and Laube&mdash;these
+were the leading spirits of &ldquo;Young Germany&rdquo;; in their train
+followed a host of lesser men, who to the present generation are
+hardly even names. In the domain of scholarship and learning
+the &ldquo;Young German&rdquo; movement was associated with the
+supremacy of Hegelianism, the leading spirits being D.F. Strauss
+(1808-1874), author of the <i>Leben Jesu</i> (1835), the historians
+G.G. Gervinus (1805-1871) and W. Menzel (1798-1873), and the
+philosopher L.A. Feuerbach (1804-1872), who, although a
+disciple of Hegel, ultimately helped to destroy the latter&rsquo;s
+influence.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the immediate circle of &ldquo;Young Germany,&rdquo; other
+tentative efforts were made to provide a substitute for the
+discredited literature of Romanticism. The historical novel, for
+instance, which Romanticists like Arnim had cultivated, fell at
+an early date under the influence of Sir Walter Scott; Wilhelm
+Hauff, Heinrich Zschokke (1771-1848) and K. Spindler (1796-1855)
+were the most prominent amidst the many imitators of
+the Scottish novelist. The drama, again, which since Kleist
+and Werner had been without definite principles, was, partly
+under Austrian influence, finding its way back to a condition of
+stability. In Germany proper, the men into whose hands it
+fell were, on the one hand, undisciplined geniuses such as C.D.
+Grabbe (1801-1836), or, on the other, poets with too little
+theatrical blood in their veins like K.L. Immermann (1796-1840),
+or with too much, like E. von Raupach (1784-1852), K. von
+Holtei (1798-1880) and Adolf Müllner (1774-1829)&mdash;the last
+named being the chief representative of the so-called <i>Schicksalstragödie</i>.
+In those years the Germans were more seriously
+interested in their opera, which, under C.M. Weber, H.A.
+Marschner, A. Lortzing and O. Nicolai, remained faithful to the
+Romantic spirit. In Austria, however, the drama followed
+lines of its own; here, at the very beginning of the century,
+H.J. von Collin (1771-1811) attempted in <i>Regulus</i> and other
+works to substitute for the lifeless pseudo-classic tragedy of
+Ayrenhoff the classic style of Schiller. His attempt is the more
+interesting, as the long development that had taken place in
+Germany between Gottsched and Schiller was virtually unrepresented
+in Austrian literature. M. von Collin (1779-1824),
+a younger brother of H.J. von Collin, did a similar service for
+the Romantic drama. Franz Grillparzer (1791-1872), Austria&rsquo;s
+greatest poet, began in the school of Müllner with a &ldquo;fate
+drama,&rdquo; but soon won an independent place for himself; more
+successfully than any other dramatist of the century, he carried
+out that task which Kleist had first seriously faced, the reconciliation
+of the classicism of Goethe and Schiller with the Romantic
+and modern spirit of the 19th century. It is from this point of
+view that works like <i>Das goldene Vliess</i> (1820), <i>König Ottokars
+Glück und Ende</i> (1825), <i>Der Traum, ein Leben</i> (1834) and <i>Des
+Meeres und der Liebe Wellen</i> (1831) must be regarded. As far
+as the poetic drama was concerned, Grillparzer stood alone,
+for E.F.J. von Münch-Bellinghausen (1806-1871), his most
+promising contemporary, once so popular under the pseudonym
+of Friedrich Halm, soon fell back into the trivial sentimentality
+of the later Romanticists. In other forms of dramatic literature
+Austria could point to many distinguished writers, notably the
+comedy-writer, E. von Bauernfeld (1802-1890), while a host
+of playwrights, chief of whom were F. Raimund (1790-1836)
+and J. Nestroy (1801-1862), cultivated the popular Viennese
+farce and fairy-play. Thus, in spite of Metternich&rsquo;s censorship
+of the drama, the Viennese theatre was, in the first half of the
+19th century, in closer touch with literature than that of any
+other German centre.</p>
+
+<p>The transitional character of the age is best illustrated by two
+eminent writers whom outward circumstances rather than any
+similarity of character and aim have classed together. These
+were K.L. Immermann, who has been already mentioned, and
+A. von Platen-Hallermund (1796-1835). Immermann&rsquo;s dramas
+were of little practical value to the theatre, but one at least,
+<i>Merlin</i> (1832), is a dramatic poem of great beauty. In his novels,
+however, <i>Die Epigonen</i> (1836) and <i>Münchhausen</i> (1838-1839),
+Immermann was the spokesman of his time. He looked backwards
+rather than forwards; he saw himself as the belated
+follower of a great literary age rather than as the pioneer of a
+new one. The bankruptcy of Romanticism and the poetically
+arid era of &ldquo;Young Germany&rdquo; left him little confidence in the
+future. Platen, on the other hand, went his own way; he, too,
+was the antagonist both of Romanticism and &ldquo;Young Germany,&rdquo;
+and with Immermann himself he came into sharp conflict.
+But in his poetry he showed himself indifferent to the strife of
+contending literary schools. He began as an imitator of the
+German oriental poets&mdash;the only Romanticists with whom he
+had any personal sympathy&mdash;and with his matchless <i>Sonette
+aus Venedig</i> (1825) he stands out as a master in the art of verse-writing
+and as the least subjective of all German lyric poets.
+In the imitation of Romance metres he sought a refuge from the
+extravagances and excesses of the Romantic decadence.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the political side of the &ldquo;Young German&rdquo; movement,
+which the German Bund aimed at stamping out, gained
+rapidly in importance under the influence of the unsettled
+political conditions between the revolutions of 1830 and 1848.
+The early &rsquo;forties were in German literature marked by an
+extraordinary outburst of political poetry, which may be aptly
+compared with the national and patriotic lyric evoked by the
+year 1813. The principles which triumphed in France at the
+revolution of 1848 were, to a great extent, fought out by the
+German singers of 1841 and 1842. Begun by mediocre talents
+like N. Becker (1809-1845) and R.E. Prutz (1816-1872), the
+movement found a vigorous champion in Georg Herwegh (1817-1875),
+who in his turn succeeded in winning Ferdinand Freiligrath
+(1810-1876) for the revolutionary cause. Others joined in the
+cry for freedom&mdash;F. Dingelstedt (1814-1881), A.H. Hoffmann
+von Fallersleben (1798-1874), and a number of Austrians, who
+had even more reason for rebellion and discontent than the
+north Germans. But the best Austrian political poetry, the
+<i>Spaziergänge eines Wiener Poeten</i>, 1831, by &ldquo;Anastasius Grün&rdquo;
+(Graf A.A. von Auersperg, 1806-1876), belonged to a decade
+earlier. The political lyric culminated in and ended with the
+year 1848; the revolutionists of the &rsquo;forties were, if not appeased,
+at least silenced by the revolution which in their eyes had
+effected so little. If Freiligrath be excepted, the chief lyric
+poets of this epoch stood aside from the revolutionary movement;
+even E. Geibel (1815-1884), the representative poet of the
+succeeding age, was only temporarily interested in the political
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page796" id="page796"></a>796</span>
+movement, and his best work is of a purely lyric character.
+M. von Strachwitz&rsquo;s (1822-1847) promising talent did not flourish
+in the political atmosphere; Annette von Droste-Hülshoff
+(1797-1848), and the Austrian, Nikolaus Lenau (1802-1850),
+both stand far removed from the world of politics; they are
+imbued with that pessimistic resignation which is, more or
+less, characteristic of all German literature between 1850 and
+1870.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Mid-Century Literature</i>.&mdash;When once the revolution of
+1848 was over, a spirit of tranquillity came over German letters;
+but it was due rather to the absence of confidence in the future
+than to any hopefulness or real content. The literature of the
+middle of the century was not wanting in achievement, but
+there was nothing buoyant or youthful about it; most significant
+of all, the generation between 1848 and 1880 was either oblivious
+or indifferent to the good work and to the new and germinating
+ideas which it produced. Hegel, who held the earlier half of the
+19th century in his ban, was still all-powerful in the universities,
+but his power was on the wane in literature and public life.
+The so-called &ldquo;Hegelian Left&rdquo; had advanced so far as to have
+become incompatible with the original Hegelianism; the new
+social and economic theories did not fit into the scheme of
+Hegelian collectivism; the interest in natural science&mdash;fostered
+by the popular books of J. Moleschott (1822-1893), Karl Vogt
+(1817-1895) and Ludwig Büchner (1824-1899)&mdash;created a
+healthy antidote to the Hegelian metaphysics. In literature and
+art, on which Hegel, as we have seen, had exerted so blighting
+an influence, his place was taken by the chief exponent
+of philosophic pessimism, Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860).
+Schopenhauer&rsquo;s antagonism to Hegelianism was of old standing,
+for his chief work, <i>Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung</i>, had
+appeared as far back as 1819; but the century was more than
+half over before the movement of ideas had, as it were, caught
+up with him, before pessimism became a dominant force in
+intellectual life.</p>
+
+<p>The literature produced between 1850 and 1870 was preeminently
+one of prose fiction. The beginnings which the
+&ldquo;Young German&rdquo; school had made to a type of novel dealing
+with social problems&mdash;the best example is Gutzkow&rsquo;s <i>Ritter
+vom Geiste</i>&mdash;developed rapidly in this succeeding epoch.
+Friedrich Spielhagen (born 1829) followed immediately in
+Gutzkow&rsquo;s footsteps, and in a series of romances from <i>Problematische
+Naturen</i> (1860) to <i>Sturmflut</i> (1876), discussed in a militant
+spirit that recalls Laube and Gutzkow the social problems
+which agitated German life in these decades. Gustav Freytag
+(1816-1895), although an older man, freed himself more successfully
+from the &ldquo;Young German&rdquo; tradition; his romance of
+German commercialism, <i>Soll und Haben</i> (1855), is the masterpiece
+of mid-century fiction of this class. Less successful was
+Freytag&rsquo;s subsequent attempt to transfer his method to the
+<i>milieu</i> of German academic life in <i>Die verlorene Handschrift</i>
+(1864). As was perhaps only natural in an age of social and
+political interests, the historical novel occupies a subordinate
+place. The influence of Scott, which in the earlier period had
+been strong, produced only one writer, Wilhelm Häring (&ldquo;Willibald
+Alexis,&rdquo; 1798-1871), who was more than a mere imitator
+of the Scottish master. In the series of six novels, from <i>Der
+Roland von Berlin</i> to <i>Dorothe</i>, which Alexis published between
+1840 and 1856, he gave Germany, and more particularly Prussia,
+a historical fiction which might not unworthily be compared
+with the <i>Waverley Novels</i>. But Alexis had no successor, and the
+historical novel soon made way for a type of fiction in which
+the accurate reproduction of remote conditions was held of
+more account than poetic inspiration or artistic power. Such
+are the &ldquo;antiquarian&rdquo; novels of ancient Egyptian life by
+Georg Ebers (1837-1898), and those from primitive German
+history by Felix Dahn (born 1834). The vogue of historical
+fiction was also transferred to some extent, as in English literature,
+to novels of American life and adventure, of which the chief
+German cultivators were K.A. Postl, who wrote under the
+pseudonym of Charles Sealsfield (1793-1864) and Friedrich
+Gerstäcker (1816-1872).</p>
+
+<p>Of greater importance was the fiction which owed its inspiration
+to the Romantic traditions that survived the &ldquo;Young
+German&rdquo; age. To this group belongs the novel of peasant and
+provincial life, of which Immermann had given an excellent
+example in <i>Der Oberhof</i>, a story included in the arabesque of
+<i>Münchhausen</i>. A Swiss pastor, Albrecht Bitzius, better known
+by his pseudonym &ldquo;Jeremias Gotthelf&rdquo; (1797-1854), was,
+however, the real founder of this class of romance; and his
+simple, unvarnished and naďvely didactic stories of the Swiss
+peasant were followed not long afterwards by the more famous
+<i>Schwarzwälder Dorfgeschichten</i> (1843-1854) of Berthold Auerbach
+(1812-1882). Auerbach is not by any means so naďve
+and realistic as Gotthelf, nor is his work free from tendencies
+and ideas which recall &ldquo;Young German&rdquo; rationalism rather
+than the unsophisticated life of the Black Forest; but the
+<i>Schwarzwälder Dorfgeschichten</i> exerted a decisive influence;
+they were the forerunners of a large body of peasant literature
+which described with affectionate sympathy and with a liberal
+admixture of dialect, south German village life. With this
+group of writers may also be associated the German Bohemian,
+A. Stifter (1805-1868), who has called up unforgettable pictures
+and impressions of the life and scenery of his home.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, the Low German peoples also benefited by the
+revival of an interest in dialect and peasant life; it is to the
+credit of Fritz Reuter (1810-1874) that he brought honour
+to the Plattdeutsch of the north, the dialects of which had
+played a fitful, but by no means negligible rôle in the earlier
+history of German letters. His Mecklenburg novels, especially
+<i>Ut de Franzosentid</i> (1860), <i>Ut mine Festungstid</i> (1863) and <i>Ut
+mine Stromtid</i> (1862-1864), are a faithful reflection of Mecklenburg
+life and temperament, and hold their place beside the best
+German fiction of the period. What Reuter did for Plattdeutsch
+prose, his contemporary, Klaus Groth (1819-1899), the author
+of <i>Quickborn</i> (1852), did for its verse. We owe, however, the best
+German prose fiction of these years to two writers, whose affinity
+with the older Romanticists was closer. The north German,
+Theodor Storm (1817-1888) is the author of a series of short
+stories of delicate, lyric inspiration, steeped in that elegiac
+Romanticism which harmonized so well with mid-century
+pessimism in Germany. Gottfried Keller (1819-1890), on the
+other hand, a native of Zürich, was a modern Romanticist of
+a robuster type; his magnificent autobiographical novel, <i>Der
+grüne Heinrich</i> (1854-1855), might be described as the last in
+the great line of Romantic fiction that had begun with <i>Wilhelm
+Meister</i>, and the short stories, <i>Die Leute von Seldwyla</i> (1856-1874)
+and <i>Züricher Novellen</i> (1878) are masterpieces of the
+first rank.</p>
+
+<p>In the dramatic literature of these decades, at least as it was
+reflected in the repertories of the German theatres, there was
+little promise. French influence was, in general, predominant;
+French translations formed the mainstay of the theatre-directors,
+while successful German playwrights, such as R. Benedix (1811-1873)
+and Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer (1800-1868), have little claim
+to consideration in a literary survey. Gustav Freytag&rsquo;s
+admirable comedy, <i>Die Journalisten</i> (1852), was one of the
+rare exceptions. But the German drama of this epoch is not
+to be judged solely by the theatres. At the middle of the century
+Germany could point to two writers who, each in his way, contributed
+very materially to the development of the modern
+drama. These were Friedrich Hebbel (1813-1863) and Otto
+Ludwig (1813-1865). Both of these men, as a later generation
+discovered, were the pioneers of that dramatic literature which
+at the close of the century accepted the canons of realism and
+aimed at superseding outward effects by psychological conflicts
+and problems of social life. Hebbel, especially, must be regarded
+as the most original and revolutionary German dramatist of
+the 19th century. Unlike his contemporary Grillparzer, whose
+aim had been to reconcile the &ldquo;classic&rdquo; and the &ldquo;romantic&rdquo;
+drama with the help of Spanish models, Hebbel laid the foundations
+of a psychological and social drama, of which the most
+modern interpreter has been Henrik Ibsen. Hebbel&rsquo;s first
+tragedy, <i>Judith</i>, appeared in 1840, his masterpieces, <i>Herodes</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page797" id="page797"></a>797</span>
+<i>und Marianne</i>, <i>Agnes Bernauer</i>, <i>Gyges und sein Ring</i>, and the
+trilogy of <i>Die Nibelungen</i> between 1850 and 1862.</p>
+
+<p>In this period of somewhat confused literary striving, there
+is, however, one body of writers who might be grouped together
+as a school, although the designation must be regarded rather
+as an outward accident of union than as implying conformity
+of aims. This is the group which Maximilian II. of Bavaria
+gathered round him in Munich between 1852 and 1860. A
+leading spirit of the group was Emanuel Geibel, who, as we have
+seen, set a model to the German lyric in this age; F. von Bodenstedt
+(1819-1892), the popular author of <i>Mirza Schaffy</i>; and
+J.V. von Scheffel (1826-1886), who, in his verse-romance, <i>Der
+Trompeter von Säckingen</i> (1854), broke a lance for a type of
+literature which had been cultivated somewhat earlier, but
+with no very conspicuous success, by men like O. von Redwitz
+(1823-1891) and G. Kinkel (1815-1882). The romance was,
+in fact, one of the favourite vehicles of poetic expression of the
+Munich school, its most successful exponents being J. Wolff
+(b. 1834) and R. Baumbach (1840-1905); while others,
+such as H. Lingg (1820-1905) and R. Hamerling (1830-1889)
+devoted themselves to the more ambitious epic. The general
+tone of the literary movement was pessimistic, the hopelessness
+of the spiritual outlook being most deeply engrained in the
+verse of H. Lorm (pseudonym for Heinrich Landesmann, 1821-1902)
+and H. Leuthold (1827-1879). On the whole, the most
+important member of the Munich group is Paul Heyse (b. 1830),
+who, as a writer of &ldquo;Novellen&rdquo; or short stories, may be classed
+with Storm and Keller. An essentially Latin genius, Heyse
+excels in stories of Italian life, where his lightness of touch
+and sense of form are shown to best advantage; but he has also
+written several long novels. Of these, <i>Kinder der Welt</i> (1873)
+and, in a lesser degree, <i>Im Paradiese</i> (1875), sum up the spirit
+and tendency of their time, just as, in earlier decades, <i>Die Ritter
+vom Geiste</i>, <i>Problematische Naturen</i> and <i>Soll und Haben</i> were
+characteristic of the periods which produced them.</p>
+
+<p>(<i>c</i>) <i>German Literature after 1870.</i>&mdash;In the years immediately
+following the Franco-German War, the prevailing conditions
+were unfavourable to literary production in Germany, and the
+re-establishment of the empire left comparatively little trace
+on the national literature. All minds were for a time engrossed
+by the <i>Kulturkampf</i>, by the financial difficulties&mdash;the so-called
+<i>Gründertum</i>&mdash;due to unscrupulous speculation, and, finally,
+by the rapid rise of social democracy as a political force. The
+intellectual basis of the latter movement was laid by Ferdinand
+Lassalle (1825-1864) and Karl Marx (1818-1883), author of
+<i>Das Kapital</i> (vol. i, 1867). But even had such disturbing elements
+been wanting, the general tone of German intellectual life at
+that time was not buoyant enough to inspire a vigorous literary
+revival. The influence of Hegel was still strong, and the &ldquo;historical&rdquo;
+method, as enunciated in <i>Der alte und der neue Glaube</i>
+(1872) by the Hegelian D.F. Strauss, was generally accepted
+at the German universities. To many the compromise which
+H. Lotze (1817-1881) had attempted to establish between
+science and metaphysics, came as a relief from the Hegelian
+tradition, but in literature and art the dominant force was still,
+as before the war, the philosophy of Schopenhauer. In his
+<i>Philosophie des Unbewussten</i> (1869), E. von Hartmann (1842-1906)
+endeavoured to bring pessimism into harmony with idealism.
+In lyric poetry, the dull monotony was broken by the
+excitement of the war, and the singers of the revolution of 1848
+were among the first to welcome the triumph and unification
+of Germany. At the same time, men of the older generation,
+like Herwegh, Freiligrath and Geibel could ill conceal a certain
+disappointment with the new régime; the united Germany
+of 1871 was not what they had dreamed of in their youth, when
+all hopes were set on the Frankfort parliament.</p>
+
+<p>The novel continued to be what it was before 1870, the most
+vigorous form of German literature, but the novelists who were
+popular in the early &rsquo;seventies were all older men. Laube,
+Gutzkow and Auerbach were still writing; Fritz Reuter was
+a universal favourite; while among the writers of short stories,
+Storm, who, between 1877 and 1888, put the crown to his work
+with his <i>Chroniknovellen</i>, and Paul Heyse were the acknowledged
+masters. It was not until at least a decade later that the genius
+of Gottfried Keller was generally recognized. The historical
+novel seemed, in those days, beyond hope of revival. Gustav
+Freytag, it is true, had made the attempt in <i>Die Ahnen</i> (1872-1881),
+a number of independent historical romances linked
+together to form an ambitious prose epic; but there was more of
+the spirit of Ebers and Dahn in Freytag&rsquo;s work than of the
+spacious art of Scott, or of Scott&rsquo;s disciple, Willibald Alexis.</p>
+
+<p>The drama of the &rsquo;seventies was in an even less hopeful condition
+than during the preceding period. The classical iambic tragedy
+was cultivated by the Munich school, by A. Wilbrandt (b. 1837),
+A. Lindner (1831-1888), H. Kruse (1815-1902), by the Austrian
+F. Nissel (1831-1893), and A. Fitger (b. 1840); but it was
+characteristic of the time that Halm was popular, while Hebbel
+and Grillparzer were neglected, it might even be said ignored.
+The most gifted German dramatist belonging exclusively to
+the decade between 1870 and 1880 was an Austrian, Ludwig
+Anzengruber (1839-1889), whose <i>Pfarrer von Kirchfeld</i> (1870)
+recalled the controversies of the <i>Kulturkampf</i>. This was Anzengruber&rsquo;s
+first drama, and it was followed by a series of powerful
+plays dealing with the life of the Austrian peasant; Anzengruber
+was, indeed, one of the ablest exponents of that village
+life, which had attracted so many gifted writers since the days
+of Gotthelf and Auerbach. But the really popular dramatists
+of this epoch were either writers who, like Benedix in the older
+generation, cultivated the <i>bourgeoise</i> comedy&mdash;A. L&rsquo;Arronge
+(b. 1838), G. von Moser (1825-1903), F. von Schönthan (b. 1849)
+and O. Blumenthal (b. 1852)&mdash;or playwrights, of whom P.
+Lindau (b. 1839) may be regarded as representative, who
+imitated French models. The only sign of progress in the
+dramatic history of this period was the marked improvement
+of the German stage, an improvement due, on the one hand, to
+the artistic reforms introduced by the duke of Meiningen in the
+Court theatre at Meiningen, and, on the other hand, to the ideals
+of a national theatre realized at Bayreuth by Richard Wagner
+(1813-1883). The greatest composer of the later 19th century
+is also one of Germany&rsquo;s leading dramatists; and the first
+performance of the trilogy <i>Der Ring der Nibelungen</i> at Bayreuth
+in the summer of 1876 may be said to have inaugurated the
+latest epoch in the history of the German drama.</p>
+
+<p>The last fifteen or twenty years of the 19th century were
+distinguished in Germany by a remarkable literary activity.
+Among the younger generation, which was growing up as citizens
+of the united German empire, a more hopeful and optimistic
+spirit prevailed. The influence of Schopenhauer was on the wane,
+and at the universities Hegelianism had lost its former hold.
+The sponsor of the new philosophic movement was Kant, the
+master of 18th-century &ldquo;enlightenment,&rdquo; and under the influence
+of the &ldquo;neo-Kantian&rdquo; movement, not merely German
+school philosophy, but theology also, was imbued with a healthier
+spirit. L. von Ranke (1795-1886) was still the dominant force
+in German historical science, and between 1881 and 1888 nine
+volumes appeared of his last great work, <i>Weltgeschichte</i>. Other
+historians of the period were H. von Sybel (1817-1895) and H.
+von Treitschke (1834-1896), the latter a vigorous and inspiring
+spokesman of the new political conditions; while J. Burckhardt
+(1818-1897), author of the masterly <i>Kultur der Renaissance in
+Italien</i> (1860) and the friend of Nietzsche, exerted an influence
+on German thought which was not confined to academic circles.
+Literary criticism perhaps benefited most of all by the dethronement
+of Hegel and the more objective attitude towards Schopenhauer;
+it seemed as if in this epoch the Germans first formed
+definite ideas&mdash;and ideas which were acceptable and accepted
+outside Germany&mdash;as to the rank and merits of their great poets.
+A marked change came over the nation&rsquo;s attitude towards Goethe,
+a poet to whom, as we have seen, neither the era of Hegel nor
+that of Schopenhauer had been favourable; Schiller was regarded
+with less national prejudice, and&mdash;most important of all&mdash;amends
+were made by the new generation for the earlier neglect of
+Kleist, Grillparzer, Hebbel and Keller.</p>
+
+<p>The thinker and poet who most completely embodies the spirit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page798" id="page798"></a>798</span>
+of this period&mdash;who dealt the Hegelian metaphysics its death-blow
+as far as its wider influence was concerned&mdash;was Friedrich
+Nietzsche (1844-1900). Nietzsche had begun as a disciple of
+Schopenhauer and a friend of Wagner, and he ultimately became
+the champion of an individualistic and optimistic philosophy
+which formed the sharpest possible contrast to mid-century
+pessimism. The individual, not the race, the <i>Herrenmensch</i>,
+not the slave, self-assertion, not self-denying renunciation&mdash;these
+are some of the ideas round which this new optimistic
+ethics turns. Nietzsche looked forward to the human race
+emerging from an effete culture, burdened and clogged by tradition,
+and re-establishing itself on a basis that is in harmony
+with man&rsquo;s primitive instincts. Like Schopenhauer before him,
+Nietzsche was a stylist of the first rank, and his literary masterpiece,
+<i>Also sprach Zarathustra</i> (1883-1891), is to be regarded as
+the most important imaginative work of its epoch.</p>
+
+<p>Nietzschean individualism was only one of many factors
+which contributed to the new literary development. The
+realistic movement, as it had manifested itself in France under
+Flaubert, the Goncourts, Zola and Maupassant, in Russia under
+Dostoievsky and Tolstoi, and in Norway under Ibsen and
+Björnson, was, for a time, the dominant force in Germany, and
+the younger generation of critics hailed it with undisguised
+satisfaction; most characteristic and significant of all, the centre
+of this revival was Berlin, which, since it had become the imperial
+capital, was rapidly establishing its claim to be also the literary
+metropolis. It was the best testimony to the vitality of the
+movement that it rarely descended to slavish imitation of the
+realistic masterpieces of other literatures; realism in Germany
+was, in fact, only an episode of the &rsquo;eighties, a stimulating
+influence rather than an accepted principle or dogma. And its
+suggestive character is to be seen not merely in the writings of
+the young <i>Stürmer und Dränger</i> of this time, but also in those
+of the older generation who, in temperament, were naturally
+more inclined to the ideals of a past age.</p>
+
+<p>Of the novelists of the latter class, A. Wilbrandt, who has
+already been mentioned as a dramatist, has shown, since about
+1890, a remarkable power of adapting himself, if not to the style
+and artistic methods of the younger school, at least to the
+ideas by which it was agitated; F. Spielhagen&rsquo;s attitude towards
+the realistic movement has been invariably sympathetic, while
+a still older writer, Theodor Fontane (1819-1898), wrote between
+1880 and 1898 a series of works in which the finer elements of
+French realism were grafted on the German novel. To the older
+school belong Wilhelm Jensen (b. 1837), and that fine humorist,
+Wilhelm Raabe (b. 1831), with whom may be associated as other
+humorists of this period, H. Seidel (1842-1906) and W. Busch
+(1832-1908). Some of the most interesting examples of recent
+German fiction come, however, from Austria and Switzerland.
+The two most eminent Austrian authors, Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach
+(b. 1830), and Ferdinand, von Saar (1833-1906),
+both excel as writers of Novellen or short stories&mdash;the latter
+especially being an exponent of that pessimism which is Austria&rsquo;s
+peculiar heritage from the previous generation of her poets.
+Austrians too, are Peter Rosegger (b. 1843), who has won
+popularity with his novels of peasant life, K.E. Franzos (1848-1904)
+and L. von Sacher-Masoch (1835-1895). German prose
+fiction is, in Switzerland, represented by two writers of the first
+rank: one of these, Gottfried Keller, has already been mentioned;
+the other, Konrad Ferdinand Meyer (1825-1898), turned to
+literature or, at least, made his reputation, comparatively late
+in life. Although, like Keller, a writer of virile, original verse,
+Meyer is best known as a novelist; he, too, was a master of the
+short story. His themes are drawn by preference from the epoch
+of the Renaissance, and his method is characterized by an
+objectivity of standpoint and a purity of style exceptional in
+German writers.</p>
+
+<p>The realistic novels of the period were written by H. Conradi
+(1862-1890), Max Kretzer (b. 1854), M.G. Conrad (b. 1846), H.
+Heiberg (b. 1840), K. Bleibtreu (b. 1859), K. Alberti (pseudonym
+for Konrad Sittenfeld, b. 1862) and Hermann Sudermann
+(b. 1857). A want of stability was, however, as has been already
+indicated, characteristic of the realistic movement in Germany;
+the idealistic trend of the German mind proved itself ill-adapted
+to the uncompromising realism of the French school, and the
+German realists, whether in fiction or in drama, ultimately
+sought to escape from the logical consequences of their theories.
+Even Sudermann, whose <i>Frau Sorge</i> (1887), <i>Der Katzensteg</i>
+(1889), and the brilliant, if somewhat sensational romance,
+<i>Es war</i> (1894), are among the best novels of this period, has
+never been a consistent realist. It is consequently not surprising
+to find that, before long, German fiction returned to psychological
+and emotional problems, to the poetical or symbolical presentation
+of life, which was more in harmony with the German temperament
+than was the robuster realism of Flaubert or Zola. This
+trend is noticeable in the work of Gustav Frenssen (b. 1863),
+whose novel <i>Jörn Uhl</i> (1901) was extraordinarily popular;
+it is also to be seen in the studies of child life and educational
+problems which have proved so attractive to the younger
+writers of the present day, such as Hermann Hesse (b. 1877),
+Emil Strauss (b. 1866), Rudolf Huch (b. 1862) and Friedrich
+Huch (b. 1873). One might say, indeed, that at the beginning
+of the 20th century the traditional form of German fiction, the
+<i>Bildungsroman</i>, had come into its ancient rights again. Mention
+ought also to be made of J.J. David (1859-1907), E. von
+Keyserling (b. 1858), W. Hegeler (b. 1870), G. von Ompteda
+(b. 1863), J. Wassermann (b. 1873), Heinrich Mann (b. 1871)
+and Thomas Mann (b. 1875). <i>Buddenbrooks</i> (1902) by the
+last mentioned is one of the outstanding novels of the period.
+Some of the best fiction of the most recent period is the work of
+women, the most distinguished being Helene Böhlau (b. 1859),
+Gabriele Reuter (b. 1859), Clara Viebig (C. Cohn-Viebig,
+b. 1860) and Ricarda Huch (b. 1864). Whether the latest
+movement in German poetry and fiction, which, under the catchword
+<i>Heimatkunst</i>, has favoured the province rather than the
+city, the dialect in preference to the language of the educated
+classes, will prove a permanent gain, it is still too soon to say,
+but the movement is at least a protest against the decadent
+tendencies of naturalism.</p>
+
+<p>At no period of German letters were literature and the theatre
+in closer touch than at the end of the 19th and the beginning of
+the 20th centuries; more than at any previous time has the
+theatre become the arena in which the literary battles of the day
+are fought out. The general improvement in the artistic,
+technical and economic conditions of the German stage have
+already been indicated; but it was not until 1889 that the effects
+of these improvements became apparent in dramatic literature.
+Before that date, it is true, Ernst von Wildenbruch (1845-1909)
+had attempted to revive the historical tragedy, but the purely
+literary qualities of his work were handicapped by a too effusive
+patriotism and a Schillerian pathos; nor did the talent of
+Richard Voss (b. 1851) prove strong enough to effect any lasting
+reform. In October 1889, however, Gerhart Hauptmann&rsquo;s
+play, <i>Vor Sonnenaufgang</i>, was produced on the then recently
+founded <i>Freie Bühne</i> in Berlin; and a month later, <i>Die Ehre</i>
+by Hermann Sudermann met with a more enthusiastic reception
+in Berlin than had fallen to the lot of any German play for more
+than a generation.</p>
+
+<p>Hauptmann (b. 1862), the most original of contemporary
+German writers, stands, more or less, alone. His early plays,
+the most powerful of which is <i>Die Weber</i> (1892), were written
+under the influence either of an uncompromising realism, or of
+that modified form of realism introduced from Scandinavia;
+but in <i>Hanneles Himmelfahrt</i> (1893) he combined realism with
+the poetic mysticism of a child&rsquo;s dream, in <i>Florian Geyer</i> (1895)
+he adapted the methods of realism to an historical subject, and
+in the year 1896 he, to all appearance, abandoned realism to
+write an allegorical dramatic poem, <i>Die versunkene Glocke</i>.
+Hauptmann&rsquo;s subsequent work has oscillated between the
+extremes marked out by these works&mdash;from the frank naturalism
+of <i>Fuhrmann Henschel</i> (1898) and <i>Rose Berndt</i> (1903), to the
+fantastic mysticism of <i>Der arme Heinrich</i> (1902) and <i>Und Pippa
+tanzt!</i> (1906).</p>
+
+<p>The dramatic talent of Hermann Sudermann has developed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page799" id="page799"></a>799</span>
+on more even lines; the success of <i>Die Ehre</i> was due in the first
+instance to the ability which Sudermann had shown in adapting
+the ideas of his time and the new methods of dramatic presentation
+to the traditional German <i>bürgerliches Drama</i>. This is the
+characteristic of the majority of the many plays which followed
+of which <i>Heimat</i> (1893), <i>Das Glück im Winkel</i> (1896) and <i>Es lebe
+das Leben!</i> (1902) may be mentioned as typical. With less
+success Sudermann attempted in <i>Johannes</i> (1898) a tragedy on
+lines suggested by Hebbel. A keen observer, a writer of brilliant
+and suggestive ideas, Sudermann is, above all, the practical
+playwright; but it is unfortunate that the theatrical element
+in his work too often overshadows its literary qualities.</p>
+
+<p>Since 1889, the drama has occupied the foreground of interest
+in Germany. The permanent repertory of the German theatre
+has not, it is true, been much enriched, but it is at least to the
+credit of contemporary German playwrights that they are unwilling
+to rest content with their successes and are constantly
+experimenting with new forms. Besides Hauptmann and
+Sudermann, the most talented dramatists of the day are Max
+Halbe (b. 1865), O.E. Hartleben (1864-1905), G. Hirschfeld
+(b. 1873), E. Rosmer (pseudonym for Elsa Bernstein, b. 1866),
+Ludwig Fulda (b. 1862), Max Dreyer (b. 1862), Otto Ernst
+(pseudonym for O.E. Schmidt, b. 1862) and Frank Wedekind
+(b. 1864). In Austria, notwithstanding the preponderant influence
+of Berlin, the drama has retained its national characteristics,
+and writers like Arthur Schnitzler (b. 1862), Hermann
+Bahr (b. 1863), Hugo von Hofmannsthal (b. 1874) and R.
+Beer-Hofmann (b. 1866) have introduced symbolistic elements
+and peculiarly Austrian problems, which are foreign to the
+theatre of north Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The German lyric of recent years shows a remarkable variety
+of new tones and pregnant poetic ideas; it has, as is natural,
+been more influenced by the optimism of Nietzsche&mdash;himself a
+lyric poet of considerable gifts&mdash;than has either novel or drama.
+Detlev von Liliencron (1844-1909) was one of the first to break
+with the traditions of the lyric as handed down from the
+Romantic epoch and cultivated with such facility by the Munich
+poets. An anthology of specifically modern lyrics, <i>Moderne
+Dichtercharaktere</i> (1885) by W. Arent (b. 1864), may be regarded
+as the manifesto of the movement in lyric poetry corresponding
+to the period of realism in fiction and the drama. Representative
+poets of this movement are Richard Dehmel (b. 1863), K.
+Henckell (b. 1864), J.H. Mackay (b. 1864 at Greenock), G.
+Falke (b. 1853), F. Avenarius (b. 1856), F. Evers (b. 1871), F.
+Dörmann (b. 1870) and K. Busse (b. 1872). A later development
+of the lyric&mdash;a return to mysticism and symbolism&mdash;is to be
+seen in the poetry of Hofmannsthal, already mentioned as a
+dramatist, and especially in Stefan George (b. 1868). Epic
+poetry, although little in harmony with the spirit of a realistic
+age, has not been altogether neglected. Heinrich Hart (1855-1906),
+one of the leading critics of the most advanced school,
+is also the author of an ambitious <i>Lied der Menschheit</i> (vols. 1-3,
+1888-1896); more conservative, on the other hand, is <i>Robespierre</i>
+(1894), an epic in the style of Hamerling by an Austrian, Marie
+delle Grazie (b. 1864). Attention may also be drawn to the
+popularity which, for a few years, the so-called <i>Überbrettl</i> or
+cabaret enjoyed, a popularity which has left its mark on the
+latest developments of the lyric. Associated with this movement
+are O.J. Bierbaum (1865-1910), whose lyrics, collected in <i>Der
+Irrgarten der Liebe</i> (1901), have been extraordinarily popular,
+E. von Wolzogen (b. 1855) and the dramatist F. Wedekind,
+who has been already mentioned.</p>
+
+<p>Whether or not the work that has been produced in such
+rich measure since the year 1889&mdash;or however much of it&mdash;is to
+be regarded as a permanent addition to the storehouse of German
+national literature, there can be no question of the serious
+artistic earnestness of the writers; the conditions for the production
+of literature in the German empire in the early years of the
+20th century were eminently healthy, and herein lies the best
+promise for the future.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;(<i>a</i>) <i>General Histories</i>, <i>Anthologies</i>, &amp;c.: A.
+Koberstein, <i>Grundriss der Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur</i>
+(1827; 5th ed. by K. Bartsch, 5 vols., 1872-1874; 6th ed., vol. i.,
+1884); G.G. Gervinus, <i>Geschichte der poetischen Nationalliteratur
+der Deutschen</i> (5 vols., 1835-1842; 5th ed. by K. Bartsch, 1871-1874);
+A.F.C. Vilmar, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur</i>
+(1848; 25th ed., 2 vols., 1900, with a continuation by A. Stern);
+W. Wackernagel, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Literatur</i> (1851-1855;
+2nd ed. by E. Martin, 1879-1894); K. Goedeke, <i>Grundriss zur
+Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung</i> (3 vols., 1857-1881; 2nd ed. by
+E. Goetze and others, in 9 vols., 1884 ff.); W. Menzel, <i>Deutsche
+Dichtung von der ältesten bis auf die neueste Zeit</i> (1858-1859); H.
+Kurz, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Literatur mit ausgewählten Stücken</i>
+(3 vols., 1857-1859; 7th ed., 4 vols., 1876-1882); O. Roquette,
+<i>Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung</i> (2 vols., 1862; 3rd ed., 1878-1879);
+W. Scherer, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Literatur</i> (1883; 10th ed., 1905).
+English translation by Mrs F.C. Conybeare (2 vols., 1885; new ed.,
+1906); Kuno Francke, <i>German Literature as determined by Social
+Forces</i> (1896; 6th ed., 1903); F. Vogt and M. Koch, <i>Geschichte der
+deutschen Literatur</i> (1897; 2nd ed., 2 vols., 1903); J.G. Robertson,
+<i>History of German Literature</i> (1902); A. Bartels, <i>Geschichte der
+deutschen Literatur</i> (2 vols., 1901-1902), with the accompanying
+bibliographical summary, <i>Handbuch zur Geschichte der deutschen
+Literatur</i> (1906). There are also histories of the literature of separate
+countries and districts, such as J. Bächtold, <i>Geschichte der deutschen
+Literatur in der Schweiz</i> (1887); R. Krauss, <i>Schwäbische Literaturgeschichte</i>
+(2 vols., 1897-1899); J.W. Nagl and J. Zeidler, <i>Deutsch-Österreichische
+Literaturgeschichte</i> (2 vols., 1899 ff.). The most
+comprehensive collection of German literature in selections is
+J. Kürschner, <i>Deutsche Nationalliteratur</i> (222 vols., 1882-1898).
+Of general anthologies mention may be made of W. Wackernagel,
+<i>Deutsches Lesebuch</i> (4 vols., 1835-1872; new ed., 1882 ff.), and
+F. Max Müller, <i>The German Classics from the Fourth to the Nineteenth
+Century</i> (1858; ed. by F. Lichtenstein, 2 vols., 1886; new ed.,
+1906). For illustrations to the history of German literature, see
+G. Könnecke, <i>Bilderatlas zur Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur</i>
+(1887; 2nd ed., 1895).</p>
+
+<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Special Periods</i>: i. <i>Old High German and Middle High
+German Periods</i>: R. Kögel and W. Bruckner, &ldquo;Geschichte der
+althochdeutschen Literatur,&rdquo; and F. Vogt, &ldquo;Geschichte der mittelhochdeutschen
+Literatur,&rdquo; in H. Paul&rsquo;s <i>Grundriss der germanischen
+Philologie</i> (2nd ed., vol. ii. pt. i., 1901); F. Khull, <i>Geschichte der
+altdeutschen Dichtung</i> (1886); J. Kelle, <i>Geschichte der deutschen
+Literatur</i>, i.-ii. (1892-1896); R. Kögel, <i>Geschichte der deutschen
+Literatur bis zum Ausgang des Mittelalters</i>, i. (1894-1897); W.
+Golther, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Literatur von den ersten Anfängen
+bis zum Ausgang des Mittelalters</i> (in Kürschner&rsquo;s Deutsche Nationalliteratur,
+vol. 163, pt. i., 1892); W. Scherer, <i>Geschichte der deutschen
+Dichtung im 11. und 12. Jahrhundert</i>, and by the same author,
+<i>Geistliche Poeten der deutschen Kaiserzeit</i> (both works in <i>Quellen
+und Forschungen</i>, 1874-1875); O. Lyon, <i>Minne- und Meistersang</i>
+(1882). There are numerous series of editions of medieval
+texts: K. Müllenhoff and W. Scherer, <i>Denkmäler deutscher Poesie
+und Prosa aus den 8.-12. Jahrhundert</i> (2 vols., 3rd ed., 1892);
+M. Heyne, <i>Bibliothek der ältesten deutschen Literaturdenkmäler</i>
+(14 vols., begun 1858); F. Pfeiffer, <i>Deutsche Klassiker des Mittelalters</i>
+(12 vols., begun 1865), with the supplementary <i>Deutsche
+Dichtungen des Mittelalters</i>, edited by K. Bartsch (7 vols., 1872 ff.);
+K. Goedeke, <i>Deutsche Dichtung im Mittelalter</i> (2nd ed., 1871); J.
+Zacher, <i>Germanistische Handbibliothek</i> (9 vols., begun 1869); H. Paul,
+<i>Altdeutsche Textbibliothek</i> (16 vols., begun 1882); <i>Deutsche Texte des
+Mittelalters</i>, ed. by the Berlin Academy (1904 ff.). Convenient
+editions of the Minnesang are K. Lachmann and M. Haupt, <i>Des
+Minnesangs Frühling</i> (4th ed. by F. Vogt, 1888), and K. Bartsch,
+<i>Deutsche Liederdichter des 12. bis 14. Jahrh.</i> (4th ed. by W. Golther,
+1903).</p>
+
+<p>ii. <i>From 1350-1700.</i>&mdash;L. Geiger, <i>Renaissance und Humanismus in
+Italien und Deutschland</i> (1882; 2nd ed. 1899); K. Borinski,
+<i>Geschichte der deutschen Literatur seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters</i>
+(in Kürschner&rsquo;s <i>Deutsche Nationalliteratur</i>, vol. 163, ii., 1898);
+H. Palm, <i>Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Literatur des 16.
+und 17. Jahrhunderts</i> (1877); C.H. Herford, <i>Studies in the
+Literary Relations of England and Germany in the Sixteenth Century</i>
+(1886); C. Lemcke, <i>Von Opitz bis Klopstock</i>, i. (1871; 2nd ed.
+1882); M. von Waldberg, <i>Deutsche Renaissance-Lyrik</i> (1888), and
+<i>Die galante Lyrik</i> (1885); F. Bobertag, <i>Geschichte des Romans in
+Deutschland</i>, i. (to 1700) (1877-1884); K. Borinski, <i>Die Poetik der
+Renaissance und die Anfänge der literarischen Kritik in Deutschland</i>
+(1886). A vast quantity of the literature of these centuries has
+been republished by the Stuttgarter literarischer Verein (founded
+in 1839), whose publications now number considerably over two
+hundred volumes; further, W. Braune, <i>Neudrucke deutscher Literaturwerke
+des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts</i> (begun 1882); K. Goedeke and
+J. Tittmann, <i>Deutsche Dichter des 16. Jahrhunderts</i> (18 vols.,
+1867 ff.), and <i>Deutsche Dichter des 17. Jahrhunderts</i> (15 vols.,
+1869 ff.). A valuable anthology is K. Goedeke&rsquo;s <i>Elf Bücher deutscher
+Dichtung von Sebastian Brant bis auf die Gegenwart</i> (2 vols., 1849).
+Since 1890 the <i>Jahresberichte für neuere deutsche Literaturgeschichte</i>
+have provided an exhaustive survey of all publications dealing with
+modern German literature. A useful practical bibliography for
+English readers, covering this and the succeeding periods, is J.S.
+Nollen, <i>A Chronology and Practical Bibliography of Modern German
+Literature</i> (1903).</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page800" id="page800"></a>800</span></p>
+
+<p>iii. <i>The Eighteenth Century.</i>&mdash;J. Schmidt, <i>Geschichte der deutschen
+Literatur von Leibniz bis auf unsere Zeit</i> (4 vols., 1862-1867; 2nd
+ed. 1886-1890); J. Hillebrand, <i>Die deutsche Nationalliteratur im
+18. und 19. Jahrhundert</i> (3 vols., 1845-1846; 3rd ed. 1875);
+H. Hettner, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Literatur im 18. Jahrhundert</i>
+(4 vols., 1862-1870; 4th ed. by O. Harnack, 1893-1895); J.W.
+Schäfer, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Literatur des 18. Jahrhunderts</i>
+(1855-1860; 2nd ed. by F. Muncker, 1881); J.K. Mörikofer, <i>Die
+schweizerische Literatur des 18. Jahrhunderts</i> (1861); J.W.
+Löbell, <i>Entwickelung der deutschen Poesie von Klopstock bis zu
+Goethes Tod</i> (3 vols., 1856-1865). There are also innumerable more
+special treatises, such as A. Eloesser, <i>Das bürgerliche Drama</i> (1898);
+O. Brahm, <i>Das deutsche Ritterdrama des 18. Jahrhunderts</i> (1880),
+&amp;c. Of collections of the literature of this and the following century,
+reference need only be made to the <i>Bibliothek der deutschen Nationalliteratur
+des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts</i>, published by Brockhaus
+(44 vols., 1868-1891), and <i>Deutsche Literaturdenkmale des 18. und
+19. Jahrhunderts</i>, edited first by B. Seuffert (1882-1894), and subsequently
+by A. Sauer.</p>
+
+<p>iv. <i>The Nineteenth Century.</i>&mdash;Th. Ziegler, <i>Die geistigen und sozialen
+Strömungen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts</i> (1899; 2nd ed. 1901);
+R. von Gottschall, <i>Die deutsche Nationalliteratur des 19. Jahrhunderts</i>
+(1854; 7th ed., 4 vols., 1900-1902); R.M. Meyer, <i>Die
+deutsche Literatur des 19. Jahrhunderts</i> (1899; 4th ed. 1910);
+R.M. Meyer, <i>Grundriss der neueren deutschen Literaturgeschichte</i>
+(1902); C. Busse, <i>Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung im neunzehnten
+Jahrhundert</i> (1901); R. Haym, <i>Die romantische Schule</i> (1870; 2nd
+ed. 1906); G. Brandes, &ldquo;Den romantiske Skole i Tyskland&rdquo; (1873),
+and &ldquo;Det unge Tyskland&rdquo; (1890), in <i>Hovedströmninger i det 19de
+Aarhundredes Litteratur</i>, vols. ii. and vi. (German translations, 1887
+and 1891; several subsequent editions, Danish and German;
+English translations, ii. 1903, and vi. 1905); R. Huch, <i>Die Blütezeit
+der Romantik (2nd ed. 1901), and Ausbreitung und Verfall der
+Romantik</i> (1902); F. Wehl, <i>Das junge Deutschland</i> (1886); J.
+Proelss, <i>Das junge Deutschland</i> (1892); A. Bartels, <i>Die deutsche
+Dichtung der Gegenwart</i> (7th ed., 1907); A. von Hanstein, <i>Das
+jüngste Deutschland</i> (2nd ed., 1901); J.F. Coar, <i>Studies in German
+Literature in the Nineteenth Century</i> (1903); Ch. Petzet, <i>Die Blütezeit
+der deutschen politischen Lyrik</i> (1903); H. Mielke, <i>Der deutsche
+Roman des 19. Jahrhunderts</i> (4th ed., 1900); S. Friedmann, <i>Das
+deutsche Drama des 19. Jahrhunderts</i> (2 vols., 1900-1903); B.
+Litzmann, <i>Das deutsche Drama in den literarischen Bewegungen der
+Gegenwart</i> (4th ed., 1898).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(J. G. R.)</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN REED ENTERTAINMENT.<a name="ar67" id="ar67"></a></span> The dramatic and
+musical entertainment which for many years was known in
+London by the title of &ldquo;German Reed&rdquo; was a form of theatrical
+enterprise deserving of commemoration in connexion with those
+who made it successful. Mr <span class="sc">Thomas German Reed</span> (born in
+Bristol in 1817, died 1888) married in 1844 Miss <span class="sc">Priscilla
+Horton</span> (1818-1895), and in 1855 they started their entertainment
+at the &ldquo;Gallery of Illustration,&rdquo; in Waterloo Place, London.
+From 1860 to 1877 they were assisted by <span class="sc">John Orlando Parry</span>
+(1810-1879), an accomplished pianoforte player, mimic, parodist
+and humorous singer; and the latter created a new type of
+musical and dramatic monologue which became very popular.
+His tradition was carried on after 1870 by <span class="sc">Mr Corney Grain</span>
+(1844-1895), who, as a clever, refined, and yet highly humorous
+society entertainer (originally a barrister), was one of the best-known
+figures of his day. After the retirement of the elder
+German Reeds, their son, <span class="sc">Alfred German Reed</span> (1846-1895),
+himself a capital actor, carried on the business in partnership
+with Corney Grain. The &ldquo;German Reed Entertainment&rdquo;&mdash;which
+was always patronized by a large class of people, many of
+whom objected on principle to going or taking their children
+to a regular theatre or a music-hall&mdash;retained its vogue for
+forty years at Waterloo Place and at the St George&rsquo;s Hall,
+Regent Street. But the death of Mr Corney Grain almost
+simultaneously with Mr Alfred German Reed, in 1895, together
+with the changed public attitude towards the regular theatre,
+ended its career.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN SILVER<a name="ar68" id="ar68"></a></span> or <span class="sc">Nickel Silver</span>, an alloy of copper,
+nickel and zinc, prepared either by melting the copper and nickel
+together in a crucible, and adding piece by piece the previously
+heated zinc, or by heating the finely divided metals under a layer
+of charcoal. To destroy its crystalline structure and so render
+it fit for working, it is heated to dull redness, and then allowed
+to cool. German silver is harder than silver; it resembles that
+metal in colour, but is of a greyer tinge. Exposed to the air it
+tarnishes slightly yellow, and with vinegar affords a crust of
+verdigris. At a bright red heat it melts, losing its zinc by oxidation
+unless protected from the atmosphere. At a heat above dull
+redness it becomes exceedingly brittle. German silver in various
+modifications of composition is much used in the arts. Alloys,
+of which about 50% is copper and the residue zinc and nickel
+in about equal proportions take a fine polish, and are used as
+imitation silver for knives and forks. With a somewhat higher
+proportion of copper an alloy is formed suitable for rolling and
+for wire. In Chinese <i>white silver</i> or <i>packfong</i> (paktong) the
+amount of copper is smaller, about 40%, with about 32% of
+nickel, 25 of zinc, and 2 or 3 of iron. German silver for casting
+contains 2 or 3% of lead, which like iron increases the whiteness
+of the alloy. German silver, having a high specific resistance
+and a low temperature coefficient, has been used for electrical
+resistance coils, and these qualities are possessed in a still greater
+degree in <i>manganin</i>, which contains manganese in place of zinc,
+its composition being 84% of copper, 12 of manganese and 4 of
+nickel. The addition of a trace of tungsten to German silver,
+as in <i>platinoid</i>, also largely increases the resistance.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMAN SOUTH-WEST AFRICA.<a name="ar69" id="ar69"></a></span> This German possession
+is bounded W. by the Atlantic, N. by Angola, S. by the Cape
+province, E. by Bechuanaland and Rhodesia, and is the only
+German dependency in Africa suited to white colonization. It
+has an area of about 322,450 sq. m., and a population of Bantu
+Negroes and Hottentots estimated in 1903 at 200,000.<a name="fa1j" id="fa1j" href="#ft1j"><span class="sp">1</span></a> The
+European inhabitants, in addition to the military, numbered
+7110 in 1907, of whom the majority were German.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Area and Boundaries.</i>&mdash;The boundary separating the German
+protectorate from the Portuguese possessions of Angola is the lower
+Kunene, from its mouth in 17° 18&prime; S., 11° 40&prime; E. to the limit of
+navigability from the sea, thence in a direct line, corresponding
+roughly to the lat. of 17° 20&prime; S., to the river Okavango, which it
+follows eastwards until the stream turns abruptly south (towards
+Lake Ngami). From this point a strip of German territory 300 m.
+long and about 50 m. broad, projects eastward until it reaches the
+Zambezi a little above the Victoria Falls. On the south this narrow
+strip of land (known as the Caprivi enclave) is separated from
+southern Rhodesia by the Kwando or Chobe river. On the east the
+frontier between British and German territory is in its northern half
+the 21st degree of E. longitude, in its southern half the 20th degree.
+This frontier is drawn through desert country. The southern frontier
+is the Orange river from its mouth to the 20° E. The coast-line
+between the Kunene and Orange rivers is not wholly German. Just
+north of the tropic of Capricorn is the British enclave of Walfish Bay
+(<i>q.v.</i>). The northern part of the protectorate is known as Ovampoland,
+the central portion as Damara (or Herero) land; the southern
+regions as Great Namaqualand. These names are derived from
+those of the dominant native races inhabiting the country.</p>
+
+<p><i>Physical Features.</i>&mdash;The coast-line is generally low and little
+broken by bays or promontories. In its entire length of about
+800 m. it has no good natural harbour, and its bays&mdash;Angra Pequena,
+otherwise Lüderitz Bay, Sierra Bay, Sandwich Harbour&mdash;are in
+danger of being filled with sand by the strong, cold, northerly coast
+current. Swakopmund is an artificial harbour at the mouth of the
+river Swakop. The small islands which stud the coast north and
+south of Angra Pequena belong to Great Britain. The coast-line
+is bordered by a belt of sand-dunes and desert, which, about 35 m.
+wide in the south, narrows towards the north. This coast belt is
+flanked by a mountain range, which attains its highest elevation in
+Mount Omatako (8972 ft.), in about 21° 15&prime; S., 16° 40&prime; E. N. E. of
+Omatako is the Omboroko range, otherwise known as the Waterberg.
+South of Omboroko, occupying the centre of the country, the range
+attains its highest average altitude. The following massifs with their
+highest points may be distinguished: Gans (7664 ft.), Nu-uibeb
+(7480 ft.), Onyati (7201 ft.), Awas (6988 ft.), Komas (5331 ft.) and
+Ganab (4002 ft.). In the S.E. are the Karas mountains, which attain
+an elevation of 6570 ft. The mountains for the main part form the
+escarpment of the great Kalahari plateau, which, gently rising
+from the interior towards the west, slopes again towards the south
+and north from the point of its highest elevation. The Kalahari
+plateau changes the undulating character it has in the west to a
+perfect plain in the far east, where the watered and habitable
+country merges into the sterile Kalahari desert. In the northern
+half of the country the central plateau contains much rich grass-land,
+while in the north-eastern region the Omaheke desert has all the
+characteristics of the Kalahari.</p>
+
+<p>There are no rivers of importance wholly within German South-West
+Africa. The Kunene (<i>q.v.</i>) has but a small portion of the
+southern bank in the colony, and similarly only part of the northern
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page801" id="page801"></a>801</span>
+bank of the Orange river (<i>q.v.</i>) is in German territory. Several
+streams run south into the Orange; of those the chief is the Great
+Fish river, which has a course of nearly 500 m. Both the Kunene
+and the Orange carry water all the year round, but are not navigable.
+Neither is the Great Fish river, which, however, is rarely dry. The
+Okavango, which comes from the north and runs towards Ngami
+(<i>q.v.</i>), is perennial, but like the Kunene and Orange, belongs only
+partly to the hydrographic system of the country. From the inner
+slopes of the coast chain many streams go N.E. to join the Okavango.
+They cross the Omaheke waste and are usually dry. Ovampoland
+has a hydrographic system connected with the Kunene, and, in
+seasons of great flood, with that of Ngami. Before the Kunene
+breaks through the outer edge of the plateau, it sends divergent
+channels south-east to a large marsh or lake called Etosha, which
+is cut by 17° E. and 19° S. Of these channels the Kwamatuo or
+Okipoko, which is perennial, enters Etosha at its N.W. corner. The
+lake when full extends about 80 m. W. to E. and 50 m. N. to S.
+From its S.E. corner issues the Omuramba, which divides into two
+branches, known respectively as the Omaheke and the Ovampo.
+These streams have an easterly direction, their beds, often dry,
+joining the Okavango. The other rivers of the protectorate have
+as a rule plenty of water in their upper courses in the rainy season,
+though some river beds are dry for years together. After a heavy
+thunderstorm such a river bed will be suddenly filled with a turbid
+current half a mile wide. The water is, however, before long
+absorbed by the thirsty land. Only in exceptionally rainy years
+do the streams which cross the sand belt carry water to the ocean.
+But in the sand which fills the river beds water may be obtained
+by digging. Of rivers running direct to the Atlantic the Little Fish
+river enters the sea at Angra Pequena and the Kuisip in Walfish Bay.
+The Swakop rises in the hills near the Waterberg, and north of it is
+the Omaruru, which carries water for the greater part of the year.
+Hot springs are numerous, and it is remarkable that those of Windhoek
+flow more copiously during the dry than the rainy season. There
+are also many cold springs, and wells which contain water all the year.</p>
+
+<p><i>Geology.</i>&mdash;Gneiss and schist, with intrusive granites and porphyries,
+overlain to a great extent by sand and lateritic deposits, occupy the
+coast belt, coast mountains and the plateau of Damaraland. In the
+Huib and Han-ami plateaus of Great Namaqualand the crystalline
+rocks are overlain by sandstones, slates, quartzites and jasper rocks,
+and these in turn by dolomites. They are probably equivalent to
+the Transvaal and Pretoria series (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Transvaal</a></span>: <i>Geology</i>). The
+next oldest rocks are of recent geological date. The Kalahari Kalk,
+which extends over large areas to the south-east of Ovampoland,
+may be of Miocene age, but it has not yielded fossils. Extensive
+tracts of alluvium occur in the basin of the Ovampo, while the dunes
+and sand-tracts of the Kalahari occupy the eastern regions.</p>
+
+<p><i>Climate.</i>&mdash;On the coast the mean temperature is low, and there is
+little rainfall. Moisture is supplied by dense fogs, which rise almost
+daily. South-west winds prevail. Inland the climate is temperate
+rather than tropical, with bracing, clear atmosphere. There are
+considerable differences of temperature between day and night, and
+two well-marked seasons, one cold and dry from May to September,
+the other hot and rainy from October to April. In winter ice
+frequently forms during the night on open water on the plateau,
+but it never remains all day. The yearly rainfall is about 20 in.
+in the Damara Hills; there is more rain in the north than in the
+south, and in the east than in the west. In the greater part of the
+colony the climate is favourable for European settlement.</p>
+
+<p><i>Flora and Fauna.</i>&mdash;The vegetation corresponds exactly with the
+climate. In the dry littoral region are plants able to exist with the
+minimum of moisture they derive from the daily fog&mdash;<i>Amarantaceae</i>,
+<i>Sarcocaula</i>, <i>Aloe dichotoma</i>, <i>Aristida subacaulis</i> and the wonderful
+<i>Welwitschia</i>. Farther inland are plants which spring up and disappear
+with the rain, and others whose roots reach permanent
+water. The former are chiefly grasses, the latter exist almost solely
+in or near river-beds. Amongst the fine trees often seen here, the
+ana tree (<i>Acacia albida</i>) is the most noteworthy, its seeds being
+favourite fodder for all domestic animals. <i>Acacia giraffae</i>, <i>Ac.
+horrida</i>, <i>Adansonia sterculia</i>, near the Kunene the <i>Hyphaene ventricosa</i>,
+deserve special notice. The vegetation in the mountain valleys is
+luxuriant, and towards the north is of a tropical character. The
+palm zone extends a considerable distance south of the Kunene,
+and here vegetation spreads over the sand-dunes of the coast plain,
+which are covered with grasses.</p>
+
+<p>Large game, formerly abundant, especially pachyderms, is scarce.
+Of antelopes the following species are plentiful in parts: springbok,
+steenbok, kudu, rietbok, pallah; of monkeys, the <i>Cynocephalus
+porcarius</i> is frequent. Various kinds of hyenas and jackals with
+fine fur (<i>Canis mesomelas</i>), also <i>Felis caracal</i>, abound. The spring-hare
+(<i>Pedestea caffer</i>) and rock-rabbit (<i>Hyrax capensis</i>) may often be
+observed. Of birds there are 728 species. Crocodiles, turtles and
+snakes are numerous.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Inhabitants.</i>&mdash;Among the natives of German South-West
+Africa three classes may be distinguished. In the first class are
+the Namaqua (Hottentots) and Bushmen. The Namaqua
+probably came from the south, while the Bushmen may be
+looked upon as an indigenous race. The Hottentots, the purest
+existing types of that race, are divided into numerous tribes,
+independent of one another, such as the Witbois, Swartzbois,
+Bondelzwarts. The Bushmen are found scattered over the
+eastern parts of the country (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Hottentots</a></span> and <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Bushmen</a></span>).
+The second class consists of the mountain Damara (Hau-Khoin),
+a race of doubtful affinities, probably of Bantu-Negro origin,
+but speaking the Hottentot language. The third class belongs
+to the Bantu-Negro stock, and came from the north-east, expelling
+and enslaving the mountain Damara, and settling in
+various parts of the country under different names. The most
+prominent are the Herero, thorough nomads and cattle-breeders;
+while the Ovampo (Ovambo or Ambo), in the northern part of
+the protectorate, are agriculturists. The Herero (<i>q.v.</i>) are also
+known by the Hottentot name Damara, and by this name their
+country is generally called. The Bastaards, who live in Namaqualand,
+are a small tribe originating from a mingling of Cape Boers
+with Hottentots. They are Christians, and able to read and
+write. The other natives are spirit-worshippers, save for the
+comparatively few converts of the Protestant missions established
+in the country. Of white races represented the chief are Germans
+and Boers. In the S.E. Boer settlers form the bulk of the white
+population. There are also numbers of British colonists in this
+region&mdash;emigrants from the Cape. The immigration of Germans
+is encouraged by subsidies and in other ways.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Towns.</i>&mdash;The chief port is Swakopmund, built on the northern
+bank of the Swakop river (the southern bank belonging to the
+British territory of Walfish Bay). The harbour is partially protected
+by a breakwater. There are also settlements at Lüderitz Bay (white
+pop. 1909, over 1000) and at Sandwich Harbour. Swakopmund is
+connected by a narrow gauge railway with Windhoek, the administrative
+capital of the colony, situated in a hilly district 180 m.
+due east of the port, but 237 m. by the railway. Karibib is the only
+place of consequence on the line. Otyimbingue is a government
+station 70 m. W.N.W. of Windhoek, and Tsumeb a mining centre
+240 m. N.N.E. of the same place. Olukonda is a government post
+in Ovampoland. In the S.E. corner of the colony, 30 m. N. of the
+Orange river, is the town of Warmbad. Keetmanshoop, 100 m. N.
+of Warmbad and 180 m. E. of Lüderitz Bay, is the centre of a small
+mining industry. Gibeon is a government station and missionary
+settlement about midway between Keetmanshoop and Windhoek.
+Besides these places there are numbers of small native towns at
+which live a few white traders and missionaries. The missionaries
+have given Biblical names to several of their stations, such as Bethany
+and Beersheba in Namaqualand, and Rehoboth in Damaraland.
+In the Caprivi enclave are a German residency and the site of the
+town of Linyante, once the capital of the Makololo dynasty of
+Barotseland (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Barotse</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p><i>Industries.</i>&mdash;Agriculture is followed by the natives in the northern
+districts, but the chief industry is stock-raising. The scarcity of
+water in the southern parts is not favourable for agricultural pursuits,
+while the good grazing lands offer splendid pasturage for cattle,
+which the Herero raise in numbers amounting to many hundred
+thousands. Sheep and goats thrive well. Horses have been imported
+from the Cape. Unfortunately the climate does not suit
+them everywhere, and they are subject to a virulent distemper.
+Cattle and sheep also suffer from the diseases which are common
+in the Cape Colony. Camels have been imported, and are doing
+well. Wheat, maize and sorghum are the chief crops raised, though
+not enough is grown to meet even local requirements. Near the
+coast the natives collect the kernels of the nara, a wild-growing
+pumpkin which, in the words of an early traveller, C.J. Andersson,
+&ldquo;are eaten by oxen, mice, men, ostriches and lions.&rdquo; About half
+the European settlers are engaged in agriculture. They raise maize,
+wheat, tobacco, fruit and vegetables. Cotton cultivation and viticulture
+are carried on in some districts.</p>
+
+<p>Minerals, especially copper, are plentiful in the country. The
+chief copper deposits are at Tsumeb, which is 4230 ft. above the sea,
+in the Otavi district. Diamonds are found on and near the surface
+of the soil in the Lüderitz Bay district, and diamonds have also been
+found in the neighbourhood of Gibeon. A little pottery is made,
+and the Hottentot women are clever in making fur cloths. In the
+north the Ovampo do a little smith-work and grass-plaiting. The
+external trade of the country was of slow growth. The exports,
+previous to the opening up of the Otavi mines, consisted chiefly of
+live stock&mdash;sent mainly to Cape Colony&mdash;guano, ivory, horns, hides
+and ostrich feathers. The chief imports are food stuffs, textiles and
+metals, and hardware. In 1903 the value of the exports was Ł168,560,
+that of the imports Ł388,210. The war which followed (see below,
+<i>History</i>) led to a great shrinking of exports, rendering the figures for
+the period 1904-1907 useless for purposes of comparison. About
+85% of the imports are from Germany.</p>
+
+<p><i>Communications.</i>&mdash;The economic development of the country
+is largely dependent on transport facilities. The railway from
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page802" id="page802"></a>802</span>
+Swakopmund to Windhoek, mentioned above, was begun in 1897, and
+was opened for traffic in July 1902. It cost nearly Ł700,000 to build.
+Another narrow gauge railway, to serve the Otavi copper mines,
+was begun in 1904 and completed in 1908. It starts from Swakopmund
+and is 400 m. long, the terminus being at Grootfontein, 40 m.
+S.E. of Tsumeb. The highest point on this line is 5213 ft. above the
+sea. In 1906-1908 a railway, 180 m. long, was built from Lüderitz
+Bay to Keetmanshoop. This line is of the standard South African
+gauge (3 ft. 6 in.), that gauge being adopted in view of the eventual
+linking up of the line with the British railway systems at Kimberley.
+A branch from Seeheim on the Keetmanshoop line runs S.E. to
+Kalkfontein.</p>
+
+<p>Besides railways, roads have been made between the chief centres
+of population. Along these, in the desert districts, wells have been
+dug. Across the Awas Mountains, separating Windhoek from the
+central plateau, a wide road has been cut. In 1903 the colony was
+placed in telegraphic communication with Europe and Cape Colony
+by the laying of submarine cables having their terminus at Swakopmund.
+There is a fairly complete inland telegraphic service.</p>
+
+<p>There is regular steamship communication between Hamburg
+and Swakopmund, Walfish Bay and Lüderitz Bay. Regular communication
+is also maintained between Cape Town and the ports
+of the colony.</p>
+
+<p><i>Administration.</i>&mdash;At the head of the administration is an imperial
+governor, responsible to the colonial office in Berlin, who is assisted
+by a council consisting of chiefs of departments. The country is
+divided into various administrative districts. In each of these there
+is a <i>Bezirksamtmann</i>, with his staff of officials and police force. In
+each district is a law court, to whose jurisdiction not alone the whites,
+but also the Bastaards are subject. As in all German colonies,
+there is a court of appeal at the residence of the governor. The
+government maintains schools at the chief towns, but education is
+principally in the hands of missionaries. The armed force consists
+of regular troops from Germany and a militia formed of Bastaards.
+The local revenue for some years before 1903 was about Ł130,000
+per annum, the expenditure about Ł400,000, the difference between
+local receipts and expenditure being made good by imperial subsidies.
+In 1908 local revenue had risen to Ł250,000, but the imperial authorities
+incurred an expenditure of over Ł2,000,000, largely for military
+purposes. On articles of export, such as feathers and hides, 5% <i>ad
+valorem</i> duty has to be paid; on cattle and horses an export tax per
+head. There is a 10% <i>ad valorem</i> duty on all imports, no difference
+being made between German and foreign goods. The sale of
+spirituous liquors is subject to a licence.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>History.</i>&mdash;The coast of south-west Africa was discovered by
+Bartholomew Diaz in 1487, whilst endeavouring to find his way
+to the Indies. He anchored in a bay which by reason of its
+smallness he named Angra Pequena. Portugal, however, took
+no steps to acquire possession of this inhospitable region, which
+remained almost unvisited by Europeans until the early years
+of the 19th century. At this time the country was devastated
+by a Hottentot chief known as Afrikander, who had fled thither
+with a band of outlaws after murdering his master, a Boer
+farmer by whom he had been ill-treated, in 1796. In 1805 some
+missionaries (of German nationality) went into Namaqualand
+in the service of the London Missionary Society, which society
+subsequently transferred its missions in this region to the Rhenish
+mission, which had had agents in the country since about 1840.
+The chief station of the missionaries was at a Hottentot settlement
+renamed Bethany (1820), a place 125 m. E. by Angra
+Pequena. The missionaries had the satisfaction of stopping
+Afrikander&rsquo;s career of bloodshed. He became a convert, a great
+friend of the mission, and took the name of Christian. The
+proximity of Great Namaqualand to Cape Colony led to visits
+from British and Dutch farmers and hunters, a few of whom
+settled in the country, which thus became in some sense a
+dependency of the Cape.</p>
+
+<p>In 1867 the islands along the coast north and south of Angra
+Pequena, on which were valuable guano deposits, were annexed
+to Great Britain. At this time a small trade between the natives
+and the outside world was developed at Angra Pequena, the
+merchants engaged in it being British and German. The political
+influence of the Cape spread meantime northward to the land of
+the Herero (Damara). The Herero had been subjugated by
+Jonker Afrikander, a son of Christian Afrikander, who followed
+the early footsteps of his sire and had renounced Christianity,
+but in 1865 they had recovered their independence. The
+Rhenish missionaries appealed (1868) to the British government
+for protection, and asked for the annexation of the country.
+This request, although supported by the Prussian government,
+was refused. In 1876, however, a special commissioner (W.
+Coates Palgrave) was sent by the Cape government &ldquo;to the tribes
+north of the Orange river.&rdquo; The commissioner concluded treaties
+with the Namaqua and Damara which fixed the limits of the
+territories of the two races and placed the whole country now
+forming German South-West Africa within the sphere of British
+influence. In the central part of Damaraland an area of some
+35,000 sq. m. was marked out as a British reservation. The
+instrument by which this arrangement was made was known
+as the treaty of Okahandya. Neither it nor the treaty relating
+to Great Namaqualand was ratified by the British government,
+but at the request of Sir Bartle Frere, then high commissioner
+for South Africa, Walfish Bay (the best harbour along the coast)
+was in 1878 annexed to Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p>In 1880 fighting between the Namaqua, who were led by
+Jan Afrikander, son of Jonker and grandson of Christian
+Afrikander, and the Damara broke out afresh, and was
+not ended until the establishment of European rule. In
+<span class="sidenote">German rule established.</span>
+1883 F.A.E. Lüderitz (1834-1886), a Bremen merchant,
+with the approval of Prince Bismarck, established a
+trading station at Angra Pequena. This step led to the annexation
+of the whole country to Germany (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Africa</a></span>, § 5)
+with the exception of Walfish Bay and the islands actually
+British territory. On the establishment of German rule Jonker
+Afrikander&rsquo;s old headquarters were made the seat of administration
+and renamed Windhoek. The Hottentots, under a chieftain
+named Hendrik Witboi, offered a determined opposition to the
+Germans, but after a protracted war peace was concluded in 1894
+and Hendrik became the ally of the Germans. Thereafter,
+notwithstanding various local risings, the country enjoyed a
+measure of prosperity, although, largely owing to economic
+conditions, its development was very slow.</p>
+
+<p>In October 1903 the Bondelzwarts, who occupy the district
+immediately north of the Orange river, rose in revolt. This act
+was the beginning of a struggle between the Germans
+and the natives which lasted over four years, and cost
+<span class="sidenote">Herero war.</span>
+Germany the lives of some 5000 soldiers and settlers,
+and entailed an expenditure of Ł15,000,000. Abuses committed
+by white traders, the brutal methods of certain officials and the
+occupation of tribal lands were among the causes of the war,
+but impatience of white rule was believed to be the chief reason
+for the revolt of the Herero, the most formidable of the opponents
+of the Germans. The Herero had accepted the German protectorate
+by treaty&mdash;without fully comprehending that to which
+they had agreed. To crush the Bondelzwarts, an object attained
+by January 1904, the governor, Colonel Theodor Leutwein, had
+denuded Damaraland of troops, and advantage was taken of this
+fact by the Herero to begin a long-planned and well-prepared
+revolt. On the 12th of January 1904 most of the German
+farmers in Damaraland were attacked, and settlers and their
+families murdered and the farms devastated. Reinforcements
+were sent from Germany, and in June General von Trotha
+arrived and took command of the troops. On the 11th of August
+von Trotha attacked the Herero in their stronghold, the Waterberg,
+about 200 m. N. of Windhoek, and inflicted upon them
+a severe defeat. The main body of the enemy escaped, however,
+from the encircling columns of the Germans, and thereafter
+the Herero, who were under the leadership of Samuel Maherero,
+maintained a guerrilla warfare, rendering the whole countryside
+unsafe. The Germans found pursuit almost hopeless, being
+crippled by the lack of water and the absence of means of transport.
+To add to their troubles a Herero bastard named Morenga,
+with a following of Hottentots, had, in July, recommenced
+hostilities in the south. On the 2nd of October 1904 von Trotha,
+exasperated at his want of success in crushing the enemy, issued
+a proclamation in which he said: &ldquo;Within the German frontier
+every Herero with or without a rifle, with or without cattle,
+will be shot. I will not take over any more women and children.
+But I will either drive them back to your people or have them
+fired on.&rdquo; In a later order von Trotha instructed his soldiers
+not to fire into, but to fire over the heads of the women and
+children, and Prince Bülow ordered the general to repeal the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page803" id="page803"></a>803</span>
+whole proclamation. Whenever they had the chance, however,
+the Germans hunted down the Herero, and thousands perished
+in the Omaheke desert, across which numbers succeeded in
+passing to British territory near Ngami.</p>
+
+<p>On the day following the issue of von Trotha&rsquo;s proclamation
+to the Herero, <i>i.e.</i> on the 3rd of October 1904, Hendrik Witboi
+sent a formal declaration of war to the Germans. Hendrik had
+helped to suppress the Bondelzwarts rising, and had received a
+German decoration for his services, and his hostility is said to
+have been kindled by the supersession of Colonel Leutwein, for
+whom he entertained a great admiration. The Witbois were
+joined by other Hottentot tribes, and their first act was to
+murder some sixty German settlers in the Gibeon district. Both
+British and Boer farmers were spared&mdash;the Hottentots in this
+matter following the example of the Herero. In November,
+considerable reinforcements having come from Germany, the
+Witbois were attacked, and Hendrik&rsquo;s headquarters, Reitmont,
+captured. Another defeat was inflicted on Hendrik in January
+1905, but, lacking ammunition and water, the Germans could not
+follow up their victory. As in Damaraland, the warfare in
+Namaqualand now assumed a guerrilla character, and the Germans
+found it almost impossible to meet their elusive enemy, while small
+detachments were often surprised and sometimes annihilated.
+In May 1905 von Trotha tried the effect on the Hottentots of
+another of his proclamations. He invited them to surrender,
+adding that in the contrary event all rebels would be exterminated.
+A price was at the same time put on the heads of Hendrik Witboi
+and other chiefs. This proclamation was unheeded by the
+Hottentots, who were in fact continuing the war with rifles and
+ammunition seized from the Germans, and replenishing their
+stock with cattle taken from the same source. In the north,
+however, Samuel Maherero had fled to British territory,
+and the resistance of the Herero was beginning to collapse.
+Concentration camps were established in which some thousands
+of Herero women and children were cared for. Meanwhile, the
+administration of von Trotha, who had assumed the governorship
+as well as the command of the troops, was severely criticized by
+the civilian population, and the non-success of the operations
+against the Hottentots provoked strong military criticism.
+In August 1905 Colonel (afterwards General) Leutwein, who
+had returned to Germany, formally resigned the governorship
+of the protectorate, and Herr von Lindequist, late German
+consul-general at Cape Town, was nominated as his successor.
+Von Trotha, who had publicly criticized Prince Bülow&rsquo;s order
+to repeal the Herero proclamation, was superseded. He had
+in the summer of 1905 instituted a series of &ldquo;drives&rdquo; against
+the Witbois, with no particular results. Hendrik always evaded
+the columns and frequently attacked them in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1905 von Lindequist arrived at Windhoek.
+The new governor issued a general amnesty to the Herero, and
+set aside two large reserves for those who surrendered. His
+conciliatory policy was in the end successful, and the Ovampo,
+who threatened to give trouble, were kept in hand. The task
+of pacifying Damaraland was continued throughout 1906, and
+by the close of that year about 16,000 Herero had been established
+in the reserves. Some 3000 had sought refuge in British territory,
+while the number who had perished may be estimated at between
+20,000 and 30,000.</p>
+
+<p>In Namaqualand von Lindequist found an enemy still unbroken.
+On the 3rd of November, however, Hendrik Witboi died, aged
+seventy-five, and his son and successor Samuel Isaac
+Witboi shortly afterwards surrendered, and the
+<span class="sidenote">The Hottentots subdued.</span>
+hostility of the tribe ceased. Morenga now became
+the chief of the rebel Hottentots, and &ldquo;drives&rdquo; against
+him were organized. Early in May 1906 an encounter between
+Morenga and a German column was fought close to the British
+frontier of the Bechuanaland protectorate. Morenga fled, was
+pursued across the frontier, and wounded, but escaped. On
+the 16th of May he was found hiding by British patrols and
+interned. Other Hottentot chiefs continued the conflict, greatly
+aided by the immense difficulty the Germans had in transporting
+supplies; to remedy which defect the building of a railway
+from Lüderitz Bay to Kubub was begun early in 1906. A camel
+transport corps was also organized, and Boer auxiliaries engaged.
+Throughout the later half of 1906 the Hottentots maintained
+the struggle, the Karas mountains forming a stronghold from
+which their dislodgment was extremely difficult. Many of their
+leaders and numbers of the tribesmen had a considerable strain
+of white (chiefly Dutch) blood and were fairly educated men,
+with a knowledge not only of native, but European ways; facts
+which helped to make them formidable opponents. Gradually
+the resistance of the Hottentots was overcome, and in December
+1906 the Bondelzwarts again surrendered. Other tribes continued
+the fight for months longer, but by March 1907 it was found
+possible to reduce the troops in the protectorate to about 5000
+men. At the height of the campaign the Germans had 19,000
+men in the field.</p>
+
+<p>In August 1907 renewed alarm was created by the escape of
+Morenga from British territory. The Cape government, regarding
+the chief as a political refugee, had refused to extradite him and
+he had been assigned a residence near Upington. This place he
+left early in August and, eluding the frontier guards, re-entered
+German territory. In September, however, he was again on
+the British side of the border. Meantime a force of the Cape
+Mounted Police under Major F.A.H. Eliott had been organized
+to effect his arrest. Summoned to surrender, Morenga fled into
+the Kalahari Desert. Eliott&rsquo;s force of sixty men pursued him
+through a waterless country, covering 80 m. in 24 hours. When
+overtaken (September 21st), Morenga, with ten followers, was
+holding a kopje and fired on the advancing troops. After a
+sharp engagement the chief and five of his men were killed, the
+British casualties being one killed and one wounded. The death
+of Morenga removed a serious obstacle to the complete pacification
+of the protectorate. Military operations continued, however,
+during 1908. Herr von Lindequist, being recalled to Berlin to
+become under-secretary in the colonial office, was succeeded as
+governor (May 1907) by Herr von Schuckmann. In 1908 steps
+were taken to establish German authority in the Caprivi enclave,
+which up to that time had been neglected by the colonial
+authorities.</p>
+
+<p>The discovery of diamonds in the Lüderitz Bay district in
+July 1908 caused a rush of treasure-seekers. The diamonds
+were found mostly on the surface in a sandy soil and
+were of small size. The stones resemble Brazilian
+<span class="sidenote">Discovery of diamonds.</span>
+diamonds. By the end of the year the total yield was
+over 39,000 carats. One of the difficulties encountered
+in developing the field was the great scarcity of fresh water.
+During 1909 various companies were formed to exploit the
+diamondiferous area. The first considerable packet of diamonds
+from the colony reached Germany in April 1909. The output for
+the year was valued at over Ł1,000,000.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities.</span>&mdash;Karl Dove, <i>Deutsch-Südwestafrika</i> (Berlin, 1903);
+W. Külz, <i>Deutsch-Südafrika</i> ... (Berlin, 1909); T. Leutwein, <i>Elf
+Jahre Gouverneur in Deutsch-Südwestafrika</i> (Berlin, 1908), an
+authoritative work, largely historical; P. Rohrbach, <i>Deutsche
+Kolonialwirtschaft</i>, Band 1: <i>Südwestafrika</i> (Berlin, 1907), a comprehensive
+economic study; I. Irle, <i>Die Herero, ein Beitrag zur Landes-,
+Volks- und Missionskunde</i> (Gütersloh, 1906), a valuable summary of
+information concerning Damaraland; Major K. Schwabe, <i>Im
+deutschen Diamantenlande</i> (Berlin, 1909); T. Rehbock, <i>Deutsch-Südwestafrika,
+seine wirtschaftliche Erschliessung unter besonderer
+Berücksichtigung der Nutzbarmachung des Wassers</i> (Berlin, 1898);
+C. von François, <i>Deutsch-Südwestafrika: Geschichte der Kolonisation
+bis zum Ausbruch des Krieges mit Witbooi</i>, April 1893 (Berlin, 1899), a
+history of the protectorate up to 1893; H. Schintz, <i>Deutsch-Südwestafrika,
+Forschungsreisen durch die deutschen Schutzgebiete Gross-Nama
+und Hereroland, nach dem Kunene, &amp;c., 1884-1887</i> (Oldenburg, N.D.
+[1891]); H. von François, <i>Nama und Damara</i> (Magdeburg, N.D.
+[1896]). See also for Ethnology, &ldquo;Die Eingeborenen Deutsch-Südwestafrikas
+nach Geschichte, Charakter, Sitten, Gebräuchen
+und Sprachen,&rdquo; in <i>Mitteilungen des Seminars für orientalische
+Sprachen</i> (Berlin and Stuttgart) for 1899 and 1900; and G.W. Stow,
+<i>The Native Races of South Africa</i> (London, 1905); ch. xvii. contains
+an account of the Afrikander family. For geology consult A. Schenk,
+&ldquo;Die geologische Entwicklung Südafrikas (mit Karte),&rdquo; <i>Peterm.
+Mitt.</i> (1888); Stromer von Reichenbach, <i>Die Geologie der deutschen
+Schutzgebiete in Afrika</i> (Munich and Leipzig, 1896). Of early books
+of travel the most valuable are: F. Galton, <i>Tropical South Africa</i>
+(1853; new ed. 1889); Charles J. Andersson, <i>Lake Ngami</i> (1856),
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page804" id="page804"></a>804</span>
+<i>The Okavango River</i> (1861) and <i>Notes of Travel</i> (1875). See also
+Sir J.E. Alexander, <i>An Expedition of Discovery into the Interior of
+Africa</i> (London, 1838). Reports on the German colonies are published
+by the British foreign office. The <i>Kriegskarte von Deutsch-Südwestafrika</i>
+(Berlin, 1904), in nine sheets on a scale of 1 : 800,000,
+will be found useful.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(F. R. C.)</div>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1j" id="ft1j" href="#fa1j"><span class="fn">1</span></a> As the result of wars with the natives, the population greatly
+decreased. The number of adult (native) males in the colony at the
+beginning of 1908 was officially estimated at 19,900, a figure indicating
+a total population of little more than 100,000.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMANTOWN,<a name="ar70" id="ar70"></a></span> a residential district and former suburb,
+now the Twenty-second Ward, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
+U.S.A., on Wissahickon Creek, in the N. part of the city. It is
+served by the Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia &amp; Reading
+railways. There are many old colonial houses and handsome
+modern residences along Main Street (the old Germantown
+Road or Avenue). Prominent among the historic houses is
+Cliveden, or the &ldquo;Chew House,&rdquo; built about 1761 by Benjamin
+Chew (1722-1810), who was chief-justice of Pennsylvania in
+1774-1777 and was imprisoned as a Loyalist in 1777, and whose
+home during the battle of Germantown (see below) was occupied
+by British troops. The well-preserved Morris House (1772) was
+the headquarters of General Howe at the close of the battle,
+and in 1793, when Germantown, owing to the yellow fever in
+Philadelphia, was the temporary capital of the United States,
+it was occupied by President Washington. Three doors above
+stood until 1904 the Ashmead House, used for a time by Count
+Nicholas Lewis Zinzendorf and his daughters for their Moravian
+school, which was removed to Bethlehem. In the same street,
+opposite Indian Queen Lane, is the old Wister Mansion, built
+as a country-seat in 1744 and occupied by British officers during
+the War of Independence. In another old house (now Nos.
+5275-5277), John Fanning Watson (1779-1860), the annalist of
+Philadelphia, did most of his literary work. Just outside the
+ward limits, in what has since become a part of Fairmont Park,
+is the house in which David Rittenhouse, the astronomer, was
+born; it stands on Monoshore Creek or Paper Mill Run, in what
+was long called Roxborough (now the 21st ward of Philadelphia).
+In this vicinity the first paper mill in America was erected in
+1690 by a company of which William Rittenhouse, David&rsquo;s
+great-grandfather, was the leading member. The King of Prussia
+Inn, built about 1740, and the Mermaid Hotel, as old or older,
+are interesting survivals of the inns and taverns of old Germantown.
+The Germantown Academy was built in 1760, and after
+the battle of Germantown was used by the British as a hospital.
+In Germantown are also a Friends&rsquo; (orthodox) school, a Friends&rsquo;
+free library, and the Germantown branch of the Philadelphia
+public library. The first school in Germantown was established
+about 1701, and for the first eighteen years was under the mastership
+of Francis Daniel Pastorius (1651-1719), the leader in founding
+the town, who lived in a house that stood on the site of the present
+First Methodist Episcopal church, High Street and Main Street.
+He compiled a primer which was the first school book produced
+in the state; with three others he drafted and signed in 1688
+what seems to have been the first public protest made in America
+against slavery; and he is celebrated in Whittier&rsquo;s <i>Pennsylvania
+Pilgrim</i>. Later the same school passed to Christopher Dock
+(d. 1771), who in 1770 published an essay on teaching (written
+in 1750), which is said to have been the first book on pedagogy
+published in America. The first Bible printed in America in
+any European language was published in Germantown in 1743
+by Christopher Sauer (d. 1758), a preacher of the German
+Baptist Brethren, who in 1739 established Germantown&rsquo;s first
+newspaper, <i>The High German Pennsylvania Historian, or Collection
+of Important News from the Kingdom of Nature and of the
+Church</i>. His grandsons are said to have cast about 1772 the
+first American printing type. The Friends were the first sect to
+erect a meeting-house of their own (about 1693). The Mennonites
+built a log meeting-house in 1709, and their present stone church
+was built in 1770. The town hall of Germantown was used as
+a hospital during the last three years of the Civil War. In Market
+Square a soldiers&rsquo; monument was erected in 1883. The Site and
+Relic Society of Germantown maintains a museum of relics.
+Many of the early settlers were linen weavers, and Germantown
+still manufactures textiles, knit goods and yarns.</p>
+
+<p>Germantown was founded in October 1683 by thirteen families
+from Crefeld, Germany, under the leadership of Francis Daniel
+Pastorius. The township, as originally laid out, contained
+four distinct villages known as Germantown, Cresheim, Sommerhousen
+and Crefield. Cresheim was later known as Mount
+Airy, and Sommerhousen and Crefield became known as Chestnut
+Hill. The borough of Germantown was incorporated in 1689.
+For many years it was a straggling village extending about 2 m.
+along Main Street. Its growth was more rapid from the middle
+of the 18th century. In 1789 a motion for the permanent
+location of the national capital at Germantown was carried
+in the Senate, and the same measure passed the House, amended
+only with respect to the temporary government of the ceded
+district; but the Senate killed the bill by voting to postpone
+further consideration of it until the next session. Germantown
+was annexed to Philadelphia in 1854.</p>
+
+<p><i>Battle of Germantown.</i>&mdash;This famous encounter in the American
+War of Independence was fought on the 4th of October 1777.
+After the battle of Brandywine (<i>q.v.</i>) and the occupation of
+Philadelphia, the British force commanded by Sir W. Howe
+encamped at Germantown, where Washington determined
+to attack them. The Americans advanced by two roads, General
+Sullivan leading the column on the right and General Greene
+that on the left. Washington himself accompanied Sullivan,
+with whom were Stirling (an officer who claimed to be earl of
+that name) and Anthony Wayne. The right at first met with
+success, driving the British advanced troops back on the main
+body near the Chew House. Colonel Musgrave, of the 40th Foot,
+threw a portion of his regiment into this house, and General
+Agnew came up with his command. The Americans under
+Stirling attempted to dislodge Musgrave, thus losing time and
+alarming part of Sullivan&rsquo;s advance who had pushed farther
+forward in the fog. General Greene on the left was even less
+fortunate. Meeting with unexpected opposition at the first
+point of attack his troops were thrown into confusion and
+compelled to retreat. One of his brigades extended itself to
+the right wing, and by opening fire on the Chew House caused
+Wayne to retreat, and presently both of the American columns
+retired rapidly in the direction of their camp. The surprise
+had failed, with the loss to Washington&rsquo;s army of 673 men as
+against 500 on the side of the British. The British General
+Agnew and the American General Nash were both mortally
+wounded. In December Washington went into winter quarters
+at Valley Forge, 40 m. west of Philadelphia. The British wintered
+in and around the city.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>See N.H. Keyser, &ldquo;Old Historic Germantown,&rdquo; in the <i>Proceedings
+and Addresses of the Pennsylvania-German Society</i> (Lancaster,
+1906); S.W. Pennypacker, <i>The Settlement of Germantown, Pennsylvania,
+and the Beginning of German Emigration to North America</i>
+(Philadelphia, 1899), and S.F. Hotchkin, <i>Ancient and Modern
+Germantown, Mount Airy and Chestnut Hill</i> (Philadelphia, 1889).</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="art" />
+<p><span class="bold">GERMANY<a name="ar71" id="ar71"></a></span> (Ger. <i>Deutschland</i>), or, more properly, <span class="sc">The German
+Empire</span> (<i>Deutsches Reich</i>), a country of central Europe. The
+territories occupied by peoples of distinctively Teutonic race
+and language are commonly designated as German, and in this
+sense may be taken to include, besides Germany proper (the
+subject of the present article), the German-speaking sections of
+Austria, Switzerland and Holland. But Germany, or the
+German empire, as it is now understood, was formed in 1871
+by virtue of treaties between the North German Confederation
+and the South German states, and by the acquisition, in the
+peace of Frankfort (May 10, 1871), of Alsace-Lorraine, and
+embraces all the countries of the former German Confederation,
+with the exception of Austria, Luxemburg, Limburg and Liechtenstein.
+The sole addition to the empire proper since that
+date is the island of Heligoland, ceded by Great Britain in 1890,
+but Germany has acquired extensive colonies in Africa and the
+Pacific (see below, <i>Colonies</i>).</p>
+
+<p>The German empire extends from 47° 16&prime; to 55° 53&prime; N., and
+from 5° 52&prime; to 22° 52&prime; E. The eastern provinces project so far
+that the extent of German territory is much greater from south-west
+to north-east than in any other direction. Tilsit is 815 m.
+from Metz, whereas Hadersleben, in Schleswig, is only 540 m.
+from the Lake of Constance. The actual difference in time
+between the eastern and western points is 1 hour and 8 minutes,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page805" id="page805"></a>805</span>
+but the empire observes but one time&mdash;1 hour E. of Greenwich.
+The empire is bounded on the S.E. and S. by Austria and Switzerland
+(for 1659 m.), on the S.W. by France (242 m.), on the W.
+by Luxemburg, Belgium and Holland (together 558 m.). The
+length of German coast on the North Sea or German Ocean is
+293 m., and on the Baltic 927 m., the intervening land boundary
+on the north of Schleswig being only 47 m. The eastern boundary
+is with Russia 843 m. The total length of the frontiers is thus
+4569 m. The area, including rivers and lakes but not the <i>haffs</i>
+or lagoons on the Baltic coast, is 208,830 sq. m., and the population
+(1905) 60,641,278. In respect of its area, the German
+empire occupied in 1909 the third place among European
+countries, and in point of population the second, coming in point
+of area immediately after Russia and Austria-Hungary, and
+in population next to Russia.</p>
+
+<p><i>Political Divisions</i>.&mdash;The empire is composed of the following
+twenty-six states and divisions: the kingdoms of Prussia,
+Bavaria, Saxony and Württemberg; the grand-duchies of
+Baden, Hesse, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Mecklenburg-Strelitz,
+Oldenburg and Saxe-Weimar; the duchies of Anhalt, Brunswick,
+Saxe-Altenburg, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and Saxe-Meiningen; the
+principalities of Lippe-Detmold, Reuss-Greiz, Reuss-Schleiz,
+Schaumburg-Lippe, Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, Schwarzburg-Sondershausen
+and Waldeck-Pyrmont; the free towns of
+Bremen, Hamburg and Lübeck, and the imperial territory of
+Alsace-Lorraine.</p>
+
+<p>Besides these political divisions there are certain parts of
+Germany which, not conterminous with political boundaries,
+retain appellations derived either from former tribal settlements
+or from divisions of the old Holy Roman Empire. These are
+Franconia (Franken), which embraces the districts of Bamberg,
+Schweinfurt and Würzburg on the upper Main; Swabia (Schwaben),
+in which is included Württemberg, parts of Bavaria and
+Baden and Hohenzollern; the Palatinate (Pfalz), embracing
+Bavaria west of the Rhine and the contiguous portion of Baden;
+Rhineland, applied to Rhenish Prussia, Nassau, Hesse-Darmstadt
+and parts of Bavaria and Baden; Vogtland,<a name="fa1k" id="fa1k" href="#ft1k"><span class="sp">1</span></a> the mountainous
+country lying in the south-west corner of the kingdom of Saxony;
+Lusatia (Lausitz), the eastern portion of the kingdom of Saxony
+and the adjacent portion of Prussia watered by the upper Spree;
+Thuringia (Thüringen), the country lying south of the Harz
+Mountains and including the Saxon duchies; East Friesland
+(Ost Friesland), the country lying between the lower course of
+the Weser and the Ems, and Westphalia (Westfalen), the fertile
+plain lying north and west of the Harz Mountains and extending
+to the North Sea and the Dutch frontier.</p>
+
+<p><i>Coast and Islands</i>.&mdash;The length of the coast-line is considerably
+less than the third part of the whole frontier. The coasts are
+shallow, and deficient in natural ports, except on the east of
+Schleswig-Holstein, where wide bays encroach upon the land,
+giving access to the largest vessels, so that the great naval
+harbour could be constructed at Kiel. With the exception of
+those on the east coast of Schleswig-Holstein, all the important
+trading ports of Germany are river ports, such as Emden, Bremen,
+Hamburg, Lübeck, Stettin, Danzig, Königsberg, Memel. A
+great difference, however, is to be remarked between the coasts
+of the North Sea and those of the Baltic. On the former, where
+the sea has broken up the ranges of dunes formed in bygone
+times, and divided them into separate islands, the mainland
+has to be protected by massive dikes, while the Frisian Islands
+are being gradually washed away by the waters. On the coast of
+East Friesland there are now only seven of these islands, of
+which Norderney is best known, while of the North Frisian
+Islands, on the western coast of Schleswig, Sylt is the most
+considerable. Besides the ordinary waste of the shores, there
+have been extensive inundations by the sea within the historic
+period, the gulf of the Dollart having been so caused in the year
+1276. Sands surround the whole coast of the North Sea to such
+an extent that the entrance to the ports is not practicable
+without the aid of pilots. Heligoland is a rocky island, but it
+also has been considerably reduced by the sea. The tides rise
+to the height of 12 or 13 ft. in the Jade Bay and at Bremerhaven,
+and 6 or 7 ft. at Hamburg. The coast of the Baltic, on the other
+hand, possesses few islands, the chief being Alsen and Fehmarn
+off the coast of Schleswig-Holstein, and Rügen off Pomerania.
+It has no extensive sands, though on the whole very flat. The
+Baltic has no perceptible tides; and a great part of its coast-line
+is in winter covered with ice, which also so blocks up the harbours
+that navigation is interrupted for several months every year.
+Its <i>haffs</i> fronting the mouths of the large rivers must be regarded
+as lagoons or extensions of the river beds, not as bays. The
+Pommersche or Oder Haff is separated from the sea by two
+islands, so that the river flows out by three mouths, the middle
+one (Swine) being the most considerable. The Frische Haff
+is formed by the Nogat, a branch of the Vistula, and by the
+Pregel, and communicates with the sea by means of the Pillauer
+Tief. The Kurische Haff receives the Memel, called Niemen in
+Russia, and has its outlet in the extreme north at Memel. Long
+narrow alluvial strips called <i>Nehrungen</i>, lie between the last
+two haffs and the Baltic. The Baltic coast is further marked
+by large indentations, the Gulf of Lübeck, that of Pomerania,
+east of Rügen, and the semicircular Bay of Danzig between
+the promontories of Rixhöft and Brüsterort. The German
+coasts are well provided with lighthouses.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Surface</i>.&mdash;In respect of physical structure Germany is divided into
+two entirely distinct portions, which bear to one another a ratio
+of about 3 to 4. The northern and larger part may be described as
+a uniform plain. South and central Germany, on the other hand,
+is very much diversified in scenery. It possesses large plateaus,
+such as that of Bavaria, which stretches away from the foot of the
+Alps, fertile low plains like that intersected by the Rhine, mountain
+chains and isolated groups of mountains, comparatively low in
+height, and so situated as not seriously to interfere with communication
+either by road or by railway.</p>
+
+<p>Bavaria is the only division of the country that includes within it
+any part of the Alps, the Austro-Bavarian frontier running along the
+ridge of the Northern Tirolese or Bavarian Alps. The
+loftiest peak of this group, the Zugspitze (57 m. S. of
+<span class="sidenote">Mountains and plateaus.</span>
+Munich), is 9738 ft. in height, being the highest summit
+in the empire. The upper German plain sloping northwards
+from the Bavarian Alps is watered by the Lech, the Isar and
+the Inn, tributaries of the Danube, all three rising beyond the
+limits of German territory. This plain is separated on the west
+from the Swiss plain by the Lake of Constance (Bodensee, 1306 ft.
+above sea-level), and on the east from the undulating grounds of
+Austria by the Inn. The average height of the plain may be estimated
+at about 1800 ft., the valley of the Danube on its north
+border being from 1540 ft. (at Ulm) to 920 ft. (at Passau). The
+plain is not very fertile. In the upper part of the plain, towards the
+Alps, there are several lakes, the largest being the Ammersee, the
+Würmsee or Starnberger See and the Chiemsee. Many portions of
+the plain are covered by moors and swamps of large extent, called
+<i>Moose</i>. The left or northern bank of the Danube from Regensburg
+downwards presents a series of granitic rocks called the Bavarian
+Forest (Bayrischer Wald), which must be regarded as a branch of the
+Bohemian Forest (Böhmer Wald). The latter is a range of wooded
+heights on the frontier of Bavaria and Bohemia, occupying the least
+known and least frequented regions of Germany. The summits of
+the Bayrischer Wald rise to the height of about 4000 ft., and those
+of the Böhmer Wald to 4800 ft., Arber being 4872 ft. The valley of
+the Danube above Regensburg is flanked by plateaus sloping gently
+to the Danube, but precipitous towards the valley of the Neckar.
+The centre of this elevated tract is the Rauhe Alb, so named on
+account of the harshness of the climate. The plateau continuing
+to the north-east and then to the north, under the name of the
+Franconian Jura, is crossed by the valley of the winding Altmühl,
+and extends to the Main. To the west extensive undulating grounds
+or low plateaus occupy the area between the Main and the Neckar.</p>
+
+<p>The south-western corner of the empire contains a series of better
+defined hill-ranges. Beginning with the Black Forest (Schwarzwald),
+we find its southern heights decline to the valley of the Rhine,
+above Basel, and to the Jura. The summits are rounded and covered
+with wood, the highest being the Feldberg (10 m. S.E. of Freiburg,
+4898 ft.). Northwards the Black Forest passes into the plateau of
+the Neckarbergland (average height, 1000 ft.). The heights between
+the lower Neckar and the Main form the Odenwald (about 1700 ft.);
+and the Spessart, which is watered by the Main on three sides, is
+nothing but a continuation of the Odenwald. West of this range of
+hills lies the valley of the upper Rhine, extending about 180 m.
+from south to north, and with a width of only 20 to 25 m. In the
+upper parts the Rhine is rapid, and therefore navigable with difficulty;
+this explains why the towns there are not along the banks of
+the river, but some 5 to 10 m. off. But from Spires (Speyer) town
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page806" id="page806"></a>806</span>
+succeeds town as far down as Düsseldorf. The western boundary
+of this valley is formed in the first instance by the Vosges, where
+granite summits rise from under the surrounding red Triassic rocks
+(Sulzer Belchen, 4669 ft.). To the south the range is not continuous
+with the Swiss Jura, the valley of the Rhine being connected
+here with the Rhone system by low ground known as the Gate of
+Mülhausen. The crest of the Vosges is pretty high and unbroken,
+the first convenient pass being near Zabern, which is followed by the
+railway from Strassburg to Paris. On the northern side the Vosges
+are connected with the Hardt sandstone plateau (Kalmit, 2241 ft.),
+which rises abruptly from the plain of the Rhine. The mountains
+south of Mainz, which are mostly covered by vineyards, are lower,
+the Donnersberg, however, raising its head to 2254 ft. These hills
+are bordered on the west by the high plain of Lorraine and the coal-fields
+of Saarbrücken, the former being traversed by the river Mosel.
+The larger part of Lorraine belongs to France, but the German part
+possesses great mineral wealth in its rich layers of ironstone (siderite)
+and in the coal-fields of the Saar. The tract of the Hunsrück,
+Taunus and Eifel is an extended plateau, divided into separate
+sections by the river valleys. Among these the Rhine valley from
+Bingen to Bonn, and that of the Mosel from Trier to Coblenz, are
+winding gorges excavated by the rivers. The Eifel presents a sterile,
+thinly-peopled plateau, covered by extensive moors in several places.
+It passes westwards imperceptibly into the Ardennes. The hills
+on the right bank of the Rhine also are in part of a like barren
+character, without wood; the Westerwald (about 2000 ft.), which
+separates the valleys of the Sieg and Lahn, is particularly so. The
+northern and southern limits of the Niederrheinische Gebirge present
+a striking contrast to the central region. In the south the declivities
+of the Taunus (2890 ft.) are marked by the occurrence of mineral
+springs, as at Ems on the Lahn, Nauheim, Homburg, Soden, Wiesbaden,
+&amp;c., and by the vineyards which produce the best Rhine wines.
+To the north of this system, on the other hand, lies the great coal
+basin of Westphalia, the largest in Germany. In the south of the
+hilly duchy of Hesse rise the isolated mountain groups of the Vogelsberg
+(2530 ft.) and the Rhön (3117 ft.), separated by the valley of the
+Fulda, which uniting farther north with the Werra forms the Weser.
+To the east of Hesse lies Thuringia, a province consisting of the
+far-stretching wooded ridge of the Thuringian Forest (Thüringerwald;
+with three peaks upwards of 3000 ft. high), and an extensive
+elevated plain to the north. Its rivers are the Saale and Unstrut.
+The plateau is bounded on the north by the Harz, an isolated
+group of mountains, rich in minerals, with its highest elevation in
+the bare summit of the Brocken (3747 ft.). To the west of the Harz
+a series of hilly tracts is comprised under the name of the Weser
+Mountains, out of which above Minden the river Weser bursts by
+the Porta Westphalica. A narrow ridge, the Teutoburger Wald
+(1300 ft.), extends between the Weser and the Ems as far as the
+neighbourhood of Osnabrück.</p>
+
+<p>To the east the Thuringian Forest is connected by the plateau of
+the Frankenwald with the Fichtelgebirge. This group of mountains,
+occupying what may be regarded as ethnologically the centre of
+Germany, forms a hydrographical centre, whence the Naab flows
+southward to the Danube, the Main westward to the Rhine, the Eger
+eastward to the Elbe, and the Saale northward, also into the Elbe.
+In the north-east the Fichtelgebirge connects itself directly with
+the Erzgebirge, which forms the northern boundary of Bohemia.
+The southern sides of this range are comparatively steep; on the
+north it slopes gently down to the plains of Leipzig, but is intersected
+by the deep valleys of the Elster and Mulde. Although by no
+means fertile, the Erzgebirge is very thickly peopled, as various
+branches of industry have taken root there in numerous small places.
+Around Zwickau there are productive coal-fields, and mining for
+metals is carried on near Freiberg. In the east a tableland of
+sandstone, called Saxon Switzerland, from the picturesque outlines
+into which it has been eroded, adjoins the Erzgebirge; one of its
+most notable features is the deep ravine by which the Elbe escapes
+from it. Numerous quarries, which supply the North German cities
+with stone for buildings and monuments, have been opened along
+the valley. The <span class="correction" title="amended from standstone">sandstone</span> range of the Elbe unites in the east
+with the low Lusatian group, along the east of which runs the best
+road from northern Germany to Bohemia. Then comes a range of
+lesser hills clustering together to form the frontier between Silesia
+and Bohemia. The most western group is the Isergebirge, and the
+next the Riesengebirge, a narrow ridge of about 20 miles&rsquo; length,
+with bare summits. Excluding the Alps, the Schneekoppe (5266
+ft.) is the highest peak in Germany; and the southern declivities
+of this range contain the sources of the Elbe. The hills north and
+north-east of it are termed the Silesian Mountains. Here one of the
+minor coal-fields gives employment to a population grouped round a
+number of comparatively small centres. One of the main roads
+into Bohemia (the pass of Landshut) runs along the eastern base
+of the Riesengebirge. Still farther to the east the mountains are
+grouped around the hollow of Glatz, whence the Neisse forces its
+way towards the north. This hollow is shut in on the east by the
+Sudetic group, in which the Altvater rises to almost 4900 ft. The
+eastern portion of the group, called the Gesenke, slopes gently away
+to the valley of the Oder, which affords an open route for the international
+traffic, like that through the Mülhausen Gate in Alsace.
+Geographers style this the Moravian Gate.</p>
+
+<p>The North German plain presents little variety, yet is not absolutely
+uniform. A row of low hills runs generally parallel to the
+mountain ranges already noticed, at a distance of 20 to 30 m. to the
+north. To these belongs the upper Silesian coal-basin, which
+occupies a considerable area in south-eastern Silesia. North of the
+middle districts of the Elbe country the heights are called the
+Fläming hills. Westward lies as the last link of this series the
+Lüneburger Heide or Heath, between the Weser and Elbe, north of
+Hanover. A second tract, of moderate elevation, sweeps round the
+Baltic, without, however, approaching its shores. This plateau
+contains a considerable number of lakes, and is divided into three
+portions by the Vistula and the Oder. The most eastward is the
+so-called Prussian Seenplatte. Spirdingsee (430 ft. above sea-level
+and 46 sq. m. in area) and Mauersee are the largest lakes; they
+are situated in the centre of the plateau, and give rise to the Pregel.
+Some peaks near the Russian frontier attain to 1000 ft. The
+Pomeranian Seenplatte, between the Vistula and the Oder, extends
+from S.W. to N.E., its greatest elevation being in the neighbourhood
+of Danzig (Turmberg, 1086 ft.). The Seenplatte of Mecklenburg,
+on the other hand, stretches from S.E. to N.W., and most of its
+lakes, of which the Müritz is the largest, send their waters towards
+the Elbe. The finely wooded heights which surround the bays of
+the east coast of Holstein and Schleswig may be regarded as a continuation
+of these Baltic elevations. The lowest parts, therefore,
+of the North German plain, excluding the sea-coasts, are the central
+districts from about 52° to 53° N. lat., where the Vistula, Netze,
+Warthe, Oder, Spree and Havel form vast swampy lowlands (in
+German called <i>Brüche</i>), which have been considerably reduced by
+the construction of canals and by cultivation, improvements due in
+large measure to Frederick the Great. The Spreewald, to the S.E.
+of Berlin, is one of the most remarkable districts of Germany. As
+the Spree divides itself there into innumerable branches, enclosing
+thickly wooded islands, boats form the only means of communication.
+West of Berlin the Havel widens into what are called the Havel lakes,
+to which the environs of Potsdam owe their charms. In general
+the soil of the North German plain cannot be termed fertile, the
+cultivation nearly everywhere requiring severe and constant labour.
+Long stretches of ground are covered by moors, and there turf-cutting
+forms the principal occupation of the inhabitants. The
+greatest extent of moorland is found in the westernmost parts of the
+plain, in Oldenburg and East Frisia. The plain contains, however,
+a few districts of the utmost fertility, particularly the tracts on the
+central Elbe, and the marsh lands on the west coast of Holstein and
+the north coast of Hanover, Oldenburg and East Frisia, which,
+within the last two centuries, the inhabitants have reclaimed from
+the sea by means of immense dikes.</p>
+
+<p><i>Rivers.</i>&mdash;Nine independent river-systems may be distinguished:
+those of the Memel, Pregel, Vistula (Weichsel), Oder, Elbe, Weser,
+Ems, Rhine and Danube. Of these the Pregel, Weser and Ems
+belong entirely, and the Oder mostly, to the German empire. The
+Danube has its sources on German soil; but only a fifth part of its
+course is German. Its total length is 1750 m., and the Bavarian
+frontier at Passau, where the Inn joins it, is only 350 m. distant
+from its sources. It is navigable as far as Ulm, 220 m. above
+Passau; and its tributaries the Lech, Isar, Inn and Altmühl are also
+navigable. The Rhine is the most important river of Germany,
+although neither its sources nor its mouths are within the limits
+of the empire. From the Lake of Constance to Basel (122 m.) the
+Rhine forms the boundary between the German empire and Switzerland;
+the canton of Schaffhausen, however, is situated on the
+northern bank of the river. From Basel to below Emmerich the
+Rhine belongs to the German empire&mdash;about 470 m. or four-sevenths
+of its whole course. It is navigable all this distance as are also the
+Neckar from Esslingen, the Main from Bamberg, the Lahn, the Lippe,
+the Ruhr, the Mosel from Metz, with its affluents the Saar and
+Sauer. Sea-going vessels sail up the Ems as far as Halte, and river
+craft as far as Greven, and the river is connected with a widely
+branching system of canals, as the Ems-Jade and Dortmund-Ems
+canals. The Fulda, navigable for 63 m., and the Werra, 38 m.,
+above the point where they unite, form by their junction the Weser,
+which has a course of 271 m., and receives as navigable tributaries the
+Aller, the Leine from Hanover, and some smaller streams. Ocean-going
+steamers, however, cannot get as far as Bremen, and unload at
+Bremerhaven. The Elbe, after a course of 250 m., enters German
+territory near Bodenbach, 490 m. from its mouth. It is navigable
+above this point through its tributary, the Moldau, to Prague.
+Hamburg may be reached by vessels of 17 ft. draught. The navigable
+tributaries of the Elbe are the Saale (below Naumburg), the
+Havel, Spree, Elde, Sude and some others. The Oder begins to be
+navigable almost on the frontier at Ratibor, 480 m. from its mouth,
+receiving as navigable tributaries the Glatz Neisse and the Warthe.
+Only the lower course of the Vistula belongs to the German empire,
+within which it is a broad, navigable stream of considerable volume.
+On the Pregel ships of 3000 tons reach Königsberg, and river barges
+reach Insterburg; the Alle, its tributary, may also be navigated.
+The Memel is navigable in its course of 113 m. from the Russian
+frontier. Germany is thus a country abounding in natural waterways,
+the total length of them being estimated at 7000 m. But it is
+only the Rhine, in its middle course, that has at all times sufficient
+volume of water to meet the requirements of a good navigable river.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page807" id="page807"></a>807</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Lakes.</i>&mdash;The regions which abound in lakes have already been
+pointed out. The Lake of Constance or Bodensee (204ž sq. m.) is on
+the frontier of the empire, portions of the northern banks belonging
+severally to Bavaria, Württemberg and Baden. In the south the
+largest lakes are the Chiemsee (33 sq. m.); the Ammersee and the
+Würmsee. A good many smaller lakes are to be found in the
+Bavarian Alps. The North German plain is dotted with upwards
+of 500 lakes, covering an area of about 2500 sq. m. The largest of
+these are the three Haffs&mdash;the Oder Haff covering 370 sq. m., the
+Frische Haff, 332, and the Kurische Haff, 626. The lakes in the
+Prussian and Pomeranian provinces, in Mecklenburg and in Holstein,
+and those of the Havel, have already been mentioned. In the west
+the only lakes of importance are the Steinhuder Meer, 14 m. north-west
+of Hanover, and the Dümmersee on the southern frontier of
+Oldenburg.</p>
+<div class="author">(P. A. A.)</div>
+
+<p><i>Geology.</i>&mdash;Germany consists of a floor of folded Palaeozoic rocks
+upon which rest unconformably the comparatively little disturbed
+beds of the Mesozoic system, while in the North German plain a
+covering of modern deposits conceals the whole of the older strata
+from view, excepting some scattered and isolated outcrops of
+Cretaceous and Tertiary beds. The rocks which compose the ancient
+floor are thrown into folds which run approximately from W.S.W.
+to E.N.E. They are exposed on the one hand in the neighbourhood
+of the Rhine and on the other hand in the Bohemian <i>massif</i>. With
+the latter must be included the Frankenwald, the Thüringerwald,
+and even the Harz. The oldest rocks, belonging to the Archaean
+system, occur in the south, forming the Vosges and the Black Forest
+in the west, and the greater part of the Bohemian <i>massif</i>, including
+the Erzgebirge, in the east. They consist chiefly of gneiss and schist,
+with granite and other eruptive rocks. Farther north, in the
+Hunsrück, the Taunus, the Eifel and Westerwald, the Harz and the
+Frankenwald, the ancient floor is composed mainly of Devonian
+beds. Other Palaeozoic systems are, however, included in the folds.
+The Cambrian, for example, is exposed at Leimitz near Hof in the
+Frankenwald, and the important coal-field of the Saar lies on the
+southern side of the Hunsrück, while Ordovician and Silurian beds
+have been found in several localities. Along the northern border
+of the folded belt lies the coal basin of the Ruhr in Westphalia,
+which is the continuation of the Belgian coal-field, and bears much
+the same relation to the Rhenish Devonian area that the coal basin
+of Liége bears to the Ardennes. Carboniferous and Devonian beds
+are also found south-east of the Bohemian <i>massif</i>, where lies the
+extensive coal-field of Silesia. The Permian, as in England, is not
+involved in the folds which have affected the older beds, and in
+general lies unconformably upon them. It occurs chiefly around the
+masses of ancient rock, and one of the largest areas is that of the
+Saar.</p>
+
+<p>Between the old rocks of the Rhine on the west and the ancient
+<i>massif</i> of Bohemia on the east a vast area of Triassic beds extends
+from Hanover to Basel and from Metz to Bayreuth. Over the
+greater part of this region the Triassic beds are free from folding
+and are nearly horizontal, but faulting is by no means absent,
+especially along the margins of the Bohemian and Rhenish hills.
+The Triassic beds must indeed have covered a large part of these old
+rock masses, but they have been preserved only where they were
+faulted down to a lower level. Along the southern margin of the
+Triassic area there is a long band of Jurassic beds dipping towards
+the Danube; and at its eastern extremity this band is continuous
+with a synclinal of Jurassic beds, running parallel to the western
+border of the Bohemian <i>massif</i>, but separated from it by a narrow
+strip of Triassic beds. Towards the north, in Hanover and Westphalia,
+the Triassic beds are followed by Jurassic and Cretaceous
+deposits, the latter being here the more important. As in the south of
+England, the lower beds of the Cretaceous are of estuarine origin and
+the Upper Cretaceous overlaps the Lower, lying in the valley of the
+Ruhr directly upon the Palaeozoic rocks. In Saxony also the upper
+Cretaceous beds rest directly upon the Palaeozoic or Archaean rocks.
+Still more to the east, in the province of Silesia, both Jurassic and
+Cretaceous beds are again met with, but they are to a large extent
+concealed by the recent accumulations of the great plain. The
+Eocene system is unknown in Germany except in the foothills of the
+Alps; but the Oligocene and Miocene are widely spread, especially
+in the great plain and in the depression of the Danube. The Oligocene
+is generally marine. Marine Miocene occurs in N.W. Germany
+and the Miocene of the Danube valley is also in part marine, but in
+central Germany it is of fluviatile or lacustrine origin. The lignites
+of Hesse, Cassel, &amp;c., are interstratified with basaltic lava-flows
+which form the greater part of the Vogelsberg and other hills. The
+trachytes of the Siebengebirge are probably of slightly earlier date.
+The precise age of the volcanoes of the Eifel, many of which are in a
+very perfect state of preservation, is not clear, but they are certainly
+Tertiary or Post-tertiary. Leucite and nepheline lavas are here
+abundant. In the Siebengebirge the little crater of Roderberg,
+with its lavas and scoriae of leucite-basalt, is posterior to some of
+the Pleistocene river deposits.</p>
+
+<p>A glance at a geological map of Germany will show that the greater
+part of Prussia and of German Poland is covered by Quaternary
+deposits. These are in part of glacial origin, and contain Scandinavian
+boulders; but fluviatile and aeolian deposits also occur.
+Quaternary beds also cover the floor of the broad depression through
+which the Rhine meanders from Basel to Mainz, and occupy a large
+part of the plain of the Danube. The depression of the Rhine is a
+trough lying between two faults or system of faults. The very
+much broader depression of the Danube is associated with the
+formation of the Alps, and was flooded by the sea during a part of
+the Miocene period.</p>
+<div class="author">(P. La.)</div>
+
+<div class="center pt2"><img style="width:519px; height:540px; vertical-align: middle;" src="images/img807.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+
+<p class="pt2"><i>Climate.</i>&mdash;The climate of Germany is to be regarded as intermediate
+between the oceanic and continental climates of western and eastern
+Europe respectively. It has nothing in common with the Mediterranean
+climate of southern Europe, Germany being separated from
+that region by the lofty barrier of the Alps. Although there are very
+considerable differences in the range of temperature and the amount
+of rainfall throughout Germany, these are not so great as they would
+be were it not that the elevated plateaus and mountain chains are
+in the south, while the north is occupied by low-lying plains. In the
+west no chain of hills intercepts the warmer and moister winds
+which blow from the Atlantic, and these accordingly influence at
+times even the eastern regions of Germany. The mean annual
+temperature of south-western Germany, or the Rhine and Danube
+basins, is about 52° to 54° F., that of central Germany 48° to 50°,
+and that of the northern plain 46° to 48°. In Pomerania and West
+Prussia it is only 44° to 45°, and in East Prussia 42° to 44°. The
+mean January temperature varies between 22° and 34° (in Masuren
+and Cologne respectively); the mean July temperature, between 61°
+in north Schleswig and 68° at Cologne. The extremes of cold and
+heat are, as recorded in the ten years 1895-1905, 7° in Königsberg
+and 93° in Heidelberg (the hottest place in Germany). The difference
+in the mean annual temperature between the south-west and north-west
+of Germany amounts to about 3°. The contrasts of heat and
+cold are furnished by the valley of the Rhine above Mainz, which
+has the greatest mean heat, the mildest winter and the highest
+summer temperature, and the lake plateau of East Prussia, where
+Arys on the Spirdingsee has a like winter temperature to the Brocken
+at 3200 ft. The Baltic has the lowest spring temperature, and the
+autumn there is also not characterized by an appreciably higher
+degree of warmth. In central Germany the high plateaus of the
+Erz and Fichtelgebirge are the coldest regions. In south Germany
+the upper Bavarian plain experiences an inclement winter and a cold
+summer. In Alsace-Lorraine the Vosges and the plateau of Lorraine
+are also remarkable for low temperatures. The warmest districts of
+the German empire are the northern parts of the Rhine plain, from
+Karlsruhe downwards, especially the Rheintal; these are scarcely
+300 ft. above the sea-level, and are protected by mountainous tracts
+of land. The same holds true of the valleys of the Neckar, Main and
+Mosel. Hence the vine is everywhere cultivated in these districts.
+The mean summer temperature there is 66° and upwards, while the
+average temperature of January does not descend to the freezing
+point (32°). The climate of north-western Germany (west of the
+Elbe) shows a predominating oceanic character, the summers not
+being too hot (mean summer temperature 60° to 62°), and snow in
+winter remaining but a short time on the ground. West of the
+Weser the average temperature of January exceeds 32°; to the east
+it sinks to 30°, and therefore the Elbe is generally covered with ice
+for some months of the year, as are also its tributaries. The farther
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page808" id="page808"></a>808</span>
+one proceeds to the east the greater are the contrasts of summer and
+winter. While the average summer warmth of Germany is 60° to
+62°, the January temperature falls as low as 26° to 28° in West
+Prussia, Posen and Silesia, and 22° to 26° in East Prussia and upper
+Silesia. The navigation of the rivers is regularly interrupted by
+frost. Similarly the upper basin of the Danube, or the Bavarian
+plain, has a rather inclement climate in winter, the average for
+January being 25° to 26°.</p>
+
+<p>As regards rainfall, Germany belongs to those regions where
+precipitation takes place at all seasons, but chiefly in the form of
+summer rains. In respect to the quantity of rain the empire takes
+a middle position between the humidity of north-western Europe
+and the aridity of the east. There are considerable differences
+between particular places. The rainfall is greatest in the Bavarian
+tableland and the hilly regions of western Germany. For the Eifel,
+Sauerland, Harz, Thuringian Forest, Rhön, Vogelsberg, Spessart,
+the Black Forest, the Vosges, &amp;c., the annual average may be stated
+at 34 in. or more, while in the lower terraces of south-western
+Germany, as in the Erzgebirge and the Sudetic range, it is estimated
+at 30 to 32 in. only. The same average obtains also on the humid
+north-west coast of Germany as far as Bremen and Hamburg. In
+the remaining parts of western Germany, on the shores of farther
+Pomerania, and in East Prussia, it amounts to upwards of 24 in.
+In western Germany there is a district famous for the scarcity of
+rain and for producing the best kind of wine: in the valley of the
+Rhine below Strassburg, in the Palatinate, and also in the valley
+of the Main, no more than from 16 to 20 in. fall. Mecklenburg,
+Brandenburg and Lusatia, Saxony and the plateau of Thuringia,
+West Prussia, Posen and lower Silesia are also to be classed among
+the more arid regions of Germany, the annual rainfall being 16 to
+20 in. Thunderstorms are most frequent in July, and vary between
+fifteen and twenty-five in the central districts, descending in the
+eastern provinces of Prussia to ten annually.</p>
+
+<p><i>Flora.</i>&mdash;The flora of Germany comprises 3413 species of phanerogamic
+and 4306 cryptogamic plants. The country forms a section
+of the central European zone, and its flora is largely under the
+influence of the Baltic and Alpine elements, which to a great degree
+here coalesce. All plants peculiar to the temperate zone abound.
+Wheat, rye, barley and oats are cultivated everywhere, but spelt
+only in the south and buckwheat in the north and north-west.
+Maize only ripens in the south. Potatoes grow in every part of the
+country, those of the sandy plains in the north being of excellent
+quality. All the commoner sorts of fruit&mdash;apples, pears, cherries,
+&amp;c.&mdash;grow everywhere, but the more delicate kinds, such as figs,
+apricots and peaches, are confined to the warmer districts. The vine
+flourishes as far as the 51° N., but only yields good wine in the
+districts of the Rhine and Danube. Flax is grown in the north,
+and hemp more particularly in the central districts. Rape can be
+produced everywhere when the soil permits. Tobacco is cultivated
+on the upper Rhine and in the
+valley of the Oder. The
+northern plain, especially in
+the province of Saxony, produces
+beet (for sugar), and hops
+are largely grown in Bavaria,
+Württemberg, Alsace, Baden
+and the Prussian province of
+Posen.</p>
+
+<p>Speaking generally, northern
+Germany is not nearly so well
+wooded as central
+and southern Germany,
+where indeed most of the
+lower mountains are covered
+with timber, as is indicated by
+the frequent use of the termination
+<span class="sidenote">Forests.</span>
+<i>wald</i> affixed to the names
+of the mountain ranges (as
+Schwarzwald, Thüringerwald,
+&amp;c.). The &ldquo;Seenplatten&rdquo; are
+less wooded than the hill
+country, but the eastern portion
+of the northern lowlands
+is well provided with timber.
+A narrow strip along the shores
+of the Baltic is covered with
+oaks and beeches; farther inland,
+and especially east of the
+Elbe, coniferous trees are the
+most prevalent, <span class="correction" title="amended from praticularly">particularly</span>
+the Scotch fir; birches are also
+abundant. The mountain
+forests consist chiefly of firs,
+pines and larches, but contain
+also silver firs, beeches and
+oaks. Chestnuts and walnuts
+appear on the terraces of the
+Rhine valley and in Swabia
+and Franconia. The whole
+north-west of Germany is destitute
+of wood, but to compensate for this the people have ample
+supplies of fuel in the extensive stretches of turf.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fauna.</i>&mdash;The number of wild animals in Germany is not very great.
+Foxes, martens, weasels, badgers and otters are to be found everywhere;
+bears are found in the Alps, wolves are rare, but they find
+their way sometimes from French territory to the western provinces,
+or from Poland to Prussia and Posen. Among the rodents the
+hamster and the field-mouse are a scourge to agriculture. Of game
+there are the roe, stag, boar and hare; the fallow deer and the
+wild rabbit are less common. The elk is to be found in the forests
+of East Prussia. The feathered tribes are everywhere abundant in
+the fields, woods and marshes. Wild geese and ducks, grouse,
+partridges, snipe, woodcock, quails, widgeons and teal are plentiful
+all over the country, and in recent years preserves have been largely
+stocked with pheasants. The length of time that birds of passage
+remain in Germany differs considerably with the different species.
+The stork is seen for about 170 days, the house-swallow 160, the
+snow-goose 260, the snipe 220. In northern Germany these birds
+arrive from twenty to thirty days later than in the south.</p>
+
+<p>The waters of Germany abound with fish; but the genera and
+species are few. The carp and salmon tribes are the most abundant;
+after them rank the pike, the eel, the shad, the roach, the perch
+and the lamprey. The Oder and some of the tributaries of the Elbe
+abound in crayfish, and in the stagnant lakes of East Prussia leeches
+are bred. In addition to frogs, Germany has few varieties of
+Amphibia. Of serpents there are only two poisonous kinds, the
+common viper and the adder (<i>Kreuzotter</i>).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Population.</i>&mdash;Until comparatively recent times no estimate
+of the population of Germany was precise enough to be of any
+value. At the beginning of the 19th century the country was
+divided into some hundred states, but there was no central
+agency for instituting an exact census on a uniform plan. The
+formation of the German Confederation in 1815 effected but
+little change in this respect, and it was left to the different states
+to arrange in what manner the census should be taken. On the
+foundation, however, of the German customs union, or <i>Zollverein</i>,
+between certain German states, the necessity for accurate
+statistics became apparent and care was taken to compile
+trustworthy tables. Researches show the population of the
+German empire, as at present constituted, to have been:
+(1816) 24,833,396; (1855) 36,113,644; and (1871) 41,058,792.
+The following table shows the population and area of each
+of the states included in the empire for the years 1871, 1875,
+1900 and 1905:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><i>Area and Population of the German States.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">States of the Empire.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Area<br />English<br />Sq. m.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="4">Population.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Density<br />per<br />Sq. m.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">1871.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1875.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1900.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1905.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Kingdoms&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">134,616</td> <td class="tcr rb">24,691,433</td> <td class="tcr rb">25,742,404</td> <td class="tcr rb">34,472,509</td> <td class="tcr rb">37,293,324</td> <td class="tcr rb">277.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Bavaria</td> <td class="tcr rb">29,292</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,863,450</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,022,390</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,176,057</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,524,372</td> <td class="tcr rb">222.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Saxony</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,789</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,556,244</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,760,586</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,202,216</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,508,601</td> <td class="tcr rb">778.8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Württemberg</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,534</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,818,539</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,881,505</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,169,480</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,302,179</td> <td class="tcr rb">305.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Grand-Duchies&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Baden</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,823</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,461,562</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,507,179</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,867,944</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,010,728</td> <td class="tcr rb">345.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Hesse</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,966</td> <td class="tcr rb">852,894</td> <td class="tcr rb">884,218</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,119,893</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,209,175</td> <td class="tcr rb">407.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Mecklenburg-Schwerin</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,068</td> <td class="tcr rb">557,897</td> <td class="tcr rb">553,785</td> <td class="tcr rb">607,770</td> <td class="tcr rb">625,045</td> <td class="tcr rb">123.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Saxe-Weimar</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,397</td> <td class="tcr rb">286,183</td> <td class="tcr rb">292,933</td> <td class="tcr rb">362,873</td> <td class="tcr rb">388,095</td> <td class="tcr rb">277.8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Mecklenburg-Strelitz</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,131</td> <td class="tcr rb">96,982</td> <td class="tcr rb">95,673</td> <td class="tcr rb">102,602</td> <td class="tcr rb">103,451</td> <td class="tcr rb">91.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Oldenburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,482</td> <td class="tcr rb">314,459</td> <td class="tcr rb">319,314</td> <td class="tcr rb">399,180</td> <td class="tcr rb">438,856</td> <td class="tcr rb">176.8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Duchies&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Brunswick</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,418</td> <td class="tcr rb">311,764</td> <td class="tcr rb">327,493</td> <td class="tcr rb">464,333</td> <td class="tcr rb">485,958</td> <td class="tcr rb">342.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Saxe-Meiningen</td> <td class="tcr rb">953</td> <td class="tcr rb">187,957</td> <td class="tcr rb">194,494</td> <td class="tcr rb">250,731</td> <td class="tcr rb">268,916</td> <td class="tcr rb">282.2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Saxe-Altenburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">511</td> <td class="tcr rb">142,122</td> <td class="tcr rb">145,844</td> <td class="tcr rb">194,914</td> <td class="tcr rb">206,508</td> <td class="tcr rb">404.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Saxe-Coburg-Gotha</td> <td class="tcr rb">764</td> <td class="tcr rb">174,339</td> <td class="tcr rb">182,599</td> <td class="tcr rb">229,550</td> <td class="tcr rb">242,432</td> <td class="tcr rb">317.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Anhalt</td> <td class="tcr rb">888</td> <td class="tcr rb">203,437</td> <td class="tcr rb">213,565</td> <td class="tcr rb">316,085</td> <td class="tcr rb">328,029</td> <td class="tcr rb">369.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Principalities&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Schwartzburg-Sondershausen</td> <td class="tcr rb">333</td> <td class="tcr rb">75,523</td> <td class="tcr rb">76,676</td> <td class="tcr rb">80,898</td> <td class="tcr rb">85,152</td> <td class="tcr rb">255.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Schwartzburg-Rudolstadt</td> <td class="tcr rb">363</td> <td class="tcr rb">67,191</td> <td class="tcr rb">67,480</td> <td class="tcr rb">93,059</td> <td class="tcr rb">96,835</td> <td class="tcr rb">266.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Waldeck</td> <td class="tcr rb">433</td> <td class="tcr rb">56,224</td> <td class="tcr rb">54,743</td> <td class="tcr rb">57,918</td> <td class="tcr rb">59,127</td> <td class="tcr rb">136.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Reuss-Greiz</td> <td class="tcr rb">122</td> <td class="tcr rb">45,094</td> <td class="tcr rb">46,985</td> <td class="tcr rb">68,396</td> <td class="tcr rb">70,603</td> <td class="tcr rb">578.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Reuss-Schleiz</td> <td class="tcr rb">319</td> <td class="tcr rb">89,032</td> <td class="tcr rb">92,375</td> <td class="tcr rb">139,210</td> <td class="tcr rb">144,584</td> <td class="tcr rb">453.2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Schaumburg-Lippe</td> <td class="tcr rb">131</td> <td class="tcr rb">32,059</td> <td class="tcr rb">33,133</td> <td class="tcr rb">43,132</td> <td class="tcr rb">44,992</td> <td class="tcr rb">343.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Lippe</td> <td class="tcr rb">469</td> <td class="tcr rb">111,135</td> <td class="tcr rb">112,452</td> <td class="tcr rb">138,952</td> <td class="tcr rb">145,577</td> <td class="tcr rb">310.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Free Towns&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Lübeck</td> <td class="tcr rb">115</td> <td class="tcr rb">52,158</td> <td class="tcr rb">56,912</td> <td class="tcr rb">96,775</td> <td class="tcr rb">105,857</td> <td class="tcr rb">920.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Bremen</td> <td class="tcr rb">99</td> <td class="tcr rb">122,402</td> <td class="tcr rb">142,200</td> <td class="tcr rb">224,882</td> <td class="tcr rb">263,440</td> <td class="tcr rb">2661.0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Hamburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">160</td> <td class="tcr rb">338,974</td> <td class="tcr rb">388,618</td> <td class="tcr rb">768,349</td> <td class="tcr rb">874,878</td> <td class="tcr rb">5467.9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Imperial Territory&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp; Alsace-Lorraine</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,604</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,549,738</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,531,804</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,719,470</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,814,564</td> <td class="tcr rb">323.8</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">German Empire</td> <td class="tcr allb">208,780</td> <td class="tcr allb">41,058,792</td> <td class="tcr allb">42,727,360</td> <td class="tcr allb">56,367,178</td> <td class="tcr allb">60,641,278</td> <td class="tcr allb">290.4</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<table class="pt2" summary="Illustration"><tr><td><img style="width:436px; height:630px; vertical-align: middle;" src="images/img808a.jpg" alt="" /></td>
+<td><img style="width:444px; height:630px; vertical-align: middle;" src="images/img808b.jpg" alt="" /></td></tr></table>
+<p class="noind f80"><a href="images/img808c.jpg">(Click to enlarge left side.)</a></p>
+<p class="noind f80"><a href="images/img808d.jpg">(Click to enlarge right side.)</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page809" id="page809"></a>809</span></p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p class="pt2">The population of the empire has thus increased, since 1871, by
+19,582,486 or 47.6%. The increase of population during 1895-1900
+was greatest in Hamburg, Bremen, Lübeck, Saxony, Prussia
+and Baden, and least in Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Waldeck. Of the
+total population in 1900, 54.3% was urban (<i>i.e.</i> living in towns of
+2000 inhabitants and above), leaving 45.7% to be classified as rural.
+On the 1st of December 1905, of the total population 29,884,681
+were males and 30,756,597 females; and it is noticeable that the
+male population shows of late years a larger relative increase than
+the female, the male population having in five years increased by
+2,147,434 and the female by only 2,126,666. The greater increase
+in the male population is attributable to diminished emigration
+and to the large increase in immigrants, who are mostly males.
+In 1905, 485,906 marriages were contracted in Germany, being at the
+rate of 8.0 per thousand inhabitants. In the same year the total
+number of births was 2,048,453. Of these, 61,300 were stillborn
+and 174,494 illegitimate, being at the rate, respectively, of 3%
+and 8.5% of the total. Illegitimacy is highest in Bavaria (about
+15%), Berlin (14%), and over 12% in Saxony, Mecklenburg-Schwerin
+and Saxe-Meiningen. It is lowest in the Rhine Province
+and Westphalia (3.9 and 2.6 respectively). Divorce is steadily on
+the increase, being in 1904, 11.1 per 10,000 marriages, as against
+8.1, 8.1, 9.3 and 10.1 for the four preceding years. The average
+deaths for the years 1901-1905 amounted to 1,227,903; the rate was
+thus 20.2 per thousand inhabitants, but the death-rate has materially
+decreased, the total number of deaths in 1907 standing at 1,178,349;
+the births for the same year were 2,060,974. In connexion with
+suicides, it is interesting to observe that the highest rates prevail
+in some of the smaller and more prosperous states of the empire&mdash;for
+example, in Saxe-Weimar, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and Saxe-Altenburg
+(on a three years&rsquo; average of figures), while the Roman
+Catholic country Bavaria, and the impoverished Prussian province
+of Posen show the most favourable statistics. For Prussia the rate
+is 20, and for Saxony it is as high as 31 per 100,000 inhabitants.
+The large cities, notably Berlin, Hamburg, Breslau and Dresden,
+show, however, relatively the largest proportion.</p>
+
+<p>In 1900 the German-speaking population of the empire amounted
+to 51,883,131. Of the inhabitants speaking other languages there
+were: Polish, 3,086,489; French (mostly in Lorraine), 211,679;
+Masurian, 142,049; Danish, 141,061; Lithuanian, 106,305;
+Cassubian, 100,213; Wendish, 93,032; Dutch, 80,361; Italian,
+65,961; Moravian, 64,382; Czech, 43,016; Frisian, 20,677;
+English, 20,217; Walloon, 11,841. In 1905 there were resident
+within the empire 1,028,560 subjects of foreign states, as compared
+with 778,698 in 1900. Of these 17,293 were subjects of Great Britain
+and Ireland, 17,184 of the United States of America and 20,584 of
+France. The bulk of the other foreigners residing in the country
+belonged to countries lying contiguous, such as Austria, which
+claimed nearly the half, Russia and Italy.</p>
+
+<p><i>Languages.</i>&mdash;The German-speaking nations in their various
+branches and dialects, if we include the Dutch and the Walloons,
+extend in a compact mass along the shores of the Baltic and of the
+North Sea, from Memel in the east to a point between Gravelines
+and Calais near the Straits of Dover. On this northern line the
+Germans come in contact with the Danes who inhabit the northern
+parts of Schleswig within the limits of the German empire. A line
+from Flensburg south-westward to Joldelund and thence northwestward
+to Hoyer will nearly give the boundary between the two
+idioms.<a name="fa2k" id="fa2k" href="#ft2k"><span class="sp">2</span></a> The German-French frontier traverses Belgium from west
+to east, touching the towns of St Omer, Courtrai and Maastricht.
+Near Eupen, south of Aix-la-Chapelle, it turns southward, and near
+Arlon south-east as far as the crest of the Vosges mountains, which
+it follows up to Belfort, traversing there the watershed of the Rhine
+and the Doubs. In the Swiss territory the line of demarcation
+passes through Bienne, Fribourg, Saanen, Leuk and Monte Rosa.
+In the south the Germans come into contact with Rhaeto-Romans
+and Italians, the former inhabiting the valley of the Vorder-Rhein
+and the Engadine, while the latter have settled on the southern slopes
+of the Alps, and are continually advancing up the valley of the
+Adige. Carinthia and Styria are inhabited by German people, except
+the valley of the Drave towards Klagenfurt. Their eastern neighbours
+there are first the Magyars, then the northern Slavs and the
+Poles. The whole eastern frontier is very much broken, and cannot
+be described in a few words. Besides detached German colonies in
+Hungary proper, there is a considerable and compact German (Saxon)
+population in Transylvania. The river March is the frontier north
+of the Danube from Pressburg as far as Brünn, to the north of which
+the German regions begin near Olmütz, the interior of Bohemia and
+Moravia being occupied by Czechs and Moravians. In these countries
+the Slav language has been steadily superseding the German. In
+the Prussian provinces of Silesia and Posen the eastern parts are
+mixed territories, the German language progressing very slowly
+among the Poles. In Bromberg and Thorn, in the valley of the
+Vistula, German is prevalent. In West Prussia some parts of the
+interior, and in East Prussia a small region along the Russian frontier,
+are occupied by Poles (Cassubians in West Prussia, Masurians in
+East Prussia). The total number of German-speaking people,
+within the boundaries wherein they constitute the compact mass
+of the population, may be estimated, if the Dutch and Walloons be
+included, at 65 millions.</p>
+
+<p>The geographical limits of the German language thus do not quite
+coincide with the German frontiers. The empire contains about
+3<span class="spp">1</span>&frasl;<span class="suu">3</span> millions of persons who do not make use of German in everyday
+life, not counting the resident foreigners.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from the foreigners above mentioned, German subjects
+speaking a tongue other than German are found only in Prussia,
+Saxony and Alsace-Lorraine. The following table shows roughly
+the distribution of German-speaking people in the world outside
+the German empire:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">Austria-Hungary</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,000,000</td> <td class="tcl">Other European Countries</td> <td class="tcr">2,300,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Netherlands (Dutch)</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,200,000</td> <td class="tcl">America</td> <td class="tcr">13,000,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Belgium (Walloon)</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,000,000</td> <td class="tcl">Asia</td> <td class="tcr">100,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Luxemburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">200,000</td> <td class="tcl">Africa</td> <td class="tcr">600,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Switzerland</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,300,000</td> <td class="tcl">Australia</td> <td class="tcr">150,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">France</td> <td class="tcr rb">500,000</td> <td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>According to the census of the 1st of December 1900 there were
+51,634,757 persons speaking commonly one language and 248,374
+speaking two languages. In the kingdom of Saxony, according to
+the census of 1900, there were 48,000 Wends, mostly in Lusatia.
+With respect to Alsace-Lorraine, detailed estimates (but no census)
+gave the number of French in the territory of Lorraine at about
+170,000, and in that of Alsace at about 46,000.</p>
+
+<p>The Poles have increased very much, owing to a greater surplus of
+births than in the case of the German people in the eastern provinces
+of Prussia, to immigration from Russia, and to the Polonization of
+many Germans through clerical and other influences (see <i>History</i>).
+The Poles are in the majority in upper Silesia (Government district
+of Oppeln; 55%) and the province of Posen (60%). They are
+numerous in West Prussia (34%) and East Prussia (14%).</p>
+
+<p>The Wends are decreasing in number, as are also the Lithuanians
+on the eastern border of East Prussia, Czechs are only found in
+Silesia on the confines of Bohemia.</p>
+
+<p>Russians flocked to Germany in thousands after the Russo-Japanese
+War and the insurrections in Russia, and the figures given for 1900
+had been doubled in 1907. Males preponderate among the various
+nationalities, with the exception of the British, the larger proportion of
+whom are females either in domestic service or engaged in tuition.</p>
+
+<p><i>Chief Towns.</i>&mdash;According to the results of the census of the 1st
+of December 1905 there were within the empire 41 towns with
+populations exceeding 100,000, viz.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc allb">State.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Population.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Berlin</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,040,148</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Hamburg</td> <td class="tcl rb">Hamburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">802,793</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Munich</td> <td class="tcl rb">Bavaria</td> <td class="tcr rb">538,393</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Dresden</td> <td class="tcl rb">Saxony</td> <td class="tcr rb">516,996</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Leipzig</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">502,570</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Breslau</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">470,751</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Cologne</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">428,503</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Frankfort-on-Main</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">334,951</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Nuremberg</td> <td class="tcl rb">Bavaria</td> <td class="tcr rb">294,344</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Düsseldorf</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">253,099</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Hanover</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">250,032</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Stuttgart</td> <td class="tcl rb">Württemberg</td> <td class="tcr rb">249,443</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Chemnitz</td> <td class="tcl rb">Saxony</td> <td class="tcr rb">244,405</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Magdeburg</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">240,661</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Charlottenburg</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">239,512</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Essen</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">231,396</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Stettin</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">224,078</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Königsberg</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">219,862</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Bremen</td> <td class="tcl rb">Bremen</td> <td class="tcr rb">214,953</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Duisburg</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">192,227</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Dortmund</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">175,575</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Halle</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">169,899</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Altona</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">168,301</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Strassburg</td> <td class="tcl rb">Alsace-Lorraine</td> <td class="tcr rb">167,342</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Kiel</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">163,710</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Elberfeld</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">162,682</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Mannheim</td> <td class="tcl rb">Baden</td> <td class="tcr rb">162,607</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Danzig</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">159,685</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Barmen</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">156,148</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Rixdorf</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">153,650</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Gelsenkirchen</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">147,037</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Aix-la-Chapelle</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">143,906</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Schöneberg</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">140,992</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Brunswick</td> <td class="tcl rb">Brunswick</td> <td class="tcr rb">136,423</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Posen</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">137,067</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Cassel</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">120,446</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Bochum</td> <td class="tcl rb"> &emsp; &rdquo;</td> <td class="tcr rb">118,455</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Karlsruhe</td> <td class="tcl rb">Baden</td> <td class="tcr rb">111,200</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Crefeld</td> <td class="tcl rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">110,347</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Plauen</td> <td class="tcl rb">Saxony</td> <td class="tcr rb">105,182</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Wiesbaden</td> <td class="tcl rb bb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">100,953</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page810" id="page810"></a>810</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Density of Population.</i>&mdash;In respect of density of population,
+Germany with (1900) 269.9 and (1905) 290.4 inhabitants to the
+square mile is exceeded in Europe only by Belgium, Holland and
+England. Apart from the free cities, Hamburg, Bremen and
+Lübeck, the kingdom of Saxony is the most, and Mecklenburg-Strelitz
+the least, closely peopled state of the empire. The most
+thinly populated districts are found, not as might be expected in
+the mountain regions, but in some parts of the plains. Leaving out
+of account the small centres, Germany may be roughly divided into
+two thinly and two densely populated parts. In the former division
+has to be classed all the North German plain. There it is only in the
+valleys of the larger navigable rivers and on the southern border
+of the plain that the density exceeds 200 inhabitants per square mile.
+In some places, indeed, it is far greater, <i>e.g.</i> at the mouths of the
+Elbe and the Weser, in East Holstein, in the delta of the Memel and
+the environs of Hamburg. This region is bordered on the south by
+a densely peopled district, the northern boundary of which may be
+defined by a line from Coburg via Cassel to Münster, for in this part
+there are not only very fertile districts, such as the <i>Goldene Aue</i> in
+Thuringia, but also centres of industry. The population is thickest
+in upper Silesia around Beuthen (coal-fields), around Ratibor, Neisse
+and Waldenburg (coal-fields), around Zittau (kingdom of Saxony),
+in the Elbe valley around Dresden, in the districts of Zwickau and
+Leipzig as far as the Saale, on the northern slopes of the Harz and
+around Bielefeld in Westphalia. In all these the density exceeds
+400 inhabitants to the square mile, and in the case of Saxony rises
+to 750. The third division of Germany comprises the basin of the
+Danube and Franconia, where around Nuremberg, Bamberg and
+Würzburg the population is thickly clustered. The fourth division
+embraces the valleys of the upper Rhine and Neckar and the district
+of Düsseldorf on the lower Rhine. In this last the proportion exceeds
+1200 inhabitants to the square mile.</p>
+
+<p><i>Emigration.</i>&mdash;There have been great oscillations in the actual
+emigration by sea. It first exceeded 100,000 soon after the Franco-German
+War (1872, 126,000), and this occurred again in the years
+1880 to 1892. Germany lost during these thirteen years more than
+1,700,000 inhabitants by emigration. The total number of those
+who sailed for the United States from 1820 to 1900 may be estimated
+at more than 4,500,000. The number of German emigrants to
+Brazil between 1870 and 1900 was about 52,000. The greater
+number of the more recent emigrants was from the agricultural
+provinces of northern Germany&mdash;West Prussia, Posen, Pomerania,
+Mecklenburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Hanover, and sometimes the
+emigration reached 1% of the total population of these provinces.
+In subsequent years the emigration of native Germans greatly
+decreased and, in 1905, amounted only to 28,075. But to this
+number must be added 284,787 foreigners who in that year were
+shipped from German ports (notably Hamburg and Bremen) to
+distant parts. Of the above given numbers of purely German
+emigrants 26,007 sailed for the United States of America; 243 to
+Canada; 333 to Brazil; 674 to the Argentine Republic; 7 to other
+parts of America; 57 to Africa; and 84 to Australia.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Agriculture.</i>&mdash;Despite the enormous development of industries
+and commerce, agriculture and cattle-rearing still represent
+in Germany a considerable portion of its economic wealth.
+Almost two-thirds of the soil is occupied by arable land, pastures
+and meadows, and of the whole area, in 1900, 91% was classed
+as productive. Of the total area 47.67% was occupied by land
+under tillage, 0.89% by gardens, 11.02% by meadow-land,
+5.01% by pastures, and 0.25% by vineyards. The largest estates
+are found in the Prussian provinces of Pomerania, Posen and
+Saxony, and in East and West Prussia, while in the Prussian Rhine
+province, in Baden and Württemberg small farms are the rule.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The same kinds of cereal crops are cultivated in all parts of the
+empire, but in the south and west wheat is predominant, and in the
+north and east rye, oats and barley. To these in some districts are
+added spelt, buckwheat, millet, rice-wheat, lesser spelt and maize.
+In general the soil is remarkably well cultivated. The three years&rsquo;
+rotation formerly in use, where autumn and spring-sown grain and
+fallow succeeded each other, has now been abandoned, except in
+some districts, where the system has been modified and improved.
+In south Germany the so-called <i>Fruchtwechsel</i> is practised, the fields
+being sown with grain crops every second year, and with pease or
+beans, grasses, potatoes, turnips, &amp;c., in the intermediate years.
+In north Germany the mixed <i>Koppelwirthschaft</i> is the rule, by which
+system, after several years of grain crops, the ground is for two or
+three seasons in pasture.</p>
+
+<p>Taking the average of the six years 1900-1905, the crop of wheat
+amounted to 3,550,033 tons (metric), rye to 9,296,616 tons, barley
+to 3,102,883 tons, and oats to 7,160,883 tons. But, in spite of this
+considerable yield in cereals, Germany cannot cover her home
+consumption, and imported on the average of the six years 1900-1905
+about 4˝ million tons of cereals to supply the deficiency.
+The potato is largely cultivated, not merely for food, but for distillation
+into spirits. This manufacture is prosecuted especially in
+eastern Germany. The number of distilleries throughout the
+German empire was, in 1905-1906, 68,405. The common beet
+(<i>Beta vulgaris</i>) is largely grown in some districts for the production of
+sugar, which has greatly increased of recent years. There are two
+centres of the beet sugar production: Magdeburg for the districts
+Prussian Saxony, Hanover, Brunswick, Anhalt and Thuringia,
+and Frankfort-on-Oder at the centre of the group Silesia, Brandenburg
+and Pomerania. Flax and hemp are cultivated, though not so
+much as formerly, for manufacture into linen and canvas, and also
+rape seed for the production of oil. The home supply of the former
+no longer suffices for the native demand. The cultivation of hops
+is in a very thriving condition in the southern states of Germany.
+The soil occupied by hops was estimated in 1905 at 98,000 acres&mdash;a
+larger area than in Great Britain, which had in the same year about
+48,000 acres. The total production of hops was 29,000 tons in 1905,
+and of this over 25,000 were grown in Bavaria, Württemberg, Baden
+and Alsace-Lorraine. Almost the whole yield in hops is consumed
+in the country by the great breweries.</p>
+
+<p>Tobacco forms a most productive and profitable object of culture
+in many districts. The total extent under this crop in 1905 was about
+35,000 acres, of which 45% was in Baden, 12% in Bavaria, 30%
+in Prussia, and the rest in Alsace and Hesse-Darmstadt. In the
+north the plant is cultivated principally in Pomerania, Brandenburg
+and East and West Prussia. Of late years the production has somewhat
+diminished, owing to the extensive tobacco manufacturing
+industries of Bremen and Hamburg, which import almost exclusively
+foreign leaves.</p>
+
+<p>Ulm, Nuremberg, Quedlinburg, Erfurt, Strassburg and Guben
+are famed for their vegetables and garden seeds. Berlin is noted for
+its flower nurseries, the Rhine valley, Württemberg and the Elbe
+valley below Dresden for fruit, and Frankfort-on-main for cider.</p>
+
+<p>The culture of the vine is almost confined to southern and western
+Germany, and especially to the Rhine district. The northern limits
+of its growth extend from Bonn in a north-easterly
+direction through Cassel to the southern foot of the
+<span class="sidenote">Vine.</span>
+Harz, crossing 52° N. on the Elbe, running then east some miles to
+the north of that parallel, and finally turning sharply towards the
+south-west on the Warthe. In the valley of the Saale and Elbe
+(near Dresden), and in lower Silesia (between Guben and Grünberg),
+the number of vineyards is small, and the wines of inferior quality;
+but along the Rhine from Basel to Coblenz, in Alsace, Baden, the
+Palatinate and Hesse, and above all in the province of Nassau, the
+lower slopes of the hills are literally covered with vines. Here are
+produced the celebrated Rüdesheimer, Hochheimer and Johannisberger.
+The vines of the lower Main, particularly those of Würzburg,
+are the best kinds; those of the upper Main and the valley of the
+Neckar are rather inferior. The Moselle wines are lighter and more
+acid than those of the Rhine. The total amount produced in
+Germany is estimated at 1000 million gallons, of a value of Ł4,000,000;
+Alsace-Lorraine turning out 400 millions; Baden, 175; Bavaria,
+Württemberg and Hesse together, 300; while the remainder, which
+though small in quantity is in quality the best, is produced by
+Prussia.</p>
+
+<p>The cultivation of grazing lands in Germany has been greatly
+improved in recent times and is in a highly prosperous condition.
+The provinces of Schleswig-Holstein, Pomerania, Hanover
+(especially the marsh-lands near the sea) and the grand-duchy
+<span class="sidenote">Live stock.</span>
+of Mecklenburg-Schwerin are particularly remarkable
+in this respect. The best meadow-lands of Bavaria are in the
+province of Franconia and in the outer range of the Alps, and those
+of Saxony in the Erzgebirge. Württemberg, Hesse and Thuringia
+also yield cattle of excellent quality. These large cattle-rearing
+centres not only supply the home markets but export live stock in
+considerable quantities to England and France. Butter is also
+largely exported to England from the North Sea districts and from
+Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg. The breeding of horses has
+attained a great perfection. The main centre is in East and West
+Prussia, then follow the marsh districts on the Elbe and Weser, some
+parts of Westphalia, Oldenburg, Lippe, Saxony and upper Silesia,
+lower Bavaria and Alsace-Lorraine. Of the stud farms Trakehnen
+in East Prussia and Graditz in the Prussian province of Saxony enjoy
+a European reputation. The aggregate number of sheep has shown
+a considerable falling off, and the rearing of them is mostly carried
+on only on large estates, the number showing only 9,692,501 in 1900,
+and 7,907,200 in 1904, as against 28,000,000 in 1860. As a rule,
+sheep-farming is resorted to where the soil is of inferior quality and
+unsuitable for tillage and the breeding of cattle. Far more attention
+is accordingly given to sheep-farming in northern and north-eastern
+Germany than in Schleswig-Holstein, Westphalia, the Rhineland
+and south Germany. The native demand for wool is not covered by
+the home production, and in this article the export from the United
+Kingdom to Germany is steadily rising, having amounted in 1905
+to a value of Ł1,691,035, as against Ł742,632 in 1900. The largest
+stock of pigs is in central Germany and Saxony, in Westphalia, on
+the lower Rhine, in Lorraine and Hesse. Central Germany (especially
+Gotha and Brunswick) exports sausages and hams largely, as
+well as Westphalia, but here again considerable importation takes
+place from other countries. Goats are found everywhere, but especially
+in the hilly districts. Poultry farming is a considerable industry,
+the geese of Pomerania and the fowls of Thuringia and Lorraine being
+in especial favour. Bee-keeping is of considerable importance,
+particularly in north Germany and Silesia.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page811" id="page811"></a>811</span></p>
+
+<p>On the whole, despite the prosperous condition of the German
+live-stock farming, the consumption of meat exceeds the amount
+rendered available by home production, and prices can only be kept
+down by a steady increase in the imports from abroad.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fisheries.</i>&mdash;The German fisheries, long of little importance, have
+been carefully fostered within recent years. The deep-sea fishing
+in the North Sea, thanks to the exertions of the German fishing league
+(<i>Deutscher Fischereiverein</i>) and to government support, is extremely
+active. Trawlers are extensively employed, and steamers bring the
+catches directly to the large fish markets at Geestemünde and Altona,
+whence facilities are afforded by the railways for the rapid transport
+of fish to Berlin and other centres. The fish mostly caught are cod,
+haddock and herrings, while Heligoland yields lobsters, and the
+islands of Föhr, Amrum and Sylt oysters of good quality. The
+German North Sea fishing fleet numbered in 1905 618 boats, with
+an aggregate crew of 5441 hands. Equally well developed are the
+Baltic fisheries, the chief ports engaged in which are Danzig, Eckernförde,
+Kolberg and Travemünde. The principal catch is haddock
+and herrings. The catch of the North Sea and Baltic fisheries in
+1906 was valued at over Ł700,000, exclusive of herrings for salting.
+The fisheries do not, however, supply the demand for fish, and fresh,
+salt and dried fish is imported largely in excess of the home yield.</p>
+
+<p><i>Mines and Minerals.</i>&mdash;Germany abounds in minerals, and the
+extraordinary industrial development of the country since 1870 is
+largely due to its mineral wealth. Having left France much behind
+in this respect, it now rivals Great Britain and the United States.</p>
+
+<p>Germany produces more silver than any other European state,
+and the quantity is annually increasing. It is extracted from the
+ores in the mines of Freiburg (Saxony), the Harz Mountains, upper
+Silesia, Merseburg, Aix-la-Chapelle, Wiesbaden and Arnsberg.
+Gold is found in the sand of the rivers Isar, Inn and Rhine, and also,
+to a limited extent, on the Harz. The quantity yielded in 1905 was,
+of silver, about 400 tons of a value of Ł1,600,000, and gold, about 4
+tons, valued at about Ł548,000.</p>
+
+<p>Lead is produced in considerable quantities in upper Silesia, the
+Harz Mountains, in the Prussian province of Nassau, in the Saxon
+Erzgebirge and in the Sauerland. The yield in 1905 amounted to
+about 153,000 tons; of which 20,000 tons were exported.</p>
+
+<p>Copper is found principally in the Mansfeld district of the Prussian
+province of Saxony and near Arnsberg in the Sauerland, the ore
+yielding 31,713 tons in 1905, of which 5000 tons were exported.</p>
+
+<p>About 90% of the zinc produced in Europe is yielded by Belgium
+and Germany. It is mostly found in upper Silesia, around Beuthen,
+and in the districts of Wiesbaden and Aix-la-Chapelle. In 1905
+no less than 198,000 tons of block zinc were produced, of which 16,500
+tons were exported.</p>
+
+<p>Of other minerals (with the exceptions of coal, iron and salt treated
+below) nickel and antimony are found in the upper Harz; cobalt in
+the hilly districts of Hesse and the Saxon Erzgebirge; arsenic in the
+Riesengebirge; quicksilver in the Sauerland and in the spurs of the
+Saarbrücken coal hills; graphite in Bavaria; porcelain clay in
+Saxony and Silesia; amber along the whole Baltic coast; and lime
+and gypsum in almost all parts.</p>
+
+<p>Coal-mining appears to have been first practised in the 14th century
+at Zwickau (Saxony) and on the Ruhr. There are six large coal-fields,
+occupying an area of about 3600 sq. m., of which
+the most important occupies the basin of the Ruhr, its
+<span class="sidenote">Coal.</span>
+extent being estimated at 2800 sq. m. Here there are more than
+60 beds, of a total thickness of 150 to 200 ft. of coal; and the amount
+in the pits has been estimated at 45,000 millions of tons. Smaller
+fields are found near Osnabrück, Ibbenbüren and Minden, and a
+larger one near Aix-la-Chapelle. The Saar coal-field, within the
+area enclosed by the rivers Saar, Nahe and Blies (460 sq. m.), is of
+great importance. The thickness of 80 beds amounts to 250 ft.,
+and the total mass of coal is estimated at 45,400 million tons. The
+greater part of the basin belongs to Prussia, the rest to Lorraine.
+A still larger field exists in the upper Silesian basin, on the borderland
+between Austria and Poland, containing about 50,000 million
+tons. Beuthen is the chief centre. The Silesian coal-fields have a
+second centre in Waldenburg, east of the Riesengebirge. The Saxon
+coal-fields stretch eastwards for some miles from Zwickau. Deposits
+of less consequence are found in upper Bavaria, upper Franconia,
+Baden, the Harz and elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>The following table shows the rapidly increasing development
+of the coal production. That of lignite is added, the provinces of
+Saxony and Brandenburg being rich in this product:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><i>Production of Coal and Lignite.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb" rowspan="2">Year.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="3">Coal.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="3">Lignite.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">Quantities.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Value.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Hands.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Quantities.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Value.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Hands.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">Mill. Tons.</td> <td class="tcr rb">Mill. Mks.</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">Mill. Tons.</td> <td class="tcr rb">Mill. Mks.</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1871</td> <td class="tcr rb">29.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">218.4</td> <td class="tcc rb">. .</td> <td class="tcr rb">8.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">26.2</td> <td class="tcc rb">. .</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1881</td> <td class="tcr rb">48.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">252.3</td> <td class="tcc rb">180,000</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">38.1</td> <td class="tcc rb">25,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1891</td> <td class="tcr rb">73.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">589.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">283,000</td> <td class="tcr rb">20.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">54.2</td> <td class="tcc rb">35,700</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1899</td> <td class="tcr rb">101.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">789.6</td> <td class="tcc rb">379,000</td> <td class="tcr rb">34.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">78.4</td> <td class="tcc rb">44,700</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1900</td> <td class="tcr rb">109.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">966.1</td> <td class="tcc rb">414,000</td> <td class="tcr rb">40.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">98.5</td> <td class="tcc rb">50,900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1905</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">121.2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">1049.9</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">490,000</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">52.5</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">122.2</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">52,800</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>This production permits a considerable export of coal to the west
+and south of the empire, but the distance from the coal-fields to
+the German coast is such that the import of British coal cannot yet
+be dispensed with (1905, over 7,000,000 tons). Besides this, from
+7,000,000 to 8,000,000 tons of lignite come annually from Bohemia.
+In north Germany peat is also of importance as a fuel; the area of
+the peat moors in Prussia is estimated at 8000 sq. m., of which 2000
+are in the north of Hanover.</p>
+
+<p>The iron-fields of Germany fall into three main groups: those of
+the lower Rhine and Westphalia, of which Dortmund and Düsseldorf
+are the centres; those of Lorraine and the Saar; and those of upper
+Silesia. The output of the ore has enormously increased of recent
+years, and the production of pig iron, as given for 1905, amounted
+to 10,875,000 tons of a value of Ł28,900,000.</p>
+
+<p>Germany possesses abundant salt deposits. The actual production
+not only covers the home consumption, but also allows a yearly
+increasing exportation, especially to Russia, Austria and Scandinavia.
+The provinces of Saxony and Hanover, with Thuringia and Anhalt,
+produce half the whole amount. A large salt-work is found at
+Strzalkowo (Posen), and smaller ones near Dortmund, Lippstadt
+and Minden (Westphalia). In south Germany salt abounds most
+in Württemberg (Hall, Heilbronn, Rottweil); the principal Bavarian
+works are at the foot of the Alps near Freilassing and Rosenheim.
+Hesse and Baden, Lorraine and the upper Palatinate have also salt-works.
+The total yield of mined salt amounted in 1905 to 6,209,000
+tons, including 1,165,000 tons of rock salt. The production has
+made great advance, having in 1850 been only 5 million cwts.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Manufactures.</i>&mdash;In no other country of the world has the
+manufacturing industry made such rapid strides within recent
+years as in Germany. This extraordinary development of
+industrial energy embraces practically all classes of manufactured
+articles. In a general way the chief manufactures may be
+geographically distributed as follows. Prussia, Alsace-Lorraine,
+Bavaria and Saxony are the chief seats of the iron manufacture.
+Steel is produced in Rhenish Prussia. Saxony is predominant
+in the production of textiles, though Silesia and Westphalia
+manufacture linen. Cotton goods are largely produced in
+Baden, Bavaria, Alsace-Lorraine and Württemberg, woollens
+and worsteds in Saxony and the Rhine province, silk in Rhenish
+Prussia (Elberfeld), Alsace and Baden. Glass and porcelain
+are largely produced in Bavaria; lace in Saxony; tobacco
+in Bremen and Hamburg; chemicals in the Prussian province
+of Saxony; watches in Saxony (Glashütte) and Nuremberg;
+toys in Bavaria; gold and silver filagree in Berlin and Aschaffenburg;
+and beer in Bavaria and Prussia.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>It is perhaps more in respect of its iron industry than of its other
+manufactures that Germany has attained a leading position in the
+markets of the world. Its chief centres are in Westphalia
+and the Rhine province (<i>auf roter Erde</i>), in upper Silesia,
+<span class="sidenote">Iron industry.</span>
+in Alsace-Lorraine and in Saxony. Of the total production
+of pig iron in 1905 amounting to over 10,000,000 tons, more than the
+half was produced in the Rhineland and Westphalia. Huge blast
+furnaces are in constant activity, and the output of rolled iron and
+steel is constantly increasing. In the latter the greatest advance
+has been made. The greater part of it is produced at or
+around Essen, where are the famous Krupp works, and Bochum.
+Many states have been for a considerable time supplied by Krupp
+with steel guns and battleship plates. The export of steel (railway)
+rails and bridges from this part is steadily on the increase.</p>
+
+<p>Hardware also, the production of which is centred in Solingen,
+Heilbronn, Esslingen, &amp;c., is largely exported. Germany stands
+second to Great Britain in the manufacture of machines and engines.
+There are in many large cities of north Germany extensive establishments
+for this purpose, but the industry is not limited to the large
+cities. In agricultural machinery Germany is a serious competitor
+with England. The locomotives and wagons for the German railways
+are almost exclusively built in Germany; and Russia, as well as
+Austria, receives large supplies of railway plant from German works.
+In shipbuilding, likewise, Germany is practically independent,
+yards having been established for the construction of the largest
+vessels.</p>
+
+<p>Before 1871 the production of cotton fabrics in France
+exceeded that in Germany, but as the cotton manufacture
+is pursued largely in Alsace, the balance is now
+against the former country. In 1905 there
+<span class="sidenote">Cotton and textiles.</span>
+were about 9,000,000 spindles in Germany. The
+export of the goods manufactured amounted in
+this year to an estimated value of Ł19,600,000. Cotton
+spinning and weaving are not confined to one district, but
+are prosecuted in upper Alsace (Mülhausen, Gebweiler,
+Colmar), in Saxony (Zwickau, Chemnitz, Annaberg), in
+Silesia (Breslau, Liegnitz), in the Rhine province (Düsseldorf,
+Münster, Cologne), in Erfurt and Hanover, in
+Württemberg (Reutlingen, Cannstatt), in Baden, Bavaria
+(Augsburg, Bamberg, Bayreuth) and in the Palatinate.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page812" id="page812"></a>812</span></p>
+
+<p>Although Germany produces wool, flax and hemp, the home production
+of these materials is not sufficient to meet the demand of
+manufactures, and large quantities of them have to be imported.
+In 1895 almost a million persons (half of them women) were employed
+in this branch of industry, and in 1897 the value of the cloth, buckskin
+and flannel manufacture was estimated at Ł18,000,000. The chief
+seats of this manufacture are the Rhenish districts of Aix-la-Chapelle,
+Düren, Eupen and Lennep, Brandenburg, Saxony, Silesia and lower
+Lusatia, the chief centres in this group being Berlin, Cottbus, Spremberg,
+Sagan and Sommerfeld.</p>
+
+<p>The manufacture of woollen and half-woollen dress materials
+centres mainly in Saxony, Silesia, the Rhine province and in Alsace.
+Furniture covers, table covers and plush are made in Elberfeld and
+Chemnitz, in Westphalia and the Rhine province (notably in Elberfeld
+and Barmen); shawls in Berlin and the Bavarian Vogtland;
+carpets in Berlin, Barmen and Silesia. In the town of Schmiedeberg
+in the last district, as also in Cottbus (Lusatia), oriental patterns are
+successfully imitated. The chief seats of the stocking manufacture
+are Chemnitz and Zwickau in Saxony, and Apolda in Thuringia.
+The export of woollen goods from Germany in 1905 amounted to
+a value of Ł13,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>Although linen was formerly one of her most important articles of
+manufacture, Germany is now left far behind in this industry by
+Great Britain, France and Austria-Hungary. This branch of textile
+manufacture has its principal centres in Silesia, Westphalia, Saxony
+and Württemberg, while Hirschberg in Silesia, Bielefeld in Westphalia
+and Zittau in Saxony are noted for the excellence of their productions.
+The goods manufactured, now no longer, as formerly, coarse in texture,
+vie with the finer and more delicate fabrics of Belfast. In the
+textile industry for flax and hemp there were, in 1905, 276,000 fine
+spindles, 22,300 hand-looms and 17,600 power-looms in operation,
+and, in 1905, linen and jute materials were exported of an estimated
+value of over Ł2,000,000. The jute manufacture, the principal
+centres of which are Berlin, Bonn, Brunswick and Hamburg, has of
+late attained considerable dimensions.</p>
+
+<p>Raw silk can scarcely be reckoned among the products of the
+empire, and the annual demand has thus to be provided for by
+importation. The main centre of the silk industry is Crefeld and its
+neighbourhood; then come Elberfeld and Barmen, Aix-la-Chapelle,
+as well as Berlin, Bielefeld, Chemnitz, Stuttgart and the district
+around Mülhausen in Alsace.</p>
+
+<p>The manufacture of paper is prosecuted almost everywhere in the
+empire. There were 1020 mills in operation in 1895, and the exports
+in 1905 amounted to more than Ł3,700,000 sterling, as
+<span class="sidenote">Paper.</span>
+against imports of a value of over Ł700,000. The manufacture
+is carried on to the largest extent in the Rhine province, in
+Saxony and in Silesia. Wall papers are produced chiefly in Rhenish
+Prussia, Berlin and Hamburg; the finer sorts of letter-paper in
+Berlin, Leipzig and Nuremberg; and printing-paper (especially for
+books) in Leipzig, Berlin and Frankfort-on-Main.</p>
+
+<p>The chief seat of the leather industry is Hesse-Darmstadt, in
+which Mainz and Worms produce excellent material. In Prussia
+large factories are in operation in the Rhine province, in
+<span class="sidenote">Leather.</span>
+Westphalia and Silesia (Brieg). Boot and shoe manufactures
+are carried on everywhere; but the best goods are produced
+by Mainz and Pirmasens. Gloves for export are extensively made in
+Württemberg, and Offenbach and Aschaffenburg are renowned for
+fancy leather wares, such as purses, satchels and the like.</p>
+
+<p>Berlin and Mainz are celebrated for the manufacture of furniture;
+Bavaria for toys; the Black Forest for clocks; Nuremberg for
+pencils; Berlin and Frankfort-on-Main for various perfumes; and
+Cologne for the famous eau-de-Cologne.</p>
+
+<p>The beetroot sugar manufacture is very considerable. It centres
+mainly in the Prussian province of Saxony, where Magdeburg is the
+<span class="sidenote">Sugar.</span>
+chief market for the whole of Germany, in Anhalt, Brunswick
+and Silesia. The number of factories was, in 1905,
+376, and the amount of raw sugar and molasses produced amounted
+to 2,643,531 metric tons, and of refined sugar 1,711,063 tons.</p>
+
+<p>Beer is produced throughout the whole of Germany. The production
+is relatively greatest in Bavaria. The <i>Brausteuergebiet</i>
+(beer excise district) embraces all the states forming the
+Zollverein, with the exception of Bavaria, Württemberg,
+Baden and Alsace-Lorraine, in which countries the excise duties are
+<span class="sidenote">Beer.</span>
+separately collected. The total number of breweries in the beer
+excise district was, in 1905-1906, 5995, which produced 1017 million
+gallons; in Bavaria nearly 6000 breweries with 392 million gallons;
+in Baden over 700 breweries with 68 million gallons; in Württemberg
+over 5000 breweries with 87 million gallons; and in Alsace-Lorraine
+95 breweries with about 29 million gallons. The amount
+brewed per head of the population amounted, in 1905, roughly to
+160 imperial pints in the excise district; to 450 in Bavaria; 280 in
+Württemberg; 260 in Baden; and 122 in Alsace-Lorraine. It may
+be remarked that the beer brewed in Bavaria is generally of darker
+colour than that produced in other states, and extra strong brews
+are exported largely into the beer excise district and abroad.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Commerce.</i>&mdash;The rapid development of German trade dates
+from the <i>Zollverein</i> (customs union), under the special rules
+and regulations of which it is administered. The Zollverein
+emanates from a convention originally entered into, in 1828,
+between Prussia and Hesse, which, subsequently joined by the
+Bavarian customs-league, by the kingdom of Saxony and the
+Thuringian states, came into operation, as regards the countries
+concerned, on the 1st of January 1834. With progressive
+territorial extensions during the ensuing fifty years, and embracing
+the grand-duchy of Luxemburg, it had in 1871, when the
+German empire was founded, an area of about 209,281 sq. m.,
+with a population of 40,678,000. The last important addition
+was in October 1888, when Hamburg and Bremen were incorporated.
+Included within it, besides the grand-duchy of
+Luxemburg, are the Austrian communes of Jungholz and
+Mittelberg; while, outside, lie the little free-port territories
+of Hamburg, Cuxhaven, Bremerhaven and Geestemünde,
+Heligoland, and small portions of the districts of Constance
+and Waldshut, lying on the Baden Swiss frontier. Down to
+1879 Germany was, in general, a free-trade country. In this
+year, however, a rigid protective system was introduced by the
+<i>Zolltarifgesetz</i>, since modified by the commercial treaties between
+Germany and Austria-Hungary, Italy, Switzerland and Belgium,
+of the 1st of February 1892, and by a customs tariff law of the
+25th of December 1902. The foreign commercial relations
+of Germany were again altered by the general and conventional
+customs tariff, which came into force on the 1st of March 1906.
+The Zolltarifgesetz of the 15th of July 1879, while restricting
+the former free import, imposed considerable duties. Exempt
+from duty were now only refuse, raw products, scientific instruments,
+ships and literary and artistic objects; forty-four articles&mdash;notably
+beer, vinegar, sugar, herrings, cocoa, salt, fish oils,
+ether, alum and soda&mdash;were unaffected by the change, while
+duties were henceforth levied upon a large number of articles
+which had previously been admitted duty free, such as pig iron,
+machines and locomotives, grain, building timber, tallow, horses,
+cattle and sheep; and, again, the tariff law further increased
+the duties leviable upon numerous other articles. Export duties
+were abolished in 1865 and transit dues in 1861. The law under
+which Great Britain enjoyed the &ldquo;most favoured nation treatment&rdquo;
+expired on the 31st of December 1905, but its provisions
+were continued by the <i>Bundesrat</i> until further notice. The
+average value of each article is fixed annually in Germany under
+the direction of the Imperial Statistical Office, by a commission
+of experts, who receive information from chambers of commerce
+and other sources. There are separate valuations for imports
+and exports. The price fixed is that of the goods at the moment
+of crossing the frontier. For imports the price does not include
+customs duties, cost of transport, insurance, warehousing, &amp;c.,
+incurred after the frontier is passed. For exports, the price
+includes all charges within the territory, but drawbacks and
+bounties are not taken into account. The quantities are determined
+according to obligatory declarations, and, for imports,
+the fiscal authorities may actually weigh the goods. For
+packages an official tax is deducted. The countries whence
+goods are imported and the ultimate destination of exports are
+registered. The import dues amounted in the year 1906, the
+first year of the revised tariff, to about Ł31,639,000, or about
+10s. 5d. per head of population.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Statistics relating to the foreign trade of the Empire are necessarily
+confined to comparatively recent times. The quantities of such
+imported articles as are liable to duty have, indeed, been known
+for many years; and in 1872 official tables were compiled showing
+the value both of imports and of exports. But when the results
+of these tables proved the importation to be very much greater
+than the exportation, the conviction arose that the valuation of the
+exports was erroneous and below the reality. In 1872 the value of the
+imports was placed at Ł173,400,000 and that of the exports at
+Ł124,700,000. In 1905 the figures were&mdash;imports, Ł371,000,000,
+and exports, Ł292,000,000, including precious metals.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Table A following shows the classification of goods adopted
+before the tariff revision of 1906. From 1907 a new classification
+has been adopted, and the change thus introduced is so great
+that it is impossible to make any comparisons between the
+statistics of years subsequent to and preceding the year 1906.
+Table B shows imports and exports for 1907 and 1908 according
+to the new classification adopted.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page813" id="page813"></a>813</span></p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table A.</span>&mdash;<i>Classes of Imports and Exports, 1905.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc allb">Import.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Export.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Refuse</td> <td class="tcr rb">Ł6,866,250</td> <td class="tcr rb">Ł1,170,200</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Cotton and cottons</td> <td class="tcr rb">23,488,750</td> <td class="tcr rb">22,949,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Lead and by-products</td> <td class="tcr rb">996,300</td> <td class="tcr rb">979,400</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Brush and sieve makers&rsquo; goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">102,400</td> <td class="tcr rb">515,450</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Drugs, chemists&rsquo; and oilmen&rsquo;s colours</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,896,900</td> <td class="tcr rb">23,196,250</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Iron and iron goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,156,500</td> <td class="tcr rb">33,126,400</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Ores, precious metals, asbestos, &amp;c.</td> <td class="tcr rb">28,834,050</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,899,450</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Flax and other vegetable spinning</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb"> &emsp;materials except cotton</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,794,100</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,235,700</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Grain and agricultural produce</td> <td class="tcr rb">59,136,200</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,496,500</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Glass</td> <td class="tcr rb">538,050</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,743,900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Hair, feathers, bristles</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,218,600</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,848,150</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Skins</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,965,500</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,548,450</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Wood and wooden wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">16,940,850</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,056,150</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Hops</td> <td class="tcr rb">913,150</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,135,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Instruments, machines, &amp;c.</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,351,500</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,898,250</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Calendars</td> <td class="tcr rb">34,300</td> <td class="tcr rb">74,700</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Caoutchouc, &amp;c.</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,379,600</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,616,400</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Clothes, body linen, millinery</td> <td class="tcr rb">739,900</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,321,050</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Copper and copper goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,273,400</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,307,050</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Hardware, &amp;c.</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,042,400</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,610,550</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Leather and leather goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,567,950</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,665,300</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Linens</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,750,100</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,904,950</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Candles</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,150</td> <td class="tcr rb">42,350</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Literary and works of art</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,066,050</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,025,500</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Groceries and confectionery</td> <td class="tcr rb">41,446,400</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,585,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Fats and oils</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,510,600</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,631,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Paper goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,086,800</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,158,800</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Furs</td> <td class="tcr rb">265,700</td> <td class="tcr rb">720,200</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Petroleum</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,036,600</td> <td class="tcr rb">132,300</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Silks and silk goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,523,300</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,889,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Soap and perfumes</td> <td class="tcr rb">151,600</td> <td class="tcr rb">768,200</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Playing cards</td> <td class="tcr rb">400</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,950</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Stone goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,822,000</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,110,550</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Coal, lignite, coke and peat</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,136,800</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,096,450</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Straw and hemp goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">561,650</td> <td class="tcr rb">262,100</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Tar, pitch, resin</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,504,400</td> <td class="tcr rb">834,100</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Animals, and animal products</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,926,200</td> <td class="tcr rb">590,700</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Earthenware goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">391,650</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,076,350</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Cattle</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,366,200</td> <td class="tcr rb">725,100</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Oilcloth</td> <td class="tcr rb">43,150</td> <td class="tcr rb">177,300</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Wools and woollen textiles</td> <td class="tcr rb">25,290,200</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,562,900</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Zinc and zinc goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">682,250</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,413,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Tin and japanned goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,770,550</td> <td class="tcr rb">744,100</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Goods insufficiently declared</td> <td class="tcc rb">. .</td> <td class="tcr rb">806,300</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">Total.</td> <td class="tcr allb">Ł352,317,250</td> <td class="tcr allb">Ł284,626,900</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><span class="sc">Table B.</span>&mdash;<i>Classes of Imports and Exports, 1907 and 1908.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws f90" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="3">Groups of Articles.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">Imports.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">Exports.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">Value in Ł1000.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">Value in Ł1000.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">1907.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1908.*</td> <td class="tcc allb">1907.</td> <td class="tcc allb">1908.*</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Agricultural and forest produce**</td> <td class="tcr rb">215,532</td> <td class="tcr rb">205,512</td> <td class="tcr rb">45,796</td> <td class="tcr rb">50,324</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Agricultural produce***</td> <td class="tcr rb">93,253</td> <td class="tcr rb">102,954</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,369</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,168</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Colonial produce and substitutes for the same</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,151</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,328</td> <td class="tcr rb">84</td> <td class="tcr rb">108</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Southern fruit and fruit peel</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,214</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,262</td> <td class="tcr rb">20</td> <td class="tcr rb">23</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Forest produce</td> <td class="tcr rb">28,166</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,299</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,066</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,967</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Resins</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,216</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,209</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,500</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,325</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Animals and animal products**</td> <td class="tcr rb">63,283</td> <td class="tcr rb">61,794</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,607</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,676</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Hides and skins</td> <td class="tcr rb">16,920</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,699</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,383</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,453</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Meat, oil, sugar, beverages</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,523</td> <td class="tcr rb">20,404</td> <td class="tcr rb">20,284</td> <td class="tcr rb">20,048</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Mineral and fossil raw materials, mineral oils</td> <td class="tcr rb">47,575</td> <td class="tcr rb">45,540</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,166</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,208</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Earths and stones</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,541</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,542</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,250</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,006</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Ores, slag, cinders</td> <td class="tcr rb">16,465</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,451</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,407</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,206</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Mineral fuel</td> <td class="tcr rb">16,895</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,910</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,445</td> <td class="tcr rb">20,020</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Mineral oils and other fossil raw materials</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,168</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,209</td> <td class="tcr rb">558</td> <td class="tcr rb">491</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Coal-tar, coal-tar oils</td> <td class="tcr rb">506</td> <td class="tcr rb">428</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,506</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,485</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Chemical and pharmaceutical products, colours</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,784</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,850</td> <td class="tcr rb">28,116</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,845</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Chemical primary materials, acids, salts</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,226</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,550</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,661</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,832</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Colours and dyeing materials</td> <td class="tcr rb">951</td> <td class="tcr rb">879</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,630</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,518</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Varnish, lacquer</td> <td class="tcr rb">189</td> <td class="tcr rb">158</td> <td class="tcr rb">206</td> <td class="tcr rb">221</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Ether, alcohol not included elsewhere,</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;essential oils, perfumery and cosmetics</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,979</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,918</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,118</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,004</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Artificial manures</td> <td class="tcr rb">992</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,001</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,303</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,236</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Explosives of all kinds</td> <td class="tcr rb">86</td> <td class="tcr rb">74</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,612</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,269</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Other chemical and pharmaceutical products</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,361</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,270</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,586</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,765</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Animal and vegetable textile</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;materials and wares thereof</td> <td class="tcr rb">98,540</td> <td class="tcr rb">92,105</td> <td class="tcr rb">78,086</td> <td class="tcr rb">70,343</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Silk and silk goods</td> <td class="tcr rb">13,533</td> <td class="tcr rb">13,704</td> <td class="tcr rb">13,324</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,364</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Wool</td> <td class="tcr rb">33,260</td> <td class="tcr rb">31,195</td> <td class="tcr rb">27,114</td> <td class="tcr rb">24,918</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Unworked wool</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,975</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,309</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,647</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,561</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Worked wool</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,625</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,961</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,799</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,393</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Wares of spun wool</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,660</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,925</td> <td class="tcr rb">20,668</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,964</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Cotton</td> <td class="tcr rb">38,543</td> <td class="tcr rb">34,456</td> <td class="tcr rb">29,004</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,201</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Unworked cotton</td> <td class="tcr rb">27,705</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,167</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,264</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,987</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Worked cotton</td> <td class="tcr rb">980</td> <td class="tcr rb">950</td> <td class="tcr rb">912</td> <td class="tcr rb">891</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Cotton wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,858</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,338</td> <td class="tcr rb">24,828</td> <td class="tcr rb">22,324</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Other vegetable textile materials</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,783</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,411</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,777</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,471</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Unworked</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,923</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,819</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,125</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,211</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Worked</td> <td class="tcr rb">166</td> <td class="tcr rb">168</td> <td class="tcr rb">122</td> <td class="tcr rb">137</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Wares thereof</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,685</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,423</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,531</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,124</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Leather and leather wares, furriers&rsquo; wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,695</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,657</td> <td class="tcr rb">16,778</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,835</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Leather</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,658</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,804</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,503</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,328</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Leather wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,332</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,176</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,016</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,867</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Furriers&rsquo; wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,698</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,672</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,237</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,616</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Caoutchouc wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">694</td> <td class="tcr rb">754</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,328</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,325</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Wares of soft caoutchouc</td> <td class="tcr rb">670</td> <td class="tcr rb">735</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,694</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,723</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Hardened caoutchouc and wares thereof</td> <td class="tcr rb">24</td> <td class="tcr rb">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">634</td> <td class="tcr rb">602</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Wares of animal or vegetable material for</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;carving or moulding</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,448</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,068</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,260</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,131</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Wooden wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">859</td> <td class="tcr rb">769</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,707</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,666</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Paper, cardboard and wares thereof</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,349</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,205</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,342</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,111</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Books, pictures, paintings</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,992</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,036</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,667</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,765</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Earthenware</td> <td class="tcr rb">467</td> <td class="tcr rb">377</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,224</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,612</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Glass and glassware</td> <td class="tcr rb">747</td> <td class="tcr rb">728</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,671</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,149</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Precious metals and wares thereof</td> <td class="tcr rb">13,281</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,243</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,629</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,858</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Gold</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,616</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,295</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,898</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,151</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Gold</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,184</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,873</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,071</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,897</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Gold wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">432</td> <td class="tcr rb">422</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,827</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,254</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Silver</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,665</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,948</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,731</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,707</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Silver</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,434</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,716</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,206</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,418</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Silver wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">231</td> <td class="tcr rb">232</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,525</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,289</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Base metals and wares thereof</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,035</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,398</td> <td class="tcr rb">57,146</td> <td class="tcr rb">58,895</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Iron and iron wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,903</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,472</td> <td class="tcr rb">38,899</td> <td class="tcr rb">40,162</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Pig iron (including non-malleable alloys)</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,601</td> <td class="tcr rb">912</td> <td class="tcr rb">966</td> <td class="tcr rb">905</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Iron wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,302</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,560</td> <td class="tcr rb">37,933</td> <td class="tcr rb">39,257</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Aluminium and aluminium wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">546</td> <td class="tcr rb">453</td> <td class="tcr rb">368</td> <td class="tcr rb">273</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Raw aluminium</td> <td class="tcr rb">529</td> <td class="tcr rb">433</td> <td class="tcr rb">152</td> <td class="tcr rb">77</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Aluminium wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">20</td> <td class="tcr rb">216</td> <td class="tcr rb">196</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Lead and lead wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,438</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,484</td> <td class="tcr rb">945</td> <td class="tcr rb">985</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Raw lead (including waste)</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,427</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,470</td> <td class="tcr rb">525</td> <td class="tcr rb">568</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Lead wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">11</td> <td class="tcr rb">14</td> <td class="tcr rb">420</td> <td class="tcr rb">417</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Zinc and zinc wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">727</td> <td class="tcr rb">847</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,433</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,489</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Raw zinc (including waste)</td> <td class="tcr rb">706</td> <td class="tcr rb">825</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,631</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,784</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Zinc wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">21</td> <td class="tcr rb">22</td> <td class="tcr rb">802</td> <td class="tcr rb">705</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Tin and tin wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,405</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,629</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,380</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,236</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Raw tin (including waste)</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,357</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,581</td> <td class="tcr rb">787</td> <td class="tcr rb">688</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Tin wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">48</td> <td class="tcr rb">48</td> <td class="tcr rb">593</td> <td class="tcr rb">548</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Nickel and nickel wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">400</td> <td class="tcr rb">540</td> <td class="tcr rb">246</td> <td class="tcr rb">298</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Raw nickel</td> <td class="tcr rb">375</td> <td class="tcr rb">527</td> <td class="tcr rb">160</td> <td class="tcr rb">233<span class="pagenum"><a name="page814" id="page814"></a>814</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Nickel wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">25</td> <td class="tcr rb">13</td> <td class="tcr rb">86</td> <td class="tcr rb">65</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Copper and copper wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">13,803</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,088</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,998</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,470</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp; Raw copper (including copper coin, brass,</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;tombac, &amp;c.)</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,995</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,192</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,204</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,014</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;&emsp;Copper wares</td> <td class="tcr rb">808</td> <td class="tcr rb">896</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,794</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,456</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Instruments of precision</td> <td class="tcr rb">813</td> <td class="tcr rb">885</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,877</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,982</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Machinery, vehicles</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,093</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,489</td> <td class="tcr rb">33,117</td> <td class="tcr rb">34,653</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Machinery</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,090</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,451</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,041</td> <td class="tcr rb">20,684</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Electro-technical products</td> <td class="tcr rb">411</td> <td class="tcr rb">451</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,227</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,107</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Vehicles and vessels</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,562</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,587</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,849</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,862</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Firearms, clocks, musical instruments, toys</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,732</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,424</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,704</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,505</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Clocks and watches</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,382</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,134</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,296</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,210</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Musical instruments</td> <td class="tcr rb">223</td> <td class="tcr rb">170</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,176</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,780</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Toys</td> <td class="tcr rb">39</td> <td class="tcr rb">35</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,949</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,273</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">Total</td> <td class="tcr allb">442,663</td> <td class="tcr allb">429,636</td> <td class="tcr allb">349,114</td> <td class="tcr allb">336,347</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl f90" colspan="5">* Provisional figures only.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl f90" colspan="5">** Excluding vegetable and animal textile materials.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl f90" colspan="5">*** Excluding vegetable textile materials.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The following table shows the commercial intercourse in imports and exports, exclusive of bullion and coin, between Germany
+and the chief countries of the world in 1905, 1906 and 1907.</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><i>Imports.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Country.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">1905.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">1906.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">1907.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Value<br />in<br />Ł1000.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Percentage<br />of<br />Germany&rsquo;s<br />Total<br />Imports.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Value<br />in<br />Ł1000.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Percentage<br />of<br />Germany&rsquo;s<br />Total<br />Imports.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Value<br />in<br />Ł1000.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Percentage<br />of<br />Germany&rsquo;s<br />Total<br />Imports.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Belgium</td> <td class="tcr rb">13,439</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,315</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,586</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Denmark</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,986</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,302</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,050</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">France</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,772</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,306</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">22,302</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">United Kingdom</td> <td class="tcr rb">35,320</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">40,531</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">48,014</td> <td class="tcr rb">11.2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Italy</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,350</td> <td class="tcr rb">3 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,851</td> <td class="tcr rb">3 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,030</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Netherlands</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,077</td> <td class="tcr rb">3 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,864</td> <td class="tcr rb">3 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,187</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Austria-Hungary</td> <td class="tcr rb">36,974</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">39,814</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">39,939</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Rumania</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,568</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,774</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,365</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Russia</td> <td class="tcr rb">47,816</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">52,528</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">54,447</td> <td class="tcr rb">12.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Sweden</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,887</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,359</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,457</td> <td class="tcr rb">2 &ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Switzerland</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,980</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,659</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,366</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Spain</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,742</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,410</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,878</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">British South Africa</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,769</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,766</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,258</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Dominion of Canada</td> <td class="tcr rb">481</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">463</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">483</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">New Zealand</td> <td class="tcr rb">75</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcr rb">87</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td> <td class="tcr rb">94</td> <td class="tcc rb">..</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">British West Africa</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,562</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,731</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,601</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">British India</td> <td class="tcr rb">13,657</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,842</td> <td class="tcr rb">4 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">20,016</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Dutch Indies</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,848</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,002</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,199</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Argentine Republic</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,150</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,302</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,756</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Brazil</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,454</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,246</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,636</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Chile</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,536</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,131</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,074</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">United States</td> <td class="tcr rb">48,770</td> <td class="tcr rb">13.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">60,787</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">64,864</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Commonwealth of Australia</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">7,690</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2.2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">8,619</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2.2</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">11,209</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2.6</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><i>Exports.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Country.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">1905.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">1906.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">1907.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Value<br />in<br />Ł1000.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Percentage<br />of<br />Germany&rsquo;s<br />Total<br />Exports.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Value<br />in<br />Ł1000.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Percentage<br />of<br />Germany&rsquo;s<br />Total<br />Exports.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Value<br />in<br />Ł1000.</td>
+<td class="tccm allb">Percentage<br />of<br />Germany&rsquo;s<br />Total<br />Exports.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Belgium</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,364</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,509</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">16,861</td> <td class="tcr rb">5 &ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Denmark</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,668</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,699</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,182</td> <td class="tcr rb">3 &ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">France</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,420</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,815</td> <td class="tcr rb">6 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">22,080</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">United Kingdom</td> <td class="tcr rb">51,253</td> <td class="tcr rb">18.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">52,473</td> <td class="tcr rb">16.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">52,135</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Italy</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,045</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,354</td> <td class="tcr rb">3.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,893</td> <td class="tcr rb">4.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Netherlands</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,295</td> <td class="tcr rb">7.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,799</td> <td class="tcr rb">7 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">22,232</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Norway</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,447</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,573</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,211</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Austria-Hungary</td> <td class="tcr rb">28,526</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">31,926</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.2</td> <td class="tcr rb">35,231</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Rumania</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,144</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.8</td> <td class="tcr rb"> 3,140</td> <td class="tcr rb">1 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,372</td> <td class="tcr rb">1 &ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Russia</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,027</td> <td class="tcr rb">6 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,962</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,531</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Sweden</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,653</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,675</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.8</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,177</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.7</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Switzerland</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,649</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">18,367</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,948</td> <td class="tcr rb">6.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Spain</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,609</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,838</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.9</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,228</td> <td class="tcr rb">1 &ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">British South Africa</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,687</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,607</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,422</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Dominion of Canada</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,071</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,203</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,456</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">New Zealand</td> <td class="tcr rb">227</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">244</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">263</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Turkey</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,484</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,357</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,011</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">British India</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,226</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,011</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.6</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,868</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.4 </td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">China</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,727</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,331</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.1</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,105</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Japan</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,158</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,328</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,036</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Argentine Republic</td> <td class="tcr rb">6,463</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,367</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.7</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,810</td> <td class="tcr rb">2.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Brazil</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,525</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.3</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,364</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.4</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,118</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">United States</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,660</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.5</td> <td class="tcr rb">31,281</td> <td class="tcr rb">10 &ensp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">32,070</td> <td class="tcr rb">9.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Commonwealth of Australia</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2,264</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0.8</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">2,863</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0.9</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3,004</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0.9</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page815" id="page815"></a>815</span></p>
+
+<p>The commerce of Germany shows an upward tendency, which
+progresses <i>pari passu</i> with its greatly increased production. The
+export of ships from the United Kingdom to the empire decreased
+during two years, 1903 (Ł305,682) and 1904 (Ł365,062), almost to a
+vanishing point, German yards being able to cope with the demands
+made upon them for the supply of vessels of all classes, including
+mercantile vessels and ships of war. In 1905 and subsequent years,
+however, the degree of employment in German yards increased to
+such an extent, principally owing to the placing of the Admiralty
+contracts with private builders, that the more urgent orders for
+mercantile vessels were placed abroad.</p>
+
+<p>The following tables give the value of trade between the United
+Kingdom and Germany in 1900 and 1905:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Staple Imports into the United<br />Kingdom from Germany.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1900.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1905.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Ł</td> <td class="tcc rb">Ł</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Sugar</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,164,573</td> <td class="tcr rb">10,488,085</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Glass and manufactures</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,078,648</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,108,117</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Eggs</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,017,119</td> <td class="tcr rb">764,966</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Cottons and yarn</td> <td class="tcr rb">992,244</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,476,385</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Woollens and yarn</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,312,671</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,984,475</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Iron and steel and manufactures</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,012,376</td> <td class="tcr rb">379,479</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Machinery</td> <td class="tcr rb">411,178</td> <td class="tcr rb">735,536</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Paper</td> <td class="tcr rb">523,544</td> <td class="tcr rb">528,946</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Musical instruments</td> <td class="tcr rb">660,777</td> <td class="tcr rb">676,391</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Toys</td> <td class="tcr rb">644,690</td> <td class="tcr rb">714,628</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Zinc and manufactures</td> <td class="tcr rb">461,023</td> <td class="tcr rb">673,602</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Wood and manufactures</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,470,839</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,109,584</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Chemicals</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">513,200</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">735,830</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Principal Articles exported by<br />Great Britain to Germany.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1900.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1905.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">Ł</td> <td class="tcc rb">Ł</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Cottons and yarn</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,843,917</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,941,917</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Woollens and yarn</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,743,842</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,795,591</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Alpaca, &amp;c., yarn</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,022,259</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,325,519</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Wool</td> <td class="tcr rb">742,632</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,691,035</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Ironwork</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,937,055</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,500,414</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Herrings</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,651,441</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,042,483</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Machinery</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,040,797</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,102,835</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Coals, cinders</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,267,172</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,406,535</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">New ships</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">1,592,865</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">1,377,081</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Navigation.</i>&mdash;The seamen of Frisia are among the best in the
+world, and the shipping of Bremen and Hamburg had won a
+respected name long before a German mercantile marine,
+properly so called, was heard of. Many Hamburg vessels sailed
+under charter of English and other houses in foreign, especially
+Chinese, waters. Since 1868 all German ships have carried a
+common flag&mdash;black, white, red; but formerly Oldenburg,
+Hanover, Bremen, Hamburg, Lübeck, Mecklenburg and Prussia
+had each its own flag, and Schleswig-Holstein vessels sailed
+under the Danish flag. The German mercantile fleet occupies,
+in respect of the number of vessels, the fourth place&mdash;after
+Great Britain, the United States of America and Norway;
+but in respect of tonnage it stands third&mdash;after Great Britain
+and the United States only.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The following table shows its distribution on the 1st of January
+of the two years 1905 and 1908:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb" rowspan="2">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">Baltic Ports.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">North Sea Ports.</td> <td class="tcc allb" colspan="2">Total Shipping.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">Number.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Tonnage.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Number.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Tonnage.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Number.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Tonnage.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">1905&mdash;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Sailing vessels</td> <td class="tcc rb">386</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,067</td> <td class="tcc rb">2181</td> <td class="tcr rb">559,436</td> <td class="tcc rb">2567</td> <td class="tcr rb">578,503</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Steamers</td> <td class="tcc rb">486</td> <td class="tcr rb">236,509</td> <td class="tcc rb">1171</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,537,563</td> <td class="tcc rb">1657</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,774,072</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb tb">Totals</td> <td class="tcc allb">872</td> <td class="tcr allb">255,576</td> <td class="tcc allb">3352</td> <td class="tcr allb">2,096,999</td> <td class="tcc allb">4224</td> <td class="tcr allb">2,352,575</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">1908&mdash;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcc rb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Sailing vessels</td> <td class="tcc rb">394</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,472</td> <td class="tcc rb">2255</td> <td class="tcr rb">516,180</td> <td class="tcc rb">2649</td> <td class="tcr rb">533,652</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&emsp;Steamers</td> <td class="tcc rb">521</td> <td class="tcr rb">274,952</td> <td class="tcc rb">140l</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,981,831</td> <td class="tcc rb">1922</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,256,783</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcr lb rb bb">Totals</td> <td class="tcc allb">915</td> <td class="tcr allb">292,424</td> <td class="tcc allb">3656</td> <td class="tcr allb">2,498,011</td> <td class="tcc allb">4571</td> <td class="tcr allb">2,790,435</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>In 1905, 2136 vessels of 283,171 tons, and in 1908, 2218 vessels of
+284,081 tons, belonged to Prussian ports, and the number of sailors
+of the mercantile marine was 60,616 in 1905 and 71,853 in 1908.</p>
+
+<p>The chief ports are Hamburg, Stettin, Bremen, Kiel, Lübeck,
+Flensburg, Bremerhaven, Danzig (Neufahrwasser), Geestemünde
+and Emden; and the number and tonnage of vessels of foreign
+nationality entering and clearing the ports of the empire, as compared
+with national shipping, were in 1906:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Foreign Ships.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Number<br />entered<br />in Cargo.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Tonnage.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Number<br />cleared<br />in Cargo.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Tonnage.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Danish</td> <td class="tcr rb">5917</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,589,346</td> <td class="tcr rb">5059</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,219,388</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">British</td> <td class="tcr rb">5327</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,129,017</td> <td class="tcr rb">3211</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,552,268</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Swedish</td> <td class="tcr rb">4891</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,164,431</td> <td class="tcr rb">3317</td> <td class="tcr rb">747,656</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Dutch</td> <td class="tcr rb">2181</td> <td class="tcr rb">458,401</td> <td class="tcr rb">1973</td> <td class="tcr rb">316,562</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Norwegian</td> <td class="tcr rb">1565</td> <td class="tcr rb">817,483</td> <td class="tcr rb">720</td> <td class="tcr rb">347,811</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Russian</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">720</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">250,564</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">439</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">143,983</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The ports of Hamburg and Bremen, which are the chief outlets for
+emigration to the United States of America, carry on a vast commercial
+trade with all the chief countries of the world, and are the
+main gates of maritime intercourse between the United Kingdom
+and Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The inland navigation is served by nearly 25,000 river, canal and
+coasting vessels, of a tonnage of about 4,000,000.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Railways.</i>&mdash;The period of railway construction was inaugurated
+in Germany by the opening of the line (4 m. in length) from
+Nuremberg to Fürth in 1835, followed by the main line (71 m.)
+between Leipzig and Dresden, opened throughout in 1839.
+The development of the railway system was slow and was not
+conceived on any uniform plan. The want of a central government
+operated injuriously, for it often happened that intricate
+negotiations and solemn treaties between several sovereign
+states were required before a line could be constructed; and,
+moreover, the course it was to take was often determined less
+by the general exigencies of commerce than by many trifling
+interests or desires of neighbouring states. The state which
+was most self-seeking in its railway politics was Hanover, which
+separated the eastern and western parts of the kingdom of
+Prussia. The difficulties arising to Prussia from this source
+were experienced in a still greater degree by the seaports of
+Bremen and Hamburg, which were severely hampered by the
+particularism displayed by Hanover.</p>
+
+<p>The making of railways was from the outset regarded by
+some German states as exclusively a function of the government.
+The South German states, for example, have only possessed state
+railways. In Prussia numerous private companies, in the first
+instance, constructed their systems, and the state contented
+itself for the most part with laying lines in such districts only
+as were not likely to attract private capital.</p>
+
+<p>The development of the German railway system falls conveniently
+into four periods. The first, down in 1840, embraces
+the beginnings of railway enterprise. The next, down to 1848,
+shows the linking-up of various existing lines and the establishment
+of inter-connexion between the chief towns. The third,
+down to 1881, shows the gradual establishment of state control
+in Prussia, and the formation of direct trunk lines. The
+fourth begins from 1881 with the purchase of practically all
+the railways in Prussia by the government, and the introduction
+of a uniform system of interworking between the various
+state systems. The purchase of the railways
+by the Prussian government was on the whole
+equably carried out, but there were several
+hard cases in the expropriation of some of
+the smaller private lines.</p>
+
+<p>The majority of the German railways are
+now owned by the state governments. Out of
+34,470 m. of railway completed and open for
+traffic in 1906, only 2579 m. were the property
+of private undertakings, and of these about
+150 were worked by the state. The bulk of the
+railways are of the normal 4 ft. 8˝ in. gauge.
+Narrow-gauge (2˝ ft.) lines&mdash;or light railways&mdash;extended
+over 1218 m. in 1903, and of these
+537 m. were worked by the state.</p>
+
+<p>The board responsible for the imperial control over the
+whole railway system in Germany is the <i>Reichseisenbahnamt</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page816" id="page816"></a>816</span>
+in Berlin, the administration of the various state systems residing,
+in Prussia, in the ministry of public works; in Bavaria in the
+ministry of the royal house and of the exterior; in Württemberg
+in the ministry of the exterior; in Saxony in the ministry of
+the interior; in Baden and Hesse-Darmstadt in commissions of
+the ministry of finance; and in Alsace-Lorraine in the imperial
+ministry of railways.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The management of the Prussian railway system is committed
+to the charge of twenty &ldquo;directions,&rdquo; into which the whole network
+of lines is divided, being those of Altona, Berlin, Breslau, Bromberg,
+Danzig, Elberfeld, Erfurt, Essen a.d. Ruhr, Frankfort-on-Main,
+Halle a.d. Saale, Hanover, Cassel, Kattowitz, Cologne, Königsberg,
+Magdeburg, Münster, Posen, Saarbrücken and Stettin. The entire
+length of the system was in 1906 20,835 m., giving an average of about
+950 m. to each &ldquo;direction.&rdquo; The smallest mileage controlled by a
+&ldquo;direction&rdquo; is Berlin, with 380 m., and the greatest, Königsberg,
+with 1200 m.</p>
+
+<p>The Bavarian system embraces 4642 m., and is controlled and
+managed, apart from the &ldquo;general direction&rdquo; in Munich, by ten
+traffic boards, in Augsburg, Bamberg, Ingolstadt, Kempten, Munich,
+Nuremberg, Regensburg, Rosenheim, Weiden and Würzburg.</p>
+
+<p>The system of the kingdom of Saxony has a length of 1616 m., and
+is controlled by the general direction in Dresden.</p>
+
+<p>The length of the Württemberg system is 1141 m., and is managed
+by a general direction in Stuttgart.</p>
+
+<p>Baden (state) controls 1233, Oldenburg (state) 382,
+Mecklenburg-Schwerin
+726 and Saxe-Weimar 257 m. respectively. Railways
+lying within the other smaller states are mostly worked by
+Prussia.</p>
+
+<p>Alsace-Lorraine has a separate system of 1085 m., which is worked
+by the imperial general direction in Strassburg.</p>
+
+<p>By the linking-up of the various state systems several grand trunk
+line routes have been developed&mdash;notably the lines
+Berlin-Vienna-Budapest;
+Berlin-Cologne-Brussels and Paris;
+Berlin-Halle-Frankfort-on-Main-Basel;
+Hamburg-Cassel-Munich and Verona;
+and Breslau-Dresden-Bamberg-Geneva. Until 1907 no uniform
+system of passenger rates had been adopted, each state retaining
+its own fares&mdash;a condition that led to much confusion. From the
+1st of May 1907 the following tariff came into force. For ordinary
+trains the rate for first class was fixed at 1źd. a mile; for second
+class at .7d.; for third class at ˝d., and for fourth class at źd. a mile.
+For express trains an extra charge is made of 2s. for distances
+exceeding 93 m. (150 kils.) in the two superior classes, and 1s. for a
+lesser distance, and of 1s. and 6d. respectively in the case of third
+class tickets. Fourth class passengers are not conveyed by express
+trains. The above rates include government duty; but the privilege
+of free luggage (as up to 56 &#8468;) has been withdrawn, and all luggage
+other than hand baggage taken into the carriages is charged for.
+In 1903 371,084,000 metric tons of goods, including animals, were
+conveyed by the German railways, yielding Ł68,085,000 sterling,
+and the number of passengers carried was 957,684,000, yielding
+Ł29,300,000.</p>
+
+<p>The passenger ports of Germany affording oversea communications
+to distant lands are mainly those of Bremen (Bremerhaven) and
+Hamburg (Cuxhaven) both of which are situate on the North Sea.
+From them great steamship lines, notably the North German Lloyd,
+the Hamburg-American, the Hamburg South American and the
+German East African steamship companies, maintain express mail
+and other services with North and South America, Australia, the
+Cape of Good Hope and the Far East. London and other English
+ports, French, Italian and Levant coast towns are also served by
+passenger steamboat sailings from the two great North Sea ports.
+The Baltic ports, such as Lübeck, Stettin, Danzig (Neufahrwasser)
+and Königsberg, principally provide communication with the coast
+towns of the adjacent countries, Russia and Sweden.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Waterways.</i>&mdash;In Germany the waterways are almost solely
+in the possession of the state. Of ship canals the chief is the
+Kaiser Wilhelm canal (1887-1895), 61 m. long, connecting the
+North Sea and the Baltic; it was made with a breadth at
+bottom of 72 ft. and at the surface of 213 ft., and with a depth
+of 29 ft. 6 in., but in 1908 work was begun for doubling the bottom
+width and increasing the depth to 36 ft. In respect of internal
+navigation, the principal of the greater undertakings are the
+Dortmund-Ems and the Elbe-Trave canals. The former, constructed
+in 1892-1899, has a length of 150 m. and a mean depth
+of 8 ft. The latter, constructed 1895-1900, has a length of 43 m.
+and a mean depth of about 7˝ ft. A project was sanctioned in
+1905 for a canal, adapted for vessels up to 600 tons, from the
+Rhine to the Weser at Hanover, utilizing a portion of the Dortmund-Ems
+canal; for a channel accommodating vessels of similar
+size between Berlin and Stettin; for improving the waterway
+between the Oder and the Vistula, so as to render it capable
+of accommodating vessels of 400 tons; and for the canalization
+of the upper Oder.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>On the whole, Germany cannot be said to be rich in canals. In
+South Germany the Ludwigs canal was, until the annexation of
+Alsace-Lorraine, the only one of importance. It was constructed by
+King Louis I. of Bavaria in order to unite the German Ocean and the
+Black Sea, and extends from the Main at Bamberg to Kelheim on
+the Danube. Alsace-Lorraine had canals for connecting the Rhine
+with the Rhone and the Marne, a branch serving the collieries of the
+Saar valley. The North German plain has, in the east, a canal
+by which Russian grain is conveyed to Königsberg, joining the
+Pregel to the Memel, and the upper Silesian coalfield is in communication
+with the Oder by means of the Klodnitz canal. The
+greatest number of canals is found around Berlin; they serve to
+join the Spree to the Oder and Elbe, and include the Teltow canal
+opened in 1906. The canals in Germany (including ship canals
+through lakes) have a total length of about 2600 m. Navigable
+and canalized rivers, to which belong the great water-systems of
+the Rhine, Elbe and Oder, have a total length of about 6000 m.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Roads.</i>&mdash;The construction of good highways has been well
+attended to in Germany only since the Napoleonic wars. The
+separation of the empire into small states was favourable to
+road-making, inasmuch as it was principally the smaller governments
+that expended large sums for their network of roads.
+Hanover and Thuringia have long been distinguished for the
+excellence of their roads, but some districts suffer even still
+from the want of good highways. The introduction of railways
+for a time diverted attention from road-making, but this neglect
+has of late been to some extent remedied. In Prussia the districts
+(<i>Kreise</i>) have undertaken the charge of the construction of the
+roads; but they receive a subsidy from the public funds of the
+several provinces. Turnpikes were abolished in Prussia in 1874
+and in Saxony in 1885. The total length of the public roads is
+estimated at 80,000 m.</p>
+
+<p><i>Posts and Telegraphs.</i>&mdash;With the exception of Bavaria and
+Württemberg, which have administrations of their own, all the
+German states belong to the imperial postal district (<i>Reichspostgebiet</i>).
+Since 1874 the postal and telegraphic departments
+have been combined. Both branches of administration have
+undergone a surprising development, especially since the reduction
+of the postal rates. Germany, including Bavaria and
+Württemberg, constitutes with Austria-Hungary a special postal
+union (Deutsch-Österreichischer Postverband), besides forming
+part of the international postal union. There are no statistics
+of posts and telegraphs before 1867, for it was only when the
+North German union was formed that the lesser states resigned
+their right of carrying mails in favour of the central authority.
+Formerly the prince of Thurn-and-Taxis was postmaster-general
+of Germany, but only some of the central states belonged to his
+postal territory. The seat of management was Frankfort-on-Main.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The following table shows the growth in the number of post
+offices for the whole empire:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">Year.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Post Offices.</td> <td class="tcc allb">Men employed.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1872</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,518</td> <td class="tcc rb">. .</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1880</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,460</td> <td class="tcc rb">. .</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1890</td> <td class="tcr rb">24,952</td> <td class="tcc rb">128,687</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1899</td> <td class="tcr rb">36,388</td> <td class="tcc rb">206,945</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1904</td> <td class="tcr rb">38,658</td> <td class="tcc rb">261,985</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1907</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">40,083</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">319,026</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>In 1872 there were 2359 telegraph offices; in 1880, 9980; in 1890,
+17,200; and in 1907, 37,309. There were 188 places provided with
+telephone service in 1888, and 13,175 in 1899. The postal receipts
+amounted for the whole empire in 1907 to Ł33,789,460, and the expenditure
+to Ł31,096,944, thus showing a surplus of Ł2,692,516.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Constitution.</i>&mdash;The constitution of the German empire is, in
+all essentials, that of the North German Confederation, which
+came into force on the 7th of June 1867. Under this the presidency
+(<i>Praesidium</i>) of the confederation was vested in the
+king of Prussia and his heirs. As a result of the Franco-German
+war of 1870 the South German states joined the confederation;
+on the 9th of December 1870 the diet of the confederation
+accepted the treaties and gave to the new confederation the
+name of German Empire (<i>Deutsche Reich</i>), and on the 18th of
+January 1871 the king of Prussia was proclaimed German
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page817" id="page817"></a>817</span>
+emperor (<i>Deutscher Kaiser</i>) at Versailles. This was a change of
+style, not of functions and powers. The title is &ldquo;German emperor,&rdquo;
+not &ldquo;emperor of Germany,&rdquo; being intended to show
+that the Kaiser is but <i>primus inter pares</i> in a confederation of
+territorial sovereigns; his authority as territorial sovereign
+(<i>Landesherr</i>) extends over Prussia, not over Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The imperial dignity is hereditary in the line of Hohenzollern,
+and follows the law of primogeniture. The emperor exercises
+the imperial power in the name of the confederated states. In
+his office he is assisted by a federal council (<i>Bundesrat</i>), which
+represents the governments of the individual states of Germany.
+The members of this council, 58 in number, are appointed for
+each session by the governments of the individual states. The
+legislative functions of the empire are vested in the emperor, the
+Bundesrat, and the Reichstag or imperial Diet. The members
+of the latter, 397 in number, are elected for a space of five years
+by universal suffrage. Vote is by ballot, and one member is
+elected by (approximately) every 150,000 inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p>As regards its legislative functions, the empire has supreme
+and independent control in matters relating to military affairs
+and the navy, to the imperial finances, to German commerce,
+to posts and telegraphs, and also to railways, in so far as these
+affect the common defence of the country. Bavaria and Württemberg,
+however, have preserved their own postal and telegraphic
+administration. The legislative power of the empire also takes
+precedence of that of the separate states in the regulation of
+matters affecting freedom of migration (<i>Freizügigkeit</i>), domicile,
+settlement and the rights of German subjects generally, as well
+as in all that relates to banking, patents, protection of intellectual
+property, navigation of rivers and canals, civil and criminal
+legislation, judicial procedure, sanitary police, and control of
+the press and of associations.</p>
+
+<p>The executive power is in the emperor&rsquo;s hands. He represents
+the empire internationally, and can declare war if defensive,
+and make peace as well as enter into treaties with other nations;
+he also appoints and receives ambassadors. For declaring
+offensive war the consent of the federal council must be obtained.
+The separate states have the privilege of sending ambassadors
+to the other courts; but all consuls abroad are officials of the
+empire and are named by the emperor.</p>
+
+<p>Both the Bundesrat and the Reichstag meet in annual sessions
+convoked by the emperor who has the right of proroguing and
+dissolving the Diet; but the prorogation must not exceed 60
+days, and in case of dissolution new elections must be ordered
+within 60 days, and the new session opened within 90 days. All
+laws for the regulation of the empire must, in order to pass,
+receive the votes of an absolute majority of the federal council
+and the Reichstag.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Alsace-Lorraine is represented in the Bundesrat by four commissioners
+(<i>Kommissäre</i>), without votes, who are nominated by the
+Statthalter (imperial lieutenant).</p>
+
+<p>The fifty-eight members of the Bundesrat are nominated by the
+governments of the individual states for each session; while the
+members of the Reichstag are elected by universal suffrage and ballot
+for the term of five years. Every German who has completed his
+twenty-fifth year is prima facie entitled to the suffrage in the state
+within which he has resided for one year. Soldiers and those in the
+navy are not thus entitled, so long as they are serving under the
+colours. Excluded, further, are persons under tutelage, bankrupts
+and paupers, as also such persons who have been deprived of civil
+rights, during the time of such deprivation. Every German citizen
+who has completed his twenty-fifth year and has resided for a year
+in one of the federal states is eligible for election in any part of the
+empire, provided he has not been, as in the cases above, excluded
+from the right of suffrage. The secrecy of the ballot is ensured by
+special regulations passed on the 28th of April 1903. The voting-paper,
+furnished with an official stamp, must be placed in an envelope
+by the elector in a compartment set apart for the purpose in the
+polling room, and, thus enclosed, be handed by him to the presiding
+officer. An absolute majority of votes decides the election. If
+(as in the case of several candidates) an absolute majority over all
+the others has not been declared, a test election (<i>Stichwahl</i>) takes
+place between the two candidates who have received the greatest
+number of votes. In case of an equal number of votes being cast
+for both candidates, the decision is by lot.</p>
+
+<p>The subjoined table gives the names of the various states composing
+the empire and the number of votes which the separate states
+have in the federal council. Each state may appoint as many
+members to the federal council as it has votes. The table also gives
+the number of the deputies in the Reichstag.</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">States of the Empire.</td> <td class="tccm allb">No. of<br />Members in<br />Bundesrat.</td> <td class="tccm allb">No. of<br />Members in<br />Reichstag.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Kingdom of Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">17</td> <td class="tcr rb">236</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Kingdom of Bavaria</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">48</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Kingdom of Saxony</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">23</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Kingdom of Württemberg</td> <td class="tcr rb">4</td> <td class="tcr rb">17</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Grand duchy of Baden</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">14</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Grand duchy of Hesse</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Grand duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Grand duchy of Saxe-Weimar</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Grand duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Grand duchy of Oldenburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Duchy of Brunswick</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Duchy of Saxe-Meiningen</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Duchy of Saxe-Altenburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Duchy of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Duchy of Anhalt</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Principality of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Principality of Waldeck</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Principality of Reuss-Greiz</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Principality of Reuss-Schleiz</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Principality of Lippe</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Free town of Lübeck</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Free town of Bremen</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Free town of Hamburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">1</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Imperial territory of Alsace-Lorraine</td> <td class="tcc rb">. .</td> <td class="tcr rb">15</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">Total</td> <td class="tcr allb">58</td> <td class="tcr allb">397</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The Reichstag must meet at least once in each year. Since
+November 1906 its members have been paid (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Payment of
+Members</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p>The following table shows its composition after the elections of
+1903 and 1907:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Parties.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1903.</td> <td class="tccm allb">1907.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Centre</td> <td class="tcr rb">100</td> <td class="tcr rb">108</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Social Democrats</td> <td class="tcr rb">81</td> <td class="tcr rb">43</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Conservatives</td> <td class="tcr rb">51</td> <td class="tcr rb">60</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">National Liberals</td> <td class="tcr rb">49</td> <td class="tcr rb">57</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Freisinnige Volkspartei</td> <td class="tcr rb">27</td> <td class="tcr rb">33</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Reichspartei</td> <td class="tcr rb">19</td> <td class="tcr rb">22</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Alsatians, Guelphs and Danes</td> <td class="tcr rb">18</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Poles</td> <td class="tcr rb">16</td> <td class="tcr rb">20</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Wirtschaftliche Vereinigung (Reform Partei)</td> <td class="tcr rb">12</td> <td class="tcr rb">21</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Freisinnige Vereinigung</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">16</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Wilde (no party)</td> <td class="tcr rb">9</td> <td class="tcr rb">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Bund der Landwirte</td> <td class="tcr rb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Bauernbund</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">3</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">1</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>All the German states have separate representative assemblies,
+except Alsace-Lorraine and the two grand-duchies of Mecklenburg.
+The six larger states have adopted the two-chamber system, but
+in the composition of the houses great differences are found.
+The lesser states also have chambers of representatives numbering
+from 12 members (in Reuss-Greiz) to 48 members (in Brunswick),
+and in most states the different classes, as well as the cities and
+the rural districts, are separately represented. The free towns
+have legislative assemblies, numbering from 120 to 200 members.</p>
+
+<p>Imperial measures, after passing the Bundesrat and the
+Reichstag, must obtain the sanction of the emperor in order to
+become law, and must be countersigned, when promulgated, by
+the chancellor of the empire (<i>Reichskanzler</i>). All members of the
+federal council are entitled to be present at the deliberations of
+the Reichstag. The Bundesrat, acting under the direction of
+the chancellor of the empire, is also a supreme administrative
+and consultative board, and as such it has nine standing committees,
+viz.: for army and fortresses; for naval purposes;
+for tariffs, excise and taxes; for trade and commerce; for
+railways, posts and telegraphs; for civil and criminal law; for
+financial accounts; for foreign affairs; and for Alsace-Lorraine.
+Each committee includes representatives of at least four states
+of the empire.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page818" id="page818"></a>818</span></p>
+
+<p>For the several branches of administration a considerable
+number of imperial offices have been gradually created. All
+of them, however, either are under the immediate authority
+of the chancellor of the empire, or are separately managed under
+his responsibility. The most important
+are the chancery office, the foreign office
+and the general post and telegraph office.
+But the heads of these do not form a cabinet.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>The Chancellor of the Empire</i> (<i>Reichskanzler</i>).&mdash;The
+Prussian plenipotentiary to the Bundesrat
+is the president of that assembly; he is appointed
+by the emperor, and bears the title
+Reichskanzler. This head official can be represented
+by any other member of the Bundesrat
+named in a document of substitution. The
+Reichskanzler is the sole responsible official,
+and conducts all the affairs of the empire, with
+the exception of such as are of a purely military
+character, and is the intermediary between the
+emperor, the Bundesrat and the Reichstag. All
+imperial rescripts require the counter-signature
+of the chancellor before attaining validity. All
+measures passed by the Reichstag require the
+sanction of the majority of the Bundesrat, and
+only become binding on being proclaimed on
+behalf of the empire by the chancellor, which
+publication takes place through the <i>Reichsgesetzblatt</i>
+(the official organ of the chancellor).</p>
+
+<p><i>Government Offices.</i>&mdash;The following imperial
+offices are directly responsible to the chancellor and stand under his
+control:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. The foreign office, which is divided into three departments:
+(i.) the political and diplomatic; (ii.) the political and commercial;
+(iii.) the legal. The chief of the foreign office is a secretary of state,
+taking his instructions immediately from the chancellor.</p>
+
+<p>2. The colonial office (under the direction of a secretary of state)
+is divided into (i.) a civil department; (ii.) a military department;
+(iii.) a disciplinary court.</p>
+
+<p>3. The ministry of the interior or home office (under the conduct
+of a secretary of state). This office is divided into four departments,
+dealing with (i.) the business of the Bundesrat, the Reichstag, the
+elections, citizenship, passports, the press, and military and naval
+matters, so far as the last concern the civil authorities; (ii.) purely
+social matters, such as old age pensions, accident insurance, migration,
+settlement, poor law administration, &amp;c.; (iii.) sanitary
+matters, patents, canals, steamship lines, weights and measures;
+and (iv.) commercial and economic relations&mdash;such as agriculture,
+industry, commercial treaties and statistics.</p>
+
+<p>4. The imperial admiralty (<i>Reichsmarineamt</i>), which is the chief
+board for the administration of the imperial navy, its maintenance
+and development.</p>
+
+<p>5. The imperial ministry of justice (<i>Reichsjustizamt</i>), presided over
+by a secretary of state. This office, not to be confused with the
+<i>Reichsgericht</i> (supreme legal tribunal of the empire) in Leipzig, deals
+principally with the drafting of legal measures to be submitted to
+the Reichstag.</p>
+
+<p>6. The imperial treasury (<i>Reichsschatzamt</i>), or exchequer, is the
+head financial office of the empire. Presided over by a secretary of
+state, its functions are principally those appertaining to the control
+of the national debt and its administration, together with such as
+in the United Kingdom are delegated to the board of inland revenue.</p>
+
+<p>7. The imperial railway board (<i>Reichseisenbahnamt</i>), the chief
+official of which has the title of &ldquo;president,&rdquo; deals exclusively with
+the management of the railways throughout the empire, in so far
+as they fall under the control of the imperial authorities in respect
+of laws passed for their harmonious interworking, their tariffs and
+the safety of passengers conveyed.</p>
+
+<p>8. The imperial post office (<i>Reichspostamt</i>), under a secretary of
+state, controls the post and telegraph administration of the empire
+(with the exception of Bavaria and Württemberg), as also those in
+the colonies and dependencies.</p>
+
+<p>9. The imperial office for the administration of the imperial
+railways in Alsace-Lorraine, the chief of which is the Prussian
+minister of public works.</p>
+
+<p>10. The office of the accountant-general of the empire (<i>Rechnungshof</i>),
+which controls and supervises the expenditure of the sums voted
+by the legislative bodies, and revises the accounts of the imperial
+bank (<i>Reichsbank</i>).</p>
+
+<p>11. The administration of the imperial invalid fund, <i>i.e.</i> of the
+fund set apart in 1871 for the benefit of soldiers invalided in the war
+of 1870-71; and</p>
+
+<p>12. The imperial bank (<i>Reichsbank</i>), supervised by a committee of
+four under the presidency of the imperial chancellor, who is a fifth
+and permanent member of such committee.</p>
+
+<p>The heads of the various departments of state do not form, as in
+England, the nucleus of a cabinet. In so far as they are secretaries
+of state, they are directly responsible to the chancellor, who represents
+all the offices in his person, and, as has been said, is the medium
+of communication between the emperor and the Bundesrat and
+Reichstag.</p>
+
+<p><i>Colonies.</i>&mdash;The following table gives some particulars of the
+dependencies of the empire:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Name.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Date of<br />Acquisition.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Area<br />(estimated)<br />sq. m.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Pop.<br />(estimated).</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">In Africa&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; Togoland</td> <td class="tcc rb">1884</td> <td class="tcr rb">33,700</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,000,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; Cameroon</td> <td class="tcc rb">1884</td> <td class="tcr rb">190,000</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,500,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; S.W. Africa</td> <td class="tcc rb">1884</td> <td class="tcr rb">322,450</td> <td class="tcr rb">200,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; East Africa</td> <td class="tcc rb">1885</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">364,000</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">7,000,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">Total in Africa</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">910,150</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,700,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">In the Pacific&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; German New Guinea</td> <td class="tcc rb">1884</td> <td class="tcr rb">70,000</td> <td class="tcr rb">110,000(?)</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; Bismarck Archipelago</td> <td class="tcc rb">1884</td> <td class="tcr rb">20,000</td> <td class="tcr rb">188,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; Caroline, Pelew and Mariana Islands</td> <td class="tcc rb">1899</td> <td class="tcr rb">800</td> <td class="tcr rb">41,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; Solomon Islands</td> <td class="tcc rb">1886</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,200</td> <td class="tcr rb">45,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; Marshall Islands</td> <td class="tcc rb">1885</td> <td class="tcr rb">160</td> <td class="tcr rb">15,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; Samoan Islands</td> <td class="tcc rb">1899</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">985</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">33,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">Total in Pacific</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">96,145</td> <td class="tcr rb">432,600</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">In Asia&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td> <td class="tcr rb">&emsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">&ensp; Kiao-chow</td> <td class="tcc rb">1897</td> <td class="tcr rb">117</td> <td class="tcr rb">60,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">Total dependencies</td> <td class="tcc allb">1884-1899</td> <td class="tcr allb">1,006,412</td> <td class="tcr allb">12,192,600</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Except Kiao-chow, which is controlled by the admiralty, the
+dependencies of the empire are under the direction of the colonial
+office. This office, created in 1907, replaced the colonial department
+of the foreign office which previously had had charge of colonial
+affairs. The value of the trade of the colonies with Germany in
+1906 was: imports into Germany, Ł1,028,000; exports from
+Germany, Ł2,236,000. For 1907 the total revenue from the colonies
+was Ł849,000; the expenditure of the empire on the colonies in
+the same year being Ł4,362,000. (See the articles on the various
+colonies.)</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Local Government.</i>&mdash;In the details of its organization local
+self-government differs considerably in the various states of the
+German empire. The general principle on which it is based,
+however, is that which has received its most complete expression
+in the Prussian system: government by experts, checked by
+lay criticism and the power of the purse, and effective control
+by the central authorities. In Prussia at least the medieval
+system of local self-government had succumbed completely to
+the centralizing policy of the monarchy, and when it was revived
+it was at the will and for the purposes of the central authorities,
+as subsidiary to the bureaucratic system. This fact determined
+its general characteristics. In England the powers of the local
+authorities are defined by act of parliament, and within the
+limits of these powers they have a free hand. In Germany general
+powers are granted by law, subject to the approval of the central
+authorities, with the result that it is the government departments
+that determine what the local elected authorities may do, and
+that the latter regard themselves as commissioned to carry out,
+not so much the will of the locality by which they are elected,
+as that of the central government. This attitude is, indeed,
+inevitable from the double relation in which they stand. A
+<i>Bürgermeister</i>, once elected, becomes a member of the bureaucracy
+and is responsible to the central administration; even the headman
+of a village commune is, within the narrow limits of his
+functions, a government official. Moreover, under the careful
+classification of affairs into local and central, many things which
+in England are regarded as local (<i>e.g.</i> education, sanitary administration,
+police) are regarded as falling under the sphere of the
+central government, which either administers them directly
+or by means of territorial delegations consisting either of
+individuals or of groups of individuals. These may be purely
+official (<i>e.g.</i> the Prussian <i>Regierung</i>), a mixture of officials and
+of elected non-official members approved by the government
+(<i>e.g.</i> the <i>Bezirksausschuss</i>), or may consist wholly of authorities
+elected for another purpose, but made to act as the agents of the
+central departments (<i>e.g.</i> the <i>Kreisausschuss</i>). That this system
+works without friction is due to the German habit of discipline;
+that it is, on the whole, singularly effective is a result of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page819" id="page819"></a>819</span>
+peculiarly enlightened and progressive views of the German
+bureaucracy.<a name="fa3k" id="fa3k" href="#ft3k"><span class="sp">3</span></a></p>
+
+<p>The unit of the German system of local government is the
+commune (<i>Gemeinde</i>, or more strictly <i>Ortsgemeinde</i>). These are
+divided into rural communes (<i>Landgemeinden</i>) and urban communes
+(<i>Stadtgemeinden</i>), the powers and functions of which,
+though differing widely, are based upon the same general
+principle of representative local self-government. The higher
+organs of local government, so far as these are representative,
+are based on the principle of a group or union of communes
+(<i>Gemeindeverband</i>). Thus, in Prussia, the representative
+assembly of the Circle (<i>Kreistag</i>) is composed of delegates of
+the rural communes, as well as of the large landowners and the
+towns, while the members of the provincial diet (<i>Provinziallandtag</i>)
+are chosen by the <i>Kreistage</i> and by such towns as form
+separate <i>Kreise</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In Prussia the classes of administrative areas are as follows:
+(1) the province, (2) the government district (<i>Regierungsbezirk</i>),
+(3) the rural circle (<i>Landkreis</i>) and urban circle (<i>Stadtkreis</i>),
+(4) the official district (<i>Amtsbezirk</i>), (5) the town commune
+(<i>Stadtgemeinde</i>) and rural commune (<i>Landgemeinde</i>). Of these
+areas the provinces, circles and communes are for the purposes
+both of the central administration and of local self-government,
+and the bodies by which they are governed are corporations.
+The <i>Regierungsbezirke</i> and <i>Amtsbezirke</i>, on the other hand, are
+for the purposes of the central administration only and are not
+incorporated. The Prussian system is explained in greater
+detail in the article <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Prussia</a></span> (<i>q.v.</i>). Here it must suffice to
+indicate briefly the general features of local government in the
+other German states, as compared with that in Prussia. The
+province, which usually covers the area of a formerly independent
+state (<i>e.g.</i> Hanover) is peculiar to Prussia. The <i>Regierungsbezirk</i>,
+however, is common to the larger states under various names,
+<i>Regierungsbezirk</i> in Bavaria, <i>Kreishauptmannschaft</i> in Saxony,
+<i>Kreis</i> in Württemberg. Common to all is the president (<i>Regierungspräsident</i>,
+<i>Kreishauptmann</i> in Saxony), an official who, with a
+committee of advisers, is responsible for the oversight of the
+administration of the circles and communes within his jurisdiction.
+Whereas in Prussia, however, the <i>Regierung</i> is purely
+official, with no representative element, the <i>Regierungsbezirk</i>
+in Bavaria has a representative body, the <i>Landrat</i>, consisting of
+delegates of the district assemblies, the towns, large landowners,
+clergy and&mdash;in certain cases&mdash;the universities; the president
+is assisted by a committee (<i>Landratsausschuss</i>) of six members
+elected by the <i>Landrat</i>. In Saxony the <i>Kreishauptmann</i> is
+assisted by a committee (<i>Kreisausschuss</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Below the <i>Regierungsbezirk</i> is the <i>Kreis</i>, or Circle, in Prussia,
+Baden and Hesse, which corresponds to the <i>Distrikt</i> in Bavaria,
+the <i>Oberamt</i> in Württemberg<a name="fa4k" id="fa4k" href="#ft4k"><span class="sp">4</span></a> and the <i>Amtshauptmannschaft</i> in
+Saxony. The representative assembly of the Circle (<i>Kreistag</i>,
+<i>Distriktsrat</i> in Bavaria, <i>Amtsversammlung</i> in Württemberg,
+<i>Bezirksversammlung</i> in Saxony) is elected by the communes, and
+is presided over by an official, either elected or, as in the case
+of the Prussian <i>Landrat</i>, nominated from a list submitted by
+the assembly. So far as their administrative and legislative
+functions are concerned the German <i>Kreistage</i> have been compared
+to the English county councils or the Hungarian <i>comitatus</i>.
+Their decisions, however, are subject to the approval of their
+official chiefs. To assist the executive a small committee
+(<i>Kreisausschuss</i>, <i>Distriktsausschuss</i>, &amp;c.) is elected subject to
+official approval. The official district (<i>Amtsbezirk</i>), a subdivision
+of the circle for certain administrative purposes (notably police),
+is peculiar to Prussia.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Rural Communes.</i>&mdash;As stated above, the lowest administrative
+area is the commune, whether urban or rural. The laws as to the
+constitution and powers of the rural communes vary much in the
+different states. In general the commune is a body corporate, its
+assembly consisting either (in small villages) of the whole body of the
+qualified inhabitants (<i>Gemeindeversammlung</i>), or of a representative
+assembly (<i>Gemeindevertretung</i>) elected by them (in communes where
+there are more than forty qualified inhabitants). At its head is an
+elected headman (<i>Schulze</i>, <i>Dorfvorsteher</i>, &amp;c.), with a small body of
+assistants (<i>Schöffen</i>, &amp;c.). He is a government official responsible,
+<i>inter alia</i>, for the policing of the commune. Where there are large
+estates these sometimes constitute communes of themselves. For
+common purposes several communes may combine, such combinations
+being termed in Württemberg <i>Bürgermeistereien</i>, in the Rhine
+province <i>Amtsverbände</i>. In general the communes are of slight
+importance. Where the land is held by small peasant proprietors,
+they display a certain activity; where there are large ground landlords,
+these usually control them absolutely.</p>
+
+<p><i>Towns.</i>&mdash;The constitution of the towns (<i>Städteverfassung</i>) varies
+more greatly in the several states than that of the rural communes.
+According to the so-called <i>Stein&rsquo;sche Städteverfassung</i> (the system
+introduced in Prussia by Stein in 1808), which, to differentiate
+between it and other systems, is called the <i>Magistratsverfassung</i> (or
+magisterial constitution), the municipal communes enjoy a greater
+degree of self-government than do the rural. In the magisterial
+constitution of larger towns and cities, the members of the <i>Magistrat</i>,
+<i>i.e.</i> the executive council (also called <i>Stadtrat</i>, <i>Gemeinderat</i>), are
+elected by the representative assembly of the citizens (<i>Stadtverordnetenversammlung</i>)
+out of their own body.</p>
+
+<p>In those parts of Germany which come under the influence of
+French legislation, the constitution of the towns and that of the
+rural communes (the so-called <i>Bürgermeistereiverfassung</i>) is identical,
+in that the members of the communal executive body are, in the
+same way as those of the communal assembly, elected to office
+immediately by the whole body of municipal electors.</p>
+
+<p>The government of the towns is regulated in the main by municipal
+codes (<i>Städteordnungen</i>), largely based upon Stein&rsquo;s reform of 1808.
+This, superseding the autonomy severally enjoyed by the towns and
+cities since the middle ages (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Commune</a></span>), aimed at welding the
+citizens, who had hitherto been divided into classes and gilds, into
+one corporate whole, and giving them all an active share in the administration
+of public affairs, while reserving to the central authorities
+the power of effective control.</p>
+
+<p>The system which obtains in all the old Prussian provinces (with
+the exception of Rügen and Vorpommern or Hither Pomerania)
+and in Westphalia is that of Stein, modified by subsequent laws&mdash;notably
+those of 1853 and 1856&mdash;which gave the state a greater
+influence, while extending the powers of the <i>Magistrat</i>. In Vorpommern
+and Rügen, and thus in the towns of Greifswald, Stralsund
+and Bergen, among others, the old civic constitutions remain unchanged.
+In the new Prussian provinces, Frankfort-on-Main received
+a special municipal constitution in 1867 and the towns of
+Schleswig-Holstein in 1869. The province of Hanover retains its
+system as emended in 1858, and Hesse-Nassau, with the exception
+of Frankfort-on-Main, received a special corporate system in 1897.
+The municipal systems of Bavaria, Württemberg and Saxony are
+more or less based on that of Stein, but with a wider sphere of self-government.
+In Mecklenburg there is no uniform system. In
+Saxe-Coburg, the towns of Coburg and Neustadt have separate and
+peculiar municipal constitutions. In almost all the other states
+the system is uniform. The free cities of Lübeck, Hamburg and
+Bremen, as sovereign states, form a separate class. Their constitutions
+are described in the articles on them.</p>
+
+<p>Where the &ldquo;magisterial&rdquo; constitution prevails, the members of
+the <i>Magistrat</i>, <i>i.e.</i> the executive council (also called variously
+<i>Stadtrat</i>, <i>Gemeindevorstand</i>, &amp;c.), are as a rule elected by the representative
+assembly of the burgesses (<i>Stadtverordnetenversammlung</i>;
+also <i>Gemeinderat</i>, <i>städtischer Ausschuss</i>, <i>Kollegium der Bürgervorsteher</i>,
+<i>Stadtältesten</i>, &amp;c.). The <i>Magistrat</i> consists of the chief burgomaster
+(<i>Erster Bürgermeister</i> or <i>Stadtschultheiss</i>, and in the large cities
+Oberbürgermeister), a second burgomaster or assessor, and in large
+towns of a number of paid and unpaid town councillors (<i>Ratsherren</i>,
+<i>Senatoren</i>, <i>Schöffen</i>, <i>Ratsmänner</i>, <i>Magistratsräte</i>), together with
+certain salaried members selected for specific purposes (<i>e.g.</i> <i>Baurat</i>,
+for building). Over this executive body the <i>Stadtverordneten</i>, who
+are elected by the whole body of citizens and unpaid, exercise a
+general control, their assent being necessary to any measures of
+importance, especially those involving any considerable outlay.
+They are elected for from three to six years; the members of the
+<i>Magistrat</i> are chosen for six, nine or twelve years, sometimes even
+for life. In the large towns the burgomasters must be jurists, and
+are paid. The police are under the control of the <i>Magistrat</i>, except
+in certain large cities, where they are under a separate state department.</p>
+
+<p>The second system mentioned above (<i>Bürgermeistereiverfassung</i>)
+prevails in the Rhine province, the Bavarian Palatinate, Hesse,
+Saxe-Weimar, Anhalt, Waldeck and the principalities of Reuss and
+Schwarzburg. In Württemberg, Baden and Hesse-Nassau the
+system is a compromise between the two; both the town and rural
+communes have a mayor (<i>Bürgermeister</i> or <i>Schultheiss</i>, as the case
+may be) and a <i>Gemeinderat</i> for administrative purposes, the citizens
+exercising control through a representative <i>Gemeindeausschuss</i>
+(communal committee).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Justice.</i>&mdash;By the Judicature Act&mdash;<i>Gerichtsverfassungsgesetz</i>&mdash;of
+1879, the so-called &ldquo;regular litigious&rdquo; jurisdiction of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page820" id="page820"></a>820</span>
+courts of law was rendered uniform throughout the empire, and
+the courts are now everywhere alike in character and composition;
+and with the exception of the <i>Reichsgericht</i> (supreme court of the
+empire), immediately subject to the government of the state
+in which they exercise jurisdiction, and not to the imperial
+government. The courts, from the lowest to the highest, are
+<i>Amtsgericht</i>, <i>Landgericht</i>, <i>Oberlandesgericht</i> and <i>Reichsgericht</i>.
+There are, further, <i>Verwaltungsgerichte</i> (administrative courts)
+for the adjustment of disputes between the various organs
+of local government, and other special courts, such as military,
+consular and arbitration courts (<i>Schiedsgericht</i>). In addition
+to litigious business the courts also deal with non-litigious
+matters, such as the registration of titles to land, guardianship
+and the drawing up and custody of testamentary dispositions,
+all which are almost entirely within the province of the <i>Amtsgerichte</i>.
+There are uniform codes of criminal law (<i>Strafgesetzbuch</i>),
+commercial law and civil law (<i>Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch</i>), the
+last of which came into force on the 1st of
+January 1900. The criminal code, based
+on that of Prussia anterior to 1870, was
+gradually adopted by all the other states
+and was generally in force by 1872. It
+has, however, been frequently emended
+and supplemented.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The lowest courts of first instance are
+the <i>Amtsgerichte</i>, each presided over by a
+single judge, and with jurisdiction in petty
+criminal and civil cases, up to 300 marks
+(Ł15). They are also competent to deal
+with all disputes as to wages, and letting and hiring, without
+regard to the value of the object in dispute. Petty criminal cases
+are heard by the judge (<i>Amtsrichter</i>) sitting with two <i>Schöffen</i>&mdash;assessors&mdash;selected
+by lot from the jury lists, who are competent
+to try prisoners for offences punishable with a fine, not exceeding
+600 marks (Ł30) or corresponding confinement, or with imprisonment
+not exceeding three months. The <i>Landgerichte</i> revise the
+decisions of the <i>Amtsgerichte</i>, and have also an original jurisdiction
+in criminal and civil cases and in divorce proceedings. The criminal
+chamber of the <i>Landgericht</i> is composed of five judges, and a majority
+of four is required for a conviction. These courts are competent
+to try cases of felony punishable with a term of imprisonment not
+exceeding five years. The preliminary examination is conducted
+by a judge, who does not sit on the bench at the trial. Jury courts
+(<i>Schwurgerichte</i>) are not permanent institutions, but are periodically
+held. They are formed of three judges of the <i>Landgericht</i> and a jury
+of twelve; and a two-thirds majority is necessary to convict.
+There are 173 <i>Landgerichte</i> in the empire, being one court for every
+325,822 inhabitants. The first court of second instance is the
+<i>Oberlandesgericht</i>, which has an original jurisdiction in grave offences
+and is composed of seven judges. There are twenty-eight such
+courts in the empire. Bavaria alone has an <i>Oberstes Landesgericht</i>,
+which exercises a revising jurisdiction over the <i>Oberlandesgerichte</i> in
+the state. The supreme court of the German empire is the <i>Reichsgericht</i>,
+having its seat at Leipzig. The judges, numbering ninety-two,
+are appointed by the emperor on the advice of the federal council
+(<i>Bundesrat</i>). This court exercises an appellate jurisdiction in civil
+cases remitted, for the decision of questions of law, by the inferior
+courts and also in all criminal cases referred to it. It sits in four
+criminal and six civil senates, each consisting of seven judges, one
+of whom is the president. The judges are styled <i>Reichsgerichtsräte</i>
+(counsellors of the imperial court).</p>
+
+<p>In the <i>Amtsgericht</i> a private litigant may conduct his own case;
+but where the object of the litigation exceeds 300 marks (Ł15),
+and in appeals from the <i>Amtsgericht</i> to the <i>Landgericht</i>, the plaintiff
+(and also the defendant) must be represented by an advocate&mdash;<i>Rechtsanwalt</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A <i>Rechtsanwalt</i>, having studied law at a university for four years
+and having passed two state examinations, if desiring to practise
+must be admitted as &ldquo;defending counsel&rdquo; by the <i>Amtsgericht</i> or
+<i>Landgericht</i>, or by both. These advocates are not state officials,
+but are sworn to the due execution of their duties. In case a client
+has suffered damage owing to the negligence of the advocate, the
+latter can be made responsible. In every district of the <i>Oberlandesgericht</i>,
+the <i>Rechtsanwälte</i> are formed into an <i>Anwaltkammer</i> (chamber
+of advocates), and the council of each chamber, sitting as a
+court of honour, deals with and determines matters affecting the
+honour of the profession. An appeal lies from this to a second
+court of honour, consisting of the president, three judges of the
+<i>Reichsgericht</i> and of three lawyers admitted to practice before that
+court.</p>
+
+<p>Criminal prosecutions are conducted in the name of the crown by
+the <i>Staatsanwälte</i> (state attorneys), who form a separate branch of the
+judicial system, and initiate public prosecutions or reject evidence as
+being insufficient to procure conviction. The proceedings in the
+courts are, as a rule, public. Only in exceptional circumstances are
+cases heard <i>in camera</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Military offences come before the military court and serious
+offences before the <i>Kriegsgericht</i>. The court-martial is, in every
+case, composed of the commander of the district as president, and
+four officers, assisted by a judge-advocate (<i>Kriegsgerichtsrat</i>), who
+conducts the case and swears the judges and witnesses. In the
+most serious class of cases, three officers and two judge-advocates
+are the judges. The prisoner is defended by an officer, whom he
+may himself appoint, and can be acquitted by a simple majority,
+but only be condemned by a two-thirds majority. There are also
+<i>Kaufmanns-</i> and <i>Gewerbegerichte</i> (commercial and industrial courts),
+composed of persons belonging to the classes of employers and
+employees, under the presidency of a judge of the court. Their
+aim is the effecting of a reconciliation between the parties. From
+the decision of these courts an appeal lies to the <i>Landgericht</i> where
+the amount of the object in dispute exceeds 100 marks (Ł5).</p>
+
+<p>The following table shows the number of criminal cases tried
+before the courts of first instance, with the number and sex of convicted
+persons, and the number of the latter per 10,000 of the civil
+population over twelve years of age:&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Year.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="2">Cases tried.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="2">Persons convicted.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Total.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Convictions<br />per 10,000<br />Inhabitants.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tccm allb"><i>Amtsgericht.</i></td> <td class="tccm allb"><i>Landgericht.</i></td> <td class="tccm allb">Males.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Females.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1900</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,143,687</td> <td class="tcc rb">&ensp;94,241</td> <td class="tcc rb">396,975</td> <td class="tcc rb">72,844</td> <td class="tcc rb">469,819</td> <td class="tcc rb">119.5</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1901</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,205,558</td> <td class="tcc rb">101,471</td> <td class="tcc rb">419,592</td> <td class="tcc rb">77,718</td> <td class="tcc rb">497,310</td> <td class="tcc rb">125.6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1902</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,221,080</td> <td class="tcc rb">104,434</td> <td class="tcc rb">431,257</td> <td class="tcc rb">81,072</td> <td class="tcc rb">512,329</td> <td class="tcc rb">127.3</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1903</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,251,662</td> <td class="tcc rb">105,241</td> <td class="tcc rb">424,813</td> <td class="tcc rb">80,540</td> <td class="tcc rb">505,353</td> <td class="tcc rb">123.4</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1904</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">1,287,686</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">105,457</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">435,191</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">81,785</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">516,976</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">124.2</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc" colspan="7">Of those convicted in 1904, 225,326 had been previously convicted.</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Poor Law.</i>&mdash;A law passed by the North German Confederation
+of the 6th of June 1870, and subsequently amended by an
+imperial law of the 12th of March 1894, laid down rules for the
+relief of the destitute in all the states composing the empire,
+with the exception of Bavaria and Alsace-Lorraine. According
+to the system adopted, the public relief of the poor is committed
+to the care of local unions (<i>Ortsarmenverbände</i>) and provincial
+unions (<i>Landarmenverbände</i>), the former corresponding, generally,
+to the commune, and the latter to a far wider area, a circle or a
+province. Any person of eighteen years, who has continuously
+resided with a local union for the space of two years, there
+acquires his domicile. But any destitute German subject must
+be relieved by the local union in which he happens to be at the
+time, the cost of the relief being defrayed by the local or provincial
+union in which he has his domicile. The wife and children
+have also their domicile in the place where the husband or father
+has his.<a name="fa5k" id="fa5k" href="#ft5k"><span class="sp">5</span></a></p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>Relief of the poor is one of the chief duties of the organs of local
+self-government. The moneys for the purpose are mainly derived
+from general taxation (poor rates per se being but rarely directly
+levied), special funds and voluntary contributions. In some
+German states and communes certain dues (such as the dog tax in
+Saxony), death duties and particularly dues payable in respect of
+public entertainments and police court fines, are assigned to the poor-relief
+chest. In some large towns the Elberfeld system of unpaid
+district visitors and the interworking of public and private charity
+is in force. The imperial laws which introduced the compulsory
+insurance of all the humbler workers within the empire, and gave
+them, when incapacitated by sickness, accident and old age, an
+absolute right to pecuniary assistance, have greatly reduced pauperism
+and crime.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Workmen&rsquo;s Insurance.</i>&mdash;On June 15, 1883, the Reichstag, as
+the result of the policy announced by the emperor William I.
+in his speech from the throne in 1881, passed an act making
+insurance against sickness, accident, and incapacity compulsory
+on all workers in industrial pursuits. By further laws, in 1885
+and 1892, this obligation was extended to certain other classes
+of workers, and the system was further modified by acts passed
+in 1900 and 1903. Under this system every person insured has a
+right to assistance in case of sickness, accident, or incapacity,
+while in case of death his widow and children receive an
+annuity.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>1. Insurance against sickness is provided for under these laws
+partly by the machinery already existing, <i>i.e.</i> the sick benefit societies,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page821" id="page821"></a>821</span>
+partly by new machinery devised to meet the new obligation imposed.
+The sick-funds (<i>Krankenkassen</i>) are thus of seven kinds:
+(1) free assistance funds (<i>Freie Hilfskassen</i>), either registered under
+the law of 1876, as modified in 1884 (<i>Eingeschriebene Hilfskassen</i>),
+or established under the law of the separate states (<i>landesrechtliche
+Hilfskassen</i>); (2) <i>Betriebs-</i> or <i>Fabrikkrankenkassen</i>, funds established
+by individual factory-owners; (3) <i>Baukrankenkasse</i>, a fund established
+for workmen engaged on the construction (<i>Bau</i>) of particular
+engineering works (canal-digging, &amp;c.), by individual contractors;
+(4) gild sick funds (<i>Innungskrankenkassen</i>), established by the gilds
+for the workmen and apprentices of their members; (5) miners&rsquo;
+sick fund (<i>Knappschaftskasse</i>); (6) local sick fund (<i>Ortskrankenkasse</i>),
+established by the commune for particular crafts or classes of
+workmen; (7) <i>Gemeindekrankenversicherung</i>, <i>i.e.</i> insurance of
+members of the commune as such, in the event of their not subscribing
+to any of the other funds. Of these, 2, 3, 6 and 7 were created
+under the above-mentioned laws.</p>
+
+<p>The number of such funds amounted in 1903 to 23,271, and
+included 10,224,297 workmen. The <i>Ortskrankenkassen</i>, with
+4,975,322 members, had the greatest, and the <i>Baukrankenkassen</i>,
+with 16,459, the smallest number of members. The <i>Ortskrankenkassen</i>,
+which endeavour to include workmen of a like trade, have
+to a great extent, especially in Saxony, fallen under the control of
+the Social Democrats. The appointment of permanent doctors
+(<i>Kassenärzte</i>) at a fixed salary has given rise to much difference
+between the medical profession and this local sick fund; and the
+insistence on &ldquo;freedom of choice&rdquo; in doctors, which has been made
+by the members and threatens to militate against the interest of the
+profession, has been met on the part of the medical body by the
+appointment of a commission to investigate cases of undue influence
+in the selection.</p>
+
+<p>According to the statistics furnished in the <i>Vierteljahreshefte zur
+Statistik des deutschen Reiches</i> for 1905, the receipts amounted to
+upwards of Ł10,000,000 for 1903, and the expenditure to somewhat
+less than this sum. Administrative changes were credited with
+nearly Ł600,000, and the invested funds totalled Ł9,000,000. The
+workmen contribute at the rate of two-thirds and the employers at
+the rate of one-third; the sum payable in respect of each worker
+varying from 1˝-3% of the earnings in the &ldquo;communal sick fund&rdquo;
+to at most l˝-4% in the others.</p>
+
+<p>2. Insurance against old age and invalidity comprehends all
+persons who have entered upon their 17th year, and who belong to
+one of the following classes of wage-earners: artisans, apprentices,
+domestic servants, dressmakers, charwomen, laundresses, seamstresses,
+housekeepers, foremen, engineers, journeymen, clerks and
+apprentices in shops (excepting assistants and apprentices in chemists&rsquo;
+shops), schoolmasters, schoolmistresses, teachers and governesses,
+provided the earnings do not exceed Ł100 per annum. The insured
+are arranged in five classes, according to the amount of their
+yearly earnings: viz. Ł17, 10s.; Ł27, 10s.; Ł47, 10s.; Ł57, 10s.;
+and Ł100. The contributions, affixed to a &ldquo;pension book&rdquo; in
+stamps, are payable each week, and amount, in English money, to
+1.45d., 2.34d., 2.82d., 3.30d. and 4.23d. Of the contribution one
+half is paid by the employer and the other by the employee, whose
+duty it is to see that the amount has been properly entered in the
+pension book. The pensions, in case of invalidity, amount (including
+a state subsidy of Ł2, 10s. for each) respectively to Ł8, 8s.;
+Ł11, 5s.; Ł13, 10s.; Ł15, 15s.; and Ł18. The old-age pensions
+(beginning at 70 years) amount to Ł5, 10s.; Ł7; Ł8, 10s.; Ł10;
+and Ł11, 10s. The old-age and invalid insurance is carried out by
+thirty-one large territorial offices, to which must be added nine
+special unions. The income of the forty establishments was, in
+1903, Ł8,500,000 (including Ł1,700,000 imperial subsidy). The
+capital collected was upwards of Ł50,000,000.</p>
+
+<p>It may be added that employees in mercantile and trading houses,
+who have not exceeded the age of 40 years and whose income is
+below Ł150, are allowed voluntarily to share in the benefits of this
+insurance.</p>
+
+<p>3. <i>Accident Insurance</i> (<i>Unfallversicherung</i>).&mdash;The insurance of
+workmen and the lesser officials against the risks of accident is
+effected not through the state or the commune, but through associations
+formed <i>ad hoc</i>. These associations are composed of members
+following the same or allied occupations (<i>e.g.</i> foresters, seamen,
+smiths, &amp;c.), and hence are called &ldquo;professional associations&rdquo;
+(<i>Berufsgenossenschaften</i>). They are empowered, subject to the
+limits set by the law, to regulate their own business by means of a
+general meeting and of elected committees. The greater number
+of these associations cover a very wide field, generally the whole
+empire; in such cases they are empowered to divide their spheres
+into sections, and to establish agents in different centres to inquire
+into cases of accident, and to see to the carrying out of the rules
+prescribed by the association for the avoidance of accidents. Those
+associations, of which the area of operations extends beyond any
+single state, are subordinate to the control of the imperial insurance
+bureau (<i>Reichsversicherungsamt</i>) at Berlin; those that are confined
+to a single state (as generally in the case of foresters and husbandmen)
+are under the control of the state insurance bureau (<i>Landesversicherungsamt</i>).</p>
+
+<p>So far as their earnings do not exceed Ł150 per annum, the following
+classes are under the legal obligation to insure: labourers in mines,
+quarries, dockyards, wharves, manufactories and breweries; bricklayers
+and navvies; post-office, railway, and naval and military servants and
+officials; carters, raftsmen and canal hands; cellarmen, warehousemen;
+stevedores; and agricultural labourers. Each of these groups
+forms an association, which within a certain district embraces all the
+industries with which it is connected. The funds for covering the
+compensation payable in respect of accidents are raised by payments
+based, in agriculture, on the taxable capital, and in other trades and
+industries on the earnings of the insured. Compensation in respect
+of injury or death is not paid if the accident was brought about
+through the culpable negligence or other delict of the insured. In
+case of injury, involving incapacity for more than thirteen weeks
+(for the earlier period the <i>Krankenkassen</i> provide), the weekly sum
+payable during complete or permanent incapacity is fixed at the
+ratio of two-thirds of the earnings during the year preceding the
+accident, and in case of partial disablement, at such a proportion
+of the earnings as corresponds to the loss through disablement.
+In certain circumstances (<i>e.g.</i> need for paid nursing) the sum may be
+increased to the full rate of the previous earnings. In case of death,
+as a consequence of injury, the following payments are made: (1)
+a sum of at least Ł2, 10s. to defray the expenses of interment;
+(2) a monthly allowance of one-fifth of the annual earnings as above
+to the widow and each child up to the age of 15.</p>
+
+<p><i>Life Insurance.</i>&mdash;There were forty-six companies in 1900 for the
+insurance of life. The number of persons insured was 1,446,249
+at the end of that year, the insurances amounting to roughly
+Ł320,000,000. Besides these are sixty-one companies&mdash;of which
+forty-six are comprised in the above life insurance companies&mdash;paying
+subsidies in case of death or of military service, endowments,
+&amp;c. Some of these companies are industrial. The transactions of
+all these companies included in 1900 over 4,179,000 persons, and the
+amount of insurances effected was Ł80,000,000.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Religion.</i>&mdash;So far as the empire as a whole is concerned there
+is no state religion, each state being left free to maintain its own
+establishment. Thus while the emperor, as king of Prussia, is
+<i>summus episcopus</i> of the Prussian Evangelical Church, as emperor
+he enjoys no such ecclesiastical headship. In the several
+states the relations of church and state differ fundamentally
+according as these states are Protestant or Catholic. In the
+latter these relations are regulated either by concordats between
+the governments and the Holy See, or by bulls of circumscription
+issued by the pope after negotiation. The effects of concordats
+and bulls alike are tempered by the exercise by the civil
+power of certain traditional reserved rights, <i>e.g.</i> the <i>placetum
+regium</i>, <i>recursus ab abusu</i>, <i>nominatio regia</i>, and that of vetoing
+the nomination of <i>personae minus gratae</i>. In the Protestant
+states the ecclesiastical authority remains purely territorial,
+and the sovereign remains effective head of the established
+church. During the 19th century, however, a large measure of
+ecclesiastical self-government (by means of general synods, &amp;c.)
+was introduced, <i>pari passu</i> with the growth of constitutional
+government in the state; and in effect, though the theoretical
+supremacy of the sovereign survives in the church as in the state,
+he cannot exercise it save through the general synod, which is
+the state parliament for ecclesiastical purposes. Where a
+sovereign rules over a state containing a large proportion of
+both Catholics and Protestants, which is usually the case, both
+systems coexist. Thus in Prussia the relations of the Roman
+Catholic community to the Protestant state are regulated by
+arrangement between the Prussian government and Rome;
+while in Bavaria the king, though a Catholic, is legally <i>summus
+episcopus</i> of the Evangelical Church.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>According to the religious census of 1900 there were in the German
+empire 35,231,104 Evangelical Protestants, 20,327,913 Roman
+Catholics, 6472 Greek Orthodox, 203,678 Christians belonging to
+other confessions, 586,948 Jews, 11,597 members of other sects and
+5938 unclassified. The Christians belonging to other confessions
+include Moravian Brethren, Mennonites, Baptists, Methodists and
+Quakers, German Catholics, Old Catholics, &amp;c. The table on following
+page shows the distribution of the population according to
+religious beliefs as furnished by the census of 1900.</p>
+
+<p>Almost two-thirds of the population belong to the Evangelical
+Church, and rather more than a third to the Church of Rome; the
+actual figures (based on the census of 1900) being (%) Evangelical
+Protestants, 62.5; Roman Catholics, 36.1; Dissenters and
+others, .043, and Jews, 1.0. The Protestants have not increased
+proportionately in number since 1890, while the Roman Catholics
+show a small relative increase. Three states in Germany have a
+decidedly predominant Roman Catholic population, viz. Alsace-Lorraine,
+Bavaria and Baden; and in four states the Protestant
+element prevails, but with from 24 to 34% of Roman Catholics;
+viz. Prussia, Württemberg, Hesse and Oldenburg. In Saxony and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page822" id="page822"></a>822</span>
+the eighteen minor states the number of Roman Catholics is only
+from 0.3 to 3.3% of the population.</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">States.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Evangelicals.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Catholics.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Other<br />Christians.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Jews.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Prussia</td> <td class="tcr rb">21,817,577</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,113,670</td> <td class="tcr rb">139,127</td> <td class="tcr rb">392,322</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Bavaria</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,749,206</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,363,178</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,607</td> <td class="tcr rb">54,928</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Saxony</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,972,063</td> <td class="tcr rb">198,265</td> <td class="tcr rb">19,103</td> <td class="tcr rb">12,416</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Württemberg</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,497,299</td> <td class="tcr rb">650,392</td> <td class="tcr rb">9,426</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,916</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Baden</td> <td class="tcr rb">704,058</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,131,639</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,563</td> <td class="tcr rb">26,132</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Hesse</td> <td class="tcr rb">746,201</td> <td class="tcr rb">341,570</td> <td class="tcr rb">7,368</td> <td class="tcr rb">24,486</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Mecklenburg-Schwerin</td> <td class="tcr rb">597,268</td> <td class="tcr rb">8,182</td> <td class="tcr rb">487</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,763</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Saxe-Weimar</td> <td class="tcr rb">347,144</td> <td class="tcr rb">14,158</td> <td class="tcr rb">361</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,188</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Mecklenburg-Strelitz</td> <td class="tcr rb">100,568</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,612</td> <td class="tcr rb">62</td> <td class="tcr rb">331</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Oldenburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">309,510</td> <td class="tcr rb">86,920</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,334</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,359</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Brunswick</td> <td class="tcr rb">436,976</td> <td class="tcr rb">24,175</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,271</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,824</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Saxe-Meiningen</td> <td class="tcr rb">244,810</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,170</td> <td class="tcr rb">395</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,351</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Saxe-Altenburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">189,885</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,723</td> <td class="tcr rb">206</td> <td class="tcr rb">99</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Saxe-Coburg-Gotha</td> <td class="tcr rb">225,074</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,330</td> <td class="tcr rb">515</td> <td class="tcr rb">608</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Anhalt</td> <td class="tcr rb">301,953</td> <td class="tcr rb">11,699</td> <td class="tcr rb">794</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,605</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Schwarzburg-Sondershausen</td> <td class="tcr rb">79,593</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,110</td> <td class="tcr rb">27</td> <td class="tcr rb">166</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt</td> <td class="tcr rb">92,298</td> <td class="tcr rb">676</td> <td class="tcr rb">37</td> <td class="tcr rb">48</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Waldeck</td> <td class="tcr rb">55,285</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,831</td> <td class="tcr rb">164</td> <td class="tcr rb">637</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Reuss-Greiz</td> <td class="tcr rb">66,860</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,043</td> <td class="tcr rb">444</td> <td class="tcr rb">48</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Reuss-Schleiz</td> <td class="tcr rb">135,958</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,579</td> <td class="tcr rb">466</td> <td class="tcr rb">178</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Schaumburg-Lippe</td> <td class="tcr rb">41,908</td> <td class="tcr rb">785</td> <td class="tcr rb">177</td> <td class="tcr rb">257</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Lippe</td> <td class="tcr rb">132,708</td> <td class="tcr rb">5,157</td> <td class="tcr rb">205</td> <td class="tcr rb">879</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Lübeck</td> <td class="tcr rb">93,671</td> <td class="tcr rb">2,190</td> <td class="tcr rb">213</td> <td class="tcr rb">670</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Bremen</td> <td class="tcr rb">208,815</td> <td class="tcr rb">13,506</td> <td class="tcr rb">876</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,409</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Hamburg</td> <td class="tcr rb">712,338</td> <td class="tcr rb">30,903</td> <td class="tcr rb">3,149</td> <td class="tcr rb">17,949</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Alsace-Lorraine</td> <td class="tcr rb">372,078</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,310,450</td> <td class="tcr rb">4,301</td> <td class="tcr rb">32,379</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc allb">Total</td> <td class="tcr allb">35,231,104</td> <td class="tcr allb">20,327,913</td> <td class="tcr allb">203,678</td> <td class="tcr allb">586,948</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>From the above table little can be inferred as to the geographical
+distribution of the two chief confessions. On this point it must be
+borne in mind that the population of the larger towns, on account
+of the greater mobility of the population since the introduction of
+railways and the abolition of restrictions upon free settlement, has
+become more mixed&mdash;Berlin, Leipzig, Hamburg, &amp;c., showing
+proportionally more Roman Catholics, and Cologne, Frankfort-on-Main,
+Munich more Protestants than formerly. Otherwise the
+geographical limits of the confessions have been but little altered
+since the Thirty Years&rsquo; War. In the mixed territories those places
+which formerly belonged to Roman Catholic princes are Roman
+Catholic still, and <i>vice versa</i>. Hence a religious map of South
+Germany looks like an historical map of the 17th century. The
+number of localities where the two confessions exist side by side is
+small. Generally speaking, South Germany is predominantly Roman
+Catholic. Some districts along the Danube (province of Bavaria,
+Upper Palatinate, Swabia), southern Württemberg and Baden, and
+in Alsace-Lorraine are entirely so. These territories are bordered
+by a broad stretch of country on the north, where Protestantism
+has maintained its hold since the time of the Reformation, including
+Bayreuth or eastern upper Franconia, middle Franconia, the northern
+half of Württemberg and Baden, with Hesse and the Palatinate.
+Here the average proportion of Protestants to Roman Catholics is
+two to one. The basin of the Main is again Roman Catholic from
+Bamberg to Aschaffenburg (western upper Franconia and lower
+Franconia). In Prussia the western and south-eastern provinces are
+mostly Roman Catholic, especially the Rhine province, together
+with the government districts of Münster and Arnsberg. The
+territories of the former principality of Cleves and of the countship
+of Mark (comprising very nearly the basin of the Ruhr), which went
+to Brandenburg in 1609, must, however, be excepted. North of
+Münster, Roman Catholicism is still prevalent in the territory of
+the former bishopric of Osnabrück. In the east, East Prussia
+(Ermeland excepted) is purely Protestant. Roman Catholicism was
+predominant a hundred years ago in all the frontier provinces acquired
+by Prussia in the days of Frederick the Great, but since then
+the German immigrants have widely propagated the Protestant
+faith in these districts. A prevailingly Roman Catholic population
+is still found in the district of Oppeln and the countship of Glatz,
+in the province of Posen, in the Polish-speaking <i>Kreise</i> of West
+Prussia, and in Ermeland (East Prussia). In all the remaining
+territory the Roman Catholic creed is professed only in the Eichsfeld
+on the southern border of the province of Hanover and around
+Hildesheim.</p>
+
+<p>The adherents of Protestantism are divided by their confessions
+into Reformed and Lutheran. To unite these the &ldquo;church union&rdquo;
+has been introduced in several Protestant states, as for
+example in Prussia and Nassau in 1817, in the Palatinate
+<span class="sidenote">Protestant Church.</span>
+in 1818 and in Baden in 1822. Since 1817 the distinction
+has accordingly been ignored in Prussia, and Christians are there
+enumerated only as Evangelical or Roman Catholic. The union, however,
+has not remained wholly unopposed&mdash;a section of the more rigid
+Lutherans who separated themselves from the state church being
+now known as Old Lutherans. In 1866 Prussia annexed Hanover
+and Schleswig-Holstein, where the Protestants were Lutherans,
+and Hesse, where the Reformed Church had
+the preponderance. The inhabitants of these
+countries opposed the introduction of the
+union, but could not prevent their being subordinated
+to the Prussian <i>Oberkirchenrat</i> (high
+church-council), the supreme court of the
+state church. A synodal constitution for the
+Evangelical State Church was introduced in
+Prussia in 1875. The <i>Oberkirchenrat</i> retains
+the right of supreme management. The
+ecclesiastical affairs of the separate provinces
+are directed by consistorial boards. The
+parishes (<i>Pfarreien</i>) are grouped into dioceses
+(<i>Sprengel</i>), presided over by superintendents,
+who are subordinate to the superintendent-general
+of the province. Prussia has sixteen
+superintendents-general. The ecclesiastical
+administration is similarly regulated in the
+other countries of the Protestant creed.
+Regarding the number of churches and
+chapels Germany has no exact statistics.</p>
+
+<p>There are five archbishoprics within the
+German empire: Gnesen-Posen, Cologne,
+Freiburg (Baden), Munich-Freising
+and Bamberg. The twenty bishoprics
+are: Breslau (where the bishop
+has the title of &ldquo;prince-bishop&rdquo;),
+Ermeland (seat at Frauenburg, East Prussia),
+Kulm (seat at Pelplin, West Prussia), Fulda,
+<span class="sidenote">Roman Catholic Church.</span>
+Hildesheim, Osnabrück, Paderborn, Münster,
+Limburg, Trier, Metz, Strassburg, Spires,
+Würzburg, Regensburg, Passau, Eichstätt,
+Augsburg, Rottenburg (Württemberg) and
+Mainz. Apostolic vicariates exist in Dresden (for Saxony), and
+others for Anhalt and the northern missions.</p>
+
+<p>The Old Catholics (<i>q.v.</i>), who seceded from the Roman Church in
+consequence of the definition of the dogma of papal infallibility,
+number roughly 50,000, with 54 clergy.</p>
+
+<p>It is in the towns that the Jewish element is chiefly to be found.
+They belong principally to the mercantile class, and are to a very
+large extent dealers in money. Their wealth has grown
+to an extraordinary degree. They are increasingly numerous
+<span class="sidenote">Jews.</span>
+in Hamburg, Berlin, Frankfort-on-Main, Breslau, Königsberg,
+Posen, Cologne, Nuremberg and Fürth. As a rule their numbers
+are proportionately greater in Prussia than elsewhere within the
+empire. But, since 1871, the Jewish population of Germany shows
+a far smaller increase than that of the Christian confessions, and
+even in the parts of the country where the Jewish population is
+densest it has shown a tendency to diminish. It is relatively
+greatest in the province of Posen, where the numbers have fallen
+from 61,982 (39.1 per thousand) in 1871 to 35,327 (18.7 per thousand)
+in 1900. The explanation is twofold&mdash;the extraordinary increase
+(1) in their numbers in Berlin and the province of Brandenburg,
+and (2) in the number of conversions to the Christian faith. In this
+last regard it may be remarked that the impulse is less from religious
+conviction than from a desire to associate on more equal terms
+with their neighbours. Though still, in fact at least, if not by law,
+excluded from many public offices, especially from commands in
+the army, they nevertheless are very powerful in Germany, the press
+being for the most part in their hands, and they furnish in many
+cities fully one-half of the lawyers and the members of the corporation.
+It should be mentioned, as a curious fact, that the numbers
+of the Jewish persuasion in the kingdom of Saxony increased
+from 3358 (1.3 per thousand) in 1871 to 12,416 (3 per thousand)
+in 1900.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Education.</i>&mdash;In point of educational culture Germany ranks
+high among all the civilized great nations of the world (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Education</a></span>: <i>Germany</i>). Education is general and compulsory
+throughout the empire, and all the states composing it have, with
+minor modifications, adopted the Prussian system providing
+for the establishment of elementary schools&mdash;<i>Volksschulen</i>&mdash;in
+every town and village. The school age is from six to fourteen,
+and parents can be compelled to send their children to a <i>Volksschule</i>,
+unless, to the satisfaction of the authorities, they are
+receiving adequate instruction in some other recognized school
+or institution.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The total number of primary schools was 60,584 in 1906-1907;
+teachers, 166,597; pupils, 9,737,262&mdash;an average of about
+one <i>Volksschule</i> to every 900 inhabitants. The annual expenditure
+was over Ł26,000,000, of which sum Ł7,500,000 was provided
+by state subvention. There were also in Germany in
+the same year 643 private schools, giving instruction similar to
+that of the elementary schools, with 41,000 pupils. A good
+criterion of the progress of education is obtained from the diminishing
+number of illiterate army recruits, as shown by the following:</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page823" id="page823"></a>823</span></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Years.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Number of<br />Recruits.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="2">Unable to Read or Write.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Total.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Per 1000<br />Recruits.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1875-1876</td> <td class="tcc rb">139,855</td> <td class="tcr rb">3331</td> <td class="tcr rb">23.7&ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1880-1881</td> <td class="tcc rb">151,180</td> <td class="tcr rb">2406</td> <td class="tcr rb">15.9&ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1885-1886</td> <td class="tcc rb">152,933</td> <td class="tcr rb">1657</td> <td class="tcr rb">10.8&ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1890-1891</td> <td class="tcc rb">193,318</td> <td class="tcr rb">1035</td> <td class="tcr rb">5.4&ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1895-1896</td> <td class="tcc rb">250,287</td> <td class="tcr rb">374</td> <td class="tcr rb">1.5&ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1898-1899</td> <td class="tcc rb">252,382</td> <td class="tcr rb">173</td> <td class="tcr rb">0.7&ensp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1900-1901</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">253,000</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">131</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">0.45</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Of the above 131 illiterates in 1900-1901, 114 were in East and
+West Prussia, Posen and Silesia.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Universities and Higher Technical Schools.</i>&mdash;Germany owes
+its large number of universities, and its widely diffused higher
+education to its former subdivision into many separate states.
+Only a few of the universities date their existence from the
+19th century; the majority of them are very much older. Each
+of the larger provinces, except Posen, has at least one university,
+the entire number being 21. All have four faculties except
+Münster, which has no faculty of medicine. As regards theology,
+Bonn, Breslau and Tübingen have both a Protestant and a
+Catholic faculty; Freiburg, Munich, Münster and Würzburg
+are exclusively Catholic; and all the rest are Protestant.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p>The following table gives the names of the 21 universities, the dates
+of their respective foundations, the number of their professors and
+other teachers for the winter half-year 1908-1909, and of the students
+attending their lectures during the winter half-year of 1907-1908:</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Date of<br />Foundation.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Professors<br />and<br />Teachers.</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="4">Students.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Total.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Theology.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Law.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Medicine.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Philosophy.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Berlin</td> <td class="tcc rb">1809</td> <td class="tcr rb">493</td> <td class="tcr rb">326</td> <td class="tcr rb">2747</td> <td class="tcr rb">1153</td> <td class="tcr rb">3934</td> <td class="tcr rb">8220</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Bonn</td> <td class="tcc rb">1818</td> <td class="tcr rb">190</td> <td class="tcr rb">395</td> <td class="tcr rb">833</td> <td class="tcr rb">282</td> <td class="tcr rb">1699</td> <td class="tcr rb">3209</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Breslau</td> <td class="tcc rb">1811</td> <td class="tcr rb">189</td> <td class="tcr rb">330</td> <td class="tcr rb">617</td> <td class="tcr rb">284</td> <td class="tcr rb">840</td> <td class="tcr rb">2071</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Erlangen</td> <td class="tcc rb">1743</td> <td class="tcr rb">77</td> <td class="tcr rb">155</td> <td class="tcr rb">323</td> <td class="tcr rb">355</td> <td class="tcr rb">225</td> <td class="tcr rb">1058</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Freiburg</td> <td class="tcc rb">1457</td> <td class="tcr rb">150</td> <td class="tcr rb">219</td> <td class="tcr rb">373</td> <td class="tcr rb">580</td> <td class="tcr rb">642</td> <td class="tcr rb">1814</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Giessen</td> <td class="tcc rb">1607</td> <td class="tcr rb">100</td> <td class="tcr rb">63</td> <td class="tcr rb">204</td> <td class="tcr rb">331</td> <td class="tcr rb">546</td> <td class="tcr rb">1144</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Göttingen</td> <td class="tcc rb">1737</td> <td class="tcr rb">161</td> <td class="tcr rb">102</td> <td class="tcr rb">441</td> <td class="tcr rb">188</td> <td class="tcr rb">1126</td> <td class="tcr rb">1857</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Greifswald</td> <td class="tcc rb">1456</td> <td class="tcr rb">105</td> <td class="tcr rb">68</td> <td class="tcr rb">188</td> <td class="tcr rb">186</td> <td class="tcr rb">361</td> <td class="tcr rb">803</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Halle</td> <td class="tcc rb">1694</td> <td class="tcr rb">174</td> <td class="tcr rb">331</td> <td class="tcr rb">450</td> <td class="tcr rb">217</td> <td class="tcr rb">1239</td> <td class="tcr rb">2237</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Heidelberg</td> <td class="tcc rb">1385</td> <td class="tcr rb">177</td> <td class="tcr rb">55</td> <td class="tcr rb">357</td> <td class="tcr rb">385</td> <td class="tcr rb">879</td> <td class="tcr rb">1676</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Jena</td> <td class="tcc rb">1558</td> <td class="tcr rb">116</td> <td class="tcr rb">48</td> <td class="tcr rb">267</td> <td class="tcr rb">265</td> <td class="tcr rb">795</td> <td class="tcr rb">1375</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Kiel</td> <td class="tcc rb">1665</td> <td class="tcr rb">121</td> <td class="tcr rb">35</td> <td class="tcr rb">271</td> <td class="tcr rb">239</td> <td class="tcr rb">480</td> <td class="tcr rb">1025</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Königsberg</td> <td class="tcc rb">1544</td> <td class="tcr rb">152</td> <td class="tcr rb">68</td> <td class="tcr rb">317</td> <td class="tcr rb">218</td> <td class="tcr rb">502</td> <td class="tcr rb">1105</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Leipzig</td> <td class="tcc rb">1409</td> <td class="tcr rb">234</td> <td class="tcr rb">303</td> <td class="tcr rb">1013</td> <td class="tcr rb">606</td> <td class="tcr rb">2419</td> <td class="tcr rb">4341</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Marburg</td> <td class="tcc rb">1527</td> <td class="tcr rb">117</td> <td class="tcr rb">133</td> <td class="tcr rb">400</td> <td class="tcr rb">261</td> <td class="tcr rb">876</td> <td class="tcr rb">1670</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Munich</td> <td class="tcc rb">1826</td> <td class="tcr rb">239</td> <td class="tcr rb">169</td> <td class="tcr rb">1892</td> <td class="tcr rb">1903</td> <td class="tcr rb">1979</td> <td class="tcr rb">5943</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Münster</td> <td class="tcc rb">1902</td> <td class="tcr rb">95</td> <td class="tcr rb">278</td> <td class="tcr rb">458</td> <td class="tcc rb">. .</td> <td class="tcr rb">870</td> <td class="tcr rb">1606</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Rostock</td> <td class="tcc rb">1418</td> <td class="tcr rb">65</td> <td class="tcr rb">48</td> <td class="tcr rb">67</td> <td class="tcr rb">211</td> <td class="tcr rb">322</td> <td class="tcr rb">648</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Strassburg</td> <td class="tcc rb">1872</td> <td class="tcr rb">167</td> <td class="tcr rb">241</td> <td class="tcr rb">369</td> <td class="tcr rb">255</td> <td class="tcr rb">844</td> <td class="tcr rb">1709</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb">Tübingen</td> <td class="tcc rb">1477</td> <td class="tcr rb">111</td> <td class="tcr rb">464</td> <td class="tcr rb">467</td> <td class="tcr rb">263</td> <td class="tcr rb">384</td> <td class="tcr rb">1578</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl lb rb bb">Würzburg</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">1582</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">102</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">106</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">331</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">625</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">320</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">1382</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Not included in the above list is the little academy&mdash;Lyceum
+Hosianum&mdash;at Braunsberg in Prussia, having faculties of theology
+(Roman Catholic) and philosophy, with 13 teachers and 150 students.
+In all the universities the number of matriculated students in 1907-1908
+was 46,471, including 320 women, 2 of whom studied theology,
+14 law, 150 philosophy and 154 medicine. There were also, within
+the same period, 5653 non-matriculated <i>Hörer</i> (hearers), including
+2486 women.</p>
+
+<p>Ten schools, technical high schools, or <i>Polytechnica</i>, rank with the
+universities, and have the power of granting certain degrees. They
+have departments of architecture, building, civil engineering,
+chemistry, metallurgy and, in some cases, anatomy. These schools
+are as follows: Berlin (Charlottenburg), Munich, Darmstadt, Karlsruhe,
+Hanover, Dresden, Stuttgart, Aix-la-Chapelle, Brunswick
+and Danzig; in 1908 they were attended by 14,149 students (2531
+foreigners), and had a teaching staff of 753. Among the remaining
+higher technical schools may be mentioned the three mining academies
+of Berlin, Clausthal, in the Harz, and Freiberg in Saxony. For
+instruction in agriculture there are agricultural schools attached to
+several universities&mdash;notably Berlin, Halle, Göttingen, Königsberg,
+Jena, Poppelsdorf near Bonn, Munich and Leipzig. Noted academies
+of forestry are those of Tharandt (in Saxony),
+Eberswalde, Münden on the Weser, Hohenheim
+near Stuttgart, Brunswick, Eisenach, Giessen and
+Karlsruhe. Other technical schools are again the
+five veterinary academies of Berlin, Hanover, Munich, Dresden and
+Stuttgart, the commercial colleges (<i>Handelshochschulen</i>) of Leipzig,
+Aix-la-Chapelle, Hanover, Frankfort-on-Main and Cologne, in
+addition to 424 commercial schools of a lesser degree, 100 schools for
+textile manufactures and numerous schools for special metal industries,
+wood-working, ceramic industries, naval architecture and
+engineering and navigation. For military science there are the
+academies of war (<i>Kriegsakademien</i>) in Berlin and Munich, a naval
+academy in Kiel, and various cadet and non-commissioned officers&rsquo;
+schools.</p>
+
+<p><i>Libraries.</i>&mdash;Mental culture and a general diffusion of knowledge
+are extensively promoted by means of numerous public libraries
+established in the capital, the university towns and other places.
+The most celebrated public libraries are those of Berlin (1,000,000
+volumes and 30,000 MSS.); Munich (1,000,000 volumes, 40,000
+MSS.); Heidelberg (563,000 volumes, 8000 MSS.); Göttingen
+(503,000 volumes, 6000 MSS.); Strassburg (760,000 volumes);
+Dresden (500,000 volumes, 6000 MSS.); Hamburg (municipal
+library, 600,000 volumes, 5000 MSS.); Stuttgart (400,000 volumes,
+3500 MSS.); Leipzig (university library, 500,000 volumes, 5000 MSS.);
+Würzburg (350,000 volumes); Tübingen (340,000 volumes); Rostock
+(318,000 volumes); Breslau (university library, 300,000 volumes,
+7000 MSS.); Freiburg-im-Breisgau (250,000 volumes); Bonn
+(265,000 volumes); and Königsberg (230,000 volumes, 1100 MSS.).
+There are also famous libraries at Gotha, Wolfenbüttel and Celle.</p>
+
+<p><i>Learned Societies.</i>&mdash;There are numerous societies and unions,
+some of an exclusively scientific character and others designed for
+the popular diffusion of useful knowledge. Foremost among German
+academies is the Academy of Sciences (<i>Akademie der Wissenschaften</i>)
+in Berlin, founded in 1700 on Leibnitz&rsquo;s great plan and opened in
+1711. After undergoing various vicissitudes, it was reorganized by
+Frederick the Great on the French model and received its present
+constitution in 1812. It has four sections: physical, mathematical,
+philosophical and historical. The members are (1) ordinary (50 in
+number, each receiving a yearly dotation of Ł30), and (2) extraordinary,
+consisting of honorary and corresponding (foreign) members.
+It has published since 1811 a selection of treatises furnished by its
+most eminent men,
+among whom must be
+reckoned Schleiermacher,
+the brothers
+Humboldt, Grimm,
+Savigny, Böckh, Ritter
+and Lachmann, and
+has promoted philological
+and historical
+research by helping
+the production of such
+works as <i>Corpus inscriptionum
+Graecarum</i>;
+<i>Corpus inscriptionum
+Latinarum</i>; <i>Monumenta
+Germaniae historica</i>,
+the works of
+Aristotle, Frederick
+the Great&rsquo;s works and
+Kant&rsquo;s collected works.
+Next in order come
+(1) the Academy of
+Sciences at Munich,
+founded in 1759,
+divided into three
+classes, philosophical,
+historical and physical,
+and especially famous
+for its historical research; (2) the Society of Sciences (<i>Gesellschaft der
+Wissenschaften</i>) in Göttingen, founded in 1742; (3) that of Erfurt,
+founded 1758; (4) Görlitz (1779) and (5) the &ldquo;Royal Saxon Society
+of Sciences&rdquo; (<i>Königliche sächsische Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften</i>),
+founded in Leipzig in 1846. Ample provision is made for scientific
+collections of all kinds in almost all places of any importance, either
+at the public expense or through private munificence.</p>
+
+<p><i>Observatories.</i>&mdash;These have in recent years been considerably
+augmented. There are 19 leading observatories in the empire, viz.
+at Bamberg, Berlin (2), Bonn, Bothkamp in Schleswig, Breslau,
+Düsseldorf, Gotha, Göttingen, Hamburg, Heidelberg, Jena, Kiel,
+Königsberg, Leipzig, Munich, Potsdam, Strassburg and Wilhelmshaven.</p>
+
+<p><i>Book Trade.</i>&mdash;This branch of industry, from the important
+position it has gradually acquired since the time of the Reformation,
+is to be regarded as at once a cause and a result of the mental culture
+of Germany. Leipzig, Berlin and Stuttgart are the chief centres of
+the trade. The number of booksellers in Germany was not less than
+10,000 in 1907, among whom were approximately 6000 publishers.
+The following figures will show the recent progress of German
+literary production, in so far as published works are concerned:</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">Year</td> <td class="tcr">1570</td> <td class="tcr">1600</td> <td class="tcr">1618</td> <td class="tcr">1650</td> <td class="tcr">1700</td> <td class="tcr">1750</td> <td class="tcr">1800</td> <td class="tcr">1840</td> <td class="tcr">1884</td> <td class="tcr">1902</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Books</td> <td class="tcr">229</td> <td class="tcr">791</td> <td class="tcr">1293</td> <td class="tcr">725</td> <td class="tcr">951</td> <td class="tcr">1219</td> <td class="tcr">3335</td> <td class="tcr">6904</td> <td class="tcr">15,607</td> <td class="tcr">26,902</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><i>Newspapers.</i>&mdash;While in England a few important newspapers
+have an immense circulation, the newspapers of Germany are much
+more numerous, but on the whole command a more limited sale.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page824" id="page824"></a>824</span>
+Some large cities, notably Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg, Dresden,
+Leipzig and Munich, have, however, newspapers with a daily circulation
+of over 100,000 copies, and in the case of some papers in
+Berlin a million copies is reached. Most readers receive their
+newspapers through the post office or at their clubs, which may help
+to explain the smaller number of copies sold.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fine Arts.</i>&mdash;Perhaps the chief advantage which Germany has
+derived from the survival of separate territorial sovereignties within
+the empire has been the decentralization of culture. Patronage of
+art is among the cherished traditions of the German princes; and
+even where&mdash;as for instance at Cassel&mdash;there is no longer a court,
+the artistic impetus given by the former sovereigns has survived
+their fall. The result has been that there is in Germany no such
+concentration of the institutions for the encouragement and study
+of the fine arts as there is in France or England. Berlin has no
+practical monopoly, such as is possessed by London or Paris, of the
+celebrated museums and galleries of the country. The picture
+galleries of Dresden, Munich and Cassel still rival that at Berlin,
+though the latter is rapidly becoming one of the richest in the world
+in works of the great masters, largely at the cost of the private
+collections of England. For the same reason the country is very well
+provided with excellent schools of painting and music. Of the art
+schools the most famous are those of Munich, Düsseldorf, Dresden
+and Berlin, but there are others, <i>e.g.</i> at Karlsruhe, Weimar and
+Königsberg. These schools are in close touch with the sovereigns
+and the governments, and the more promising pupils are thus from
+the first assured of a career, especially in connexion with the decoration
+of public buildings and monuments. To this fact is largely
+due the excellence of the Germans in grandiose decorative painting
+and sculpture, a talent for the exercise of which plenty of scope has
+been given them by the numerous public buildings and memorials
+raised since the war of 1870. Perhaps for this very reason, however,
+the German art schools have had no such cosmopolitan influence
+as that exercised by the schools of Paris, the number of foreign
+students attending them being comparatively small. It is otherwise
+with the schools of music, which exercise a profound influence far
+beyond the borders of Germany. Of these the most important are
+the conservatoires of Leipzig, Dresden, Berlin, Munich and Frankfort-on-Main.
+The fame of Weimar as a seat of musical education,
+though it possesses an excellent conservatoire, is based mainly on
+the tradition of the abbé Liszt, who gathered about him here a
+number of distinguished pupils, some of whom have continued
+to make it their centre. Music in Germany also receives a
+great stimulus from the existence, in almost every important
+town, of opera-houses partly supported by the sovereigns or
+by the civic authorities. Good music being thus brought within
+the reach of all, appreciation of it is very wide-spread in all classes of
+the population. The imperial government maintains institutes at
+Rome and Athens which have done much for the advancement of
+archaeology.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(P. A. A.)</div>
+
+<p><i>Army.</i>&mdash;The system of the &ldquo;nation in arms&rdquo; owes its existence
+to the reforms in the Prussian army that followed Jena. The
+&ldquo;nation in arms&rdquo; itself was the product of the French Revolutionary
+and Napoleonic wars, but it was in Prussia that was
+seen the systematization and the economical and effective
+application of the immense forces of which the revolutionary
+period had demonstrated the existence (see also <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Army</a></span>; <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Conscription</a></span>;
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">French Revolutionary Wars</a></span>, &amp;c.). It was
+with an army and a military system that fully represented the
+idea of the &ldquo;nation in arms&rdquo; that Prussia created the powerful
+Germany of later days, and the same system was extended
+by degrees over all the other states of the new empire. But
+these very successes contained in themselves the germ of new
+troubles. Increased prosperity, a still greater increase in population
+and the social and economic disturbances incidental to the
+conversion of an agricultural into a manufacturing community,
+led to the practical abandonment of the principle of
+<i>universal</i> service. More men came before the recruiting
+officer than there was money to train; and in 1895 the period
+of service with the colours was reduced from three to two
+years&mdash;a step since followed by other military powers, the idea
+being that with the same peace effective and financial grants
+half as many men again could be passed through the ranks as
+before.</p>
+
+<p>In 1907 the recruiting statistics were as follows:</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr f90" style="width: 90%;" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>Number of young men attaining service age (including
+ those who had voluntarily enlisted before their time)</p></td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcrb">556,772</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>Men belonging to previous years who had been put back
+ for re-examination, &amp;., still borne on the lists</p></td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcrb">657,753</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">1,214,525</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p><i>Deduct</i>&mdash;Physically unfit, &amp;c.</p></td> <td class="tcr">35,802</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>&emsp;Struck off</p></td> <td class="tcr">860</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>Voluntarily enlisted in the army and navy,
+ on or before attaining service age</p></td> <td class="tcr">57,739</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>Assigned as recruits to the navy</p></td> <td class="tcr">10,374</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>Put back, &amp;c.</p></td> <td class="tcr">684,193</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">788,968</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>Available as army recruits, fit</p></td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr un">425,557</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>Of these, (<i>a</i>) Assigned to the active army for two or three
+ years&rsquo; service with the colours</p></td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcrb">212,661</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>&emsp;&emsp;(<i>b</i>) Assigned to the Ersatz-Reserve of the
+ army and navy</p></td> <td class="tccm cl" rowspan="2"><i>untrained</i></td> <td class="tcrb">89,877</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>&emsp;&emsp;(<i>c</i>) Assigned to the 1st levy of Landsturm</p></td> <td class="tcrb">123,019</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcr">425,557</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Thus only half the men on whom the government has an
+effective hold go to the colours in the end. Moreover few of the
+men &ldquo;put back, &amp;c.,&rdquo; who figure on both sides of the account for
+any one year, and seem to average 660,000, are really &ldquo;put back.&rdquo;
+They are in the main those who have failed or fail to present themselves,
+and whose names are retained on the liability lists against
+the day of their return. Many of these have emigrated.</p>
+
+<p>By the constitution of the 16th of April 1871 every German
+is liable to service and no substitution is allowed. Liability
+begins at the age of seventeen, and actual service, as a rule,
+from the age of twenty. The men serve in the active army and
+army reserve for seven years, of which two years (three in the
+case of cavalry and horse artillery recruits) are spent with the
+colours. During his four or five years in the reserve, the soldier
+is called out for training with his corps twice, for a maximum
+of eight weeks (in practice usually for six). After quitting the
+reserve the soldier is drafted into the first ban of the <i>Landwehr</i>
+for five years more, in which (except in the cavalry, which is
+not called out in peace time) he undergoes two trainings of from
+eight to fourteen days. Thence he passes into the second ban
+and remains in it until he has completed his thirty-ninth year&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>
+from six to seven years more, the whole period of army and Landwehr
+service being thus nineteen years. Finally, all soldiers are
+passed into the <i>Landsturm</i>, in the first ban of which they remain
+until the completion of their forty-fifth year. The second ban
+consists of untrained men between the ages of thirty-nine and
+forty-five. Young men who reach a certain standard of education,
+however, are only obliged to serve for one year in the active
+army. They are called One-Year Volunteers (<i>Einjährig-Freiwilligen</i>),
+defray their own expenses and are the chief source of
+supply of reserve and Landwehr officers. That proportion of
+the annual contingents which is dismissed untrained goes either
+to the Ersatz-Reserve or to the 1st ban of the Landsturm (the
+Landwehr, it will be observed, contains only men who have
+served with the colours). The Ersatz consists exclusively of
+young men, who would in war time be drafted to the regimental
+depots and thence sent, with what training circumstances had
+in the meantime allowed, to the front. Some men of the Ersatz
+receive a short preliminary training in peace time.</p>
+
+<p>In 1907 the average height of the private soldiers was 5 ft. 6 in.,
+that of the non-commissioned officers 5 ft. 6˝ in., and that of the
+one-year volunteers 5 ft. 9˝ in. A much greater proportion of
+the country recruits were accepted as &ldquo;fit&rdquo; than of those
+coming from the towns. Voluntary enlistments of men who
+desired to become non-commissioned officers were most frequent
+in the provinces of the old Prussian monarchy, but in Berlin
+itself and in Westphalia the enlistments fell far short of the
+number of non-commissioned officers required for the territorial
+regiments of the respective districts. Above all, in Alsace-Lorraine
+one-eighth only of the required numbers were obtained.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Peace and War Strengths.</i>&mdash;German military policy is revised
+every five years; thus a law of April 1905 fixes the strength and
+establishments to be attained on March 31, 1910, the necessary
+augmentations, &amp;c., being carried out gradually in the intervening
+years. The peace strength for the latter date was fixed at 505,839
+men (not including officers, non-commissioned officers and one-year
+volunteers), forming&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcr">633</td> <td class="tcl">battalions infantry.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr">510</td> <td class="tcl">squadrons cavalry.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr">574</td> <td class="tcl">batteries field and horse artillery.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr">40</td> <td class="tcl">battalions foot artillery.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr">29</td> <td class="tcl">battalions pioneers.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr">12</td> <td class="tcl">battalions communication troops.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcr">23</td> <td class="tcl">train battalions, &amp;c.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page825" id="page825"></a>825</span></p>
+
+<p class="noind">The addition of about 25,000 officers and 85,000 non-commissioned
+officers, one-year men, &amp;c., brings the peace footing of the German
+army in 1910 to a total of about 615,000 of all ranks.</p>
+
+<p>As for war, the total fighting strength of the German nation
+(including the navy) has been placed at as high a figure as 11,000,000.
+Of these 7,000,000 have received little or no training, owing to medical
+unfitness, residence abroad, failure to appear, surplus of annual
+contingents, &amp;c., as already explained, and not more than 3,000,000
+of these would be available in war. The real military resources of
+Germany, untrained and trained, are thus about 7,000,000, of whom
+4,000,000 have at one time or another done a continuous period of
+service with the colours.<a name="fa6k" id="fa6k" href="#ft6k"><span class="sp">6</span></a> This is of course for a war of defence <i>ŕ
+outrance</i>. For an offensive war, only the active army, the reserve,
+the Ersatz and the 1st levy of the Landwehr would be really available.</p>
+
+<p>A rough calculation of the number of these who go to form or to
+reinforce the field armies and the mobilized garrisons may be given:</p>
+
+<table class="nobctr" style="width: 80%;" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>Cadres of officers and non-commissioned officers</p></td> <td class="tcrb">100,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>From 7 annual contingents of recruits (<i>i.e.</i>
+ active army and reserve)</p></td> <td class="tcrb">1,200,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>From 5 contingents of Landwehr (1st ban)</p></td> <td class="tcrb">600,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>From 7 classes of Ersatz reserve called to the
+ depots, able-bodied men</p></td> <td class="tcrb">400,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl"><p>One-year volunteers recalled to the colours or
+ serving as reserve and Landwehr officers</p></td> <td class="tcrb">100,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcrb">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tcrb">2,400,000</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>These again would divide into a first line army of 1,350,000 and a
+second of 1,050,000. It is calculated that the field army would
+consist, in the third week of a great war, of 633 battalions, 410
+squadrons and 574 batteries, with technical, departmental and
+medical troops (say 630,000 bayonets, 60,000 sabres and 3444 guns,
+or 750,000 men), and that these could be reinforced in three or four
+weeks by 350 fresh battalions. Behind these forces there would
+shortly become available for secondary operations about 460 battalions
+of the 1st ban Landwehr, and 200 squadrons and about 220
+batteries of the reserve and Landwehr. In addition, each would
+leave behind depot troops to form the nucleus on which the 2nd ban
+Landwehr and the Landsturm would eventually be built up. The
+total number of units of the three arms in all branches may be stated
+approximately at 2200 battalions, 780 squadrons and 950 batteries.</p>
+
+<p><i>Command and Organization</i>.&mdash;By the articles of the constitution
+the whole of the land forces of the empire form a united army in
+war and peace under the orders of the emperor. The sovereigns of
+the chief states are entitled to nominate the lower grades of officers,
+and the king of Bavaria has reserved to himself the special privilege
+of superintending the general administration of the three Bavarian
+army corps; but all appointments are made subject to the emperor&rsquo;s
+approval. The emperor is empowered to erect fortresses in any part
+of the empire. It is the almost invariable practice of the kings of
+Prussia to command their forces in person, and the army commands,
+too, are generally held by leaders of royal or princely rank. The
+natural corollary to this is the assignment of special advisory duties
+to a responsible chief of staff. The officers are recruited either
+from the Cadet Corps at Berlin or from amongst those men, of
+sufficient social standing, who join the ranks as &ldquo;avantageurs&rdquo;
+with a view to obtaining commissions. Reserve and Landwehr
+officers are drawn from among officers and selected non-commissioned
+officers retired from the active army, and one-year volunteers who
+have passed a special examination. All candidates, from whatever
+source they come, are subject to approval or rejection by their
+brother officers before being definitively commissioned. Promotion
+in the German army is excessively slow, the senior subalterns having
+eighteen to twenty years&rsquo; commissioned service and the senior
+captains sometimes thirty. The number of officers on the active list
+is about 25,000. The under-officers number about 84,000.</p>
+
+<p>The German army is organized in twenty-three army corps,
+stationed and recruited in the various provinces and states as follows:
+Guard, Berlin (general recruiting); I. Königsberg (East Prussia);
+II. Stettin (Pomerania); III. Berlin (Brandenburg); IV. Magdeburg
+(Prussian Saxony); V. Posen (Poland and part of Silesia); VI.
+Breslau (Silesia); VII. Münster (Westphalia); VIII. Coblenz
+(Rhineland); IX. Altona (Hanse Towns and Schleswig-Holstein);
+X. Hanover (Hanover); XI. Cassel (Hesse-Cassel); XII. Dresden
+(Saxony); XIII. Stuttgart (Württemberg); XIV. Karlsruhe
+(Baden); XV. Strassburg (Alsace); XVI. Metz (Lorraine); XVII.
+Danzig (West Prussia); XVIII. Frankfurt-am-Main (Hesse Darmstadt,
+Main country); XIX. Leipzig (Saxony); I. Bavarian Corps,
+Munich; II. Bavarian Corps, Würzburg; III. Bavarian Corps,
+Nuremberg. The formation of a XX. army corps out of the extra
+division of the XIV. corps at Colmar in Alsace, with the addition of
+two regiments from Westphalia and drafts of the XV. and XVI.
+corps, was announced in 1908 as the final step of the programme for
+the period 1906-1910. The normal composition of an army corps
+on war is (<i>a</i>) staff, (<i>b</i>) 2 infantry divisions, each of 2 brigades (4
+regiments or 12 battalions), 2 regiments of field artillery (comprising
+9 batteries of field-guns and 3 of field howitzers, 72 pieces in all),
+3 squadrons of cavalry, 1 or 2 companies of pioneers, a bridge train
+and 1 or 2 bearer companies; (<i>c</i>) corps troops, 1 battalion rifles,
+telegraph troops, bridge train, ammunition columns, train (supply)
+battalion, field bakeries, bearer companies and field hospitals, &amp;c.,
+with, as a rule, one or two batteries of heavy field howitzers or
+mortars and a machine-gun group. The remainder of the cavalry
+and horse artillery attached to the army corps in peace goes in war
+to form the cavalry divisions. Certain corps have an increased
+effective; thus the Guard has a whole cavalry division, and the I.
+corps (Königsberg) has three divisions. Several corps possess an
+extra infantry brigade of two 2-battalion regiments, but these,
+unless stationed on the frontiers, are gradually absorbed into new
+divisions and army corps. In war several army corps, cavalry
+divisions and reserve divisions are grouped in two or more &ldquo;armies,&rdquo;
+and in peace the army corps are divided for purposes of superior
+control amongst several &ldquo;army inspections.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The cavalry is organized in regiments of cuirassiers, dragoons,
+lancers, hussars and mounted rifles,<a name="fa7k" id="fa7k" href="#ft7k"><span class="sp">7</span></a> the regiments having four
+service and one depot squadrons. Troopers are armed with lance,
+sword and carbine (for which in 1908 the substitution of a short rifle
+with bayonet was suggested). In peace time the highest permanent
+organization is the brigade of two regiments or eight squadrons, but
+in war and at man&oelig;uvres divisions of three brigades, with horse
+artillery attached, are formed.</p>
+
+<p>The infantry consists of 216 regiments, mostly of three battalions
+each. These are numbered, apart from the eight Guard regiments
+and the Bavarians, serially throughout the army. Certain regiments
+are styled grenadiers and fusiliers. In addition there are eighteen
+chasseur or rifle battalions (<i>Jäger</i>). The battalion has always four
+companies, each, at war strength, 250 strong. The armament
+of the infantry is the model 1898 magazine rifle and bayonet (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Rifle</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p>The field (including horse) artillery consists in peace of 94 regiments
+subdivided into two or three groups (<i>Abteilungen</i>), each of
+two or three 6-gun batteries. The field gun in use is the quick-firing
+gun 96/N.A. (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Ordnance</a></span>: <i>Field Equipments</i>).</p>
+
+<p>The foot artillery is intended for siege and fortress warfare, and to
+furnish the heavy artillery of the field army. It consists of forty
+battalions. Machine gun detachments, resembling 4-gun batteries
+and horsed as artillery, were formed to the number of sixteen in
+1904-1906. These are intended to work with the cavalry divisions.
+Afterwards it was decided to form additional small groups of two
+guns each, less fully horsed, to assist the infantry, and a certain
+number of these were created in 1906-1908.</p>
+
+<p>The engineers are a technical body, not concerned with field
+warfare or with the command of troops. On the other hand, the
+pioneers (29 battalions) are assigned to the field army, with duties
+corresponding roughly to those of field companies R.E. in the British
+service. Other branches represented in Great Britain by the Royal
+Engineers are known in Germany by the title &ldquo;communication
+troops,&rdquo; and comprise railway, telegraph and airship and balloon
+battalions. The Train is charged with the duties of supply and
+transport. There is one battalion to each army corps.</p>
+
+<p><i>Remounts</i>.&mdash;The peace establishment in horses is approximately
+100,000. Horses serve eight to nine years in the artillery and nine
+to ten in the cavalry, after which, in the autumn of each year, they
+are sold, and their places taken by remounts. The latter are bought
+at horse-fairs and private sales, unbroken, and sent to the 25 remount
+depots, whence, when fit for the service, they are sent to the various
+units, as a rule in the early summer. Most of the cavalry and
+artillery riding horses come from Prussia proper. The Polish
+districts produce swift Hussar horses of a semi-eastern type. Hanover
+is second only to East Prussia in output of horses. Bavaria, Saxony
+and Württemberg do not produce enough horses for their own armies
+and have to draw on Prussia. Thirteen thousand four hundred
+and forty-five young horses were bought by the army authorities
+during 1907. The average price was about Ł51 for field artillery
+draught horses, Ł65 for heavy draught horses, and Ł46 for riding
+horses.</p>
+
+<p>The military expenditure of Germany, according to a comparative
+table furnished to the House of Commons by the British war office
+in 1907, varied between Ł36,000,000 and Ł44,000,000 per annum
+in the period 1899-1902, and between Ł42,000,000 and Ł51,000,000
+per annum in that of 1905-1909.</p>
+
+<p><i>Colonial Troops</i>.&mdash;In 1906 these, irrespective of the brigade of
+occupation then maintained in north China and of special reinforcements
+sent to S.W. Africa during the Herrero war, consisted of the
+<i>German East Africa</i> troops, 220 Europeans and 1470 natives; the
+<i>Cameroon</i> troops, 145 European and 1170 natives; <i>S.W. African
+troops</i>, entirely European and normally consisting of 606 officers
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page826" id="page826"></a>826</span>
+and men active and a reserve of ex-soldier settlers; the Kiao-Chau
+garrison (chiefly marines), numbering 2687 officers and men; and
+various small police forces in Togo, New Guinea, Samoa, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p><i>Fortresses</i>.&mdash;The fixed defences maintained by the German empire
+(apart from naval ports and coast defences) belong to two distinct
+epochs in the military policy of the state. In the first period
+(roughly 1871-1899), which is characterized by the development of
+the offensive spirit, the fortresses, except on the French and Russian
+frontiers, were reduced to a minimum. In the interior only Spandau,
+Cüstrin, Magdeburg, Ingolstadt and Ulm were maintained as
+defensive supporting points, and similarly on the Rhine, which
+was formerly studded with fortresses from Basel to Emmerich, the
+defences were limited to New Breisach, Germersheim, Mainz,
+Coblenz, Cologne and Wesel, all of a &ldquo;barrier&rdquo; character and not
+organized specially as centres of activity for field armies. The
+French frontier, and to a less extent the Russian, were organized
+offensively. Metz, already surrounded by the French with a girdle of
+forts, was extended and completed (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Fortification and Siegecraft</a></span>)
+as a great entrenched camp, and Strassburg, which in 1870
+possessed no outlying works, was similarly expanded, though the
+latter was regarded an instrument of defence more than of attack.
+On the Russian frontier Königsberg, Danzig, Thorn, Posen, Glogau
+(and on a smaller scale Boyen in East Prussia and Graudenz on the
+Vistula) were modernized and improved.</p>
+
+<p>From 1899, however, Germany began to pay more attention to
+her fixed defences, and in the next years a long line of fortifications
+came into existence on the French frontier, the positions and strength
+of which were regulated with special regard to a new strategic
+disposition of the field armies and to the number and sites of the
+&ldquo;strategic railway stations&rdquo; which were constructed about the
+same time. Thus, the creation of a new series of forts extending
+from Thionville (Diedenhofen) to Metz and thence south-eastward
+was coupled with the construction of twelve strategic railway
+stations between Cologne and the Belgian frontier, and later&mdash;the
+so-called &ldquo;fundamental plan&rdquo; of operations against France having
+apparently undergone modification in consequence of changes in the
+foreign relations of the German government&mdash;an immense strategic
+railway station was undertaken at Saarburg, on the right rear of
+Thionville and well away from the French frontier, and many important
+new works both of fortification and of railway construction
+were begun in Upper Alsace, between Colmar and Basel.</p>
+
+<p>The coast defences include, besides the great naval ports
+of Wilhelmshaven on the North Sea and Kiel on the Baltic,
+Danzig, Pillau, Memel, Friedrichsort, Cuxhaven, Geestemünde and
+Swinemünde.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(C. F. A.)</div>
+
+<p><i>Navy</i>.&mdash;The German navy is of recent origin. In 1848 the
+German people urged the construction of a fleet. Money was
+collected, and a few men-of-war were fitted out; but these
+were subsequently sold, the German <i>Bundestag</i> (federal council)
+not being in sympathy with the aspirations of the nation. Prussia
+however, began laying the foundations of a small navy. To
+meet the difficulty arising from the want of good harbours in
+the Baltic, a small extent of territory near Jade Bay was bought
+from Oldenburg in 1854, for the purpose of establishing a war-port
+there. Its construction was completed at enormous expense,
+and it was opened for ships by the emperor in June 1869 under
+the name of Wilhelmshaven. In 1864 Prussia, in annexing
+Holstein, obtained possession of the excellent port of Kiel,
+which has since been strongly fortified. From the time of the
+formation of the North German Confederation the navy has
+belonged to the common federal interest. Since 1st October
+1867 all its ships have carried the same flag, of the national
+colours&mdash;black, white, red, with the Prussian eagle and the iron
+cross.</p>
+
+<p>From 1848 to 1868 the increase of the navy was slow. In
+1851 it consisted of 51 vessels, including 36 small gunboats
+of 2 guns each. In 1868 it consisted of 45 steamers (including
+2 ironclads) and 44 sailing vessels, but during the various wars
+of the period 1848-1871, only a few minor actions were fought
+at sea, and for many years after the French War the development
+of the navy did not keep pace with that of the empire&rsquo;s commercial
+interests beyond the seas, or compete seriously with
+the naval power of possible rivals. But towards the end of the
+19th century Germany started on a new naval policy, by which
+her fleet was largely and rapidly increased. Details of this
+development will be found in the article <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Navy</a></span> (see also <i>History</i>
+below, <i>ad fin.</i>). It will be sufficient here to give the statistics
+relating to the beginning of the year 1909, reference being made
+only to ships effective at that date and to ships authorized in
+the construction programme of 1907:</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tcl">Modern battleships</td> <td class="tcr">20</td> <td class="tcl">effective, 4 approaching completion.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Old battleships and coast defence ships</td> <td class="tcr">11</td> <td class="tcl">effective (4 non-effective).</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Armoured cruisers</td> <td class="tcr">9</td> <td class="tcl">effective, 1 approaching completion.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Protected cruisers</td> <td class="tcr">31</td> <td class="tcl">effective, 2 approaching completion.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcl">Torpedo craft of modern types</td> <td class="tcr">130</td> <td class="tcl">effective, 3 approaching completion.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Administration</i>.&mdash;In 1889 the administration was transferred
+from the ministry of war to the imperial admiralty (<i>Reichsmarineamt</i>),
+at the head of which is the naval secretary of state. The chief
+command was at the same time separated from the administration
+and vested in a naval officer, who controls the movements of the
+fleet, its personnel and training, while the maintenance of the arsenals
+and dockyards, victualling and clothing and all matters immediately
+affecting the <i>matériel</i>, fall within the province of the secretary of
+state. The navy is divided between the Baltic (Kiel) and North Sea
+(Wilhelmshaven) stations, which are strategically linked by the
+Kaiser Wilhelm Canal (opened in 1895), across the Schleswig-Holstein
+peninsula. Danzig, Cuxhaven and Sonderburg have also been
+made naval bases.</p>
+
+<p><i>Personnel</i>.&mdash;The German navy is manned by the obligatory service
+of the essentially maritime population&mdash;such as sailors, fishermen
+and others, as well as by volunteers, who elect for naval service in
+preference to that in the army. It is estimated that the total
+seafaring population of Germany amounts to 80,000. The active
+naval personnel was, in 1906, 2631 officers (including engineers,
+marines, medical, &amp;c.) and 51,138 under-officers and men, total
+53,769. In addition, there is a reserve of more than 100,000 officers
+and men.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(P. A. A.)</div>
+
+<p><i>Finance</i>.&mdash;The imperial budget is voted every year by the
+Reichstag. The &ldquo;extraordinary funds,&rdquo; from which considerable
+sums appear annually in the budget, were created after the
+Franco-German War. Part of the indemnity was invested
+for definite purposes. The largest of these investments served
+for paying the pensions of the invalided, and amounted originally
+to Ł28,000,000. Every year, not only the interest, but part
+of the capital is expended in paying these pensions, and the
+capital sum was thus reduced in 1903 to Ł15,100,000, and in 1904
+to Ł13,200,000. Another fund, of about Ł5,200,000, serves
+for the construction and armament of fortresses; while
+Ł6,000,000, known as the <i>Reichskriegsschatz</i>&mdash;or &ldquo;war treasure
+fund&rdquo;&mdash;is not laid out at interest, but is stored in coined gold
+and bullion in the Juliusturm at Spandau. In addition to
+these, the railways in Alsace-Lorraine, which France bought
+of the Eastern Railway Company for Ł13,000,000, in order to
+transfer them to the control of Germany, are also the property
+of the empire.</p>
+
+<p>During the years 1908 and 1909 considerable public discussion
+and political activity were devoted to the reorganization of
+German imperial finance, and it is only possible here to deal
+historically with the position up to that time, since further
+developments of an important nature were already foreshadowed.</p>
+
+<p>In 1871 the system accepted was that the imperial budget
+should be financed substantially by its reliance on the revenue
+from what were the obvious imperial resources&mdash;customs and
+excise duties, stamp duties, post and telegraph receipts, and
+among minor sources the receipts from the Alsace-Lorraine
+railways. But it was also provided that, for the purpose of
+deficits, the states should, in addition, if required by the imperial
+minister of finance, contribute their quotas according to population&mdash;<i>Matrikular
+Beiträge</i>. It was not expected that these would
+become chronic, but in a few years, and emphatically by the early
+&rsquo;eighties, they were found to be an essential part of the financial
+system, owing to regular deficits. It had been intended that,
+in return for the <i>Matrikular Beiträge</i>, regular assignments (<i>Überweisungen</i>)
+should be returned to the states, in relief of their
+own taxation, which would practically wipe out the contribution;
+but instead of these the <i>Überweisungen</i> were considerably less.
+Certain reorganizations were made in 1887 and 1902, but the
+excess of the <i>Matrikular Beiträge</i> over the <i>Überweisungen</i> continued;
+the figures in 1905 and 1908 being as follows (in millions
+of marks):&mdash;</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tccm allb">Matrikular-<br />Beiträge.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Überweisungen.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Excess.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1905</td> <td class="tcc rb">213</td> <td class="tcc rb">189</td> <td class="tcc rb">&ensp;24</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1908</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">346</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">195</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">150</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page827" id="page827"></a>827</span></p>
+
+<p>These figures show how natural it was to desire to relieve the
+states by increasing the direct imperial revenue.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, in spite of the &ldquo;matricular contributions,&rdquo; the
+calls on imperial finance had steadily increased, and up to 1908
+were continually met to a large extent by loans, involving a
+continual growth of the imperial debt, which in 1907 amounted
+to 3643 millions of marks. The imperial budget, like that of
+most European nations, is divided into two portions, the ordinary
+and the extraordinary; and the increase under both heads
+(especially for army and navy) became a recurrent factor. A
+typical situation is represented by the main figures for 1905 and
+1906 (in millions of marks):</p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">&nbsp;</td> <td class="tccm allb" colspan="2">Expenditure.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Revenue.</td> <td class="tccm allb" rowspan="2">Raised by<br />Loan.</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Ordinary.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Extra-<br />ordinary.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1905</td> <td class="tcc rb">2002</td> <td class="tcc rb">193</td> <td class="tcc rb">2053</td> <td class="tcc rb">341</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1906</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2157</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">235</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2118</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">258</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The same process went on in 1907 and 1908, and it was
+necessarily recognized that the method of balancing the imperial
+budget by a regular increase of debt could not be satisfactory
+in a country where the general increase of
+wealth and taxable capacity had meanwhile
+been conspicuous. And though the main
+proposals made by the government for new
+taxation, including new direct taxes, resulted
+in a parliamentary deadlock in 1909, and led
+to Prince von Bülow&rsquo;s resignation as chancellor,
+it was already evident that some important
+reorganization of the imperial financial system
+was inevitable.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><i>Currency.</i>&mdash;The German empire adopted a gold
+currency by the law of the 4th of December
+1871. Subsequently the old local coinages
+(<i>Landesmünzen</i>) began to be called in and replaced
+by new gold and silver coins. The old gold
+coins, amounting to Ł4,550,000, had been called in
+as early as 1873; and the old silver coins have
+since been successively put out of circulation, so
+that none actually remains as legal tender but the
+thaler (3s.). The currency reform was at first
+facilitated by the French indemnity, a great part
+of which was paid in gold. But later on that metal became scarcer;
+the London gold prices ran higher and higher, while silver prices
+declined. The average rate per ounce of standard silver in 1866-1870
+was 60<span class="spp">5</span>&frasl;<span class="suu">8</span>d., in January 1875 only 57˝d., in July 1876 as low as
+49d. It rose in January 1877 to 57˝d., but again declined, and in
+September 1878 it was 50<span class="spp">5</span>&frasl;<span class="suu">8</span>d. While the proportion of like weights
+of fine gold and fine silver in 1866-1870 averaged 1 to 15.55, it was 1
+to 17.79 in 1876, 1 to 17.18 in 1877, and, in 1902, in consequence
+of the heavy fall in silver, the ratio became as much as 1 to 39.
+By the currency law of the 9th of July 1873, the present coinage
+system was established and remains, with certain minor modifications,
+now in force as then introduced. The unit is the mark (1
+shilling)&mdash;the tenth part of the imperial <i>gold coin</i> (Krone = crown),
+of which last 139˝ are struck from a pound of pure gold. Besides
+these ten-mark pieces, there are Doppelkronen (double crowns),
+about equivalent in value to an English sovereign (the average rate
+of exchange being 20 marks 40 pfennige per Ł1 sterling), and,
+formerly, half-crowns (halbe Kronen = 5 marks) in gold were also
+issued, but they have been withdrawn from circulation. Silver coins
+are 5, 2 and 1 mark pieces, equivalent to 5, 2 and 1 shillings respectively,
+and 50 pfennige pieces = 6d. Nickel coins are 10 and 5
+pfennige pieces, and there are bronze coins of 2 and 1 pfennige.
+The system is decimal; thus 100 pfennige = 1 mark, 1000 pfennige = the
+gold krone (or crown), and 1d. English amounts roughly to 8
+pfennige.</p>
+
+<p><i>Banking.</i>&mdash;A new banking law was promulgated for the whole
+empire on the 14th of March 1875. Before that date there existed
+thirty-two banks with the privilege of issuing notes, and on the 31st
+of December 1872, Ł67,100,000 in all was in circulation, Ł25,100,000
+of that sum being uncovered. The banking law was designed to
+reduce this circulation of notes; Ł19,250,000 was fixed as an aggregate
+maximum of uncovered notes of the banks. The private banks
+were at the same time obliged to erect branch offices in Berlin or
+Frankfort-on-Main for the payment of their notes. In consequence
+of this regulation numerous banks resigned the privilege of issuing
+notes, and at present there are in Germany but the following private
+note banks, issuing private notes, viz. the Bavarian, the Saxon,
+the Württemberg, the Baden and the Brunswick, in addition to the
+Imperial Bank. The Imperial Bank (Reichsbank) ranks far above
+the others in importance. It took the place of the Prussian Bank
+in 1876, and is under the superintendence and management of the
+empire, which shares in the profits. Its head office is in Berlin, and
+it is entitled to erect branch offices in any part of the empire. It
+has a capital of Ł9,000,000 divided into 40,000 shares of Ł150 each,
+and 60,000 shares of Ł50 each. The Imperial Bank is privileged to
+issue bank-notes, which must be covered to the extent of 1s. 3d. in
+coined money, bullion or bank-notes, the remainder in bills at short
+sight. Of the net profits, a dividend of 3˝% is first payable to the
+shareholders, 20% of the remainder is transferred to the reserve
+until this has reached a total of Ł3,000,000, and of the remainder
+again a quarter is apportioned to the shareholders and three-quarters
+falls to the imperial exchequer. If the net profits do not reach
+3˝%, the balance must be made good from the reserve. Private
+note banks are not empowered to do business outside the state
+which has conceded them the privilege to issue notes, except under
+certain limitations. One of these is that they agree that their
+privilege to issue private notes may be withdrawn at one year&rsquo;s
+notice without compensation. But this condition has not been
+enforced in the case of such banks as have agreed to accept as
+binding the official rate of discount of the Reichsbank after this has
+reached or when it exceeds 4%. At other times they are not to
+discount at more than ź% below the official rate of the Reichsbank,
+or in case the Reichsbank itself discounts at a lower rate than the
+official rate, at more than <span class="spp">1</span>&frasl;<span class="suu">8</span>% below that rate.</p>
+
+<p>The following table shows the financial condition of the note-issuing
+banks, in thousands of marks, over a term of years:</p>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><i>Liabilities.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Year.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Banks.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Capital.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Reserve.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Notes in<br />Circulation.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total, including<br />other Liabilities.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1900</td> <td class="tcc rb">8</td> <td class="tcc rb">219,672</td> <td class="tcc rb">48,329</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,313,855</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,237,017</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1901</td> <td class="tcc rb">7</td> <td class="tcc rb">231,672</td> <td class="tcc rb">54,901</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,345,436</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,360,453</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1902</td> <td class="tcc rb">6</td> <td class="tcc rb">216,000</td> <td class="tcc rb">56,684</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,373,482</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,353,951</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1903</td> <td class="tcc rb">6</td> <td class="tcc rb">216,000</td> <td class="tcc rb">60,131</td> <td class="tcc rb">1,394,336</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,365,256</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1904</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">6</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">216,000</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">64,385</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">1,433,421</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2,378,845</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="pt2 center"><i>Assets.</i></p>
+
+<table class="ws" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td class="tccm allb">Year.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Banks.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Coin and<br />Bullion.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Notes of State<br />and other Banks.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Bills.</td> <td class="tccm allb">Total.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1900</td> <td class="tcc rb">8</td> <td class="tcr rb">899,630</td> <td class="tcc rb">51,931</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,036,961</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,239,564</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1901</td> <td class="tcc rb">7</td> <td class="tcr rb">990,262</td> <td class="tcc rb">60,770</td> <td class="tcr rb">990,950</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,360,355</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1902</td> <td class="tcc rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">1,052,391</td> <td class="tcc rb">54,389</td> <td class="tcr rb">901,408</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,354,253</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb">1903</td> <td class="tcc rb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb">973,953</td> <td class="tcc rb">54,231</td> <td class="tcr rb">984,604</td> <td class="tcc rb">2,356,511</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tcc lb rb bb">1904</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">6</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">996,601</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">66,372</td> <td class="tcr rb bb">947,358</td> <td class="tcc rb bb">2,379,234</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="noind">The total turnover of the Imperial Bank was, in the first year of its
+foundation, 1ž milliards pounds sterling; and, in 1899, 90 milliards.
+Eighty-five per cent of its bank-notes have been, on the average,
+covered by metal reserve.</p>
+
+<p>The total value of silver coins is not to exceed 10 marks, and that
+of copper and nickel 2˝ marks per head of the population. While
+the coinage of silver, nickel and copper is reserved to the state,
+the coinage of gold pieces can be undertaken by the state for the
+account of private individuals on payment of a fixed charge. The
+coinage takes place in the six mints belonging to the various states&mdash;thus
+Berlin (Prussia), Munich (Bavaria), Dresden (in the Muldenerhütte
+near Freiberg, Saxony), Stuttgart (Württemberg), Karlsruhe
+(Baden) and Hamburg (for the state of Hamburg). Of the thalers,
+the Vereinsthaler, coined until 1867 in Austria, was by ordinance of
+the Bundesrat declared illegal tender since the 1st of January 1903.
+No one can be compelled to accept more than 20 marks in silver or
+more than 1 mark in nickel and copper coin; but, on the other hand,
+the Imperial Bank accepts imperial silver coin in payment to any
+amount.</p>
+
+<p>The total value of thalers, which, with the exception of the
+Vereinsthaler, are legal tender, was estimated in 1894 at about
+Ł20,000,000.</p>
+
+<p><span class="sc">Bibliography.</span>&mdash;Cotta, <i>Deutschlands Boden</i> (2 vols., 1853); H.A.
+Daniel, <i>Deutschland</i> (1896); J. Kutzen, <i>Das deutsche Land</i> (Breslau,
+1900); Von Klöden, <i>Geographisches Handbuch</i>, vol. ii. (1875);
+G. Neumann, <i>Das deutsche Reich</i> (2 vols., 1874); O. Brunckow, <i>Die
+Wohnplätze des deutschen Reiches&mdash;auf Grund der amtlichen Materialien
+bearbeitet</i> (new ed., Berlin, 1897); <i>Handbuch der Wirtschaftskunde
+Deutschlands</i> (4 vols., Leipzig, 1901-1905); <i>Gothaischer genealogischer
+Hofkalender auf das Jahr 1907</i> (Gotha); A. von W. Keil, <i>Neumanns
+Ortslexikon des deutschen Reiches</i> (3rd ed., Leipzig, 1894); Meyer,
+<i>Konversations-Lexikon</i> (1902 seqq.); Brockhaus, <i>Konversations-Lexikon</i>
+(1900 seqq.); J. Kürschner, <i>Staats- Hof- und Kommunal-handbuch
+des Reiches und der Einzelstaaten</i> (Leipzig, 1900); P. Hage,
+<i>Grundriss der deutschen Staats- und Rechtskunde</i> (Stuttgart, 1906),
+and for Statistical matter chiefly the following: <i>Centralblatt für
+das deutsche Reich. Herausgegeben im Reichsamt der Innern</i> (Berlin,
+1900); <i>Die deutsche Armee und die kaiserliche Marine</i> (Berlin, 1889);
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page828" id="page828"></a>828</span>
+<i>Gewerbe und Handel im deutschen Reich nach der gewerblichen
+Betriebszählung, vom 14. Juni 1895</i> (Berlin, 1899); <i>Handbuch für
+das deutsche Reich auf das Jahr 1900, bearbeitet im Reichsamt der
+Innern</i> (Berlin); <i>Handbuch für die deutsche Handelsmarine auf das
+Jahr 1900; Statistik des deutschen Reichs</i>, published by the <i>Kaiserliches
+Statistisches Amt</i> (including trade, navigation, criminal
+statistics, sick insurance, &amp;c.); <i>Statistisches Jahrbuch für das deutsche
+Reich</i> (Berlin, 1906) and <i>Vierteljahrshefte für Statistik des deutschen
+Reichs</i> (including census returns, commerce and railways). See also
+among English publications on geographical and statistical matter:
+<i>Annual Statement of the Trade of the United Kingdom with Foreign
+Countries and British Possessions for the Year 1899</i> (London, 1900);
+and G.G. Chisholm, <i>Europe</i>, being vols. i. and ii. of Stanford&rsquo;s
+<i>Compendium of Geography and Travel</i> (London, 1899 and 1900).
+The fullest general account of the geology of Germany will be found
+in R. Lepsius, <i>Geologie von Deutschland und den angrenzenden Gebieten</i>
+(Stuttgart, first volume completed in 1892). Shorter descriptions
+will be found in E. Kayser, <i>Lehrbuch der geologischen Formationskunde</i>
+(Stuttgart, English edition under the title <i>Text-book of Comparative
+Geology</i>), and H. Credner, <i>Elemente der Geologie</i> (Leipzig).</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Archaeology</p>
+
+<p>From an archaeological point of view Germany is very far
+from being a homogeneous whole. Not only has the development
+of the south differed from that of the north, and the west
+been subjected to other influences than those affecting the east,
+but even where the same influences have been at work the period
+of their operation has often varied widely in the different districts,
+so that in a general sketch of the whole country the chronology
+can only be a very rough approximation. In this article the
+dates assigned to the various periods in south Germany are those
+given by Sophus Müller, on the lines first laid down by Montelius.
+As regards north Germany, Müller puts the Northern Bronze age
+500 years later than the Southern, but a recent find in Sweden
+bears out Montelius&rsquo;s view that southern influence made itself
+rapidly felt in the North. The conclusions of Montelius and
+Müller are disputed by W. Ridgeway, who maintains that the
+Iron age originated in central Europe, and that iron must consequently
+have been worked in those regions as far back as
+<i>c.</i> 2000 <span class="scs">B.C.</span></p>
+
+<p><i>Older Palaeolithic Period</i>.&mdash;The earliest traces of man&rsquo;s
+handiwork are found either at the end of the pre-Glacial epoch,
+or in an inter-Glacial period, but it is a disputed point whether
+the latter is the first of a series of such periods. A typical German
+find is at Taubach, near Weimar, where almond-shaped stone
+wedges, small flint knives, and roughly-hacked pieces of porphyry
+and quartz are found, together with the remains of elephants.
+There are also bone implements, which are not found in the
+earliest periods in France.</p>
+
+<p><i>Palaeolithic Transition Period</i> (<i>Solutré</i>).&mdash;More highly developed
+forms are found when the mammoth has succeeded the elephant.
+Implements of chipped stone for the purposes of boring and
+scraping suggest that man worked hides for clothing. Ornaments
+of perforated teeth and shells are found.</p>
+
+<p><i>Later Palaeolithic Period</i> (<i>La Madeleine</i>).&mdash;The next period is
+marked by the presence of reindeer. In the Hohlefels in the
+Swabian Achthal there is still no trace of earthenware, and we
+find the skull of a reindeer skilfully turned into a drinking-vessel.
+Saws, needles, awls and bone harpoons are found. It is to be
+noticed that none of the German finds (mostly in the south and
+west) show any traces of the highly developed artistic sense so
+characteristic of the dwellers in France at this period.</p>
+
+<p>The gap in our knowledge of the development of Palaeolithic
+into Neolithic civilization has recently been partially filled in
+by discoveries in north Germany and France of objects showing
+rather more developed forms than those of the former period,
+but still unaccompanied by earthenware. It is a disputed point
+whether the introduction of Neolithic civilization is due to a new
+ethnological element.</p>
+
+<p><i>Neolithic Age</i> (in south Germany till <i>c.</i> 2000 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>).&mdash;Neolithic
+man lived under the same climatic conditions as prevail to-day,
+but amidst forests of fir. He shows advance in every direction,
+and by the end of the later Neolithic period he is master of the
+arts of pottery and spinning, is engaged in agricultural pursuits,
+owns domestic animals, and makes weapons and tools of fine
+shape, either ground and polished or beautifully chipped.
+Traces of Neolithic settlements have been found chiefly in the
+neighbourhood of Worms, in the Main district and in Thuringia.
+These dwellings are usually holes in the ground, and presumably
+had thatched roofs. Our knowledge of the later Neolithic age,
+as of the succeeding periods, is largely gained from the remains of
+lake-dwellings, represented in Germany chiefly by Bavarian
+finds. The lake-dwellings in Mecklenburg, Pomerania and East
+Prussia are of a different type, and it is not certain that they date
+back to the Stone age. Typical Neolithic cemeteries are found at
+Hinkelstein, Alzey and other places in the neighbourhood of
+Worms. In these graves the skeletons lie flat, while in other
+cemeteries, as at Flomborn in Rhine-Hessen, and near Heilbronn,
+they are in a huddled position (hence the name <i>Hockergräber</i>).
+Necklaces and bracelets of Mediterranean shells point to a considerable
+amount of commerce. Other objects found in the
+graves are small flint knives, stone axes, flint and lumps of pyrites
+for obtaining fire, and, in the women&rsquo;s graves, hand-mills for
+grinding corn. The earthenware vessels usually have rounded
+bottoms. The earliest ornamentation consists of finger-imprints.
+Later we find two periods of zigzag designs in south Germany
+with an intermediate stage of spirals and wavy lines, while in
+north and east Germany the so-called string-ornamentation
+predominates. Towards the end of the period the inhabitants of
+north Germany erect megalithic graves, and in Hanover especially
+the passage-graves.</p>
+
+<p><i>Bronze Age</i> (in south Germany from <i>c.</i> 2000-1000 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>).&mdash;In
+the later Stone age we note the occasional use of copper, and then
+the gradual appearance of bronze. The bronze civilization of the
+Aegean seems to have had direct influence along the basins of
+the Danube and Elbe, while the culture of the western parts of
+central Germany was transmitted through Italy and France.
+No doubt the pre-eminence of the north, and especially of Denmark,
+at this period, was due to the amber trade, causing southern
+influence to penetrate up the basin of the Elbe to Jutland. The
+earlier period is characterized by the practice of inhumation in
+barrows made of clays, stones or sand, according to the district.
+Bronze is cast, whereas at a later time it shows signs of the
+hammer. From the finds in Bavarian graves it appears that the
+chief weapons were the dagger and the long pointed <i>Palstab</i>
+(palstave), while a short dagger fixed like an axe on a long shaft
+is characteristic of the North. The women wore two bronze
+pins, a bracelet on each arm, amber ornaments and a necklace of
+bronze tubes in spirals. One or two vases are found in each
+barrow, ornamented with finger-imprints, &ldquo;string&rdquo; decoration,
+&amp;c. The later period is characterized by the practice of cremation,
+though the remains are still placed in barrows. Swords
+make their appearance. The women wear more and more
+massive ornaments. The vases are highly polished and of
+elegant form, with zigzag decoration.</p>
+
+<p><i>Hallstatt Period</i> (in Germany 8th-5th century <span class="scs">B.C.</span>).&mdash;The
+Hallstatt stage of culture, named after the famous cemetery in
+upper Austria, is marked by the introduction of iron (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Hallstatt</a></span>). In Germany its centre is Bavaria, Baden and
+Württemberg, with the Thuringian forest as the northern
+boundary. In Brandenburg, Lusatia, Silesia, Posen and Saxony,
+where there was no strong Bronze age tradition, Hallstatt influence
+is very noticeable. In west Prussia the urns with human
+faces deserve notice. The dead are either buried in barrows
+or cremated, the latter especially in north and east Germany.
+In Bavaria both practices are resorted to, as at Hallstatt. The
+pottery develops beautiful form and colour. Fibulae, often of
+the &ldquo;kettle-drum&rdquo; form, take the place of the Bronze age pin.</p>
+
+<p><i>La Tčne Period</i> (4th-1st century <span class="scs">B.C.</span>).&mdash;Down to this time there
+is very little evidence concerning the racial affinities of the population.
+When our records first begin the western and southern
+portions of Germany seem to have been inhabited by Celtic
+peoples (see below &ldquo;Ethnography&rdquo;). La Tčne, in Switzerland, has
+given its name to the period, of which the earlier part corresponds
+to the time of Celtic supremacy. It is interesting to note how
+the Celts absorb Roman and still more Greek culture, even
+imitating foreign coins, and pass on their new arts to their
+Teutonic neighbours; but in spite of the strong foreign influence
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page829" id="page829"></a>829</span>
+the Celtic civilization can in some sort be termed national.
+Later it has a less rich development, betraying the political
+decay of the race. Its centres in Germany are the southern
+districts as far as Thuringia, and the valleys of the Main and Saar.
+The ornamentation is of the conventionalized plant type: gold
+is freely used, and enamel, of a kind different from the Roman
+enamel used later in Germany, is applied to weapons and ornaments.
+Chariots are used in war, and fortified towns are built,
+though we must still suppose the houses to have consisted of a
+wooden framework coated with clay. In these districts La Tčne
+influence is contemporary with the use of tumuli, but in the
+(non-Celtic) coast districts it must be sought in urn-cemeteries.</p>
+
+<p><i>Roman Period</i> (from the 1st century <span class="scs">A.D.</span>).&mdash;The period succeeding
+to La Tčne ought rather to be called Romano-Germanic,
+the relation of the Teutonic races to the Roman civilization
+being much the same as that of the Celts to classical culture in
+the preceding period. The Rhine lands were of course the centre
+of Roman civilization, with Roman roads, fortresses, stone and
+tiled houses and marble temples. By this time the Teutonic
+peoples had probably acquired the art of writing, though the
+origin of their national (Runic) alphabet is still disputed. The
+graves of the period contain urns of earthenware or glass,
+cremation being the prevalent practice, and the objects found
+include one or more coins in accordance with Roman usage.</p>
+
+<p><i>Period of National Migrations</i> (<span class="scs">A.D.</span> 300-500).&mdash;The grave-finds
+do not bear out the picture of a period of ceaseless war painted
+by the Roman historians. On the contrary, weapons are seldom
+found, at any rate in graves, the objects in which bear witness
+to a life of extraordinary luxury. Magnificent drinking-vessels,
+beautifully ornamented dice and draughtsmen, masses of gay
+beads, are among the commonest grave-finds. A peculiarity
+of the period is the development of decoration inspired by
+animal forms, but becoming more and more tortuous and fantastic.
+Only those eastern parts of Germany which were now
+occupied by Slavonic peoples remained uninfluenced by this rich
+civilization.</p>
+
+<p><i>The Merovingian Period</i> (<span class="scs">A.D.</span> 500-800) sees the completion
+of the work of converting the German tribes to Christianity.
+<i>Reihengräber</i>, containing objects of value, but otherwise like
+modern cemeteries, with the dead buried in rows (<i>Reihen</i>), are
+found over all the Teutonic part of Germany, but some tribes,
+notably the Alamanni, seem still to have buried their dead in
+barrows. Among the Franks and Burgundians we find monolithic
+sarcophagi in imitation of the Romans, and in other
+districts sarcophagi were constructed out of several blocks of
+stone&mdash;the so-called <i>Plattengräber</i>. The weapons are the <i>spatha</i>,
+or double-bladed German sword, the <i>sax</i> (a short sword, or
+long knife, <i>semispathium</i>), the knife, shield, and the favourite
+German axe, though this latter is not found in Bavaria. The
+ornaments are beads, earrings, brooches, rings, bracelets, &amp;c.,
+thickly studded with precious stones.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities</span>.&mdash;S. Müller, <i>Urgeschichte Europas</i> (1905), and
+<i>Tierornamentik</i> (1881); O. Montelius, &ldquo;Chronologie der Bronzezeit
+in N. Deutschland und Skandinavien,&rdquo; in <i>Archiv für Anthropologie</i>,
+vols. xxv. and xxvi.; M. Hoernes, <i>Urgeschichte des Menschen</i>
+(1892), and <i>Der diluviale Mensch in Europa</i> (1903); M. Much,
+<i>Kupferzeit in Europa</i> (1893); R. Munro, <i>Lake-dwellings of Europe</i>
+(1890); J. Naue, <i>Bronzezeit in Ober-Bayern</i> (1894); O. Tischler,
+<i>Ostpreussische Altertümer</i> (1902); R. Virchow, <i>Über Hünengräber
+und Pfahlbauten</i> (1866); J. Mestorf, <i>Urnenfriedhöfe in
+Schleswig-Holstein</i> (1886); A. Lissauer, <i>Prähistorische Denkmäler Preussens</i>
+(1887); I. Undset, <i>Erstes Auftreten des Eisens in N. Europa</i> (1882);
+L. Lindenschmit, <i>Handbuch der deutschen Altertumskunde</i>, i.
+(1880-1889); and W. Ridgeway, <i>Early Age of Greece</i>, i. (1901). Also
+articles by the above and others, chiefly in <i>Zeitschrift für Ethnologie</i>
+(Berlin); <i>Archiv für Anthropologie</i> (Brunswick); <i>Globus</i> (Brunswick);
+<i>Westdeutsche Zeitschrift</i> (Trier); <i>Schriften der physikalisch-ökonomischen
+Gesellschaft</i> (Königsberg); <i>Nachrichten über deutsche
+Altertumskunde</i> (Berlin); <i>Verhandlungen der Berliner Gesellschaft
+für Anthropologie</i>, &amp;c.; <i>Beiträge zur Anthropologie Bayerns</i> (Munich);
+and <i>Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum</i> (Berlin).</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(B. S. P.)</div>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Ethnography and Early History</p>
+
+<p>Our direct knowledge of Germany begins with the appointment
+of Julius Caesar as governor of Gaul in 59 <span class="scs">B.C.</span> Long
+before that time there is evidence of German communication
+with southern civilization, as the antiquities prove, and occasional
+<span class="sidenote">Julius Caesar in Germany.</span>
+travellers from the Mediterranean had made their way into
+those regions (<i>e.g.</i> Pytheas, towards the end of the 4th
+century), but hardly any records of their journeys survive.
+The first Teutonic peoples whom the Romans are
+said to have encountered are the Cimbri and Teutoni,
+probably from Denmark, who invaded Illyria, Gaul and Italy
+towards the end of the 2nd century <span class="scs">B.C.</span> When Caesar arrived
+in Gaul the westernmost part of what is now Germany was in
+the possession of Gaulish tribes. The Rhine practically formed
+the boundary between Gauls and Germans, though one Gaulish
+tribe, the Menapii, is said to have been living beyond the Rhine
+at its mouth, and shortly before the arrival of Caesar an invading
+force of Germans had seized and settled down in what is now
+Alsace, 72 <span class="scs">B.C.</span> At this time the Gauls were being pressed by
+the Germans along the whole frontier, and several of Caesar&rsquo;s
+campaigns were occupied with operations, either against the
+Germans, or against Gaulish tribes set in motion by the Germans.
+Among these we may mention the campaign of his first year of
+office, 58 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>, against the German king Ariovistus, who led the
+movement in Alsace, and that of 55 <span class="scs">B.C.</span> in which he expelled
+the Usipetes and Tencteri who had crossed the lower Rhine.
+During the period of Caesar&rsquo;s government he succeeded in
+annexing the whole of Gaul as far as the Rhine. (For the campaigns
+see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Caesar, Julius</a></span>.)</p>
+
+<p>After peace had been established in Italy by Augustus,
+attempts were made to extend the Roman frontier beyond the
+Rhine. The Roman prince Nero Claudius Drusus (<i>q.v.</i>)
+in the year 12 <span class="scs">B.C.</span> annexed what is now the kingdom
+<span class="sidenote">The campaign of other Roman leaders.</span>
+of the Netherlands, and constructed a canal (Fossa
+Drusiana) between the Rhine and the lake Flevo
+(Lacus Flevus), which partly corresponded to the
+Zuyder Zee, though the topography of the district has greatly
+altered. He also penetrated into regions beyond and crossed
+the Weser, receiving the submission of the Bructeri, Chatti and
+Cherusci. After Drusus&rsquo; death in 9 <span class="scs">B.C.</span>, while on his return from
+an expedition which reached the Elbe, the German command
+was twice undertaken by Tiberius, who in <span class="scs">A.D.</span> 5 received the
+submission of all the tribes in this quarter, including the Chauci
+and the Langobardi. A Roman garrison was left in the conquered
+districts between the Rhine and the Elbe, but the reduction was
+not thoroughly completed. About the same time the Roman
+fleet voyaged along the northern coast apparently as far as the
+north of Jutland, and received the nominal submission of several
+tribes in that region, including the Cimbri and the Charudes.
+In <span class="scs">A.D.</span> 9 Quintilius Varus, the successor of Tiberius, was surprised
+in the <i>Saltus Teutobergensis</i> between the Lippe and the Weser
+by a force raised by Arminius, a chief of the Cherusci, and his
+army consisting of three legions was annihilated. Germanicus
+Caesar, during his tenure of the command of the Roman armies
+on the Rhine, made repeated attempts to recover the Roman
+position in northern Germany and exact vengeance for the death
+of Varus, but without real success, and after his recall the Rhine
+formed for the greater part of its course the boundary of the
+Empire. A standing army was kept up on the Rhine, divided
+into two commands, upper and lower Germany, the headquarters
+of the former being at Mainz, those of the latter at
+Vetera, near Xanten. A number of important towns grew up,
+among which we may mention Trier (Augusta Trevirorum),
+Cologne (Colonia Agrippinensis), Bonn (Bonna), Worms (Borbetomagus),
+Spires (Noviomagus), Strassburg (Argentoratum) and
+Augsburg (Augusta Vindelicorum).</p>
+
+<p>At a later date, however, probably under the Flavian emperors,
+the frontier of upper Germany was advanced somewhat beyond
+the Rhine, and a fortification, the <i>Pfahlgraben</i>, constructed to
+protect it. It led from Hönningen on the Rhine, about half-way
+between Bonn and Coblenz, to Mittenberg above Aschaffenburg
+on the Main, thence southwards to Lorch in Württemberg,
+whence it turned east to the junction of the Altmühl with the
+Danube at Kelheim.</p>
+
+<p>During the wars of Drusus, Tiberius and Germanicus the
+Romans had ample opportunity of getting to know the tribal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page830" id="page830"></a>830</span>
+geography of Germany, especially the western part, and though
+most of our authorities lived at a somewhat later period, it is
+probable that they derived their information very largely from
+records of that time. It will be convenient, therefore, to give an
+account of the tribal geography of Germany in the time of Augustus,
+as our knowledge of the subject is much more complete for his
+reign than for several centuries later.</p>
+
+<p>Of the Gaulish tribes west of the Rhine, the most important
+was the Treveri, inhabiting the basin of the Moselle, from whom
+the city of Trier (Trčves) derives its name. The Rauraci
+probably occupied the south of Alsace. To the south
+<span class="sidenote">The German tribes.</span>
+of the Treveri lay the Mediomatrici, and to the west
+of them lay the important tribe of the Sequani, who
+had called in Ariovistus. The Treveri claimed to be of German
+origin, and the same claim was made by a number of tribes in
+Belgium, the most powerful of which were the Nervii. The
+meaning of this claim is not quite clear, as there is some obscurity
+concerning the origin of the name Germani. It appears to be a
+Gaulish term, and there is no evidence that it was ever used by
+the Germans themselves. According to Tacitus it was first
+applied to the Tungri, whereas Caesar records that four Belgic
+tribes, namely, the Condrusi, Eburones, Caeraesi and Paemani,
+were collectively known as Germani. There is no doubt that
+these tribes were all linguistically Celtic, and it is now the
+prevailing opinion that they were not of German origin ethnologically,
+but that the ground for their claim was that they had
+come from over the Rhine (cf. Caesar, <i>De Bello Gallico</i> ii. 4).
+It would therefore seem that the name Germani originally
+denoted certain Celtic tribes to the east of the Rhine, and that
+it was then transferred to the Teutonic tribes which subsequently
+occupied the same territory.</p>
+
+<p>There is little doubt that during the last century before the
+Christian era the Celtic peoples had been pushed considerably
+farther west by the Teutonic peoples, a process which
+was still going on in Caesar&rsquo;s time, when we hear of
+<span class="sidenote">Their movements.</span>
+the overthrow of the Menapii, the last Gaulish tribe
+beyond the Rhine. In the south the same process can be
+observed. The Boii were expelled from their territories in Bohemia
+by the Marcomanni in the time of Augustus, and the Helvetii
+are also recorded to have occupied formerly lands east of the
+Rhine, in what is now Baden and Württemberg. Caesar also
+mentions a Gaulish tribe named Volcae Tectosages as living
+in Germany in his time. The Volcae Arecomici in the south of
+France and the Tectosages of Galatia were in all probability
+offshoots of this people. The name of the tribe was adopted
+in the Teutonic languages as a generic term for all Celtic and
+Italian peoples (O.H.G. <i>Walha</i>, A.S. <i>Wealas</i>), from which it is
+probably to be inferred that they were the Celtic people with
+whom the Teutonic races had the closest association in early
+times. It has been thought that they inhabited the basin of
+the Weser, and a number of place-names in this district are
+supposed to be of Celtic origin. Farther to the south and west
+Ptolemy mentions a number of place-names which are certainly
+Celtic, <i>e.g.</i> Mediolanion, Aregelia, Lougidounon, Lokoriton,
+Segodounon. There is therefore great probability that a large
+part of western Germany east of the Rhine had formerly been
+occupied by Celtic peoples. In the east a Gaulish people named
+Cotini are mentioned, apparently in the upper basin of the Oder,
+and Tacitus speaks of a tribe in the same neighbourhood, the
+Osi, who he says spoke the Pannonian language. It is probable,
+therefore, that in other directions also the Germans had considerably
+advanced their frontier southwards at a comparatively
+recent period.</p>
+
+<p>Coming now to the Germans proper, the basin of the Rhine
+between Strassburg and Mainz was inhabited by the Tribocci,
+Nemetes and Vangiones, farther down by the Mattiaci
+about Wiesbaden, and the Ubii in the neighbourhood
+<span class="sidenote">Tribes in the west and north.</span>
+of Cologne; beyond them were the Sugambri, and
+in the Rhine delta the Batavi and other smaller
+tribes. All these tribes remained in subjection to the Romans.
+Beyond them were the Tencteri, probably about the basin of
+the Lahn, and the Usipetes about the basin of the Ruhr. The
+basin of the Lippe and the upper basin of the Ems were inhabited
+by the Bructeri, and in the same neighbourhood were the Ampsivarii,
+who derive their name from the latter river. East of
+them lay the Chasuarii, presumably in the basin of the Hase.
+The upper basin of the Weser was inhabited by the Chatti, whose
+capital was Mattium, supposed to be Maden on the Eder. To
+the north-west of them were situated the Marsi, apparently
+between the Diemel and the Lippe, while the central part of the
+basin of the Weser was inhabited by the Cherusci, who seem to
+have extended considerably eastward. The lower part of the
+river-basin was inhabited by the Angrivarii. The coastlands
+north of the mouth of the Rhine were occupied by the Canninefates,
+beyond them by the Frisii as far as the mouth of the Ems,
+thence onward to the mouth of the Elbe by the Chauci. As to
+the affinities of all these various tribes we have little definite
+information, but it is worth noting that the Batavi in Holland
+are said to have been a branch of the Chatti, from whom they had
+separated owing to a <i>seditio domestica</i>. The basin of the Elbe
+was inhabited by Suebic tribes, the chief of which were the
+Marcomanni, who seem to have been settled on the Saale during
+the latter part of the 1st century <span class="scs">B.C.</span>, but moved into Bohemia
+before the beginning of the Christian era, where they at once
+became a formidable power under their king Maroboduus.
+The Quadi were settled somewhat farther east about the source
+of the Elbe. The Hermunduri in the basin of the Saale were in
+alliance with the Romans and occupied northern Bavaria with
+their consent. The Semnones apparently dwelt below the
+junction of the Saale and Elbe. The Langobardi (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Lombards</a></span>)
+possessed the land between the territory of the Semnones and
+the mouth of the river. Their name is supposed to be preserved
+in Bardengau, south of Hamburg. From later evidence it is
+likely that another division of the Suebi inhabited western
+Holstein. The province of Schleswig (perhaps only the west
+coast) and the islands adjacent were inhabited by the Saxons,
+while the east coast, at least in later times, was occupied by the
+Angli. The coast of Mecklenburg was probably inhabited by
+the Varini (the later Warni). The eastern part of Germany
+was much less known to the Romans, information being particularly
+deficient as to the populations of the coast districts, though
+it seems probable that the Rugii inhabited the eastern part of
+Pomerania, where a trace of them is preserved in the name
+Rügenwalde. The lower part of the basin of the Oder was
+probably occupied by the Burgundiones, and the upper part by
+a number of tribes collectively known as Lugii, who seem to
+correspond to the Vandals of later times, though the early
+Roman writers apparently used the word Vandilii in a wider
+sense, embracing all the tribes of eastern Germany. Among the
+Lugii we may probably include the Silingae, who afterwards
+appear among the Vandals in Spain, and whose name is preserved
+in Slavonic form in that of the province Silesia. The Goths
+(Gotones) apparently inhabited the basin of the Vistula about
+the middle of its course, but the lower part of the basin was
+inhabited by non-Teutonic peoples, among whom we may
+mention the Galindi, probably Prussians, and the Aestii, either
+Prussian or Esthonian, in the coastlands at the mouth of the
+river, who are known especially in connexion with the amber
+trade. To the east of the Vistula were the Slavonic tribes
+(Veneti), and amongst them, perhaps rather to the north, a
+Finnish population (Fenni), which disappeared in later times.</p>
+
+<p>In the time of Augustus by far the most powerful ruler in
+Germany was Maroboduus, king of the Marcomanni. His
+supremacy extended over all the Suebic tribes (except
+perhaps the Hermunduri), and most of the peoples
+<span class="sidenote">Domestic wars of the Germans.</span>
+of eastern Germany, including apparently the Lugii
+and Goths. But in the year <span class="scs">A.D.</span> 17 he became involved
+in an unsuccessful campaign against Arminius, prince of the
+Cherusci, in which the Semnones and Langobardi revolted
+against him, and two years later he was deprived of his throne
+by a certain Catualda. The latter, however, was soon expelled
+by Vibilius, king of the Hermunduri, and his power was transferred
+to Vannius, who belonged to the Quadi. About the same time
+Arminius met his death while trying to make himself king of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page831" id="page831"></a>831</span>
+Cherusci. In the year 28 the Frisians revolted from the Romans,
+and though they submitted again in the year 47, Claudius
+immediately afterwards recalled the Roman troops to the left
+bank of the Rhine. In the year 50 Vannius, king of the Suebi,
+was driven from the throne by Vibilius, king of the Hermunduri,
+and his nephews Vangio and Sido obtained his kingdom. In
+the year 58 the Chatti suffered a serious disaster in a campaign
+against the Hermunduri. They seem, however, to have recovered
+very soon, and at the end of the 1st century had apparently
+extended their power at the expense of the Cherusci. During
+the latter part of the 1st century the Chauci seem to have been
+enlarging their territories: as early as the year 47 we find them
+raiding the Roman lands on the lower Rhine, and in 58 they
+expelled the Ampsivarii, who after several vain attempts to
+acquire new possessions were annihilated by the neighbouring
+tribes. During the last years of the 1st century the Angrivarii
+are found moving westwards, probably under pressure from the
+Chauci, and the power of the Bructeri was almost destroyed by
+their attack. In 69 the Roman territory on the lower Rhine
+was disturbed by the serious revolt of Claudius Civilis, a prince
+of the Batavi who had served in the Roman army. He was
+joined by the Bructeri and other neighbouring tribes, but being
+defeated by Petilius Cerealis (afterwards consular legate in
+Britain) at Vetera and in other engagements gave up the struggle
+and arranged a capitulation in <span class="scs">A.D.</span> 70. By the end of the 1st
+century the Chauci and Chatti seem to have become by far
+the most powerful tribes in western Germany, though the former
+are seldom mentioned after this time.</p>
+
+<p>After the time of Tacitus our information regarding German
+affairs becomes extremely meagre. The next important conflict
+with the Romans was the Marcomannic War (166-180), in
+which all the Suebic tribes together with the Vandals (apparently
+the ancient Lugii) and the Sarmatian Iazyges seem to have
+taken part. Peace was made by the emperor Commodus in
+<span class="scs">A.D.</span> 180 on payment of large sums of money.</p>
+
+<p>About the beginning of the 3rd century we find a forward
+movement in south-west Germany among a group of tribes
+known collectively as Alamanni (<i>q.v.</i>) who came in
+conflict with the emperor Caracalla in the year 213.
+<span class="sidenote">The Alamanni, the Goths and the Franks.</span>
+About the same time the Goths also made their first
+appearance in the south-east and soon became the
+most formidable antagonists of Rome. In the year
+251 they defeated and slew the emperor Decius, and in the
+reign of Gallienus their fleets setting out from the north of the
+Black Sea worked great havoc on the coast of the Aegean (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Goths</a></span>). It is not to be supposed, however, that they had quitted
+their own lands on the Vistula by this time. In this connexion
+we hear also of the Heruli (<i>q.v.</i>), who some twenty years later,
+about 289, make their appearance in the western seas. In 286
+we hear for the first time of maritime raids by the Saxons in
+the same quarter. About the middle of the 3rd century the
+name Franks (<i>q.v.</i>) makes its first appearance, apparently a
+new collective term for the tribes of north-west Germany from
+the Chatti to the mouth of the Rhine.</p>
+
+<p>In the 4th century the chief powers in western Germany were
+the Franks and the Alamanni, both of whom were in constant
+conflict with the Romans. The former were pressed
+in their rear by the Saxons, who at some time before
+<span class="sidenote">Arrival of the Huns.</span>
+the middle of the 4th century appear to have invaded
+and conquered a considerable part of north-west
+Germany. About the same time great national movements
+seem to have been taking place farther east. The Burgundians
+made their appearance in the west shortly before the end of the
+3rd century, settling in the basin of the Main, and it is probable
+that some portions of the north Suebic peoples, perhaps the
+ancient Semnones, had already moved westward. By the middle
+of the 4th century the Goths had become the dominant power
+in eastern Germany, and their King Hermanaric held a supremacy
+which seems to have stretched from the Black Sea to Holstein.
+At his death, however, the supremacy of eastern Germany
+passed to the Huns, an invading people from the east, whose
+arrival seems to have produced a complete displacement of
+population in this region. With regard to the course of events
+in eastern Germany we have no knowledge, but during the 5th
+century several of the peoples previously settled there appear
+to have made their way into the lands south of the Carpathians
+and Riesengebirge, amongst whom (besides the Goths) may
+be especially mentioned the Rugii and the Gepides, the latter
+perhaps originally a branch of the Goths. According to tradition
+the Vandals had been driven into Pannonia by the Goths in
+the time of Constantine. We do not know how far northward
+the Hunnish power reached in the time of Attila, but the invasion
+of this nation was soon followed by a great westward
+movement of the Slavs.</p>
+
+<p>In the west the Alamanni and the descendants of the Marcomanni,
+now called Baiouarii (Bavarians), had broken through
+the frontiers of the Roman provinces of Vindelicia
+and Noricum at the beginning of the 5th century,
+<span class="sidenote">The Burgundians and other tribes.</span>
+while the Vandals together with some of the Suebi
+and the non-Teutonic Alani from the east crossed
+the Rhine and invaded Gaul in 406. About 435-440 the Burgundians
+were overthrown by Attila, and their king Gunthacarius
+(Gundahar) killed. The remains of the nation shortly
+afterwards settled in Gaul. About the same time the Franks
+overran and occupied the modern Belgium, and in the course of
+the next half-century their dominions were enormously extended
+towards the south (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Franks</a></span>). After the death of Attila in
+453 the power of the Huns soon collapsed, but the political
+divisions of Germany in the ensuing period are far from clear.</p>
+
+<p>In the 6th century the predominant peoples are the Franks,
+Frisians, Saxons, Alamanni, Bavarians, Langobardi, Heruli
+and Warni. By the beginning of this century the
+Saxons seem to have penetrated almost, if not quite,
+<span class="sidenote">The Franks and others in the 6th century.</span>
+to the Rhine in the Netherlands. Farther south,
+however, the old land of the Chatti was included in
+the kingdom of Clovis. Northern Bavaria was occupied
+by the Franks, whose king Clovis subdued the Alamanni in
+495. To the east of the Franks between the Harz, the Elbe and
+the Saale lay the kingdom of the Thuringi, the origin of whom
+is not clear. The Heruli also had a powerful kingdom, probably
+in the basin of the Elbe, and to the east of them were the Langobardi.
+The Warni apparently now dwelt in the regions about
+the mouth of the Elbe, while the whole coast from the mouth
+of the Weser to the west Scheldt was in the hands of the Frisians.
+By this time all the country east of the lower Elbe seems to
+have been Slavonic. In the north, perhaps in the province of
+Schleswig, we hear now for the first time of the Danes. Theodoric,
+king of the Ostrogoths, endeavoured to form a confederacy
+with the Thuringi, Heruli and Warni against Clovis in order
+to protect the Visigoths in the early years of the 6th century,
+but very shortly afterwards the king of the Heruli was slain
+by the Langobardi and their existence as an independent power
+came to an end. In 531 the Thuringian kingdom was destroyed
+by the Frankish king Theodoric, son of Clovis, with whom the
+Saxons were in alliance.</p>
+
+<p>During the 6th and 7th centuries the Saxons were intermittently
+under Frankish supremacy, but their conquest was not
+complete until the time of Charlemagne. Shortly
+after the middle of the 6th century the Franks were
+<span class="sidenote">The Saxons and the Franks.</span>
+threatened with a new invasion by the Avars. In
+567-568 the Langobardi, who by this time had moved
+into the Danube basin, invaded Italy and were followed by those
+of the Saxons who had settled in Thuringia. Their lands were
+given by the Frankish king Sigeberht to the north Suebi and
+other tribes who had come either from the Elbe basin or possibly
+from the Netherlands. About the same time Sigeberht was
+defeated by the Avars, and though the latter soon withdrew
+from the Frankish frontiers, their course was followed by a
+movement of the Slavs, who occupied the basin of the Elster
+and penetrated to that of the Main.</p>
+
+<p>By the end of the 6th century the whole basin of the Elbe
+except the Saxon territory near the mouth had probably become
+Slavonic. To the east of the Saale were the Sorbs (Sorabi), and
+beyond them the Daleminci and Siusli. To the east of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page832" id="page832"></a>832</span>
+Saxons were the Polabs (Polabi) in the basin of the Elbe, and
+beyond them the Hevelli about the Havel. Farther north in
+Mecklenburg were the Warnabi, and in eastern Holstein the
+Obotriti and the Wagri. To the east of the Warnabi were the
+Liutici as far as the Oder, and beyond that river the Pomerani.
+To the south of the Oder were the Milcieni and the Lusici, and
+farther east the Poloni with their centre in the basin of the
+Vistula. The lower part of the Vistula basin, however, was in
+possession of Prussian tribes, the Prussi and Lithuani.</p>
+
+<p>The Warni now disappear from history, and from this time
+the Teutonic peoples of the north as far as the Danish boundary
+about the Eider are called Saxons. The conquest of the Frisians
+by the Franks was begun by Pippin (Pepin) of Heristal in 689
+and practically completed by Charles Martel, though they were
+not entirely brought into subjection until the time of Charlemagne.
+The great overthrow of the Saxons took place about
+772-773 and by the end of the century Charlemagne had extended
+his conquests to the border of the Danes. By this time the whole
+of the Teutonic part of Germany had been finally brought under
+his government.</p>
+
+<div class="condensed">
+<p><span class="sc">Authorities.</span>&mdash;Caesar, <i>De bello Gallico</i>, especially i. 31 ff., iv.
+1-19, vi. 21 ff.; Velleius Paterculus, especially ii. 105 ff.; Strabo,
+especially pp. 193 ff., 290 ff.; Pliny, <i>Natural History</i>, iv. §§ 99 ff.,
+106; Tacitus, Annales, i. 38 ff., ii. 5 ff., 44 ff., 62 f., 88; <i>Germania</i>,
+passim; <i>Histories</i>, iv.; Ptolemy ii. 9, §§ 2 ff., 11, iii. 5, §§ 19 ff.;
+Dio Cassius, passim; Julius Capitolinus; Claudius Mamertinus;
+Ammianus Marcellinus, passim; Zosimus; Jordanes, <i>De origine
+Getarum</i>; Procopius, <i>De bello Gothico</i>; K. Zeuss, <i>Die Deutschen und
+die Nachbarstämme</i>; O. Bremer in Paul&rsquo;s <i>Grundriss d. germ. Philologie</i>
+(2nd ed.), vol. iii. pp. 735 ff.</p>
+</div>
+<div class="author">(F. G. M. B.)</div>
+
+<p class="pt2 center sc">Medieval and Modern History</p>
+
+<p>When Clovis, or Chlodovech, became king of a tribe of the
+Salian Franks in 481, five years after the fall of the Western
+empire, the region afterwards called Germany was
+divided into five main districts, and its history for
+<span class="sidenote">Divisions of Germany.</span>
+the succeeding three centuries is mainly the history
+of the tribes inhabiting these districts. In the north-east,
+dwelling between the Rhine and the Elbe, were the Saxons
+(<i>q.v.</i>), to the east and south of whom stretched the extensive
+kingdom of Thuringia (<i>q.v.</i>). In the south-west the Alamanni
+occupied the territory afterwards called Swabia (<i>q.v.</i>), and extended
+along the middle Rhine until they met the Ripuarian
+Franks, then living in the northern part of the district which at
+a later period was called after them, Franconia (<i>q.v.</i>); and in
+the south-east were the Bavarians, although it was some time
+before their country came to be known as Bavaria (<i>q.v.</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Clovis was descended from Chlogio, or Clodion, who had ruled
+over a branch of the Salian Franks from 427 to 447, and whose
+successors, following his example, had secured an
+influential position for their tribe. Having obtained
+<span class="sidenote">The wars of Clovis.</span>
+possession of that part of Gaul which lay between the
+Seine and the Loire, Clovis turned his attention to his eastern
+neighbours, and was soon engaged in a struggle with the Alamanni
+which probably arose out of a quarrel between them and the
+Ripuarian Franks for the possession of the middle Rhine. When
+in 496, or soon afterwards, the Alamanni were defeated, they
+were confined to what was afterwards known as Swabia, and the
+northern part of their territory was incorporated with the kingdom
+of the Franks. Clovis had united the Salian Franks under his
+rule, and he persuaded, or compelled, the Ripuarian Franks
+also to accept him as their king; but on his death in 511 his
+kingdom was divided, and the Ripuarian, or Rhenish, Franks
+as they are sometimes called, together with some of the Alamanni,
+came under the rule of his eldest son Theuderich or Theodoric I.
+This was the first of the many partitions which effectually divided
+the kingdom of the Franks into an eastern and a western portion,
+that is to say, into divisions which eventually became Germany
+and France respectively, and the district ruled by Theuderich
+was almost identical with that which afterwards bore the name
+of Austrasia. In 531 Theuderich killed Hermannfried, king of
+the Thuringians, a former ally, with whom he had quarrelled,
+conquered his kingdom, and added its southern portion to his
+own possessions. His son and successor, Theudebert I., exercised
+a certain supremacy over the Alamanni and the Bavarians, and
+even claimed authority over various Saxon tribes between
+whom and the Franks there had been some fighting. After his
+death in 548, however, the Frankish power in Germany sank to
+very minute proportions, a result due partly to the spirit of
+tribal independence which lingered among the German races,
+but principally to the paralysing effect of the unceasing rivalry
+between Austrasia and Neustria. From 548 the Alamanni were
+ruled by a succession of dukes who soon made themselves independent;
+and in 555 a duke of the Bavarians, who exercised
+his authority without regard for the Frankish supremacy, is
+first mentioned. In Thuringia, which now only consisted of the
+central part of the former kingdom, King Dagobert I. set up in
+634 a duke named Radulf who soon asserted his independence
+of Dagobert and of his successor, Sigebert III. The Saxons for
+their part did not own even a nominal allegiance to the Frankish
+kings, whose authority on the right bank of the Rhine was confined
+to the district actually occupied by men of their own name,
+which at a later date became the duchy of Franconia. During
+these years the eastern border of Germany was constantly
+ravaged by various Slavonic tribes. King Dagobert sent troops
+to repel these marauders from time to time, but the main burden
+of defence fell upon the Saxons, Bavarians and Thuringians.
+The virtual independence of these German tribes lasted until
+the union of Austrasia and Neustria in 687, an achievement
+mainly due to the efforts of Pippin of Heristal, who soon became
+the actual, though not the nominal, ruler of the Frankish realm.
+Pippin and his son Charles Martel, who was mayor of the palace
+from 717 to 741, renewed the struggle with the Germans and
+were soon successful in re-establishing the central power which
+the Merovingian kings had allowed to slip from their grasp.
+The ducal office was abolished in Thuringia, a series of wars
+reduced the Alamanni to strict dependence, and both countries
+were governed by Frankish officials. Bavaria was brought
+into subjection about the same time; the Bavarian law, committed
+to writing between 739 and 748, strongly emphasizes the
+supremacy of the Frankish king, whose authority it recognizes
+as including the right to appoint and even to depose the duke
+of Bavaria. The Saxons, on the other hand, succeeded in retaining
+their independence as a race, although their country was
+ravaged in various campaigns and some tribes were compelled
+from time to time to pay tribute. The rule of Pippin the Short,
+both before and after his coronation as king, was troubled by
+constant risings on the part of his East Frankish or German
+subjects, but aided by his brother Carloman, who for a time
+administered this part of the Frankish kingdom, Pippin was
+generally able to deal with the rebels.</p>
+
+<p>After all, however, even these powerful Frankish conquerors
+had but imperfect success in Germany. When they were present
+with their formidable armies, they could command
+obedience; when engaged, as they often were, in
+<span class="sidenote">The Saxons remain independent.</span>
+distant parts of the vast Frankish territory, they
+could not trust to the fulfilment of the fair promises
+they had exacted. One of the chief causes of their
+ill-success was the continued independence of the Saxons. Ever
+since they had acquired the northern half of Thuringia, this warlike
+race had been extending its power. They were still heathens,
+cherishing bitter hatred towards the Franks, whom they regarded
+as the enemies both of their liberties and of their religion; and
+their hatred found expression, not only in expeditions into
+Frankish territory, but in help willingly rendered to every German
+confederation which wished to throw off the Frankish yoke.
+Hardly any rebellion against the dukes of the Franks, or against
+King Pippin, took place in Germany without the Saxons coming
+forward to aid the rebels. This was perfectly understood by
+the Frankish rulers, who tried again and again to put an end to
+the evil by subduing the Saxons. They could not, however, attain
+their object. An occasional victory was gained, and some border
+tribes were from time to time compelled to pay tribute; but the
+mass of the Saxons remained unconquered. This was partly
+due to the fact that the Saxons had not, like the other German
+confederations, a duke who, when beaten, could be held responsible
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page833" id="page833"></a>833</span>
+for the engagements forced upon him as the representative of
+his subjects. A Saxon chief who made peace with the Franks
+could undertake nothing for the whole people. As a conquering
+race, they were firmly compact; conquered, they were in the
+hands of the victor a rope of sand.</p>
+
+<p>It was during the time of Pippin of Heristal and his son and
+grandson that the conversion of the Germans to Christianity
+was mainly effected. Some traces of Roman Christianity
+still lingered in the Rhine valley and in southern
+<span class="sidenote">Christianity in Germany.</span>
+Germany, but the bulk of the people were heathen,
+in spite of the efforts of Frank and Irish missionaries
+and the command of King Dagobert I. that all his subjects should
+be baptized. Rupert, bishop of Worms, had already made some
+progress in the work of converting the Bavarians and Alamanni,
+as had Willibrord among the Thuringians when St Boniface
+appeared in Germany in 717. Appointed bishop of the Germans
+by Pope Gregory II., and supported by Charles Martel, he preached
+with much success in Bavaria and Thuringia, notwithstanding
+some hostility from the clergy who disliked the influence of
+Rome. He founded or restored bishoprics in Bavaria, Thuringia
+and elsewhere, and in 742 presided over the first German council.
+When he was martyred in 755 Christianity was professed by all
+the German races except the Saxons, and the church, organized
+and wealthy, had been to a large extent brought under the control
+of the papacy. The old pagan faith was not yet entirely destroyed,
+and traces of its influence may still be detected in popular
+beliefs and customs. But still Christianity was dominant, and
+soon became an important factor in the process of civilization,
+while the close alliance of the German church with the
+papacy was followed by results of the utmost consequence for
+Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The reign of Charlemagne is a period of great importance
+in the history of Germany. Under his rule the first signs of
+national unity and a serious advance in the progress of
+order and civilization may be seen. The long struggle,
+<span class="sidenote">The work of Charlemagne.</span>
+which ended in 804 with the submission of the Saxons
+to the emperor, together with the extension of a real
+Frankish authority over the Bavarians, brought the German races
+for the first time under a single ruler; while war and government,
+law and religion, alike tended to weld them into one people.
+The armies of Charlemagne contained warriors from all parts of
+Germany; and although tribal law was respected and codified,
+legislation common to the whole empire was also introduced.
+The general establishment of the Frankish system of government
+and the presence of Frankish officials helped to break down the
+barriers of race, and the influence of Christianity was in the same
+direction. With the conversion of the Saxons the whole German
+race became nominally Christian; and their ruler was lavish in
+granting lands and privileges to prelates, and untiring in founding
+bishoprics, monasteries and schools. Measures were also taken
+for the security and good government of the country. Campaigns
+against the Slavonic tribes, if sometimes failing in their immediate
+object, taught those peoples to respect the power of the Frankish
+monarch; and the establishment of a series of marches along
+the eastern frontier gave a sense of safety to the neighbouring
+districts. The tribal dukes had all disappeared, and their duchies
+were split up into districts ruled by counts (<i>q.v.</i>), whose tendencies
+to independence the emperor tried to check by the visits of the
+<i>missi dominici</i> (<i>q.v.</i>). Some of the results of the government
+of Charlemagne were, however, less beneficial. His coronation
+as Roman emperor in 800, although it did not produce at the
+time so powerful an impression in Germany as in France, was
+fraught with consequences not always favourable for the former
+country. The tendencies of the tribe to independence were
+crushed as their ancient popular assemblies were discouraged;
+and the liberty of the freemen was curtailed owing to the exigencies
+of military service, while the power of the church was
+rarely directed to the highest ends.</p>
+
+<p>The reign of the emperor Louis I. was marked by a number
+of abortive schemes for the partition of his dominions among his
+sons, which provoked a state of strife that was largely responsible
+for the increasing weakness of the Empire. The mild nature of
+<span class="sidenote">Louis I. and his sons.</span>
+his rule, however, made Louis popular with his German subjects,
+to whose support mainly he owed his restoration to power on
+two occasions. When in 825 his son Louis, afterwards
+called &ldquo;the German,&rdquo; was entrusted with the
+government of Bavaria and from this centre gradually
+extended his authority over the Carolingian dominions
+east of the Rhine, a step was taken in the process by which
+East Francia, or Germany, was becoming a unit distinguishable
+from other portions of the Empire; a process which was
+carried further by the treaty of Verdun in August 843, when,
+after a struggle between Louis the German and his brothers for
+their father&rsquo;s inheritance, an arrangement was made by which
+Louis obtained the bulk of the lands east of the Rhine together
+with the districts around Mainz, Worms and Spires on the left
+bank. Although not yet a single people, the German tribes had
+now for the first time a ruler whose authority was confined to
+their own lands, and from this time the beginnings of national
+life may be traced. For fifty years the main efforts of Louis
+were directed to defending his kingdom from the inroads of his
+Slavonic neighbours, and his detachment from the rest of the
+Empire necessitated by these constant engagements towards the
+east, gradually gave both him and his subjects a distinctive
+character, which was displayed and emphasized when, in
+ratifying an alliance with his half-brother, the West-Frankish
+king, Charles the Bald, the oath was sworn in different tongues.
+The East and West Franks were unable to understand each
+other&rsquo;s speech, so Charles took the oath in a Romance, and
+Louis in a German dialect.</p>
+
+<p>Important as is the treaty of Verdun in German history, that
+of Mersen, by which Louis and Charles the Bald settled in 870
+their dispute over the kingdom of Lothair, second son
+of the emperor Lothair I., is still more important.
+<span class="sidenote">Louis the German and his successors.</span>
+The additional territory which Louis then obtained
+gave to his dominions almost the proportions which
+Germany maintained throughout the middle ages. They were
+bounded on the east by the Elbe and the Bohemian mountains,
+and on the west beyond the Rhine they included the districts
+known afterwards as Alsace and Lorraine. His jurisdiction
+embraced the territories occupied by the five ancient German
+tribes, and included the five archbishoprics of Mainz, Treves
+(Trier), Cologne, Salzburg and Bremen. When Louis died in
+876 his kingdom was divided among his three sons, but as the
+two elder of these soon died without heirs, Germany was again
+united in 882 under his remaining son Charles, called &ldquo;the Fat,&rdquo;
+who soon became ruler of almost the whole of the extensive
+domains of Charlemagne. There was, however, no cohesion in
+the restored empire, the disintegration of which, moreover, was
+hastened by the ravages of the Northmen, who plundered the
+cities in the valley of the Rhine. Charles attempted to buy off
+these redoubtable invaders, a policy which aroused the anger of
+his German subjects, whose resentment was accentuated by the
+king&rsquo;s indifference to their condition, and found expression in
+887 when Arnulf, an illegitimate son of Carloman, the eldest
+son of Louis the German, led an army of Bavarians against him.
+Arnulf himself was recognized as German or East-Frankish
+king, although his actual authority was confined to Bavaria and
+its neighbourhood. He was successful in freeing his kingdom
+for a time from the ravages of the Northmen, but was not equally
+fortunate in his contests with the Moravians. After his death in
+899 his kingdom came under the nominal rule of his young son
+Louis &ldquo;the Child,&rdquo; and in the absence of firm rule and a central
+authority became the prey of the Magyars and other hordes of
+invaders.</p>
+
+<p>During these wars feudalism made rapid advance in Germany.
+The different peoples compelled to attend to their own defence
+appointed dukes for special military services (see
+<span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Duke</a></span>); and these dukes, chosen often from members
+<span class="sidenote">Feudalism in Germany.</span>
+of the old ducal families, succeeded without much
+difficulty in securing a more permanent position for
+themselves and their descendants. In Saxony, for example,
+we hear of Duke Otto the Illustrious, who also ruled over
+Thuringia; and during the early years of the 10th century dukes
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page834" id="page834"></a>834</span>
+appear in Franconia, Bavaria, Swabia and Lorraine. These
+dukes acquired large tracts of land of which they gave grants
+on conditions of military service to persons on whom they could
+rely; while many independent landowners sought their protection
+on terms of vassalage. The same process took place in the case
+of great numbers of freemen of a lower class, who put themselves
+at the service of their more powerful neighbours in return for
+protection. In this manner the feudal tenure of land began to
+prevail in almost all parts of Germany, and the elaborate social
+system which became known as feudalism was gradually built
+up. The dukes became virtually independent, and when Louis
+the Child died in 911, the royal authority existed in name
+only.</p>
+
+<p>While Louis the Child lived the German dukes were virtually
+kings in their duchies, and their natural tendency was to make
+themselves absolute rulers. But, threatened as they
+were by the Magyars, with the Slavs and Northmen
+<span class="sidenote">Conrad I.</span>
+always ready to take advantage of their weakness, they could
+not afford to do without a central government. Accordingly
+the nobles assembled at Forchheim, and by the advice of Otto
+the Illustrious, duke of Saxony, Conrad of Franconia was chosen
+German king. The dukes of Bavaria, Swabia and Lorraine were
+displeased at this election, probably because Conrad was likely
+to prove considerably more powerful than they wished. Rather
+than acknowledge him, the duke of Lotharingia, or Lorraine,
+transferred his allegiance to Charles the Simple of France; and
+it was in vain that Conrad protested and despatched armies into
+Lorraine. With the help of the French king the duke maintained
+his ground, and for the time his country was lost to Germany.
+Bavaria and Swabia yielded, but, mainly through the fault of
+the king himself, their submission was of brief duration. The
+rise of the dukes had been watched with extreme jealousy by
+the leading prelates. They saw that the independence they had
+hitherto enjoyed would be much more imperilled by powerful
+local governors than by a sovereign who necessarily regarded it
+as part of his duty to protect the church. Hence they had done
+everything they could to prevent the dukes from extending their
+authority, and as the government was carried on during the reign
+of Louis the Child mainly by Hatto I., archbishop of Mainz, they
+had been able to throw considerable obstacles in the way of their
+rivals. They had now induced Conrad to quarrel with both
+Swabia and Bavaria, and also with Henry, duke of Saxony, son
+of the duke to whom he chiefly owed his crown. In these contests
+the German king met with indifferent success, but the struggle
+with Saxony was not very serious, and when dying in December
+919 Conrad recommended the Franconian nobles to offer the
+crown to Henry, the only man who could cope with the anarchy
+by which he had himself been baffled.</p>
+
+<p>The nobles of Franconia acted upon the advice of their king,
+and the Saxons were very willing that their duke should rise
+to still higher honours. Henry I., called &ldquo;the Fowler,&rdquo;
+who was chosen German king in May 919, was one of
+<span class="sidenote">Henry the Fowler.</span>
+the best of German kings, and was a born statesman
+and warrior. His ambition was of the noblest order, for he sank
+his personal interests in the cause of his country, and he knew
+exactly when to attain his objects by force, and when by concession
+and moderation. Almost immediately he overcame
+the opposition of the dukes of Swabia and Bavaria; some time
+later, taking advantage of the troubled state of France, he
+accepted the homage of the duke of Lorraine, which for many
+centuries afterwards remained a part of the German kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Having established internal order, Henry was able to turn
+to matters of more pressing moment. In the first year of his
+reign the Magyars, who had continued to scourge
+Germany during the reign of Conrad, broke into
+<span class="sidenote">Henry and the Magyars.</span>
+Saxony and plundered the land almost without hindrance.
+In 924 they returned, and this time by good
+fortune one of their greatest princes fell into the hands of the
+Germans. Henry restored him to his countrymen on condition
+that they made a truce for nine years; and he promised to pay
+yearly tribute during this period. The barbarians accepted his
+terms, and faithfully kept their word in regard to Henry&rsquo;s own
+lands, although Bavaria, Swabia and Franconia they occasionally
+invaded as before. The king made admirable use of the opportunity
+he had secured, confining his efforts, however, to Saxony
+and Thuringia, the only parts of Germany over which he had
+any control.</p>
+
+<p>In the southern and western German lands towns and fortified
+places had long existed; but in the north, where Roman influence
+had only been feeble, and where even the Franks
+had not exercised much authority until the time of
+<span class="sidenote">Henry&rsquo;s work in Saxony.</span>
+Charlemagne, the people still lived as in ancient times,
+either on solitary farms or in exposed villages. Henry
+saw that, while this state of things lasted, the population could
+never be safe, and began the construction of fortresses and walled
+towns. Of every group of nine men one was compelled to devote
+himself to this work, while the remaining eight cultivated his
+fields and allowed a third of their produce to be stored against
+times of trouble. The necessities of military discipline were
+also a subject of attention. Hitherto the Germans had fought
+mainly on foot, and, as the Magyars came on horseback, the
+nation was placed at an immense disadvantage. A powerful
+force of cavalry was now raised, while at the same time the
+infantry were drilled in new and more effective modes of fighting.
+Although these preparations were carried on directly under
+Henry&rsquo;s supervision, only in Saxony and Thuringia the neighbouring
+dukes were stimulated to follow his example. When he
+was ready he used his new troops, before turning them against
+their chief enemy, the Magyars, to punish refractory Slavonic
+tribes; and he brought under temporary subjection nearly
+all the Slavs between the Elbe and the Oder. He proceeded
+also against the Bohemians, whose duke was compelled to do
+homage.</p>
+
+<p>The truce with the Magyars was not renewed, whereupon in
+933 a body of invaders crossed, as in former years, the frontier
+of Thuringia. Henry prudently waited until dearth
+of provisions forced the enemy to divide into two
+<span class="sidenote">The Magyars return.</span>
+bands. He then swept down upon the weaker force,
+annihilated it, and rapidly advanced against the
+remaining portion of the army. The second battle was more
+severe than the first, but not less decisive. The Magyars, unable
+to cope with a disciplined army, were cut down in great numbers,
+and those who survived rode in terror from the field. The exact
+scenes of these conflicts are not known, although the date of the
+second encounter was the 15th of March 933; but few more
+important battles have ever been fought. The power of the
+Magyars was not indeed destroyed, but it was crippled, and the
+way was prepared for the effective liberation of Germany from
+an intolerable plague. While the Magyars had been troubling
+Germany on the east and south, the Danes had been irritating
+her on the north. Charlemagne had established a march between
+the Eider and the Schlei; but in course of time the Danes had
+not only seized this territory, but had driven the German population
+beyond the Elbe. The Saxons had been slowly reconquering
+the lost ground, and now Henry, advancing with his victorious
+army into Jutland, forced Gorm, the Danish king, to become
+his vassal and regained the land between the Eider and the
+Schlei. But Henry&rsquo;s work concerned the duchy of Saxony
+rather than the kingdom of Germany. He concentrated all his
+energies on the government and defence of northern and eastern
+Germany, leaving the southern and western districts to profit
+by his example, while his policy of refraining from interference
+in the affairs of the other duchies tended to diminish the ill-feeling
+which existed between the various German tribes and to bring
+peace to the country as a whole. It is in these directions that
+the reign of Henry the Fowler marks a stage in the history of
+Germany.</p>
+
+<p>When this great king died in July 936 every land inhabited
+by a German population formed part of the German kingdom,
+and none of the duchies were at war either with him or among
+themselves. Along the northern and eastern frontier were tributary
+races, and the country was for the time rid of an enemy
+<span class="sidenote">The growth of towns.</span>
+which, for nearly a generation, had kept it in perpetual fear. Great
+as were these results, perhaps Henry did even greater service
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page835" id="page835"></a>835</span>
+in beginning the growth of towns throughout north Germany.
+Not content with merely making them places of defence, he
+decreed that they should be centres for the administration
+of justice, and that in them should be held all public
+festivities and ceremonies; he also instituted markets,
+and encouraged traders to take advantage of the opportunities
+provided for them. A strong check was thus imposed
+upon the tendency of freemen to become the vassals of great lords.
+This movement had become so powerful by the troubles of the
+epoch that, had no other current of influence set in, the entire class
+of freemen must soon have disappeared. As they now knew that
+they could find protection without looking to a superior, they
+had less temptation to give up their independence, and many
+of them settled in the towns where they could be safe and free.
+Besides maintaining a manly spirit in the population, the towns
+rapidly added to their importance by the stimulus they gave
+to all kinds of industry and trade.</p>
+
+<p>Before his death Henry obtained the promise of the nobles
+at a national assembly, or diet, at Erfurt to recognize his son
+Otto as his successor, and the promise was kept, Otto
+being chosen German king in July 936. Otto I. the
+<span class="sidenote">Otto the Great.</span>
+Great began his reign under the most favourable
+circumstances. He was twenty-four years of age, and at the
+coronation festival, which was held at Aix-la-Chapelle, the dukes
+performed for the first time the nominally menial offices known
+as the arch-offices of the German kingdom. But these peaceful
+relations soon came to an end. Reversing his father&rsquo;s policy,
+Otto resolved that the dukes should act in the strictest sense
+as his vassals, or lose their dignities. At the time of his coronation
+Germany was virtually a federal state; he wished to transform
+it into a firm and compact monarchy. This policy speedily led to
+a formidable rebellion, headed by Thankmar, the king&rsquo;s half-brother,
+a fierce warrior, who fancied that he had a prior claim
+to the crown, and who secured a number of followers in Saxony.
+He was joined by Eberhard, duke of Franconia, and it was only
+by the aid of the duke of Swabia, whom the duke of Franconia
+had offended, that the rising was put down. This happened in
+938, and in 939 a second rebellion, led by Otto&rsquo;s brother Henry,
+was supported by the duke of Franconia and by Giselbert, duke
+of Lorraine. Otto again triumphed, and derived immense advantages
+from his success. The duchy of Franconia he kept
+in his own hands, and in 944 he granted Lorraine to Conrad
+the Red, an energetic and honourable count, whom he still
+further attached to himself by giving him his daughter for his
+wife. Bavaria, on the death of its duke in 947, was placed under
+his brother Henry, who, having been pardoned, had become
+a loyal subject. The duchy of Swabia was also brought into
+Otto&rsquo;s family by the marriage of his son Ludolf with Duke
+Hermann&rsquo;s daughter, and by these means Otto made himself
+master of the kingdom. For the time, feudalism in truth meant
+that lands and offices were held on condition of service; the king
+was the genuine ruler, not only of freemen, but of the highest
+vassals in the nation.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of these internal troubles Otto was attacked
+by the French king, Louis IV., who sought to regain Lorraine.
+However, the German king was soon able to turn his
+arms against his new enemy; he marched into France
+<span class="sidenote">Otto&rsquo;s wars with France and with the Slavs.</span>
+and made peace with Louis in 942. Otto&rsquo;s subsequent
+interventions in the affairs of France were mainly
+directed towards making peace between Louis and his
+powerful and rebellious vassal, Hugh the Great, duke of the
+Franks, both of whom were married to sisters of the German
+king. Much more important than Otto&rsquo;s doings in France were
+his wars with his northern and eastern neighbours. The duke of
+Bohemia, after a long struggle, was brought to submission in
+950. Among the Slavs between the Elbe and the Oder the king
+was represented by Margrave Gero, a warrior well fitted for the
+rough work he had to do, loyal to his sovereign, but capable
+of any treachery towards his enemies, who conquered much of
+the country north of Bohemia between the Oder and the upper
+and middle Elbe. Margrave Billung, who looked after the
+Abotrites on the lower Elbe, was less fortunate, mainly because
+of the neighbourhood of the Danes, who, after the death of King
+Henry, often attacked the hated Germans, but some progress
+was made in bringing this district under German influence.
+Otto, having profound faith in the power of the church to
+reconcile conquered peoples to his rule, provided for the benefit
+of the Danes the bishoprics of Schleswig, Ripen and Aarhus;
+and among those which he established for the Slavs were the
+important bishoprics of Brandenburg and Havelberg. In his
+later years he set up the archbishopric of Magdeburg, which
+took in the sees of Meissen, Zeitz and Merseburg.</p>
+
+<p>Having secured peace in Germany and begun the real conquest
+of the border races, Otto was by far the greatest sovereign
+in Europe; and, had he refused to go beyond the
+limits within which he had hitherto acted, it is probable
+<span class="sidenote">Otto in Italy.</span>
+that he would have established a united monarchy.
+But a decision to which he soon came deprived posterity of the
+results which might have sprung from the policy of his earlier
+years. About 951 Adelaide, widow of Lothair, son of Hugh,
+king of Italy, having refused to marry the son of Berengar,
+margrave of Ivrea, was cast into prison and cruelly treated. She
+appealed to Otto; other reasons called him in the same direction,
+and in 951 he crossed the Alps and descended into Lombardy.
+He displaced Berengar, and was so fascinated by Queen Adelaide
+that within a few weeks he was married to her at Pavia. But
+Otto&rsquo;s son, Ludolf, who had received a promise of the German
+crown, saw his rights threatened by this marriage. He went
+to an old enemy of his father, Frederick, archbishop of Mainz,
+and the two plotted together against the king, who, hearing of
+their proceedings, returned to Germany in 952, leaving Duke
+Conrad of Lorraine as his representative in Italy. Otto, who
+did not suspect how deep were the designs of the conspirators,
+paid a visit to Mainz, where he was seized and was compelled
+to take certain solemn pledges which, after his escape, he
+repudiated.</p>
+
+<p>War broke out in 953, and the struggle was the most serious
+in which he had been engaged. In Lorraine, of which duchy
+Otto made his brother Bruno, archbishop of Cologne,
+administrator, his cause was triumphant; but everywhere
+<span class="sidenote">The civil war.</span>
+else dark clouds gathered over his head. Conrad
+the Red hurried from Italy and joined the rebels; in Swabia,
+in Bavaria, in Franconia and even in Saxony, the native land
+of the king, many sided with them. It is extremely remarkable
+that this movement acquired so quickly such force and volume.
+The explanation, according to some historians, is that the
+people looked forward with alarm to the union of Germany with
+Italy. There were still traditions of the hardships inflicted upon
+the common folk by the expeditions of Charlemagne, and it is
+supposed that they anticipated similar evils in the event of his
+empire being restored. Whether or not this be the true explanation,
+the power of Otto was shaken to its foundations. At last
+he was saved by the presence of an immense external peril. The
+Magyars were as usual stimulated to action by the disunion of
+their enemies; and Conrad and Ludolf made the blunder of
+inviting their help, a proceeding which disgusted the Germans,
+many of whom fell away from their side and rallied to the
+head and protector of the nation. In a very short time Conrad
+and the archbishop of Mainz submitted, and although Ludolf
+held out a little longer he soon asked for pardon. Lorraine
+was given to Bruno; but Conrad, its former duke, although
+thus punished, was not disgraced, for Otto needed his services
+<span class="sidenote">Defeat of Magyars.</span>
+in the war with the Magyars. The great battle against
+these foes was fought on the 10th of August 955
+on the Lechfeld near Augsburg. After a fierce and
+obstinate fight, in which Conrad and many other nobles fell,
+the Germans were victorious; the Magyars were even more
+thoroughly scourged than in the battles in which Otto&rsquo;s father
+had given them their first real check. The deliverance of Germany
+was complete, and from this time, notwithstanding
+certain wild raids towards the east, the Magyars began to settle
+in the land they still occupy, and to adapt themselves to the
+conditions of civilized life.</p>
+
+<p>Entreated by Pope John XII., who needed a helper against
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page836" id="page836"></a>836</span>
+Berengar, Otto went a second time to Italy, in 961; and on
+this occasion he received from the pope at Rome the imperial
+<span class="sidenote">Otto crowned emperor.</span>
+crown. In 966 he was again in Italy, where he remained
+six years, exercising to the full his imperial
+rights in regard to the papacy, but occupied mainly
+in an attempt to make himself master of the southern,
+as well as of the northern half of the peninsula.</p>
+
+<p>By far the most important act of Otto&rsquo;s eventful life was
+his assumption of the Lombard and the imperial crowns. His
+successors steadily followed his example, and the
+sovereign crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle claimed as his
+right coronation by the pope in Rome. Thus grew
+<span class="sidenote">Connexion of Germany with the Empire.</span>
+up the Holy Roman Empire, that strange state which,
+directly descending through the empire of Charlemagne
+from the empire of the Caesars, contained so many elements
+foreign to ancient life. We are here concerned with it only as
+it affected Germany. Germany itself never until our own day
+became an empire. It is true that at last the Holy Roman
+Empire was in reality confined to Germany; but in theory it
+was something quite different. Like France, Germany was a
+kingdom, but it differed from France in this, that its king was
+also king in Italy and Roman emperor. As the latter title made
+him nominally the secular lord of the world, it might have
+been expected to excite the pride of his German subjects; and
+doubtless, after a time, they did learn to think highly of themselves
+as the imperial race. But the evidence tends to show
+that at first at least they had no wish for this honour, and would
+have preferred their ruler to devote himself entirely to his own
+people.</p>
+
+<p>There are signs that during Otto&rsquo;s reign they began to have
+a distinct consciousness of national life, their use of the word
+&ldquo;deutsch&rdquo; to indicate the whole people being one of these
+symptoms. Their common sufferings, struggles and triumphs,
+however, account far more readily for this feeling than the
+supposition that they were elated by their king undertaking
+obligations which took him for years together away from his
+native land. So solemn were the associations of the imperial
+title that, after acquiring it, Otto probably looked for more
+intimate obedience from his subjects. They were willing enough
+to admit the abstract claims of the Empire; but in the world of
+feudalism there was a multitude of established customs and
+rights which rudely conflicted with these claims, and in action,
+remote and abstract considerations gave way before concrete
+and present realities. Instead of strengthening the allegiance
+of the Germans towards their sovereign, the imperial title was
+the means of steadily undermining it. To the connexion of their
+kingdom with the Empire they owe the fact that for centuries
+they were the most divided of European nations, and that they
+have only recently begun to create a genuinely united state.
+France was made up of a number of loosely connected lands,
+each with its own lord, when Germany, under Otto, was to a
+large extent moved by a single will, well organized and strong.
+But the attention of the French kings was concentrated on their
+immediate interests, and in course of time they brought their
+unruly vassals to order. The German kings, as emperors, had
+duties which often took them away for long periods from Germany.
+This alone would have shaken their authority, for, during their
+absence, the great vassals seized rights which were afterwards
+difficult to recover. But the emperors were not merely absent,
+they had to engage in struggles in which they exhausted the
+energies necessary to enforce obedience at home; and, in order
+to obtain help, they were sometimes glad to concede advantages
+to which, under other conditions, they would have tenaciously
+clung. Moreover, the greatest of all their struggles was with
+the papacy; so that a power outside their kingdom, but exercising
+immense influence within it, was in the end always prepared
+to weaken them by exciting dissension among their people.
+Thus the imperial crown was the most fatal gift that could have
+been offered to the German kings; apparently giving them
+all things, it deprived them of nearly everything. And in doing
+this it inflicted on many generations incalculable and needless
+suffering.</p>
+
+<p>By the policy of his later years Otto did much to prepare
+the way for the process of disintegration which he rendered
+inevitable by restoring the Empire. With the kingdom
+divided into five great duchies, the sovereign could
+<span class="sidenote">Otto and the duchies.</span>
+always have maintained at least so much unity as Henry
+the Fowler secured; and, as the experience of Otto
+himself showed, there would have been chances of much greater
+centralization. Yet he threw away this advantage. Lorraine
+was divided into two duchies, Upper Lorraine and Lower Lorraine.
+In each duchy of the kingdom he appointed a count palatine,
+whose duty was to maintain the royal rights; and after Margrave
+Gero died in 965 his territory was divided into three marches,
+and placed under margraves, each with the same powers as Gero.
+Otto gave up the practice of retaining the duchies either in his
+own hands or in those of relatives. Even Saxony, his native
+duchy and the chief source of his strength, was given to Margrave
+Billung, whose family kept it for many years. To combat the
+power of the princes, Otto, especially after he became emperor
+and looked upon himself as the protector of the church, immensely
+increased the importance of the prelates. They received great
+gifts of land, were endowed with jurisdiction in criminal as well
+as civil cases, and obtained several other valuable sovereign
+rights. The emperor&rsquo;s idea was that, as church lands and
+offices could not be hereditary, their holders would necessarily
+favour the crown. But he forgot that the church had a head
+outside Germany, and that the passion for the rights of an order
+may be not less intense than that for the rights of a family.
+While the Empire was at peace with the popes the prelates did
+strongly uphold it, and their influence was unquestionably,
+on the whole, higher than that of rude secular nobles. But
+with the Empire and the Papacy in conflict, they could not but
+abide, as a rule, by the authority which had the most sacred
+claims to their loyalty. From all these circumstances it curiously
+happened that the sovereign who did more than almost any other
+to raise the royal power, was also the sovereign who, more than
+any other, wrought its decay.</p>
+
+<p>Otto II. had been crowned German king at Aix-la-Chapelle
+and emperor at Rome during his father&rsquo;s lifetime. Becoming
+sole ruler in May 973, his troubles began in Lorraine,
+but were more serious in Bavaria, which was now a
+<span class="sidenote">Otto II.</span>
+very important duchy. Its duke, Henry, the brother of Otto I.,
+had died in 955 and had been succeeded by a young son, Henry,
+whose turbulent career subsequently induced the Bavarian
+historian Aventinus to describe him as <i>rixosus</i>, or the Quarrelsome.
+In 973 Burchard II., duke of Swabia, died, and the new
+emperor refused to give this duchy to Henry, further irritating
+this duke by bestowing it upon his enemy, Otto, a grandson
+of the emperor Otto I. Having collected allies Henry rebelled,
+and in 976 the emperor himself marched against him and drove
+him into Bohemia. Bavaria was taken from him and given to
+Otto of Swabia, but it was deprived of some of its importance.
+The southern part, Carinthia, which had hitherto been a march
+district, was separated from it and made into a duchy, and the
+church in Bavaria was made dependent upon the king and not
+upon the duke. Having arrived at this settlement Otto marched
+against the Bohemians, but while he was away from Germany
+war was begun against him by Henry, the new duke of Carinthia,
+who, forgetting the benefits he had just received, rose to avenge
+the wrongs of his friend, the deposed duke Henry of Bavaria.
+The emperor made peace with the Bohemians and quickly put
+down the rising. Henry of Bavaria was handed over to the
+keeping of the bishop of Utrecht and Carinthia received another
+duke.</p>
+
+<p>In his anxiety to obtain possession of southern Italy, Otto I.
+had secured as a wife for his son and successor Theophano,
+daughter of the East Roman emperor, Romanus
+II., the ruler of much of southern Italy. Otto II.,
+<span class="sidenote">Otto and France.</span>
+having all his father&rsquo;s ambition with much of his
+strength and haughtiness, longed to get away from Germany
+and to claim these remoter districts. But he was detained for
+some time owing to the sudden invasion of Lower Lorraine by
+Lothair, king of France, in 978. So stealthily did the invader
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page837" id="page837"></a>837</span>
+advance that the emperor had only just time to escape from
+Aix-la-Chapelle before the town was seized and plundered.
+As quickly as possible Otto placed himself at the head of
+a great army and marched to Paris, but he was compelled
+to retreat without taking the city, and in 980 peace was
+made.</p>
+
+<p>At last, after an expedition against the Poles, Otto was able
+to fulfil the wish of his heart; he went to Italy in 980 and never
+returned to Germany. His claims to southern Italy
+were vehemently opposed, and in July 982 he suffered
+<span class="sidenote">Otto in Italy.</span>
+a disastrous defeat at the hands of the East Roman
+emperor&rsquo;s subjects and their Saracen allies. The news of this
+crushing blow cast a gloom over Germany, which was again
+suffering from the attacks of her unruly neighbours. The Saxons
+were able to cope with the Danes and the German boundary
+was pushed forward in the south-east; but the Slavs fought
+with such courage and success that during the reigns of the
+emperors Otto II. and Otto III. much of the work effected by
+the margraves Hermann Billung and Gero was undone, and
+nearly two centuries passed before they were driven back to
+the position which they had perforce occupied under Otto the
+Great. Such were the first-fruits of the assumption of the
+imperial crown.</p>
+
+<p>About six months before his death in Rome, in December
+983, Otto held a diet at Verona which was attended by many
+of the German princes, who recognized his infant
+son Otto as his successor. Otto was then taken to
+<span class="sidenote">Otto III.</span>
+Germany, and after his father&rsquo;s death he was crowned at
+Aix-la-Chapelle on Christmas Day 983. Henry of Bavaria
+was released from his confinement and became his guardian;
+but as this restless prince showed an inclination to secure the
+crown for himself, the young king was taken from him and placed
+in the care of his mother Theophano. Henry, however, gained
+a good deal of support both within and without Germany and
+caused much anxiety to Otto&rsquo;s friends, but in 985 peace was made
+and he was restored to Bavaria. While Theophano acted as
+regent, the chief functions of government were discharged by
+Willigis, archbishop of Mainz (d. 1011), a vigorous prelate who
+had risen from a humble rank to the highest position in the
+German Church. He was aided by the princes, each of whom
+claimed a voice in the administration, and, during the lifetime of
+Theophano at least, a stubborn and sometimes a successful
+resistance was offered to the attacks of the Slavs. But under
+the prevalent conditions a vigorous rule was impossible, and
+during Otto&rsquo;s minority the royal authority was greatly weakened.
+In Saxony the people were quickly forgetting their hereditary
+connexion with the successors of Henry the Fowler; in Bavaria,
+after the death of Duke Henry in 995, the nobles, heedless of the
+royal power, returned to the ancient German custom and chose
+Henry&rsquo;s son Henry as their ruler.</p>
+
+<p>In 995 Otto III. was declared to have reached his majority.
+He had been so carefully trained in all the learning of the time
+that he was called the &ldquo;wonder of the world,&rdquo; and a
+certain fascination still belongs to his imaginative and
+<span class="sidenote">The character of Otto.</span>
+fantastic nature. Imbued by his mother with the
+extravagant ideas of the East Roman emperors he
+introduced into his court an amount of splendour and ceremonial
+hitherto unknown in western Europe. The heir of the western
+emperors and the grandson of an eastern emperor, he spent most
+of his time in Rome, and fancied he could unite the world under
+his rule. In this vague design he was encouraged by Gerbert, the
+greatest scholar of the day, whom, as Silvester II., he raised to
+the papal throne. Meanwhile Germany was suffering severely
+from internal disorders and from the inroads of her rude
+neighbours; and when in the year 1000 Otto visited his northern
+kingdom there were hopes that he would smite these enemies
+with the vigour of his predecessors. But these hopes were
+disappointed; on the contrary, Otto seems to have released
+Boleslaus, duke of the Poles, from his vague allegiance to the
+German kings, and he founded an archbishopric at Gnesen,
+thus freeing the Polish sees from the authority of the archbishop
+of Magdeburg.</p>
+
+<p>When Otto III. died in January 1002 there remained no
+representative of the elder branch of the imperial family, and
+several candidates came forward for the vacant throne.
+Among these candidates was Henry of Bavaria, son
+<span class="sidenote">Henry II.</span>
+of Duke Henry the Quarrelsome and a great-grandson of Henry
+the Fowler, and at Mainz in June 1002 this prince was chosen
+German king as Henry II. Having been recognized as king by
+the Saxons, the Thuringians and the nobles of Lorraine, the new
+king was able to turn his attention to the affairs of government,
+but on the whole his reign was an unfortunate one for Germany.
+For ten years civil war raged in Lorraine; in Saxony much blood
+was shed in petty quarrels; and Henry made expeditions against
+his turbulent vassals in Flanders and Friesland. He also interfered
+in the affairs of Burgundy, but the acquisition of this kingdom
+was the work of his successor, Conrad II. During nearly the
+whole of this reign the Germans were fighting the Poles. Boleslaus
+of Poland, who was now a very powerful sovereign, having
+conquered Lusatia and Silesia, brought Bohemia also under his
+rule and was soon at variance with the German king. Anxious
+to regain these lands Henry allied himself with some Slavonic
+tribes, promising not to interfere with the exercise of their
+heathen religion, while Boleslaus found supporters among the
+discontented German nobles. The honours of the ensuing war
+were with Henry, and when peace was made in 1006 Boleslaus
+gave up Bohemia, but the struggle was soon renewed and neither
+side had gained any serious advantage when peace was again
+made in 1013. A third Polish war broke out in 1015. Henry
+led his troops in person and obtained assistance from the Russians
+and the Hungarians; peace was concluded in 1018, the Elbe
+remaining the north-east boundary of Germany. Henry made
+three journeys to Italy, being crowned king of the Lombards
+at Pavia in 1004 and emperor at Rome ten years later. Before
+the latter event, in order to assert his right of sovereignty over
+Rome, he called himself king of the Romans, a designation which
+henceforth was borne by his successors until they received the
+higher title from the pope. Hitherto a sovereign crowned at
+Aix-la-Chapelle had been &ldquo;king of the West Franks,&rdquo; or &ldquo;king
+of the Franks and Saxons.&rdquo; Henry was generous to the church,
+to which he looked for support, but he maintained the royal
+authority over the clergy. Although generally unsuccessful he
+strove hard for peace, and during this reign the principle of
+inheritance was virtually established with regard to German
+fiefs.</p>
+
+<p>After Henry&rsquo;s death the nobles met at Kamba, near Oppenheim,
+and in September 1024 elected Conrad, a Franconian
+count, to the vacant throne. Although favoured by
+the German clergy the new king, Conrad II., had to
+<span class="sidenote">Conrad II.</span>
+face some opposition; this, however, quickly vanished and he received
+the homage of the nobles in the various duchies and seemed
+to have no reason to dread internal enemies. Nevertheless,
+he had soon to battle with a conspiracy headed by his stepson,
+Ernest II., duke of Swabia. This was caused primarily by
+Conrad&rsquo;s avowed desire to acquire the kingdom of Burgundy, but
+other reasons for dissatisfaction existed, and the revolting duke
+found it easy to gather around him the scattered forces of discontent.
+However, the king was quite able to deal with the
+rising, which, indeed, never attained serious proportions, although
+Ernest gave continual trouble until his death in 1030. With
+regard to the German duchies Conrad followed the policy of
+Otto the Great. He wished to control, not to abolish them.
+In 1026, when Duke Henry of Bavaria died, he obtained the
+duchy for his son Henry, afterwards the emperor Henry III.;
+later, despite the opposition of the nobles, he invested the same
+prince with Swabia, where the ducal family had died out.
+Franconia was in the hands of Conrad himself; thus Saxony,
+Thuringia, Carinthia and Lorraine were the only duchies not
+completely dependent upon the king.</p>
+
+<p>When Conrad ascended the throne the safety of Germany
+was endangered from three different points. On the north was
+Denmark ruled by Canute the Great; on the east was the wide
+Polish state whose ruler, Boleslaus, had just taken the title of
+<span class="sidenote">The neighbouring countries.</span>
+king; and on the south-east was Hungary, which under its king,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page838" id="page838"></a>838</span>
+St Stephen, was rapidly becoming an organized and formidable
+power. Peace was maintained with Canute, and in 1035 a treaty
+was concluded and the land between the Eider and
+the Schlei was ceded to Denmark. In 1030 Conrad
+waged a short war against Hungary, but here also
+he was obliged to assent to a cession of territory.
+In Poland he was more fortunate. After the death of Boleslaus
+in 1025 the Poles plunged into a civil war, and Conrad was able
+to turn this to his own advantage. In 1031 he recovered Lusatia
+and other districts, and in 1033 the Polish duke of Mesislaus
+did homage to him at Merseburg. His authority was recognized
+by the Bohemians, and two expeditions taught the Slavonic
+tribes between the Elbe and the Oder to respect his power.</p>
+
+<p>In Italy, whither he journeyed in 1026 and 1036, Conrad
+was not welcomed. Although as emperor and as king of the
+Lombards he was the lawful sovereign of that country,
+the Germans were still regarded as intruders and could
+<span class="sidenote">Conrad in Italy.</span>
+only maintain their rights by force. The event which
+threw the greatest lustre upon this reign was the acquisition of
+the kingdom of Burgundy, or Arles, which was bequeathed to
+Conrad by its king, Rudolph III., the uncle of his wife, Gisela.
+Rudolph died in 1032, and in 1033 Conrad was crowned king
+at Peterlingen, being at once recognized by the German-speaking
+population. For about two years his rival, Odo, count of
+Champagne, who was supported by the Romance-speaking
+inhabitants, kept up the struggle against him, but eventually
+all opposition was overcome and the possession of Burgundy
+was assured to the German king.</p>
+
+<p>This reign is important in the history of Germany because
+it marks the beginning of the great imperial age, but it has other
+features of interest. In dealing with the revolt of
+Ernest of Swabia Conrad was aided by the reluctance
+<span class="sidenote">The nobles and the land.</span>
+of the vassals of the great lords to follow them against
+the king. This reluctance was due largely to the
+increasing independence of this class of landholders, who were
+beginning to learn that the sovereign, and not their immediate
+lord, was the protector of their liberties; the independence
+in its turn arose from the growth of the principle of heredity.
+In Germany Conrad did not definitely decree that fiefs should
+pass from father to son, but he encouraged and took advantage
+of the tendency in this direction, a tendency which was, obviously,
+a serious blow at the power of the great lords over their vassals.
+In 1037 he issued from Milan his famous edict for the kingdom
+of Italy which decreed that upon the death of a landholder his
+fief should descend to his son, or grandson, and that no fiefholder
+should be deprived of his fief without the judgment of his peers.
+In another direction Conrad&rsquo;s policy was to free himself as king
+from dependence upon the church. He sought to regain lands
+granted to the church by his predecessors; prelates were employed
+on public business much less frequently than heretofore.
+He kept a firm hand over the church, but his rule was purely
+secular; he took little or no interest in ecclesiastical affairs.
+During this reign the centre and basis of the imperial power in
+Germany was moved southwards. Saxony, the home of the
+Ottos, became less prominent in German politics, while Bavaria
+and the south were gradually gaining in importance.</p>
+
+<p>Henry III., who had been crowned German king and also
+king of Burgundy during his father&rsquo;s lifetime, took possession
+of his great inheritance without the slightest sign of
+opposition in June 1039. He was without the impulsiveness
+<span class="sidenote">Henry III.</span>
+which marred Conrad&rsquo;s great qualities, but he had
+the same decisive judgment, wide ambition and irresistible
+will as his father. During the late king&rsquo;s concluding years a
+certain Bretislaus, who had served Conrad with distinction
+in Lusatia, became duke of Bohemia and made war upon the
+disunited Poles, easily bringing them into subjection. Thus
+Germany was again threatened with the establishment of a great
+and independent Slavonic state upon her eastern frontier. To
+combat this danger Henry invaded Bohemia, and after two
+reverses compelled Bretislaus to appear before him as a suppliant
+at Regensburg. The German king treated his foe generously
+and was rewarded by receiving to the end of his reign the service
+of a loyal vassal; he also gained the goodwill of the Poles by
+helping to bring about the return of their duke, Casimir I., who
+willingly did homage for his land. The king of Denmark, too,
+acknowledged Henry as his feudal lord. Moreover, by several
+campaigns in Hungary the German king brought that country
+into the position of a fief of the German crown. This war was
+occasioned by the violence of the Hungarian usurper, Aba Samuel,
+and formed Henry&rsquo;s principal occupation from 1041 to 1045.</p>
+
+<p>In Germany itself Henry acquired, during the first ten years
+of his rule, an authority which had been unknown since the days
+of Otto the Great. Early in his reign he had made a
+determined enemy of Godfrey the Bearded, duke of
+<span class="sidenote">Henry&rsquo;s internal policy.</span>
+upper Lorraine, who, in 1044, conspired against him
+and who found powerful allies in Henry I., king of
+France, in the counts of Flanders and Holland, and in certain
+Burgundian nobles. However, Godfrey and his friends were
+easily worsted, and when the dispossessed duke again tried the
+fortune of war he found that the German king had detached
+Henry of France from his side and was also in alliance with the
+English king, Edward the Confessor. While thus maintaining
+his authority in the north-east corner of the country by alliances
+and expeditions, Henry was strong enough to put the laws in
+motion against the most powerful princes and to force them to
+keep the public peace. Under his severe but beneficent rule,
+Germany enjoyed a period of internal quiet such as she had
+probably never experienced before, but even Henry could not
+permanently divert from its course the main political tendency
+of the age, the desire of the great feudal lords for independence.</p>
+
+<p>Cowed, but unpacified and discontented, the princes awaited
+their opportunity, while the king played into their hands by
+allowing the southern duchies, Swabia, Bavaria and
+Carinthia, to pass from under his own immediate
+<span class="sidenote">Henry&rsquo;s wars.</span>
+control. His position was becoming gradually weaker
+when in 1051 he invaded Hungary, where a reaction against
+German influence was taking place. After a second campaign
+in 1052 the Hungarian king, Andrew, was compelled to make
+peace and to own himself the vassal of the German king. Meanwhile
+Saxony and Bavaria were permeated by the spirit of unrest,
+and Henry returned from Hungary just in time to frustrate
+a widespread conspiracy against him in southern Germany.
+Encouraged by the support of the German rebels, Andrew of
+Hungary repudiated the treaty of peace and the German
+supremacy in that country came to a sudden end. Among the
+causes which undermined Henry&rsquo;s strength was the fact that the
+mediate nobles, who had stood loyally by his father, Conrad,
+were not his friends; probably his wars made serious demands
+upon them, and his strict administration of justice, especially
+his insistence upon the maintenance of the public peace, was
+displeasing to them.</p>
+
+<p>At the beginning of Henry&rsquo;s reign the church all over Europe
+was in a deplorable condition. Simony was universally practised
+and the morality of the clergy was very low. The
+Papacy, too, had sunk to a degraded condition and its
+<span class="sidenote">Henry and the church.</span>
+authority was annihilated, not only by the character
+of successive popes, but by the fact that there were at
+the same time three claimants for the papal throne. Henry, a
+man of deep, sincere and even rigorous piety, regarded these
+evils with sorrow; he associated himself definitely with the
+movement for reform which proceeded from Cluny, and
+commanded his prelates to put an end to simony and other
+abuses. Then moving farther in the same direction he resolved
+to strike at the root of the evil by the exercise of his imperial
+authority. In 1046 he entered Italy at the head of an army
+which secured for him greater respect than had been given to
+any German ruler since Charlemagne, and at Sutri and in Rome
+he deposed the three rival popes. He then raised to the papal
+see Suidger, bishop of Bamberg, who, as Pope Clement II.,
+crowned him emperor; after Clement three other German popes&mdash;Damasus II.,
+Leo IX. and Victor II.&mdash;owed their elevation to
+Henry. Under these popes a new era began for the church, and
+in thus reforming the Papacy Henry III. fulfilled what was
+regarded as the noblest duty of his imperial office, but he also
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page839" id="page839"></a>839</span>
+sharpened a weapon whose keen edge was first tried against
+his son.</p>
+
+<p>The last years of Henry III. form a turning-point in German
+history. Great kings and emperors came after him, but none
+of them possessed the direct, absolute authority which he
+freely wielded; even in the case of the strongest the forms of
+feudalism more and more interposed themselves between the
+monarch and the nation, and at last the royal authority virtually
+disappeared. During this reign the towns entered upon an age
+of prosperity, and the Rhine and the Weser became great
+avenues of trade.</p>
+
+<p>When Henry died in October 1056 the decline of the royal
+authority was accelerated by the fact that his successor was a
+child. Henry IV., who had been crowned king in
+1054, was at first in charge of his mother, the empress
+<span class="sidenote">The minority of Henry IV.</span>
+Agnes, whose weak and inefficient rule was closely
+watched by Anno, archbishop of Cologne. In 1062,
+however, Anno and other prominent prelates and laymen,
+perhaps jealous of the influence exercised at court by Henry,
+bishop of Augsburg (d. 1063), managed by a clever trick to
+get possession of the king&rsquo;s person. Deserted by her friends
+Agnes retired, and forthwith Anno began to rule the state.
+But soon he was compelled to share his duties with Adalbert,
+archbishop of Bremen, and a year or two later Adalbert became
+virtually the ruler of Germany, leaving Anno to attend to affairs
+in Italy. Adalbert&rsquo;s rule was very successful. Compelling
+King Solomon to own Henry&rsquo;s supremacy he restored the
+influence of Germany in Hungary; in internal affairs he restrained
+the turbulence of the princes, but he made many
+enemies, especially in Saxony, and in 1066 Henry, who had
+just been declared of age, was compelled to dismiss him. The
+ambitious prelate, however, had gained great influence over
+Henry, who had grown up under the most diverse influences.
+The young king was generous and was endowed with considerable
+intellectual gifts; but passing as he did from Anno&rsquo;s gloomy
+palace at Cologne to Adalbert&rsquo;s residence in Bremen, where he
+was petted and flattered, he became wayward and wilful.</p>
+
+<p>Henry IV. assumed the duties of government soon after the
+fall of Adalbert and quickly made enemies of many of the chief
+princes, including Otto of Nordheim, the powerful
+duke of Bavaria, Rudolph, duke of Swabia, and
+<span class="sidenote">Henry&rsquo;s personal rule.</span>
+Berthold of Zähringen, duke of Carinthia. In Saxony,
+where, like his father, he frequently held his court,
+he excited intense hostility by a series of injudicious proceedings.
+While the three Ottos were pursuing the shadow of imperial
+greatness in Italy, much of the crown land in this duchy had been
+seized by the nobles and was now held by their descendants.
+Henry IV. insisted on the restoration of these estates and encroached
+upon the rights of the peasants. Moreover, he built
+a number of forts which the people thought were intended for
+prisons; he filled the land with riotous and overbearing Swabians;
+he kept in prison Magnus, the heir to the duchy; and is said
+to have spoken of the Saxons in a tone of great contempt. All
+classes were thus combined against him, and when he ordered
+his forces to assemble for a campaign against the Poles the
+Saxons refused to join the host. In 1073 the universal discontent
+found expression in a great assembly at Wormesleben, in which
+the leading part was taken by Otto of Nordheim, by Werner,
+archbishop of Magdeburg, and by Burkhard II., bishop of
+Halberstadt. Under Otto&rsquo;s leadership the Thuringians joined
+the rising, which soon spread far and wide. Henry was surprised
+by a band of rebels in his fortress at the Harzburg; he fled to
+Hersfeld and appealed to the princes for support, but he could
+not compel them to aid him and they would grant him nothing.
+After tedious negotiations he was obliged to yield to the demands
+of his enemies, and peace was made at Gerstungen in 1074.
+Zealously carrying out the conditions of the peace, the peasants
+not only battered down the detested forts, they even destroyed
+the chapel at the Harzburg and committed other acts of desecration.
+These proceedings alarmed the princes, both spiritual and
+secular, and Henry, who had gained support from the cities
+of the Rhineland, was able to advance with a formidable army
+into Saxony in 1075. He gained a decisive victory, rebuilt the
+forts and completely restored the authority of the crown.</p>
+
+<p>In 1073, while Germany was in this confused state, Hildebrand
+had become pope as Gregory VII., and in 1075 he issued his
+famous decree against the marriage of the clergy and
+against their investiture by laymen. To the latter
+<span class="sidenote">Pope Gregory VII.</span>
+decree it was impossible for any sovereign to submit,
+and in Germany there were stronger reasons than
+elsewhere for resistance. A large part of the land of the country
+was held by the clergy, and most of it had been granted to them
+because it was supposed that they would be the king&rsquo;s most
+efficient helpers. Were the feudal tie broken, the crown must
+soon vanish, and the constitution of medieval society undergo
+a radical change. Henry, who hitherto had treated the new
+pope with excessive respect, now announced his intention of
+going to Rome and assuming the imperial title. The pope,
+to whom the Saxons had been encouraged to complain, responded
+by sending back certain of Henry&rsquo;s messengers, with the command
+that the king should do penance for the crimes of which his
+subjects accused him. Enraged by this unexpected arrogance,
+Henry summoned a synod of German bishops to Worms in
+January 1076, and Hildebrand was declared deposed. The
+papal answer was a bull excommunicating the German king,
+dethroning him and liberating his subjects from their oath of
+allegiance.</p>
+
+<p>Never before had a pope ventured to take so bold a step.
+It was within the memory even of young men that a German
+king had dismissed three popes, and had raised in
+turn four of his own prelates to the Roman see. And
+<span class="sidenote">Effect of Henry&rsquo;s excommunication.</span>
+now a pope attempted to drag from his throne the
+successor of this very sovereign. The effect of the
+bull was tremendous; no other was ever followed by
+equally important results. The princes had long been chafing
+under the royal power; they had shaken even so stern an
+autocrat as Henry III., and the authority of Henry IV. was
+already visibly weakened. At this important stage in their
+contest with the crown a mighty ally suddenly offered himself,
+and with indecent eagerness they hastened to associate themselves
+with him. Their vassals and subjects, appalled by the invisible
+powers wielded by the head of the church, supported them in
+their rebellion. The Saxons again rose in arms and Otto of
+Nordheim succeeded in uniting the North and South German
+supporters of the pope. Henry had looked for no such result
+as this; he did not understand the influences which lay beneath
+the surface and was horrified by his unexpected isolation. At
+a diet in Tribur he humbled himself before the princes, but in
+vain. They turned from him and decided that the pope should
+be asked to judge Henry; that if, within a year, the sentence
+of excommunication were not removed, the king should lose his
+crown; and that in the meantime he should live in retirement.</p>
+
+<p>Next came the strange scene at Canossa which burned itself
+into the memory of Europe. For three days the representative
+of the Caesars entreated to be admitted into the pope&rsquo;s
+presence. No other mode of escape than complete
+<span class="sidenote">Scene at Canossa.</span>
+subjection to Gregory had suggested itself, or was
+perhaps possible; but it did not save him. Although the pope
+forgave him, the German princes, resolved not to miss the chance
+which fortune had given them, met in March 1077, and deposed
+him, electing Rudolph, duke of Swabia, as his successor. But
+Henry&rsquo;s bitter humiliations transformed his character; they
+brought out all his latent capacities of manliness.</p>
+
+<p>The war of investitures that followed was the opening of the
+tremendous struggle between the Empire and the Papacy,
+which is the central fact of medieval history and
+which, after two centuries of conflict, ended in the
+<span class="sidenote">The struggle over investitures.</span>
+exhaustion of both powers. Its details belong more
+to the history of Italy than to that of Germany,
+where it took the form of a fight between two rival kings, but
+in Germany its effects were more deeply felt. The nation now
+plucked bitter fruit from the seed planted by Otto the Great
+in assuming the imperial crown and by a long line of kings and
+emperors in lavishing worldly power upon the church. In the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page840" id="page840"></a>840</span>
+ambition of the spiritual and the secular princes the pope had
+an immensely powerful engine of offence against the emperor,
+and without the slightest scruple this was turned to the best
+advantage.</p>
+
+<p>When this struggle began it may be said in general that Henry
+was supported by the cities and the lower classes, while Rudolph
+relied upon the princes and the opponents of a united
+Germany; or, to make another division, Henry&rsquo;s
+<span class="sidenote">Henry IV. and the anti-kings.</span>
+strength lay in the duchies of Franconia and Bavaria,
+Rudolph&rsquo;s in Swabia and Saxony. In the Rhineland
+and in southern Germany the cities had been steadily growing
+in wealth and power, and they could not fail to realize that
+they had more to fear from the princes than from the crown.
+Hence when Henry returned to Germany in 1078 Worms,
+Spires and many other places opened their gates to him and
+contributed freely to his cause; nevertheless his troops were
+beaten in three encounters and Pope Gregory thundered anew
+against him in March 1080. However, the fortune of war soon
+turned, and in October 1080 Rudolph of Swabia was defeated
+and slain. Henry then carried the war into Italy; in 1084
+he was crowned emperor in Rome by Wibert, archbishop of
+Ravenna, whom, as Clement III., he had set up as an anti-pope,
+and in 1085 Gregory died an exile from Rome. Meanwhile
+in Germany Henry&rsquo;s opponents had chosen Hermann, count of
+Luxemburg, king in succession to Rudolph of Swabia. Hermann,
+however, was not very successful, and when Henry returned
+to Germany in 1084 he found that his most doughty opponent,
+Otto of Nordheim, was dead, and that the anti-king had few
+friends outside Saxony. This duchy was soon reduced to
+obedience and was treated with consideration, and when the
+third anti-king, Egbert, margrave of Meissen, was murdered in
+1090 there would have been peace if Germany had followed
+her own impulses.</p>
+
+<p>In the Papacy, however, Henry had an implacable foe; and
+again and again when he seemed on the point of a complete
+triumph the smouldering embers of revolt were kindled
+once more into flame. In Italy his son, Conrad, was
+<span class="sidenote">Henry and the Papacy.</span>
+stirred up against him and in 1093 was crowned king
+at Monza; then ten years later, when Germany was
+more peaceful than it had been for years and when the emperor&rsquo;s
+authority was generally acknowledged, his second son, Henry,
+afterwards the emperor Henry V., was induced to head a dangerous
+rebellion. The Saxons and the Thuringians were soon in
+arms, and they were joined by those warlike spirits of Germany
+to whom an age of peace brought no glory and an age of prosperity
+brought no gain. After some desultory fighting Henry IV.
+was taken prisoner and compelled to abdicate; he had, however,
+escaped and had renewed the contest when he died in August
+1106.</p>
+
+<p>During this reign the first crusade took place, and the German
+king suffered severely from the pious zeal which it expressed
+<span class="sidenote">The First Crusade.</span>
+and intensified. The movement was not in the end
+favourable to papal supremacy, but the early crusaders,
+and those who sympathized with them, regarded the
+enemies of the pope as the enemies of religion.</p>
+
+<p>The early years of Henry V.&rsquo;s reign were spent in campaigns
+in Flanders, Bohemia, Hungary and Poland, but the new king
+was soon reminded that the dispute over investitures
+was unsettled. Pope Paschal II. did not doubt, now
+that Henry IV. was dead, that he would speedily
+<span class="sidenote">Henry V. in Germany.</span>
+triumph; but he was soon undeceived. Henry V.,
+who with unconscious irony had promised to treat the pope
+as a father, continued, like his predecessors, to invest prelates
+with the ring and the staff, and met the expostulations of Paschal
+by declaring that he would not surrender a right which had
+belonged to all former kings. Lengthened negotiations took
+place but they led to no satisfactory result, while the king&rsquo;s
+enemies in Germany, taking advantage of the deadlock, showed
+signs of revolt. One of the most ardent of these enemies was
+Lothair of Supplinburg, whom Henry himself had made duke
+of Saxony upon the extinction of the Billung family in 1106.
+Lothair was humbled in 1112, but he took advantage of the
+emperor&rsquo;s difficulties to rise again and again, the twin pillars of
+his strength being the Saxon hatred of the Franconian emperors
+and an informal alliance with the papal see. Henry&rsquo;s chief friends
+were his nephews, the two Hohenstaufen princes, Frederick
+and Conrad, to whose father Frederick the emperor Henry IV.
+had given the duchy of Swabia when its duke Rudolph
+became his rival. The younger Frederick succeeded to this
+duchy in 1105, while ten years later Conrad was made duke of
+Franconia, a country which for nearly a century had been under
+the immediate government of the crown. The two brothers
+were enthusiastic imperialists, and with persistent courage they
+upheld the cause of their sovereign during his two absences
+in Italy.</p>
+
+<p>At last, in September 1122, the investiture question was
+settled by the concordat of Worms. By this compromise,
+which exhaustion forced upon both parties, the right
+of electing prelates was granted to the clergy, and
+<span class="sidenote">The concordat of Worms.</span>
+the emperor surrendered the privilege of investing
+them with the ring and the staff. On the other hand
+it was arranged that these elections should take place in the
+presence of the emperor or his representative, and that he should
+invest the new prelate with the sceptre, thus signifying that
+the bishop, or abbot, held his temporal fiefs from him and not
+from the pope. In Germany the victory remained with the
+emperor, but it was by no means decisive. The Papacy was far
+from realizing Hildebrand&rsquo;s great schemes; yet in regard to the
+question in dispute it gained solid advantage, and its general
+authority was incomparably more important than it had been
+half a century before. During this period it had waged war upon
+the emperor himself. Instead of acknowledging its inferiority as
+in former times it had claimed to be the higher power; it had
+even attempted to dispose of the imperial crown as if the Empire
+were a papal fief; and it had found out that it could at any
+time tamper, and perhaps paralyse, the imperial authority by
+exciting internal strife in Germany. Having thus settled this
+momentous dispute Henry spent his later years in restoring
+order in Germany, and in planning to assist his father-in-law,
+Henry I. of England, in France. During this reign under the
+lead of Otto, bishop of Bamberg (<i>c.</i> 1063-1139), Pomerania
+began to come under the influence of Germany and of
+Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>The Franconian dynasty died out with Henry V. in May 1125,
+and after a protracted contest Lothair, duke of Saxony, the
+candidate of the clergy, was chosen in the following
+August to succeed him. The new king&rsquo;s first enterprise
+<span class="sidenote">The reign of Lothair the Saxon.</span>
+was a disastrous campaign in Bohemia, but
+before this occurrence he had aroused the enmity of
+the Hohenstaufen princes by demanding that they should
+surrender certain lands which had formerly been the property
+of the crown. Lothair&rsquo;s rebuff in Bohemia stiffened the backs
+of Frederick and Conrad, and in order to contend with them
+the king secured a powerful ally by marrying his daughter
+Gertrude to Henry the Proud, a grandson of Welf, whom Henry
+IV. had made duke of Bavaria, a duchy to which Henry himself
+had succeeded in 1126. Henry was perhaps the most powerful
+of the king&rsquo;s subjects, nevertheless the dukes of Swabia and
+Franconia withstood him, and a long war desolated South
+Germany. This was ended by the submission of Frederick in
+1134 and of Conrad in the following year. Lothair&rsquo;s position,
+which before 1130 was very weak, had gradually become stronger.
+He had put down the disorder in Bavaria, in Saxony and in
+Lorraine; a diet held at Magdeburg in 1135 was attended by
+representatives from the vassal states of Denmark, Hungary,
+Bohemia and Poland; and in 1136, when he visited Italy for
+the second time, Germany was in a very peaceful condition. In
+June 1133 during the king&rsquo;s first visit to Italy he had received
+from Pope Innocent II. the imperial crown and also the investiture
+of the extensive territories left by Matilda, marchioness of
+Tuscany; and at this time the pope seems to have claimed the
+emperor as his vassal, a statement to this effect (<i>post homo fit
+papae, sumit quo dante coronam</i>) being inscribed in the audience
+hall of the Lateran at Rome.</p>
+
+<p class="f90" style="text-align: right;">(<i>Continued in volume</i> 11 <i>slice</i> 8.)</p>
+
+<hr class="foot" /> <div class="note">
+
+<p><a name="ft1k" id="ft1k" href="#fa1k"><span class="fn">1</span></a> <i>i.e.</i> the territory once under the jurisdiction of an imperial <i>Vogt</i>
+or <i>advocatus</i> (see <span class="sc"><a href="#artlinks">Advocate</a></span>).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft2k" id="ft2k" href="#fa2k"><span class="fn">2</span></a> The question, much disputed between Germans and Danes, is
+exhaustively treated by P. Lauridsen in F. de Jessen&rsquo;s <i>La Question
+de Sleswig</i> (Copenhagen, 1906), pp. 114 et seq.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft3k" id="ft3k" href="#fa3k"><span class="fn">3</span></a> See the comparative study in Percy Ashley&rsquo;s <i>Local and Central
+Government</i> (London, 1906).</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft4k" id="ft4k" href="#fa4k"><span class="fn">4</span></a> The <i>Kreis</i> in Württemberg corresponds to the <i>Regierungsbezirk</i>
+elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft5k" id="ft5k" href="#fa5k"><span class="fn">5</span></a> The system of compulsory registration, which involves a notification
+to the police of any change of address (even temporary), of
+course makes it easy to determine the domicile in any given case.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft6k" id="ft6k" href="#fa6k"><span class="fn">6</span></a> Actually between 1883 and 1908 over five million recruits
+passed through the drill sergeant&rsquo;s hands, as well as perhaps 210,000
+one-year volunteers.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ft7k" id="ft7k" href="#fa7k"><span class="fn">7</span></a> These last have a curious history. They were formed from about
+1890 onwards, by individual squadrons, two or three being voted each
+year. Ostensibly raised for the duties of mounted orderlies, at a
+time when it would have been impolitic to ask openly for more
+cavalry, they were little by little trained in real cavalry work,
+then combined in provisional regiments for disciplinary purposes
+and at last frankly classed as cavalry.</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="art" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th
+Edition, Volume 11, Slice 7, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENCYC. BRITANNICA, VOL 11 SL 7 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37523-h.htm or 37523-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/5/2/37523/
+
+Produced by Marius Masi, Don Kretz and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img752.jpg b/37523-h/images/img752.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8d30558
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img752.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img752a.jpg b/37523-h/images/img752a.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6da7c6d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img752a.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img762.jpg b/37523-h/images/img762.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dd33026
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img762.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img771.jpg b/37523-h/images/img771.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3122b48
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img771.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img807.jpg b/37523-h/images/img807.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..55edc76
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img807.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img808a.jpg b/37523-h/images/img808a.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fc517bf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img808a.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img808b.jpg b/37523-h/images/img808b.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..09d847f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img808b.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img808c.jpg b/37523-h/images/img808c.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f6b65b1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img808c.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523-h/images/img808d.jpg b/37523-h/images/img808d.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1c4d37a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523-h/images/img808d.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/37523.txt b/37523.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..42631f6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,16354 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition,
+Volume 11, Slice 7, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 7
+ "Geoponici" to "Germany"
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 24, 2011 [EBook #37523]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENCYC. BRITANNICA, VOL 11 SL 7 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marius Masi, Don Kretz and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's notes:
+
+(1) Numbers following letters (without space) like C2 were originally
+ printed in subscript. Letter subscripts are preceded by an
+ underscore, like C_n.
+
+(2) Characters following a carat (^) were printed in superscript.
+
+(3) Side-notes were relocated to function as titles of their respective
+ paragraphs.
+
+(4) Macrons and breves above letters and dots below letters were not
+ inserted.
+
+(5) [root] stands for the root symbol; [alpha], [beta], etc. for greek
+ letters.
+
+(6) The following typographical errors have been corrected:
+
+ ARTICLE GEORGE III.: "George III. therefore waited his time."
+ 'George' amended from 'Goerge'.
+
+ ARTICLE GEORGE THE SYNCELLUS: "He was the syncellus (cell-mate, the
+ confidential companion assigned to the patriarchs ..." 'companion'
+ amended from 'campanion'.
+
+ ARTICLE GEORGIA: "The governor's power of veto extends to separate
+ items in appropriation bills, but in every case his veto may be
+ overridden by a two-thirds vote of the legislature." 'overridden'
+ amended from 'overriden'.
+
+ ARTICLE GERMAN LITERATURE: "But it had no vitality of its own; it
+ virtually sprang into existence at the command of Charlemagne ..."
+ 'existence' amended from 'existance'.
+
+ ARTICLE GERMAN LITERATURE: "The unkempt literature of the
+ Reformation age admittedly stood in need of guidance and
+ discipline, but the 17th century made the fatal mistake of trying
+ to impose the laws and rules of Romance literatures on a people of
+ a purely Germanic stock." 'guidance' amended from 'guidauce'.
+
+ ARTICLE GERMANY: "The sandstone range of the Elbe unites in the
+ east with the low Lusatian group, along the east of which runs the
+ best road from northern Germany to Bohemia." 'sandstone' amended
+ from 'standstone'.
+
+ ARTICLE GERMANY: "... farther inland, and especially east of the
+ Elbe, coniferous trees are the most prevalent, particularly the
+ Scotch fir; birches are also abundant." 'particularly' amended from
+ 'praticularly'.
+
+
+
+
+ ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA
+
+ A DICTIONARY OF ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE
+ AND GENERAL INFORMATION
+
+ ELEVENTH EDITION
+
+
+ VOLUME XI, SLICE VII
+
+ Geoponici to Germany
+
+
+
+
+ARTICLES IN THIS SLICE:
+
+
+ GEOPONICI GERARD, ETIENNE MAURICE
+ GEORGE, SAINT GERARD, FRANCOIS
+ GEORGE I. GERARD, JEAN IGNACE ISIDORE
+ GEORGE II. GERARD, JOHN
+ GEORGE III. GERARDMER
+ GEORGE IV. GERASA
+ GEORGE V. (of Great Britain) GERAULT-RICHARD, ALFRED LEON
+ GEORGE V. (of Hanover) GERBER, ERNST LUDWIG
+ GEORGE I. (of the Hellenes) GERBERON, GABRIEL
+ GEORGE (of Saxony) GERBERT, MARTIN
+ GEORGE OF LAODICEA GERBIL
+ GEORGE OF TREBIZOND GERENUK
+ GEORGE THE MONK GERGOVIA
+ GEORGE THE SYNCELLUS GERHARD, FRIEDRICH WILHELM EDUARD
+ GEORGE, HENRY GERHARD, JOHANN
+ GEORGE PISIDA GERHARDT, CHARLES FREDERIC
+ GEORGE, LAKE GERHARDT, PAUL
+ GEORGE JUNIOR REPUBLIC GERICAULT, JEAN LOUIS ANDRE THEODORE
+ GEORGETOWN (British Guiana) GERIZIM
+ GEORGETOWN (Washington, U.S.A.) GERLACHE, ETIENNE CONSTANTIN
+ GEORGETOWN (Kentucky, U.S.A.) GERLE, CHRISTOPHE ANTOINE
+ GEORGETOWN (South Car., U.S.A.) GERMAN BAPTIST BRETHREN
+ GEORGETOWN (Texas, U.S.A.) GERMAN CATHOLICS
+ GEORGIA (U.S.A.) GERMAN EAST AFRICA
+ GEORGIA (Transcaucasia) GERMAN EVANGELICAL SYNOD OF N. AMERICA
+ GEORGIAN BAY GERMANIC LAWS, EARLY
+ GEORGSWALDE GERMANICUS CAESAR
+ GEPHYREA GERMANIUM
+ GERA GERMAN LANGUAGE
+ GERALDTON GERMAN LITERATURE
+ GERANDO, MARIE JOSEPH DE GERMAN REED ENTERTAINMENT
+ GERANIACEAE GERMAN SILVER
+ GERANIUM GERMAN SOUTH-WEST AFRICA
+ GERARD (archbishop of York) GERMANTOWN
+ GERARD (Tum, Tunc, Tenque) GERMANY (part)
+ GERARD OF CREMONA
+
+
+
+
+GEOPONICI,[1] or _Scriptores rei rusticae_, the Greek and Roman writers
+on husbandry and agriculture. On the whole the Greeks paid less
+attention than the Romans to the scientific study of these subjects,
+which in classical times they regarded as a branch of economics. Thus
+Xenophon's _Oeconomicus_ (see also _Memorabilia_, ii. 4) contains a
+eulogy of agriculture and its beneficial ethical effects, and much
+information is to be found in the writings of Aristotle and his pupil
+Theophrastus. About the same time as Xenophon, the philosopher
+Democritus of Abdera wrote a treatise [Greek: Peri Georgias], frequently
+quoted and much used by the later compilers of _Geoponica_ (agricultural
+treatises). Greater attention was given to the subject in the
+Alexandrian period; a long list of names is given by Varro and
+Columella, amongst them Hiero II. and Attalus III. Philometor. Later,
+Cassius Dionysius of Utica translated and abridged the great work of the
+Carthaginian Mago, which was still further condensed by Diophanes of
+Nicaea in Bithynia for the use of King Deiotarus. From these and similar
+works Cassianus Bassus (q.v.) compiled his _Geoponica_. Mention may also
+be made of a little work [Greek: Peri Georgikon] by Michael Psellus
+(printed in Boissonade, _Anecdota Graeca_, i.).
+
+The Romans, aware of the necessity of maintaining a numerous and
+thriving order of agriculturists, from very early times endeavoured to
+instil into their countrymen both a theoretical and a practical
+knowledge of the subject. The occupation of the farmer was regarded as
+next in importance to that of the soldier, and distinguished Romans did
+not disdain to practise it. In furtherance of this object, the great
+work of Mago was translated into Latin by order of the senate, and the
+elder Cato wrote his _De agri cultura_ (extant in a very corrupt state),
+a simple record in homely language of the rules observed by the old
+Roman landed proprietors rather than a theoretical treatise. He was
+followed by the two Sasernae (father and son) and Gnaeus Tremellius
+Scrofa, whose works are lost. The learned Marcus Terentius Varro of
+Reate, when eighty years of age, composed his _Rerum rusticarum, libri
+tres_, dealing with agriculture, the rearing of cattle, and the
+breeding of fishes. He was the first to systematize what had been
+written on the subject, and supplemented the labours of others by
+practical experience gained during his travels. In the Augustan age
+Julius Hyginus wrote on farming and bee-keeping, Sabinus Tiro on
+horticulture, and during the early empire Julius Graecinus and Julius
+Atticus on the culture of vines, and Cornelius Celsus (best known for
+his _De medicina_) on farming. The chief work of the kind, however, is
+that of Lucius Junius Moderatus Columella (q.v.). About the middle of
+the 2nd century the two Quintilii, natives of Troja, wrote on the
+subject in Greek. It is remarkable that Columella's work exercised less
+influence in Rome and Italy than in southern Gaul and Spain, where
+agriculture became one of the principal subjects of instruction in the
+superior educational establishments that were springing up in those
+countries. One result of this was the preparation of manuals of a
+popular kind for use in the schools. In the 3rd century Gargilius
+Martialis of Mauretania compiled a _Geoponica_ in which medical botany
+and the veterinary art were included. The _De re rustica_ of Palladius
+(4th century), in fourteen books, which is almost entirely borrowed from
+Columella, is greatly inferior in style and knowledge of the subject. It
+is a kind of farmer's calendar, in which the different rural occupations
+are arranged in order of the months. The fourteenth book (on forestry)
+is written in elegiacs (85 distichs). The whole of Palladius and
+considerable fragments of Martialis are extant.
+
+ The best edition of the _Scriptores rei rusticae_ is by J.G. Schneider
+ (1794-1797), and the whole subject is exhaustively treated by A.
+ Magerstedt, _Bilder aus der romischen Landwirtschaft_ (1858-1863); see
+ also Teuffel-Schwabe, _Hist. of Roman Literature_, 54; C.F. Bahr in
+ Ersch and Gruber's _Allgemeine Encyklopadie_.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] The latinized form of a non-existent [Greek: Geoponikoi], used
+ for convenience.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE, SAINT (d. 303), the patron saint of England, Aragon and
+Portugal. According to the legend given by Metaphrastes the Byzantine
+hagiologist, and substantially repeated in the Roman _Acta sanctorum_
+and in the Spanish breviary, he was born in Cappadocia of noble
+Christian parents, from whom he received a careful religious training.
+Other accounts place his birth at Lydda, but preserve his Cappadocian
+parentage. Having embraced the profession of a soldier, he rapidly rose
+under Diocletian to high military rank. In Persian Armenia he organized
+and energized the Christian community at Urmi (Urumiah), and even
+visited Britain on an imperial expedition. When Diocletian had begun to
+manifest a pronounced hostility towards Christianity, George sought a
+personal interview with him, in which he made deliberate profession of
+his faith, and, earnestly remonstrating against the persecution which
+had begun, resigned his commission. He was immediately laid under
+arrest, and after various tortures, finally put to death at Nicomedia
+(his body being afterwards taken to Lydda) on the 23rd of April 303. His
+festival is observed on that anniversary by the entire Roman Catholic
+Church as a semi-duplex, and by the Spanish Catholics as a duplex of the
+first class with an octave. The day is also celebrated as a principal
+feast in the Orthodox Eastern Church, where the saint is distinguished
+by the titles [Greek: megalomartyr] and [Greek: tropaiophoros].
+
+The historical basis of the tradition is particularly unsound, there
+being two claimants to the name and honour. Eusebius, _Hist. eccl._
+viii. 5, writes: "Immediately on the promulgation of the edict (of
+Diocletian) a certain man of no mean origin, but highly esteemed for his
+temporal dignities, as soon as the decree was published against the
+churches in Nicomedia, stimulated by a divine zeal and excited by an
+ardent faith, took it as it was openly placed and posted up for public
+inspection, and tore it to shreds as a most profane and wicked act.
+This, too, was done when the two Caesars were in the city, the first of
+whom was the eldest and chief of all and the other held fourth grade of
+the imperial dignity after him. But this man, as the first that was
+distinguished there in this manner, after enduring what was likely to
+follow an act so daring, preserved his mind, calm and serene, until the
+moment when his spirit fled." Rivalling this anonymous martyr, who is
+often supposed to have been St George, is an earlier martyr briefly
+mentioned in the _Chronicon Pascale_: "In the year 225 of the Ascension
+of our Lord a persecution of the Christians took place, and many
+suffered martyrdom, among whom also the Holy George was martyred."
+
+Two Syrian church inscriptions bearing the name, one at Ezr'a and the
+other at Shaka, found by Burckhardt and Porter, and discussed by J. Hogg
+in the _Transactions of the Royal Literary Society_, may with some
+probability be assigned to the middle of the 4th century. Calvin
+impugned the saint's existence altogether, and Edward Reynolds
+(1599-1676), bishop of Norwich, like Edward Gibbon a century later, made
+him one with George of Laodicea, called "the Cappadocian," the Arian
+bishop of Alexandria (see GEORGE OF LAODICEA).
+
+Modern criticism, while rejecting this identification, is not unwilling
+to accept the main fact that an officer named Georgios, of high rank in
+the army, suffered martyrdom probably under Diocletian. In the canon of
+Pope Gelasius (494) George is mentioned in a list of those "whose names
+are justly reverenced among men, but whose acts are known only to God,"
+a statement which implies that legends had already grown up around his
+name. The caution of Gelasius was not long preserved; Gregory of Tours,
+for example, asserts that the saint's relics actually existed in the
+French village of Le Maine, where many miracles were wrought by means of
+them; and Bede, while still explaining that the _Gesta Georgii_ are
+reckoned apocryphal, commits himself to the statement that the martyr
+was beheaded under Dacian, king of Persia, whose wife Alexandra,
+however, adhered to the Christian faith. The great fame of George, who
+is reverenced alike by Eastern and Western Christendom and by
+Mahommedans, is due to many causes. He was martyred on the eve of the
+triumph of Christianity, his shrine was reared near the scene of a great
+Greek legend (Perseus and Andromeda), and his relics when removed from
+Lydda, where many pilgrims had visited them, to Zorava in the Hauran
+served to impress his fame not only on the Syrian population, but on
+their Moslem conquerors, and again on the Crusaders, who in grateful
+memory of the saint's intervention on their behalf at Antioch built a
+new cathedral at Lydda to take the place of the church destroyed by the
+Saracens. This cathedral was in turn destroyed by Saladin.
+
+The connexion of St George with a dragon, familiar since the _Golden
+Legend_ of Jacobus de Voragine, can be traced to the close of the 6th
+century. At Arsuf or Joppa--neither of them far from Lydda--Perseus had
+slain the sea-monster that threatened the virgin Andromeda, and George,
+like many another Christian saint, entered into the inheritance of
+veneration previously enjoyed by a pagan hero.[1] The exploit thus
+attaches itself to the very common Aryan myth of the sun-god as the
+conqueror of the powers of darkness.
+
+The popularity of St George in England has never reached the height
+attained by St Andrew in Scotland, St David in Wales or St Patrick in
+Ireland. The council of Oxford in 1222 ordered that his feast should be
+kept as a national festival; but it was not until the time of Edward
+III. that he was made patron of the kingdom. The republics of Genoa and
+Venice were also under his protection.
+
+ See P. Heylin, _The History of ... S. George of Cappadocia_ (1631); S.
+ Baring-Gould, Curious _Myths of the Middle Ages_; Fr. Gorres, "Der
+ Ritter St Georg in der Geschichte, Legende und Kunst" (_Zeitschrift
+ fur wissenschaftliche Theologie_, xxx., 1887, Heft i.); E.A.W. Budge,
+ _The Martyrdom and Miracles of St George of Cappadocia_: the Coptic
+ texts edited with an English translation (1888); Bolland, _Acta
+ Sancti_, iii. 101; E.O. Gordon, _Saint George_ (1907); M.H. Bulley,
+ _St George for Merrie England_ (1908).
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] G.A. Smith (_Hist. Geog. of Holy Land_, p. 164) points out
+ another coincidence. "The Mahommedans who usually identify St George
+ with the prophet Elijah, at Lydda confound his legend with one about
+ Christ himself. Their name for Antichrist is Dajjal, and they have a
+ tradition that Jesus will slay Antichrist by the gate of Lydda. The
+ notion sprang from an ancient bas-relief of George and the Dragon on
+ the Lydda church. But Dajjal may be derived, by a very common
+ confusion between _n_ and _l_, from Dagon, whose name two
+ neighbouring villages bear to this day, while one of the gates of
+ Lydda used to be called the Gate of Dagon." It is a curious process
+ by which the monster that symbolized heathenism conquered by
+ Christianity has been evolved out of the first great rival of the God
+ of Israel.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE I. [George Louis] (1660-1727), king of Great Britain and Ireland,
+born in 1660, was heir through his father Ernest Augustus to the
+hereditary lay bishopric of Osnabruck, and to the duchy of Calenberg,
+which formed one portion of the Hanoverian possessions of the house of
+Brunswick, whilst he secured the reversion of the other portion, the
+duchy of Celle or Zell, by his marriage (1682) with the heiress, his
+cousin Sophia Dorothea. The marriage was not a happy one. The morals of
+German courts in the end of the 17th century took their tone from the
+splendid profligacy of Versailles. It became the fashion for a prince to
+amuse himself with a mistress or more frequently with many mistresses
+simultaneously, and he was often content that the mistresses whom he
+favoured should be neither beautiful nor witty. George Louis followed
+the usual course. Count Konigsmark--a handsome adventurer--seized the
+opportunity of paying court to the deserted wife. Conjugal infidelity
+was held at Hanover to be a privilege of the male sex. Count Konigsmark
+was assassinated. Sophia Dorothea was divorced in 1694, and remained in
+seclusion till her death in 1726. When George IV., her descendant in the
+fourth generation, attempted in England to call his wife to account for
+sins of which he was himself notoriously guilty, free-spoken public
+opinion reprobated the offence in no measured terms. But in the Germany
+of the 17th century all free-spoken public opinion had been crushed out
+by the misery of the Thirty Years' War, and it was understood that
+princes were to arrange their domestic life according to their own
+pleasure.
+
+The prince's father did much to raise the dignity of his family. By
+sending help to the emperor when he was struggling against the French
+and the Turks, he obtained the grant of a ninth electorate in 1692. His
+marriage with Sophia, the youngest daughter of Elizabeth the daughter of
+James I. of England, was not one which at first seemed likely to confer
+any prospect of advancement to his family. But though there were many
+persons whose birth gave them better claims than she had to the English
+crown, she found herself, upon the death of the duke of Gloucester, the
+next Protestant heir after Anne. The Act of Settlement in 1701 secured
+the inheritance to herself and her descendants. Being old and
+unambitious she rather permitted herself to be burthened with the honour
+than thrust herself forward to meet it. Her son George took a deeper
+interest in the matter. In his youth he had fought with determined
+courage in the wars of William III. Succeeding to the electorate on his
+father's death in 1698, he had sent a welcome reinforcement of
+Hanoverians to fight under Marlborough at Blenheim. With prudent
+persistence he attached himself closely to the Whigs and to Marlborough,
+refusing Tory offers of an independent command, and receiving in return
+for his fidelity a guarantee by the Dutch of his succession to England
+in the Barrier treaty of 1709. In 1714 when Anne was growing old, and
+Bolingbroke and the more reckless Tories were coquetting with the son of
+James II., the Whigs invited George's eldest son, who was duke of
+Cambridge, to visit England in order to be on the spot in case of need.
+Neither the elector nor his mother approved of a step which was likely
+to alienate the queen, and which was specially distasteful to himself,
+as he was on very bad terms with his son. Yet they did not set
+themselves against the strong wish of the party to which they looked for
+support, and it is possible that troubles would have arisen from any
+attempt to carry out the plan, if the deaths, first of the electress
+(May 28) and then of the queen (August 1, 1714), had not laid open
+George's way to the succession without further effort of his own.
+
+In some respects the position of the new king was not unlike that of
+William III. a quarter of a century before. Both sovereigns were
+foreigners, with little knowledge of English politics and little
+interest in English legislation. Both sovereigns arrived at a time when
+party spirit had been running high, and when the task before the ruler
+was to still the waves of contention. In spite of the difference between
+an intellectually great man and an intellectually small one, in spite
+too of the difference between the king who began by choosing his
+ministers from both parties and the king who persisted in choosing his
+ministers from only one, the work of pacification was accomplished by
+George even more thoroughly than by William.
+
+George I. was fortunate in arriving in England when a great military
+struggle had come to an end. He had therefore no reason to call upon the
+nation to make great sacrifices. All that he wanted was to secure for
+himself and his family a high position which he hardly knew how to
+occupy, to fill the pockets of his German attendants and his German
+mistresses, to get away as often as possible from the uncongenial
+islanders whose language he was unable to speak, and to use the strength
+of England to obtain petty advantages for his German principality. In
+order to do this he attached himself entirely to the Whig party, though
+he refused to place himself at the disposal of its leaders. He gave his
+confidence, not to Somers and Wharton and Marlborough, but to Stanhope
+and Townshend, the statesmen of the second rank. At first he seemed to
+be playing a dangerous game. The Tories, whom he rejected, were
+numerically superior to their adversaries, and were strong in the
+support of the country gentlemen and the country clergy. The strength of
+the Whigs lay in the towns and in the higher aristocracy. Below both
+parties lay the mass of the nation, which cared nothing for politics
+except in special seasons of excitement, and which asked only to be let
+alone. In 1715 a Jacobite insurrection in the north, supported by the
+appearance of the Pretender, the son of James II., in Scotland, was
+suppressed, and its suppression not only gave to the government a
+character of stability, but displayed its adversaries in an unfavourable
+light as the disturbers of the peace.
+
+Even this advantage, however, would have been thrown away if the Whigs
+in power had continued to be animated by violent party spirit. What
+really happened was that the Tory leaders were excluded from office, but
+that the principles and prejudices of the Tories were admitted to their
+full weight in the policy of the government. The natural result
+followed. The leaders to whom no regard was paid continued in
+opposition. The rank and file, who would personally have gained nothing
+by a party victory, were conciliated into quiescence.
+
+This mingling of two policies was conspicuous both in the foreign and
+the domestic actions of the reign. In the days of Queen Anne the Whig
+party had advocated the continuance of war with a view to the complete
+humiliation of the king of France, whom they feared as the protector of
+the Pretender, and in whose family connexion with the king of Spain they
+saw a danger for England. The Tory party, on the other hand, had been
+the authors of the peace of Utrecht, and held that France was
+sufficiently depressed. A fortunate concurrence of circumstances enabled
+George's ministers, by an alliance with the regent of France, the duke
+of Orleans, to pursue at the same time the Whig policy of separating
+France from Spain and from the cause of the Pretender, and the Tory
+policy of the maintenance of a good understanding with their neighbour
+across the Channel. The same eclecticism was discernible in the
+proceedings of the home government. The Whigs were conciliated by the
+repeal of the Schism Act and the Occasional Conformity Act, whilst the
+Tories were conciliated by the maintenance of the Test Act in all its
+vigour. The satisfaction of the masses was increased by the general
+well-being of the nation.
+
+Very little of all that was thus accomplished was directly owing to
+George I. The policy of the reign is the policy of his ministers.
+Stanhope and Townshend from 1714 to 1717 were mainly occupied with the
+defence of the Hanoverian settlement. After the dismissal of the latter
+in 1717, Stanhope in conjunction with Sunderland took up a more decided
+Whig policy. The Occasional Conformity Act and the Schism Act were
+repealed in 1719. But the wish of the liberal Whigs to modify if not to
+repeal the Test Act remained unsatisfied. In the following year the
+bursting of the South Sea bubble, and the subsequent deaths of Stanhope
+in 1721 and of Sunderland in 1722, cleared the way for the accession to
+power of Sir Robert Walpole, to whom and not to the king was due the
+conciliatory policy which quieted Tory opposition by abstaining from
+pushing Whig principles to their legitimate consequences.
+
+Nevertheless something of the honour due to Walpole must be reckoned to
+the king's credit. It is evident that at his accession his decisions
+were by no means unimportant. The royal authority was still able within
+certain limits to make its own terms. This support was so necessary to
+the Whigs that they made no resistance when he threw aside their leaders
+on his arrival in England. When by his personal intervention he
+dismissed Townshend and appointed Sunderland, he had no such social and
+parliamentary combination to fear as that which almost mastered his
+great-grandson in his struggle for power. If such a combination arose
+before the end of his reign it was owing more to his omitting to fulfil
+the duties of his station than from the necessity of the case. As he
+could talk no English, and his ministers could talk no German, he
+absented himself from the meetings of the cabinet, and his frequent
+absences from England and his want of interest in English politics
+strengthened the cabinet in its tendency to assert an independent
+position. Walpole at last by his skill in the management of parliament
+rose as a subject into the almost royal position denoted by the name of
+prime minister. In connexion with Walpole the force of wealth and
+station established the Whig aristocracy in a point of vantage from
+which it was afterwards difficult to dislodge them. Yet, though George
+had allowed the power which had been exercised by William and Anne to
+slip through his hands, it was understood to the last that if he chose
+to exert himself he might cease to be a mere cipher in the conduct of
+affairs. As late as 1727 Bolingbroke gained over one of the king's
+mistresses, the duchess of Kendal; and though her support of the fallen
+Jacobite took no effect, Walpole was not without fear that her
+reiterated entreaties would lead to his dismissal. The king's death in a
+carriage on his way to Hanover, in the night between 10th and 11th June
+in the same year, put an end to these apprehensions.
+
+His only children were his successor George II. and Sophia Dorothea
+(1687-1757), who married in 1706 Frederick William, crown prince
+(afterwards king) of Prussia. She was the mother of Frederick the Great.
+ (S. R. G.)
+
+ See the standard English histories. A recent popular work is L.
+ Melville's _The First George in Hanover and England_ (1908).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE II. [George Augustus] (1683-1760), king of Great Britain and
+Ireland, the only son of George I., was born in 1683. In 1705 he married
+Wilhelmina Caroline of Anspach. In 1706 he was created earl of
+Cambridge. In 1708 he fought bravely at Oudenarde. At his father's
+accession to the English throne he was thirty-one years of age. He was
+already on bad terms with his father. The position of an heir-apparent
+is in no case an easy one to fill with dignity, and the ill-treatment of
+the prince's mother by his father was not likely to strengthen in him a
+reverence for paternal authority. It was most unwillingly that, on his
+first journey to Hanover in 1716, George I. appointed the prince of
+Wales guardian of the realm during his absence. In 1717 the existing
+ill-feeling ripened into an open breach. At the baptism of one of his
+children, the prince selected one godfather whilst the king persisted in
+selecting another. The young man spoke angrily, was ordered into arrest,
+and was subsequently commanded to leave St James's and to be excluded
+from all court ceremonies. The prince took up his residence at Leicester
+House, and did everything in his power to support the opposition against
+his father's ministers.
+
+When therefore George I. died in 1727, it was generally supposed that
+Walpole would be at once dismissed. The first direction of the new king
+was that Sir Spencer Compton would draw up the speech in which he was to
+announce to the privy council his accession. Compton, not knowing how to
+set about his task, applied to Walpole for aid. Queen Caroline took
+advantage of this evidence of incapacity, advocated Walpole's cause with
+her husband and procured his continuance in office. This curious scene
+was indicative of the course likely to be taken by the new sovereign.
+His own mind was incapable of rising above the merest details of
+business. He made war in the spirit of a drill-sergeant, and he
+economized his income with the minute regularity of a clerk. A blunder
+of a master of the ceremonies in marshalling the attendants on a levee
+put him out of temper. He took the greatest pleasure in counting his
+money piece by piece, and he never forgot a date. He was above all
+things methodical and regular. "He seems," said one who knew him well,
+"to think his having done a thing to-day an unanswerable reason for his
+doing it to-morrow."
+
+Most men so utterly immersed in details would be very impracticable to
+deal with. They would obstinately refuse to listen to a wisdom and
+prudence which meant nothing in their ears, and which brought home to
+them a sense of their own inferiority. It was the happy peculiarity of
+George II. that he was exempt from this failing. He seemed to have an
+instinctive understanding that such and such persons were either wiser
+or even stronger than himself, and when he had once discovered that, he
+gave way with scarcely a struggle. Thus it was that, though in his
+domestic relations he was as loose a liver as his father had been, he
+allowed himself to be guided by the wise but unobtrusive counsels of his
+wife until her death in 1737, and that when once he had recognized
+Walpole's superiority he allowed himself to be guided by the political
+sagacity of the great minister. It is difficult to exaggerate the
+importance of such a temper upon the development of the constitution.
+The apathy of the nation in all but the most exciting political
+questions, fostered by the calculated conservatism of Walpole, had
+thrown power into the hands of the great landowners. They maintained
+their authority by supporting a minister who was ready to make use of
+corruption, wherever corruption was likely to be useful, and who could
+veil over the baseness of the means which he employed by his talents in
+debate and in finance. To shake off a combination so strong would not
+have been easy. George II. submitted to it without a struggle.
+
+So strong indeed had the Whig aristocracy grown that it began to lose
+its cohesion. Walpole was determined to monopolize power, and he
+dismissed from office all who ventured to oppose him. An opposition
+formidable in talents was gradually formed. In its composite ranks were
+to be found Tories and discontented Whigs, discarded official hacks who
+were hungry for the emoluments of office, and youthful purists who
+fancied that if Walpole were removed, bribes and pensions would cease to
+be attractive to a corrupt generation. Behind them was Bolingbroke,
+excluded from parliament but suggesting every party move. In 1737 the
+opposition acquired the support of Frederick, prince of Wales. The young
+man, weak and headstrong, rebelled against the strict discipline exacted
+by his father. His marriage in 1736 to Augusta of Saxony brought on an
+open quarrel. In 1737, just as the princess of Wales was about to give
+birth to her first child, she was hurried away by her husband from
+Hampton Court to St James's Palace at the imminent risk of her life,
+simply in order that the prince might show his spite to his father who
+had provided all necessary attendance at the former place. George
+ordered his son to quit St James's, and to absent himself from court.
+Frederick in disgrace gave the support of his name, and he had nothing
+else to give, to the opposition. Later in the year 1737, on the 20th of
+November, Queen Caroline died. In 1742 Walpole, weighed down by the
+unpopularity both of his reluctance to engage in a war with Spain and of
+his supposed remissness in conducting the operations of that war, was
+driven from office. His successors formed a composite ministry in which
+Walpole's old colleagues and Walpole's old opponents were alike to be
+found.
+
+The years which followed settled conclusively, at least for this reign,
+the constitutional question of the power of appointing ministers. The
+war between Spain and England had broken out in 1739. In 1741 the death
+of the emperor Charles VI. brought on the war of the Austrian
+succession. The position of George II. as a Hanoverian prince drew him
+to the side of Maria Theresa through jealousy of the rising Prussian
+monarchy. Jealousy of France led England in the same direction, and in
+1741 a subsidy of L300,000 was voted to Maria Theresa. The king himself
+went to Germany and attempted to carry on the war according to his own
+notions. Those notions led him to regard the safety of Hanover as of far
+more importance than the wishes of England. Finding that a French army
+was about to march upon his German states, he concluded with France a
+treaty of neutrality for a year without consulting a single English
+minister. In England the news was received with feelings of disgust. The
+expenditure of English money and troops was to be thrown uselessly away
+as soon as it appeared that Hanover was in the slightest danger. In 1742
+Walpole was no longer in office. Lord Wilmington, the nominal head of
+the ministry, was a mere cipher. The ablest and most energetic of his
+colleagues, Lord Carteret (afterwards Granville), attached himself
+specially to the king, and sought to maintain himself in power by his
+special favour and by brilliant achievements in diplomacy.
+
+In part at least by Carteret's mediation the peace of Breslau was
+signed, by which Maria Theresa ceded Silesia to Frederick (July 28,
+1742). Thus relieved on her northern frontier, she struck out vigorously
+towards the west. Bavaria was overrun by her troops. In the beginning of
+1743 one French army was driven across the Rhine. On June 27th another
+French army was defeated by George II. in person at Dettingen. Victory
+brought elation to Maria Theresa. Her war of defence was turned into a
+war of vengeance. Bavaria was to be annexed. The French frontier was to
+be driven back. George II. and Carteret after some hesitation placed
+themselves on her side. Of the public opinion of the political classes
+in England they took no thought. Hanoverian troops were indeed to be
+employed in the war, but they were to be taken into British pay.
+Collisions between British and Hanoverian officers were frequent. A
+storm arose against the preference shown to Hanoverian interests. After
+a brief struggle Carteret, having become Lord Granville by his mother's
+death, was driven from office in November 1744.
+
+Henry Pelham, who had become prime minister in the preceding year, thus
+saw himself established in power. By the acceptance of this ministry,
+the king acknowledged that the function of choosing a ministry and
+directing a policy had passed from his hands. In 1745 indeed he recalled
+Granville, but a few days were sufficient to convince him of the
+futility of his attempt, and the effort to exclude Pitt at a later time
+proved equally fruitless.
+
+Important as were the events of the remainder of the reign, therefore,
+they can hardly be grouped round the name of George II. The resistance
+to the invasion of the Young Pretender in 1745, the peace of
+Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748, the great war ministry of Pitt at the close of
+the reign, did not receive their impulse from him. He had indeed done
+his best to exclude Pitt from office. He disliked him on account of his
+opposition in former years to the sacrifices demanded by the Hanoverian
+connexion. When in 1756 Pitt became secretary of state in the Devonshire
+administration, the king bore the yoke with difficulty. Early in the
+next year he complained of Pitt's long speeches as being above his
+comprehension, and on April 5, 1757, he dismissed him, only to take him
+back shortly after, when Pitt, coalescing with Newcastle, became master
+of the situation. Before Pitt's dismissal George II. had for once an
+opportunity of placing himself on the popular side, though, as was the
+case of his grandson during the American war, it was when the popular
+side happened to be in the wrong. In the true spirit of a martinet, he
+wished to see Admiral Byng executed. Pitt urged the wish of the House of
+Commons to have him pardoned. "Sir," replied the king, "you have taught
+me to look for the sense of my subjects in another place than in the
+House of Commons." When George II. died in 1760, he left behind him a
+settled understanding that the monarchy was one of the least of the
+forces by which the policy of the country was directed. To this end he
+had contributed much by his disregard of English opinion in 1743; but it
+may fairly be added that, but for his readiness to give way to
+irresistible adversaries, the struggle might have been far more bitter
+and severe than it was.
+
+Of the connexion between Hanover and England in this reign two memorials
+remain more pleasant to contemplate than the records of parliamentary
+and ministerial intrigues. With the support of George II., amidst the
+derision of the English fashionable world, the Hanoverian Handel
+produced in England those masterpieces which have given delight to
+millions, whilst the foundation of the university of Gottingen by the
+same king opened a door through which English political ideas afterwards
+penetrated into Germany.
+
+George II. had three sons,--Frederick Louis (1707-1751); George William
+(1717-1718); and William Augustus, duke of Cumberland (1721-1765); and
+five daughters, Anne (1709-1759), married to William, prince of Orange,
+1734; Amelia Sophia Eleonora (1711-1786); Elizabeth Caroline
+(1713-1757); Mary (1723-1772), married to Frederick, landgrave of
+Hesse-Cassel, 1740; Louisa (1724-1751), married to Frederick V., king of
+Denmark, 1743. (S. R. G.)
+
+ See Lord Hervey, _Memoirs of the Reign of George II._, ed. by J. W,
+ Croker (3 vols., London, 1884); Horace Walpole, _Mem. of the Reign of
+ George II._, with notes by Lord Holland (3 vols., 2nd ed., 1847).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE III. [George William Frederick] (1738-1820), king of Great
+Britain and Ireland, son of Frederick, prince of Wales, and grandson of
+George II., whom he succeeded in 1760, was born on the 4th of June 1738.
+After his father's death in 1751 he had been educated in seclusion from
+the fashionable world under the care of his mother and of her favourite
+counsellor the earl of Bute. He had been taught to revere the maxims of
+Bolingbroke's "Patriot King," and to believe that it was his appointed
+task in life to break the power of the Whig houses resting upon
+extensive property and the influence of patronage and corruption. That
+power had already been gravely shaken. The Whigs from their incompetency
+were obliged when the Seven Years' War broke out to leave its management
+in the hands of William Pitt. The nation learned to applaud the great
+war minister who succeeded where others had failed, and whose immaculate
+purity put to shame the ruck of barterers of votes for places and
+pensions.
+
+In some sort the work of the new king was the continuation of the work
+of Pitt. But his methods were very different. He did not appeal to any
+widely spread feeling or prejudice; nor did he disdain the use of the
+arts which had maintained his opponents in power. The patronage of the
+crown was to be really as well as nominally his own; and he calculated,
+not without reason, that men would feel more flattered in accepting a
+place from a king than from a minister. The new Toryism of which he was
+the founder was no recurrence to the Toryism of the days of Charles II.
+or even of Anne. The question of the amount of toleration to be accorded
+to Dissenters had been entirely laid aside. The point at issue was
+whether the crown should be replaced in the position which George I.
+might have occupied at the beginning of his reign, selecting the
+ministers and influencing the deliberations of the cabinet. For this
+struggle George III. possessed no inconsiderable advantages. With an
+inflexible tenacity of purpose, he was always ready to give way when
+resistance was really hopeless. As the first English-born sovereign of
+his house, speaking from his birth the language of his subjects, he
+found a way to the hearts of many who never regarded his predecessors as
+other than foreign intruders. The contrast, too, between the pure
+domestic life which he led with his wife Charlotte, whom he married in
+1761, and the habits of three generations of his house, told in his
+favour with the vast majority of his subjects. Even his marriage had
+been a sacrifice to duty. Soon after his accession he had fallen in love
+with Lady Sarah Lennox, and had been observed to ride morning by morning
+along the Kensington Road, from which the object of his affections was
+to be seen from the lawn of Holland House making hay, or engaged in some
+other ostensible employment. Before the year was over Lady Sarah
+appeared as one of the queen's bridesmaids, and she was herself married
+to Sir Charles Bunbury in 1762.
+
+At first everything seemed easy to him. Pitt had come to be regarded by
+his own colleagues as a minister who would pursue war at any price, and
+in getting rid of Pitt in 1761 and in carrying on the negotiations which
+led to the peace of Paris in 1762, the king was able to gather round him
+many persons who would not be willing to acquiesce in any permanent
+change in the system of government. With the signature of the peace his
+real difficulties began. The Whig houses, indeed, were divided amongst
+themselves by personal rivalries. But they were none of them inclined to
+let power and the advantages of power slip from their hands without a
+struggle. For some years a contest of influence was carried on without
+dignity and without any worthy aim. The king was not strong enough to
+impose upon parliament a ministry of his own choice. But he gathered
+round himself a body of dependants known as the king's friends, who were
+secure of his favour, and who voted one way or the other according to
+his wishes. Under these circumstances no ministry could possibly be
+stable; and yet every ministry was strong enough to impose some
+conditions on the king. Lord Bute, the king's first choice, resigned
+from a sense of his own incompetency in 1763. George Grenville was in
+office till 1765; the marquis of Rockingham till 1766; Pitt, becoming
+earl of Chatham, till illness compelled him to retire from the conduct
+of affairs in 1767, when he was succeeded by the duke of Grafton. But a
+struggle of interests could gain no real strength for any government,
+and the only chance the king had of effecting a permanent change in the
+balance of power lay in the possibility of his associating himself with
+some phase of strong national feeling, as Pitt had associated himself
+with the war feeling caused by the dissatisfaction spread by the
+weakness and ineptitude of his predecessors.
+
+Such a chance was offered by the question of the right to tax America.
+The notion that England was justified in throwing on America part of the
+expenses caused in the late war was popular in the country, and no one
+adopted it more pertinaciously then George III. At the bottom the
+position which he assumed was as contrary to the principles of
+parliamentary government as the encroachments of Charles I. had been.
+But it was veiled in the eyes of Englishmen by the prominence given to
+the power of the British parliament rather than to the power of the
+British king. In fact the theory of parliamentary government, like most
+theories after their truth has long been universally acknowledged, had
+become a superstition. Parliaments were held to be properly vested with
+authority, not because they adequately represented the national will,
+but simply because they were parliaments. There were thousands of people
+in England to whom it never occurred that there was any good reason why
+a British parliament should be allowed to levy a duty on tea in the
+London docks and should not be allowed to levy a duty on tea at the
+wharves of Boston. Undoubtedly George III. derived great strength from
+his honest participation in this mistake. Contending under parliamentary
+forms, he did not wound the susceptibilities of members of parliament,
+and when at last in 1770 he appointed Lord North--a minister of his own
+selection--prime minister, the object of his ambition was achieved with
+the concurrence of a large body of politicians who had nothing in common
+with the servile band of the king's friends.
+
+As long as the struggle with America was carried on with any hope of
+success they gained that kind of support which is always forthcoming to
+a government which shares in the errors and prejudices of its subjects.
+The expulsion of Wilkes from the House of Commons in 1769, and the
+refusal of the House to accept him as a member after his re-election,
+raised a grave constitutional question in which the king was wholly in
+the wrong; and Wilkes was popular in London and Middlesex. But his case
+roused no national indignation, and when in 1774 those sharp measures
+were taken with Boston which led to the commencement of the American
+rebellion in 1775, the opposition to the course taken by the king made
+little way either in parliament or in the country. Burke might point out
+the folly and inexpedience of the proceedings of the government. Chatham
+might point out that the true spirit of English government was to be
+representative, and that that spirit was being violated at home and
+abroad. George III., who thought that the first duty of the Americans
+was to obey himself, had on his side the mass of unreflecting Englishmen
+who thought that the first duty of all colonists was to be useful and
+submissive to the mother-country. The natural dislike of every country
+engaged in war to see itself defeated was on his side, and when the news
+of Burgoyne's surrender at Saratoga arrived in 1777, subscriptions of
+money to raise new regiments poured freely in.
+
+In March 1778 the French ambassador in London announced that a treaty of
+friendship and commerce had been concluded between France and the new
+United States of America. Lord North was anxious to resign power into
+stronger hands, and begged the king to receive Chatham as his prime
+minister. The king would not hear of it. He would have nothing to say to
+"that perfidious man" unless he would humble himself to enter the
+ministry as North's subordinate. Chatham naturally refused to do
+anything of the kind, and his death in the course of the year relieved
+the king of the danger of being again overruled by too overbearing a
+minister. England was now at war with France, and in 1779 she was also
+at war with Spain.
+
+George III. was still able to control the disposition of office. He
+could not control the course of events. His very ministers gave up the
+struggle as hopeless long before he would acknowledge the true state of
+the case. Before the end of 1779, two of the leading members of the
+cabinet, Lords Gower and Weymouth, resigned rather than bear the
+responsibility of so ruinous an enterprise as the attempt to overpower
+America and France together. Lord North retained office, but he
+acknowledged to the king that his own opinion was precisely the same as
+that of his late colleagues.
+
+The year 1780 saw an agitation rising in the country for economical
+reform, an agitation very closely though indirectly connected with the
+war policy of the king. The public meetings held in the country on this
+subject have no unimportant place in the development of the
+constitution. Since the presentation of the Kentish petition in the
+reign of William III. there had been from time to time upheavings of
+popular feeling against the doings of the legislature, which kept up the
+tradition that parliament existed in order to represent the nation. But
+these upheavings had all been so associated with ignorance and violence
+as to make it very difficult for men of sense to look with displeasure
+upon the existing emancipation of the House of Commons from popular
+control. The Sacheverell riots, the violent attacks upon the Excise
+Bill, the no less violent advocacy of the Spanish War, the declamations
+of the supporters of Wilkes at a more recent time, and even in this very
+year the Gordon riots, were not likely to make thoughtful men anxious to
+place real power in the hands of the classes from whom such exhibitions
+of folly proceeded. But the movement for economical reform was of a very
+different kind. It was carried on soberly in manner, and with a definite
+practical object. It asked for no more than the king ought to have been
+willing to concede. It attacked useless expenditure upon sinecures and
+unnecessary offices in the household, the only use of which was to
+spread abroad corruption amongst the upper classes. George III. could
+not bear to be interfered with at all, or to surrender any element of
+power which had served him in his long struggle with the Whigs. He held
+out for more than another year. The news of the capitulation of Yorktown
+reached London on the 25th of November 1781. On the 20th of March 1782
+Lord North resigned.
+
+George III. accepted the consequences of defeat. He called the marquis
+of Rockingham to office at the head of a ministry composed of pure Whigs
+and of the disciples of the late earl of Chatham, and he authorized the
+new ministry to open negotiations for peace. Their hands were greatly
+strengthened by Rodney's victory over the French fleet, and the failure
+of the combined French and Spanish attack upon Gibraltar; and before the
+end of 1782 a provisional treaty was signed with America, preliminaries
+of peace with France and Spain being signed early in the following year.
+On the 3rd of September 1783 the definitive treaties with the three
+countries were simultaneously concluded. "Sir," said the king to John
+Adams, the first minister of the United States of America accredited to
+him, "I wish you to believe, and that it may be understood in America,
+that I have done nothing in the late contest but what I thought myself
+indispensably bound to do by the duty which I owed to my people. I will
+be very frank with you. I was the last to consent to the separation: but
+the separation having been made and having become inevitable, I have
+always said, as I say now, that I would be the first to meet the
+friendship of the United States as an independent power."
+
+Long before the signature of the treaties Rockingham died (July 1,
+1782). The king chose Lord Shelburne, the head of the Chatham section of
+the government, to be prime minister. Fox and the followers of
+Rockingham refused to serve except under the duke of Portland, a
+minister of their own selection, and resigned office. The old
+constitutional struggle of the reign was now to be fought out once more.
+Fox, too weak to obtain a majority alone, coalesced with Lord North, and
+defeated Shelburne in the House of Commons on the 27th of February 1783.
+On the 2nd of April the coalition took office, with Portland as nominal
+prime minister, and Fox and North the secretaries of state as its real
+heads.
+
+This attempt to impose upon him a ministry which he disliked made the
+king very angry. But the new cabinet had a large majority in the House
+of Commons, and the only chance of resisting it lay in an appeal to the
+country against the House of Commons. Such an appeal was not likely to
+be responded to unless the ministers discredited themselves with the
+nation. George III. therefore waited his time. Though a coalition
+between men bitterly opposed to one another in all political principles
+and drawn together by nothing but love of office was in itself
+discreditable, it needed some more positive cause of dissatisfaction to
+arouse the constituencies, which were by no means so ready to interfere
+in political disputes at that time as they are now. Such dissatisfaction
+was given by the India Bill, drawn up by Burke. As soon as it had passed
+through the Commons the king hastened to procure its rejection in the
+House of Lords by his personal intervention with the peers. He
+authorized Lord Temple to declare in his name that he would count any
+peer who voted for the bill as his enemy. On the 17th of December 1783
+the bill was thrown out. The next day ministers were dismissed. William
+Pitt became prime minister. After some weeks' struggle with a constantly
+decreasing majority in the Commons, the king dissolved parliament on the
+25th of March 1784. The country rallied round the crown and the young
+minister, and Pitt was firmly established in office.
+
+There can be no reasonable doubt[1] that Pitt not only took advantage of
+the king's intervention in the Lords, but was cognizant of the intrigue
+before it was actually carried out. It was upon him, too, that the
+weight of reconciling the country to an administration formed under such
+circumstances lay. The general result, so far as George III. was
+concerned, was that to all outward appearance he had won the great
+battle of his life. It was he who was to appoint the prime minister, not
+any clique resting on a parliamentary support. But the circumstances
+under which the victory was won were such as to place the constitution
+in a position very different from that in which it would have been if
+the victory had been gained earlier in the reign. Intrigue there was
+indeed in 1783 and 1784 as there had been twenty years before.
+Parliamentary support was conciliated by Pitt by the grant of royal
+favours as it had been in the days of Bute. The actual blow was struck
+by a most questionable message to individual peers. But the main result
+of the whole political situation was that George III. had gone a long
+way towards disentangling the reality of parliamentary government from
+its accidents. His ministry finally stood because it had appealed to the
+constituencies against their representatives. Since then it has properly
+become a constitutional axiom that no such appeal should be made by the
+crown itself. But it may reasonably be doubted whether any one but the
+king was at that time capable of making the appeal. Lord Shelburne, the
+leader of the ministry expelled by the coalition, was unpopular in the
+country, and the younger Pitt had not had time to make his great
+abilities known beyond a limited circle. The real question for the
+constitutional historian to settle is not whether under ordinary
+circumstances a king is the proper person to place himself really as
+well as nominally at the head of the government; but whether under the
+special circumstances which existed in 1783 it was not better that the
+king should call upon the people to support him, than that government
+should be left in the hands of men who rested their power on close
+boroughs and the dispensation of patronage, without looking beyond the
+walls of the House of Commons for support.
+
+That the king gained credit far beyond his own deserts by the glories of
+Pitt's ministry is beyond a doubt. Nor can there be any reasonable doubt
+that his own example of domestic propriety did much to strengthen the
+position of his minister. It is true that that life was insufferably
+dull. No gleams of literary or artistic taste lightened it up. The
+dependants of the court became inured to dull routine unchequered by
+loving sympathy. The sons of the household were driven by the sheer
+weariness of such an existence into the coarsest profligacy. But all
+this was not visible from a distance. The tide of moral and religious
+improvement which had set in in England since the days of Wesley brought
+popularity to a king who was faithful to his wife, in the same way that
+the tide of manufacturing industry and scientific progress brought
+popularity to the minister who in some measure translated into practice
+the principles of the _Wealth of Nations_.
+
+Nor were there wanting subjects of importance beyond the circle of
+politics in which George III. showed a lively interest. The voyages of
+discovery which made known so large a part of the islands and coasts of
+the Pacific Ocean received from him a warm support. In the early days of
+the Royal Academy, its finances were strengthened by liberal grants from
+the privy purse. His favourite pursuit, however, was farming. When
+Arthur Young was issuing his _Annals of Agriculture_, he was supplied
+with information by the king, under the assumed name of Mr Ralph
+Robinson, relating to a farm at Petersham.
+
+The life of the king was suddenly clouded over. Early in his reign, in
+1765, he had been out of health, and--though the fact was studiously
+concealed at the time--symptoms of mental aberration were even then to
+be perceived. In October 1788 he was again out of health, and in the
+beginning of the following month his insanity was beyond a doubt. Whilst
+Pitt and Fox were contending in the House of Commons over the terms on
+which the regency should be committed to the prince of Wales, the king
+was a helpless victim to the ignorance of physicians and the brutalities
+of his servants. At last Dr Willis, who had made himself a name by
+prescribing gentleness instead of rigour in the treatment of the insane,
+was called in. Under his more humane management the king rapidly
+recovered. Before the end of February 1789 he was able to write to Pitt
+thanking him for his warm support of his interests during his illness.
+On the 23rd of April he went in person to St Paul's to return thanks for
+his recovery.
+
+The popular enthusiasm which burst forth around St Paul's was but a
+foretaste of a popularity far more universal. The French Revolution
+frightened the great Whig landowners till they made their peace with the
+king. Those who thought that the true basis of government was
+aristocratical were now of one mind with those who thought that the true
+basis of government was monarchical; and these two classes were joined
+by a far larger multitude which had no political ideas whatever, but
+which had a moral horror of the guillotine. As Elizabeth had once been
+the symbol of resistance to Spain, George was now the symbol of
+resistance to France. He was not, however, more than the symbol. He
+allowed Pitt to levy taxes and incur debt, to launch armies to defeat,
+and to prosecute the English imitators of French revolutionary courses.
+At last, however, after the Union with Ireland was accomplished, he
+learned that Pitt was planning a scheme to relieve the Catholics from
+the disabilities under which they laboured. The plan was revealed to him
+by the chancellor, Lord Loughborough, a selfish and intriguing
+politician who had served all parties in turn, and who sought to forward
+his own interests by falling in with the king's prejudices. George III.
+at once took up the position from which he never swerved. He declared
+that to grant concessions to the Catholics involved a breach of his
+coronation oath. No one has ever doubted that the king was absolutely
+convinced of the serious nature of the objection. Nor can there be any
+doubt that he had the English people behind him. Both in his peace
+ministry and in his war ministry Pitt had taken his stand on royal
+favour and on popular support. Both failed him alike now, and he
+resigned office at once. The shock to the king's mind was so great that
+it brought on a fresh attack of insanity. This time, however, the
+recovery was rapid. On the 14th of March 1801 Pitt's resignation was
+formally accepted, and the late speaker, Mr Addington, was installed in
+office as prime minister.
+
+The king was well pleased with the change. He was never capable of
+appreciating high merit in any one; and he was unable to perceive that
+the question on which Pitt had resigned was more than an improper
+question, with which he ought never to have meddled. "Tell him," he
+said, in directing his physician to inform Pitt of his restoration to
+health, "I am now quite well, quite recovered from my illness; but what
+has he not to answer for, who has been the cause of my having been ill
+at all?" Addington was a minister after his own mind. Thoroughly honest
+and respectable, with about the same share of abilities as was possessed
+by the king himself, he was certainly not likely to startle the world by
+any flights of genius. But for one circumstance Addington's ministry
+would have lasted long. So strong was the reaction against the
+Revolution that the bulk of the nation was almost as suspicious of
+genius as the king himself. Not only was there no outcry for legislative
+reforms, but the very idea of reform was unpopular. The country
+gentlemen were predominant in parliament, and the country gentlemen as a
+body looked upon Addington with respect and affection. Such a minister
+was therefore admirably suited to preside over affairs at home in the
+existing state of opinion. But those who were content with inaction at
+home would not be content with inaction abroad. In time of peace
+Addington would have been popular for a season. In time of war even his
+warmest admirers could not say that he was the man to direct armies in
+the most terrible struggle which had ever been conducted by an English
+government.
+
+For the moment this difficulty was not felt. On the 1st of October 1801,
+preliminaries of peace were signed between England and France, to be
+converted into the definitive peace of Amiens on the 27th of March 1802.
+The ruler of France was now Napoleon Bonaparte, and few persons in
+England believed that he had any real purpose of bringing his aggressive
+violence to an end. "Do you know what I call this peace?" said the king;
+"an experimental peace, for it is nothing else. But it was unavoidable."
+
+The king was right. On the 18th of May 1803 the declaration of war was
+laid before parliament. The war was accepted by all classes as
+inevitable, and the French preparations for an invasion of England
+roused the whole nation to a glow of enthusiasm only equalled by that
+felt when the Armada threatened its shores. On the 26th of October the
+king reviewed the London volunteers in Hyde Park. He found himself the
+centre of a great national movement with which he heartily sympathized,
+and which heartily sympathized with him.
+
+On the 12th of February 1804 the king's mind was again affected. When he
+recovered, he found himself in the midst of a ministerial crisis. Public
+feeling allowed but one opinion to prevail in the country--that Pitt,
+not Addington, was the proper man to conduct the administration in time
+of war. Pitt was anxious to form an administration on a broad basis,
+including Fox and all prominent leaders of both parties. The king would
+not hear of the admission of Fox. His dislike of him was personal as
+well as political, as he knew that Fox had had a great share in drawing
+the prince of Wales into a life of profligacy. Pitt accepted the king's
+terms, and formed an administration in which he was the only man of real
+ability. Eminent men, such as Lord Grenville, refused to join a ministry
+from which the king had excluded a great statesman on purely personal
+grounds.
+
+The whole question was reopened on Pitt's death on the 23rd of January
+1806. This time the king gave way. The ministry of All the Talents, as
+it was called, included Fox amongst its members. At first the king was
+observed to appear depressed at the necessity of surrender. But Fox's
+charm of manner soon gained upon him. "Mr Fox," said the king, "I
+little thought that you and I should ever meet again in this place; but
+I have no desire to look back upon old grievances, and you may rest
+assured I never shall remind you of them." On the 13th of September Fox
+died, and it was not long before the king and the ministry were openly
+in collision. The ministry proposed a measure enabling all subjects of
+the crown to serve in the army and navy in spite of religious
+disqualifications. The king objected even to so slight a modification of
+the laws against the Catholics and Dissenters, and the ministers
+consented to drop the bill. The king asked more than this. He demanded a
+written and positive engagement that this ministry would never, under
+any circumstances, propose to him "any measure of concession to the
+Catholics, or even connected with the question." The ministers very
+properly refused to bind themselves for the future. They were
+consequently turned out of office, and a new ministry was formed with
+the duke of Portland as first lord of the treasury and Mr Perceval as
+its real leader. The spirit of the new ministry was distinct hostility
+to the Catholic claims. On the 27th of April 1807 a dissolution of
+parliament was announced, and a majority in favour of the king's
+ministry was returned in the elections which speedily followed.
+
+The elections of 1807, like the elections of 1784, gave the king the
+mastery of the situation. In other respects they were the counterpart of
+one another. In 1784 the country declared, though perhaps without any
+clear conception of what it was doing, for a wise and progressive
+policy. In 1807 it declared for an unwise and retrogressive policy, with
+a very clear understanding of what it meant. It is in his reliance upon
+the prejudices and ignorance of the country that the constitutional
+significance of the reign of George III. appears. Every strong
+government derives its power from its representative character. At a
+time when the House of Commons was less really representative than at
+any other, a king was on the throne who represented the country in its
+good and bad qualities alike, in its hatred of revolutionary violence,
+its moral sturdiness, its contempt of foreigners, and its defiance of
+all ideas which were in any way strange. Therefore it was that his
+success was not permanently injurious to the working of the constitution
+as the success of Charles I. would have been. If he were followed by a
+king less English than himself, the strength of representative power
+would pass into other hands than those which held the sceptre.
+
+The overthrow of the ministry of All the Talents was the last political
+act of constitutional importance in which George III. took part. The
+substitution of Perceval for Portland as the nominal head of the
+ministry in 1809 was not an event of any real significance, and in 1811
+the reign practically came to an end. The king's reason finally broke
+down after the death of the princess Amelia, his favourite child; and
+the prince of Wales (see GEORGE IV.) became prince regent. The remaining
+nine years of George III.'s life were passed in insanity and blindness,
+and he died on the 29th of January 1820.
+
+His wife, Charlotte Sophia (1744-1818), was a daughter of Charles Louis
+of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (d. 1816), and was married to the king in London
+on the 8th of September 1761. After a peaceful and happy married life
+the queen died at Kew on the 17th of November 1818.
+
+George III. had nine sons. After his successor came Frederick, duke of
+York and Albany (1763-1827); William Henry, duke of Clarence, afterwards
+King William IV. (1765-1837); Edward Augustus, duke of Kent (1767-1825),
+father of Queen Victoria; Ernest Augustus, duke of Cumberland,
+afterwards king of Hanover (1771-1851); Augustus Frederick, duke of
+Sussex (1773-1843); Adolphus Frederick, duke of Cambridge (1774-1850);
+Octavius (1779-1783); Alfred (1780-1782). He had also six
+daughters--Charlotte Augusta (1766-1828), married in 1797 to Frederick,
+afterwards king of Wurttemberg; Augusta Sophia (1768-1840); Elizabeth
+(1770-1840), married Frederick, landgrave of Hesse-Homburg, 1818; Mary
+(1776-1857), married to William Frederick, duke of Gloucester, 1816;
+Sophia (1777-1848); Amelia (1783-1810). (S. R. G.)
+
+ The numerous contemporary memoirs and diaries are full of the best
+ material for a picture of George III.'s reign, apart from the standard
+ histories. Thackeray's _Four Georges_ must not be trusted so far as
+ historical judgment is concerned; Jesse's _Memoirs of the Life and
+ Reign of George III._ (2nd ed., 1867) is chiefly concerned with
+ personalities. See also Beckles Willson, _George III., as Man, Monarch
+ and Statesman_ (1907).
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] See Lord Fitzmaurice's _Life of Shelburne_, iii. 393.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE IV. [George Augustus Frederick] (1762-1830), king of Great
+Britain and Ireland, eldest son of George III., was born at St James's
+Palace, London, on the 12th of August 1762. He was naturally gifted, was
+well taught in the classics, learnt to speak French, Italian and German
+fluently, and had considerable taste for music and the arts; and in
+person he was remarkably handsome. His tutor, Bishop Richard Hurd, said
+of him when fifteen years old that he would be "either the most polished
+gentleman or the most accomplished blackguard in Europe--possibly both";
+and the latter prediction was only too fully justified. Reaction from
+the strict and parsimonious style of his parents' domestic life, which
+was quite out of touch with the gaiety and extravagance of London
+"society," had its natural effect in plunging the young prince of Wales,
+flattered and courted as he was, into a whirl of pleasure-seeking. At
+the outset his disposition was brilliant and generous, but it was
+essentially unstable, and he started even before he came of age on a
+career of dissipation which in later years became wholly profligate. He
+had an early amour with the actress Mary ("Perdita") Robinson, and in
+the choice of his friends he opposed and annoyed the king, with whom he
+soon became (and always remained) on the worst of terms, by associating
+himself with Fox and Sheridan and the Whig party. When in 1783 he came
+of age, a compromise between the coalition ministry and the king secured
+him an income of L50,000 from the Civil List, and L60,000 was voted by
+parliament to pay his debts and start his separate establishment at
+Carlton House. There, under the auspices of C.J. Fox and Georgiana,
+duchess of Devonshire, he posed as a patron of Whig politics and a
+leader in all the licence and luxury of gay society--the "First
+gentleman in Europe," as his flatterers described him as years went on.
+And at this early age he fell seriously in love with the famous Mrs
+Fitzherbert.
+
+His long connexion with this lady may most conveniently be summarized
+here. It was indeed for some time the one redeeming and restraining
+factor in his life, though her devotion and self-sacrificing conduct
+were in marked contrast with his unscrupulousness and selfishness. Mary
+Anne (or as she always called herself, Maria) Fitzherbert (1756-1837)
+was the daughter of Walter Smythe, the second son of Sir John Smythe,
+Bart., of Acton Burnell Park, Shropshire, and came of an old Roman
+Catholic family. Educated at a French convent, she married first in 1775
+Edward Weld, who died within the year, and secondly in 1778 Thomas
+Fitzherbert, who died in 1781, leaving his widow with a comfortable
+fortune. A couple of years later she became a prominent figure in London
+society, and her beauty and charm at once attracted the young prince,
+who wooed her with all the ardour of a violent passion. She herself was
+distracted between her desire to return his love, her refusal to
+contemplate becoming his mistress, and her knowledge that state reasons
+made a regular marriage impossible. The Act of Settlement (1689)
+entailed his forfeiture of the succession if he married a Roman
+Catholic, apart from the fact that the Royal Marriage Act of 1772 made
+any marriage illegal without the king's consent, which was out of the
+question. But after trying for a while to escape his attentions, her
+scruples were overcome. In Mrs Fitzherbert's eyes the state law was,
+after all, not everything. To a Roman Catholic, and equally to any
+member of the Christian church, a formal marriage ceremony would be
+ecclesiastically and sacramentally binding; and after a period of
+passionate importunacy on his part they were secretly married by the
+Rev. R. Burt, a clergyman of the Church of England, on the 15th of
+December 1785.[1] There is no doubt as to Mrs Fitzherbert's belief,
+supported by ecclesiastical considerations, in her correct and binding,
+though admittedly illegal, relationship to the prince as his canonical
+wife; and though that relationship was not, and for political reasons
+could not be, publicly admitted, it was in fact treated by their
+intimates on the footing of a morganatic marriage. The position
+nevertheless was inevitably a false one; Mrs Fitzherbert had promised
+not to publish the evidence of the marriage (which, according to a
+strict interpretation of the Act of Settlement might have barred
+succession to the crown), and the rumours which soon got about led the
+prince to allow it to be disavowed by his political friends. He lived in
+the most extravagant way, became heavily involved in debt, and as the
+king would not assist him, shut up Carlton House, and went to live with
+Mrs Fitzherbert at Brighton. In 1787 a proposal was brought before the
+House of Commons by Alderman Newnham for a grant in relief of his
+embarrassments. It was on this occasion that Fox publicly declared in
+the House of Commons, as on the prince's own authority, in answer to
+allusions to the marriage, that the story was a malicious falsehood. A
+little later Sheridan, in deference to Mrs Fitzherbert's pressure and to
+the prince's own compunction, made a speech guardedly modifying Fox's
+statement; but though in private the denial was understood, it effected
+its object, the House voting a grant of L221,000 to the prince and the
+king adding L10,000 to his income; and Mrs Fitzherbert, who at first
+thought of severing her connexion with the prince, forgave him. Their
+union--there was no child of the marriage--was brutally broken off in
+June 1794 by the prince, when further pressure of debts (and the
+influence of a new Egeria in Lady Jersey) made him contemplate his
+official marriage with princess Caroline; in 1800, however, it was
+renewed, after urgent pleading on the prince's part, and after Mrs
+Fitzherbert had obtained a formal decision from the pope pronouncing her
+to be his wife, and sanctioning her taking him back; her influence over
+him continued till shortly before the prince became regent, when his
+relations with Lady Hertford brought about a final separation. For the
+best years of his life he had at least had in Mrs Fitzherbert the
+nearest approach to a real wife, and this was fully recognized by the
+royal family.[2] But his dissolute nature was entirely selfish, and his
+various liaisons ended in the dominance of Lady Conyngham, the "Lady
+Steward" of his household, from 1821 till his death.
+
+Notorious as the prince of Wales had become by 1788, it was in that year
+that his father's first attack of insanity made his position in the
+state one of peculiar importance. Fox maintained and Pitt denied that
+the prince of Wales, as the heir-apparent, had a right to assume the
+regency independently of any parliamentary vote. Pitt, with the support
+of both Houses, proposed to confer upon him the regency with certain
+restrictions. The recovery of the king in February 1789 put an end,
+however, to the prince's hopes. In 1794 the prince consented to a
+marriage with a German Protestant princess, because his father would not
+pay his debts on any other terms, and his cousin, Princess Caroline of
+Brunswick, was brought over from Germany and married to him in 1795. Her
+behaviour was light and flippant, and he was brutal and unloving. The
+ill-assorted pair soon parted, and soon after the birth of their only
+child, the princess Charlotte, they were formally separated. With great
+unwillingness the House of Commons voted fresh sums of money to pay the
+prince's debts.
+
+In 1811 he at last became prince regent in consequence of his father's
+definite insanity. No one doubted at that time that it was in his power
+to change the ministry at his pleasure. He had always lived in close
+connexion with the Whig opposition, and he now empowered Lord Grenville
+to form a ministry. There soon arose differences of opinion between them
+on the answer to be returned to the address of the Houses, and the
+prince regent then informed the prime minister, Mr Perceval, that he
+should continue the existing ministry in office. The ground alleged by
+him for this desertion of his friends was the fear lest his father's
+recovery might be rendered impossible if he should come to hear of the
+advent of the opposition to power. Lord Wellesley's resignation in
+February 1812 made the reconstruction of the ministry inevitable. As
+there was no longer any hope of the king's recovery, the former
+objection to a Whig administration no longer existed. Instead of taking
+the course of inviting the Whigs to take office, he asked them to join
+the existing administration. The Whig leaders, however, refused to join,
+on the ground that the question of the Catholic disabilities was too
+important to be shelved, and that their difference of opinion with Mr
+Perceval was too glaring to be ignored. The prince regent was
+excessively angry, and continued Perceval in office till that minister's
+assassination on the 11th of May, when he was succeeded by Lord
+Liverpool, after a negotiation in which the proposition of entering the
+cabinet was again made to the Whigs and rejected by them. In the
+military glories of the following years the prince regent had no share.
+When the allied sovereigns visited England in 1814, he played the part
+of host to perfection. So great was his unpopularity at home that hisses
+were heard in the streets as he accompanied his guests into the city.
+The disgust which his profligate and luxurious life caused amongst a
+people suffering from almost universal distress after the conclusion of
+the war rapidly increased. In 1817 the windows of the prince regent's
+carriage were broken as he was on his way to open parliament.
+
+The death of George III. on the 29th of January 1820, gave to his son
+the title of king without in any way altering the position which he had
+now held for nine years. Indirectly, however, this change brought out a
+manifestation of popular feeling such as his father had never been
+subjected to even in the early days of his reign, when mobs were burning
+jack-boots and petticoats. The relations between the new king and his
+wife unavoidably became the subject of public discussion. In 1806 a
+charge against the princess of having given birth to an illegitimate
+child had been conclusively disproved, and the old king had consequently
+refused to withdraw her daughter, the princess Charlotte, from her
+custody. When in the regency the prince was able to interfere, and
+prohibited his wife from seeing her daughter more than once a fortnight.
+On this, in 1813, the princess addressed to her husband a letter setting
+forth her complaints, and receiving no answer published it in the
+_Morning Chronicle_. The prince regent then referred the letter,
+together with all papers relating to the inquiry of 1806, to a body of
+twenty-three privy councillors for an opinion whether it was fit that
+the restrictions on the intercourse between the princess Charlotte and
+her mother should continue in force. All except two answered as the
+regent wished them to answer. But if the official leaning was towards
+the husband, the leaning of the general public was towards the wife of a
+man whose own life had not been such as to justify him in complaining of
+her whom he had thrust from him without a charge of any kind. Addresses
+of sympathy were sent up to the princess from the city of London and
+other public bodies. The discord again broke out in 1814 in consequence
+of the exclusion of the princess from court during the visit of the
+allied sovereigns. In August in that year she left England, and after a
+little time took up her abode in Italy. The accession of George IV.
+brought matters to a crisis. He ordered that no prayer for his wife as
+queen should be admitted into the Prayer Book. She at once challenged
+the accusation which was implied in this omission by returning to
+England. On the 7th of June she arrived in London. Before she left the
+continent she had been informed that proceedings would be taken against
+her for adultery if she landed in England. Two years before, in 1818,
+commissioners had been sent to Milan to investigate charges against her,
+and their report, laid before the cabinet in 1819, was made the basis of
+the prosecution. On the day on which she arrived in London a message was
+laid before both Houses recommending the criminating evidence to
+parliament. A secret committee in the House of Lords after considering
+this evidence brought in a report on which the prime minister founded a
+Bill of Pains and Penalties to divorce the queen and to deprive her of
+her royal title. The bill passed the three readings with diminished
+majorities, and when on the third reading it obtained only a majority of
+nine, it was abandoned by the Government. The king's unpopularity, great
+as it had been before, was now greater than ever. Public opinion,
+without troubling itself to ask whether the queen was guilty or not, was
+roused to indignation by the spectacle of such a charge being brought by
+a husband who had thrust away his wife to fight the battle of life
+alone, without protection or support, and who, whilst surrounding her
+with spies to detect, perhaps to invent, her acts of infidelity, was
+himself notorious for his adulterous life. In the following year (1821)
+she attempted to force her way into Westminster Abbey to take her place
+at the coronation. On this occasion the popular support failed her; and
+her death in August relieved the king from further annoyance.
+
+Immediately after the death of the queen, the king set out for Ireland.
+He remained there but a short time, and his effusive declaration that
+rank, station, honours were nothing compared with the exalted happiness
+of living in the hearts of his Irish subjects gained him a momentary
+popularity which was beyond his attainment in a country where he was
+better known. His reception in Dublin encouraged him to attempt a visit
+to Edinburgh in the following year (August 1822). Since Charles II. had
+come to play the sorry part of a covenanting king in 1650 no sovereign
+of the country had set foot on Scottish soil. Sir Walter Scott took the
+leading part in organizing his reception. The enthusiasm with which he
+was received equalled, if it did not surpass, the enthusiasm with which
+he had been received in Dublin. But the qualities which enabled him to
+fix the fleeting sympathies of the moment were not such as would enable
+him to exercise the influence in the government which had been
+indubitably possessed by his father. He returned from Edinburgh to face
+the question of the appointment of a secretary of state which had been
+raised by the death of Lord Londonderry (Castlereagh). It was upon the
+question of the appointment of ministers that the battle between the
+Whigs and the king had been fought in the reign of George III. George
+IV. had neither the firmness nor the moral weight to hold the reins
+which his father had grasped. He disliked Canning for having taken his
+wife's side very much as his father had disliked Fox for taking his own.
+But Lord Liverpool insisted on Canning's admission to office, and the
+king gave way. Tacitly and without a struggle the constitutional victory
+of the last reign was surrendered. But it was not surrendered to the
+same foe as that from which it had been won. The coalition ministry in
+1784 rested on the great landowners and the proprietors of rotten
+boroughs. Lord Liverpool's ministry had hitherto not been very
+enlightened, and it supported itself to a great extent upon a narrow
+constituency. But it did appeal to public opinion in a way that the
+coalition did not, and what it wanted itself in popular support would be
+supplied by its successors. What one king had gained from a clique
+another gave up to the nation. Once more, on Lord Liverpool's death in
+1827, the same question was tried with the same result. The king not
+only disliked Canning personally, but he was opposed to Canning's
+policy. Yet after some hesitation he accepted Canning as prime minister;
+and when, after Canning's death and the short ministry of Lord Goderich,
+the king in 1828 authorized the duke of Wellington to form a ministry,
+he was content to lay down the principle that the members of it were not
+expected to be unanimous on the Catholic question. When in 1829 the
+Wellington ministry unexpectedly proposed to introduce a Bill to remove
+the disabilities of the Catholics, he feebly strove against the proposal
+and quickly withdrew his opposition. The worn-out debauchee had neither
+the merit of acquiescing in the change nor the courage to resist it.
+
+George IV. died on the 26th of June 1830, and was succeeded by his
+brother, the duke of Clarence, as William IV. His only child by Queen
+Caroline, the princess Charlotte Augusta, was married in 1816 to Leopold
+of Saxe-Coburg, afterwards king of the Belgians, and died in childbirth
+on the 6th of November 1817.
+
+ George IV. was a bad king, and his reign did much to disgust the
+ country with the Georgian type of monarchy; but libertine and
+ profligate as he became, the abuse which has been lavished on his
+ personal character has hardly taken into sufficient consideration the
+ loose morals of contemporary society, the political position of the
+ Whig party, and his own ebullient temperament. Thackeray, in his _Four
+ Georges_, is frequently unfair in this respect. The just condemnation
+ of the moralist and satirist requires some qualification in the light
+ of the picture of the period handed down in the memoirs and diaries of
+ the time, such as Greville's, Croker's, Creevey's, Lord Holland's,
+ Lord Malmesbury's, &c. Among later works see _The First Gentleman of
+ Europe_, by Lewis Melville (1906), a book for the general reader.
+ (S. R. G.; H. Ch.)
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] For a discussion of the ecclesiastical validity of the marriage
+ see W.H. Wilkins, _Mrs Fitzherbert and George IV._ (1905), chs. vi.
+ and vii.
+
+ [2] Mrs Fitzherbert herself, after her final separation from the
+ prince, with an annuity of L6000 a year, lived an honoured and more
+ or less retired life mainly at Brighton, a town which owed its rapid
+ development in fashionable popularity and material wealth to its
+ selection by the prince and herself as a residence from the earliest
+ years of their union; and there she died, seven years after the death
+ of George IV., in 1837. William IV. on his accession offered to
+ create her a duchess, but she declined; she accepted, however, his
+ permission to put her servants in royal livery. William IV. in fact
+ did all he could, short of a public acknowledgment (which the duke of
+ Wellington opposed on state grounds), to recognize her position as
+ his brother's widow. Charles Greville, writing of her after her
+ death, says in his _Diary_, "She was not a clever woman, but of a
+ very noble spirit, disinterested, generous, honest and affectionate."
+ The actual existence of a marriage tie and the documentary evidence
+ of her rights were not definitely established for many years; but in
+ 1905 a sealed packet, deposited at Coutts's bank in 1833, was at
+ length opened by royal permission, and the marriage certificate and
+ other conclusive proofs therein contained were published in Mr W.H.
+ Wilkins's _Mrs Fitzherbert and George IV_. In 1796 the prince had
+ made a remarkable will in Mrs Fitzherbert's favour, which he gave her
+ in 1799, and it is included among these documents (now in the private
+ archives at Windsor). In this he speaks of her emphatically
+ throughout as "my wife." It also contained directions that at his
+ death a locket with her miniature, which he always wore, should be
+ interred with him; and Mrs Fitzherbert was privately assured, on the
+ duke of Wellington's authority, that when the king was buried at
+ Windsor the miniature was on his breast.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE V. [GEORGE FREDERICK ERNEST ALBERT], king of Great Britain and
+Ireland and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, emperor of India
+(1865- ), second son of King Edward VII., was born at Marlborough House,
+London, on the 3rd of June 1865. When four years old, he and his elder
+brother, Prince Albert Victor, two years his senior, were placed under
+the tutorship of John Neale Dalton, then curate of Sandringham. In 1877
+the two princes became naval cadets on the "Britannia" at Spithead,
+where they passed through the ordinary curriculum, and in 1879 they
+joined H.M.S. "Bacchante" under the command of Captain Lord Charles
+Scott, making a voyage to the West Indies, in the course of which they
+were rated midshipmen. After a month at home in 1880 they returned to
+the ship to make another prolonged cruise in H.M.S. "Bacchante," in the
+course of which they visited South America, South Africa, Australia, the
+Fiji Islands, Japan, Ceylon, Egypt, Palestine and Greece. A narrative of
+this voyage, _The Cruise of H.M.S. "Bacchante_," compiled from the
+letters, diaries and notebooks of the princes, was published in 1886. At
+the close of this tour in 1882 the brothers separated. Prince George,
+who remained in the naval service, was appointed to H.M.S. "Canada,"
+commanded by Captain Durrant, on the North American and West Indian
+station, and was promoted sub-lieutenant. On his return home he passed
+through the Royal Naval College at Greenwich and the gunnery and torpedo
+schools, being promoted lieutenant in 1885. A year later he was
+appointed to H.M.S. "Thunderer" of the Mediterranean squadron, and was
+subsequently transferred to H.M.S. "Dreadnaught" and H.M.S. "Alexandra."
+In 1889 he joined the flagship of the Channel squadron, H.M.S.
+"Northumberland," and in that year was in command of torpedo boat No. 79
+for the naval manoeuvres. In 1890 he was put in command of the gunboat
+H.M.S. "Thrush" for service on the North American and West Indian
+station. After his promotion as commander in 1891 he commissioned H.M.S.
+"Melampus," the command of which he relinquished on the death of his
+brother, Albert Victor, the duke of Clarence, in January 1892, since his
+duties as eventual heir to the crown precluded him from devoting himself
+exclusively to the navy. He was promoted captain in 1893, rear-admiral
+in 1901, and vice-admiral in 1903. He was created duke of York, earl of
+Inverness, and Baron Killarney in 1892, and on the 6th of July 1893 he
+married Princess Victoria Mary (b. 26th May 1867), daughter of Francis,
+duke of Teck, and Princess Mary Adelaide, duchess of Teck, daughter of
+Adolphus Frederick, duke of Cambridge. Their eldest son, Prince Edward
+Albert, was born at White Lodge, Richmond, on the 23rd of June 1894;
+Prince Albert Frederick George was born at Sandringham on the 14th of
+December 1895; Princess Victoria Alexandra on the 25th of April 1897;
+Prince Henry William Frederick Albert on the 31st of March 1900; Prince
+George Edward Alexander Edmund on the 20th of December 1902; and Prince
+John Charles Francis on the 12th of July 1905. The duke and duchess of
+York visited Ireland in 1899, and it had been arranged before the death
+of Queen Victoria that they should make a tour in the colonies. On the
+accession of King Edward VII. (1901) this plan was confirmed. They
+sailed in the "Ophir" on the 16th of March 1901, travelling by the
+ordinary route, and landed at Melbourne in May, when they opened the
+first parliament of the Commonwealth. They then proceeded to New
+Zealand, returning by way of South Africa and Canada. An official
+account of the tour was published by Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace as
+_The Web of Empire_ (1902). In November 1901 the duke was created prince
+of Wales. On the death of Edward VII. (May 6, 1910) he succeeded to the
+Crown as George V., his consort taking the style of Queen Mary.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE V., king of Hanover (1819-1878), was the only son of Ernest
+Augustus, king of Hanover and duke of Cumberland, and consequently a
+grandson of the English king George III. Born in Berlin on the 27th of
+May 1819, his youth was passed in England and in Berlin until 1837, when
+his father became king of Hanover and he took up his residence in that
+country. He lost the sight of one eye during a childish illness, and the
+other by an accident in 1833. Being thus totally blind there were doubts
+whether he was qualified to succeed to the government of Hanover; but
+his father decided that he should do so, as the law of the dissolved
+empire only excluded princes who were born blind. This decision was a
+fatal one to the dynasty. Both from his father and from his maternal
+uncle, Charles Frederick, prince of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1785-1837),
+one of the most influential men at the Prussian court, George had
+learned to take a very high and autocratic view of royal authority. His
+blindness prevented him from acquiring the shrewdness and knowledge of
+the world which had assisted his father, and he easily fell into the
+hands of unwise, and perhaps dishonest and disloyal, advisers. A man of
+deep religious feeling, he formed a fantastic conception of the place
+assigned to the house of Guelph in the divine economy, and had ideas of
+founding a great Guelph state in Europe. It is, therefore, not
+surprising that from the time of his accession in November 1851 he was
+constantly engaged in disputes with his _Landtag_ or parliament, and was
+consequently in a weak and perilous position when the crisis in the
+affairs of Germany came in 1866. Having supported Austria in the diet of
+the German confederation in June 1866, he refused, contrary to the
+wishes of his parliament, to assent to the Prussian demand that Hanover
+should observe an unarmed neutrality during the war. As a result his
+country and his capital were at once occupied by the Prussians, to whom
+his army surrendered on the 29th of June 1866, and in the following
+September Hanover was formally annexed by Prussia. From his retreat at
+Hietzing near Vienna, George appealed in vain to the powers of Europe;
+and supported by a large number of his subjects, an agitation was
+carried on which for a time caused some embarrassment to Prussia. All
+these efforts, however, to bring about a restoration were unavailing,
+and the king passed the remainder of his life at Gmunden in Austria, or
+in France, refusing to the last to be reconciled with the Prussian
+government. Whilst visiting Paris for medical advice he died in that
+city on the 12th of June 1878, and was buried in St George's chapel,
+Windsor. In February 1843 he had married Marie, daughter of Joseph, duke
+of Saxe-Altenburg, by whom he left a son and two daughters. His son,
+Ernest Augustus, duke of Cumberland (b. 1845), continued to maintain the
+claim of his house to the kingdom of Hanover.
+
+By the capitulation of 1866 the king was allowed to retain his personal
+property, which included money and securities equal to nearly
+L1,500,000, which had been sent to England before the Prussian invasion
+of Hanover. The crown jewels had also been secretly conveyed to England.
+His valuable plate, which had been hidden at Herrenhausen, was restored
+to him in 1867; his palace at Herrenhausen, near Hanover, was reserved
+as his property; and in 1867 the Prussian government agreed to
+compensate him for the loss of his landed estates, but owing to his
+continued hostility the payment of the interest on this sum was
+suspended in the following year (see HANOVER).
+
+ See O. Klopp, _Konig Georg V._ (Hanover, 1878); O. Theodor,
+ _Erinnerungen an Georg V._ (Bremerhaven, 1878); and O. Meding,
+ _Memoiren zur Zeitgeschichte_ (Leipzig, 1881-1884).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE I., king of the Hellenes (1845- ), second son of King Christian
+IX. of Denmark, was born at Copenhagen on the 24th of December 1845.
+After the expulsion of King Otho in 1862, the Greek nation, by a
+plebiscite, elected the British prince, Alfred, duke of Edinburgh
+(subsequently duke of Coburg), to the vacant throne, and on his refusal
+the national assembly requested Great Britain to nominate a candidate.
+The choice of the British government fell on Prince Christian William
+Ferdinand Adolphus George of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glucksburg,
+whose election as king of the Hellenes, with the title George I., was
+recognized by the powers (6th of June 1863). The sister of the new
+sovereign, Princess Alexandra, had a few months before (10th March)
+married the prince of Wales, afterwards King Edward VII., and his father
+succeeded to the crown of Denmark in the following November. Another
+sister, Princess Dagmar, subsequently married the grand duke Alexander
+Alexandrovitch, afterwards Emperor Alexander III. of Russia. On his
+accession, King George signed an act resigning his right of succession
+to the Danish throne in favour of his younger brother Prince Waldemar.
+He was received with much enthusiasm by the Greeks. Adopting the motto,
+"My strength is the love of my people," he ruled in strict accordance
+with constitutional principles, though not hesitating to make the
+fullest use of the royal prerogative when the intervention of the crown
+seemed to be required by circumstances. For the events of his reign see
+GREECE: _History_.
+
+King George married, on the 27th of October 1867, the grand duchess Olga
+Constantinovna of Russia, who became distinguished in Greece for her
+activity on behalf of charitable objects. Their children were Prince
+Constantine, duke of Sparta (b. 1868), who married in 1889 Princess
+Sophia of Prussia, daughter of the emperor Frederick, and granddaughter
+of Queen Victoria; Prince George (b. 1869), from November 1898 to
+October 1906 high commissioner of the powers in Crete; Prince Nicholas
+(b. 1872), who married in 1902 the grand duchess Helen-Vladimirovna of
+Russia; Prince Andrew (b. 1882), who married in 1903 Princess Alice of
+Battenberg; Prince Christopher (b. 1888); and a daughter, Princess Marie
+(b. 1876), who married in 1900 the grand duke George Michailovich of
+Russia.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE, king of Saxony (1832-1904), the youngest son of King John of
+Saxony (d. 1873) and Queen Amelia, was born at Dresden on the 8th of
+August 1832. From an early age he received a careful scientific and
+military training, and in 1846 entered the active army as a lieutenant
+of artillery. In 1849-1850 he was a student at the university of Bonn,
+but soon returned to military life, for which he had a predilection. In
+the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 he commanded a Saxon cavalry brigade,
+and in the early part of the war of 1870-71 a division, but later
+succeeded to the supreme command of the XII. (Saxon) army corps in the
+room of his brother, the crown prince Albert (afterwards king) of
+Saxony. His name is inseparably associated with this campaign, during
+which he showed undoubted military ability and an intrepidity which
+communicated itself to all ranks under his command, notably at the
+battles of St Privat and Beaumont, in which he greatly distinguished
+himself. On his brother succeeding to the throne he became
+commander-in-chief of the Saxon army, and was in 1888 made a Prussian
+field marshal by the emperor William I. He married in 1859 the infanta
+Maria, sister of King Louis of Portugal, and King Albert's marriage
+being childless, succeeded on his death in 1902 to the throne of Saxony.
+He died on the 15th of October 1904, at Pillnitz.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE OF LAODICEA in Syria, often called "the Cappadocian," from 356 to
+361 Arian archbishop of Alexandria, was born about the beginning of the
+4th century. According to Ammianus (xxii. 11), he was a native of
+Epiphania, in Cilicia. Gregory Nazianzen tells us that his father was a
+fuller, and that he himself soon became notorious as a parasite of so
+mean a type that he would "sell himself for a cake." After many
+wanderings, in the course of which he seems to have amassed a
+considerable fortune, first as an army-contractor and then as a receiver
+of taxes, he ultimately reached Alexandria. It is not known how or when
+he obtained ecclesiastical orders; but, after Athanasius had been
+banished in 356, George was promoted by the influence of the then
+prevalent Arian faction to the vacant see. His theological attitude was
+that known as semi-Arian or Homoiousian, and his associates were
+Eustathius of Sebaste and Basil of Ancyra. At George's instigation the
+second Sirmian formula (promulgated by the third council of Sirmium
+357), which was conciliatory towards strict Arianism, was opposed at the
+council of Ancyra in 358 (Harnack, _Hist. of Dogma_, iv. 76). His
+persecutions and oppressions of the orthodox ultimately raised a
+rebellion which compelled him to flee for his life; but his authority
+was restored, although with difficulty, by a military demonstration.
+Untaught by experience, he resumed his course of selfish tyranny over
+Christians and heathen alike, and raised the irritation of the populace
+to such a pitch that when, on the accession of Julian, his downfall was
+proclaimed and he was committed to prison, they dragged him thence and
+killed him, finally casting his body into the sea (24th of December
+361). With much that was sordid and brutal in his character George
+combined a highly cultivated literary taste, and in the course of his
+chequered career he had found the means of collecting a splendid
+library, which Julian ordered to be conveyed to Antioch for his own use.
+An anonymous work against the Manicheans discovered by Lagarde in 1859
+in a MS. of Titus of Bostra has been attributed to him.
+
+ The original sources for the facts of the life of George of Laodicea
+ are Ammianus, Gregory Nazianzen, Epiphanius and Athanasius. His
+ character has been drawn with graphic fidelity by Gibbon in the 23rd
+ chapter of the _Decline and Fall_; but the theory, accepted by Gibbon,
+ which identifies him with the patron saint of England is now rejected
+ (see GEORGE, SAINT). See C.S. Hulst, _St George of Cappadocia in
+ Legend and History_ (1910).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE OF TREBIZOND (1395-1484), Greek philosopher and scholar, one of
+the pioneers of the revival of letters in the Western world, was born in
+the island of Crete, and derived his surname Trapezuntios from the fact
+that his ancestors were from Trebizond. At what period he came to Italy
+is not certain; according to some accounts he was summoned to Venice
+about 1430 to act as amanuensis to Francesco Barbaro, who appears to
+have already made his acquaintance; according to others he did not visit
+Italy till the time of the council of Florence (1438-1439). He learned
+Latin from Vittorino da Feltre, and made such rapid progress that in
+three years he was able to teach Latin literature and rhetoric. His
+reputation as a teacher and a translator of Aristotle was very great,
+and he was selected as secretary by Pope Nicholas V., an ardent
+Aristotelian. The needless bitterness of his attacks upon Plato (in the
+_Comparatio Aristotelis et Platonis_), which drew forth a powerful
+response from Bessarion (q.v.), and the manifestly hurried and
+inaccurate character of his translations of Plato, Aristotle and other
+classical authors, combined to ruin his fame as a scholar, and to
+endanger his position as a teacher of philosophy. The indignation
+against him on account of his first-named work was so great that he
+would probably have been compelled to leave Italy had not Alphonso V.
+given him protection at the court of Naples. He subsequently returned to
+Rome, where he died in great poverty on the 12th of August 1484. He had
+long outlived his reputation, and towards the end of his life his
+intellect failed him. From all accounts he was a man of very
+disagreeable character, conceited and quarrelsome.
+
+ See G. Voigt, _Die Wiederbelebung des klassischen Altertums_ (1893),
+ and article by C.F. Bahr in Ersch and Gruber's _Allgemeine
+ Encyklopadie_. For a complete list of his numerous works, consisting
+ of translations from Greek into Latin (Plato, Aristotle and the
+ Fathers) and original essays in Greek (chiefly theological) and Latin
+ (grammatical and rhetorical), see Fabricius, _Bibliotheca Graeca_ (ed.
+ Harles), xii.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE THE MONK [GEORGIOS MONACHOS], called Hamartolos (Greek for
+"sinner"), Byzantine chronicler, lived during the reign of Michael III.
+(842-867). He wrote a _Chronicle_ of events, in four books, from the
+creation of the world to the death of the emperor Theophilus (842),
+whose widow Theodora restored the worship of images in the same year. It
+is the only original contemporary authority for the years 813-842, and
+therefore so far indispensable; the early parts of the work are merely a
+compilation. In the introduction the author disclaims all pretensions to
+literary style, and declares that his only object was to relate such
+things as were "useful and necessary" with a strict adherence to truth.
+Far too much attention, however, is devoted to religious matters; the
+iconoclasts are fiercely attacked, and the whole is interlarded with
+theological discussions and quotations from the fathers. The work was
+very popular, and translations of it served as models for Slavonic
+writers. The MSS. give a continuation down to 948, the author of which
+is indicated simply as "the logothete," by whom probably Symeon
+Metaphrastes (second half of the 10th century) is meant. In this
+religious questions are relegated to the background, more attention is
+devoted to political history, and the language is more popular. Still
+further continuations of little value go down to 1143. The large
+circulation of the work and its subsequent reissues, with alterations
+and interpolations, make it very difficult to arrive at the original
+text.
+
+ EDITIONS: E. de Muralt (St Petersburg, 1859); J.P. Migne, _Patrologia
+ Graeca_, cx.; C. de Boor (in Teubner series, 1904- ). See F. Hirsch,
+ _Byzantinische Studien_ (1876); C. de Boor in _Historische
+ Untersuchungen_ (in honour of Arnold Schafer, Bonn, 1882); C.
+ Krumbacher, _Geschichte der byzantinischen Litteratur_ (1897).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE THE SYNCELLUS [GEORGIOS SYNKELLOS], of Constantinople, Byzantine
+chronicler and ecclesiastic, lived at the end of the 8th and the
+beginning of the 9th century A.D. He was the _syncellus_ (cell-mate, the
+confidential companion assigned to the patriarchs, sometimes little more
+than a spy; see SYNCELLUS) or private secretary of Tara(u)sius,
+patriarch of Constantinople (784-806), after whose death he retired to a
+convent, and wrote his _Chronicle_ of events from Adam to Diocletian
+(285). At his earnest request, the work, which he doubtless intended to
+bring down to his own times, was continued after his death by his friend
+Theophanes Confessor. The _Chronicle_, which, as its title implies, is
+rather a chronological table (with notes) than a history, is written
+with special reference to pre-Christian times and the introduction of
+Christianity, and exhibits the author as a staunch upholder of
+orthodoxy. But in spite of its religious bias and dry and uninteresting
+character, the fragments of ancient writers and apocryphal books
+preserved in it render it specially valuable. For instance, considerable
+portions of the original text of the _Chronicle_ of Eusebius have been
+restored by the aid of Syncellus. His chief authorities were Annianus of
+Alexandria (5th century) and Panodorus, an Egyptian monk, who wrote
+about the year 400 and drew largely from Eusebius, Dexippus and Julius
+Africanus.
+
+ Editio princeps, by J. Goar (1652); in Bonn _Corpus scriptorum hist.
+ Byz._, by W. Dindorf (1829). See also H. Gelzer, _Sextus Julius
+ Africanus_, ii. 1 (1885); C. Krumbacher, _Geschichte der
+ byzantinischen Litteratur_ (1897).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE, HENRY (1839-1897), American author and political economist, was
+born in Philadelphia, Penn., on the 2nd of September 1839. He settled in
+California in 1858; removed to New York, 1880; was first a printer, then
+an editor, but finally devoted all his life to economic and social
+questions. In 1871 he published _Our Land Policy_, which, as further
+developed in 1879 under the title of _Progress and Poverty_, speedily
+attracted the widest attention both in America and in Europe. In 1886 he
+published _Protection or Free Trade_. Henry George had no political
+ambition, but in 1886 he received an independent nomination as mayor of
+New York City, and became so popular that it required a coalition of
+the two strongest political parties to prevent his election. He received
+68,000 votes, against 90,000 for the coalition candidate. His death on
+the 29th of October 1897 was followed by one of the greatest
+demonstrations of popular feeling and general respect that ever attended
+the funeral of any strictly private citizen in American history. The
+fundamental doctrine of Henry George, the equal right of all men to the
+use of the earth, did not originate with him; but his clear statement of
+a method by which it could be enforced, without increasing state
+machinery, and indeed with a great simplification of government, gave it
+a new form. This method he named the _Single Tax_. His doctrine may be
+condensed as follows: The land of every country belongs of right to all
+the people of that country. This right cannot be alienated by one
+generation, so as to affect the title of the next, any more than men can
+sell their yet unborn children for slaves. Private ownership of land has
+no more foundation in morality or reason than private ownership of air
+or sunlight. But the private occupancy and use of land are right and
+indispensable. Any attempt to divide land into equal shares is
+impossible and undesirable. Land should be, and practically is now,
+divided for private use in parcels among those who will pay the highest
+price for the use of each parcel. This price is now paid to some persons
+annually, and it is called _rent_. By applying the rent of land,
+exclusive of all improvements, to the equal benefit of the whole
+community, absolute justice would be done to all. As rent is always more
+than sufficient to defray all necessary expenses of government, those
+expenses should be met by a tax upon rent alone, to be brought about by
+the gradual abolition of all other taxes. Landlords should be left in
+undisturbed possession and nominal ownership of the land, with a
+sufficient margin over the tax to induce them to collect their rents and
+pay the tax. They would thus be transformed into mere land agents.
+Obviously this would involve absolute free trade, since all taxes on
+imports, manufactures, successions, documents, personal property,
+buildings or improvements would disappear. Nothing made by man would be
+taxed at all. The right of private property in all things made by man
+would thus be absolute, for the owner of such things could not be
+divested of his property, without full compensation, even under the
+pretence of taxation. The idea of concentrating all taxes upon
+ground-rent has found followers in Great Britain, North America,
+Australia and New Zealand. In practical politics this doctrine is
+confined to the "Single Tax, Limited," which proposes to defray only the
+needful public expenses from ground-rent, leaving the surplus, whatever
+it may be, in the undisturbed possession of landowners.
+
+ The principal books by Henry George are: _Progress and Poverty_
+ (1879), _The Irish Land Question_ (1881), _Social Problems_ (1884),
+ _Protection or Free Trade_ (1886), _The Condition of Labor_ (1891), _A
+ Perplexed Philosopher_ (1892), _Political Economy_ (1898). His son,
+ Henry George (b. 1862), has written a _Life_ (1900). For the Single
+ Tax theory see Shearman's _Natural Taxation_ (1899). (T. G. S.)
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE PISIDA [GEORGIOS PISIDES], Byzantine poet, born in Pisidia,
+flourished during the 7th century A.D. Nothing is known of him except
+that he was a deacon and chartophylax (keeper of the records) of the
+church of St Sophia. His earliest work, in three cantos ([Greek:
+akroaseis]), on the campaign of the emperor Heraclius against the
+Persians, seems to be the work of an eyewitness. This was followed by
+the _Avarica_, an account of a futile attack on Constantinople by the
+Avars (626), said to have been repulsed by the aid of the Virgin Mary;
+and by the _Heraclias_, a general survey of the exploits of Heraclius
+both at home and abroad down to the final overthrow of Chosroes in 627.
+George Pisida was also the author of a didactic poem, _Hexaemeron_ or
+_Cosmourgia_, upon the creation of the world; a treatise on the vanity
+of life, after the manner of _Ecclesiastes_; a controversial composition
+against Severus, bishop of Antioch; two short poems upon the
+resurrection of Christ and on the recovery of the sacred crucifix stolen
+by the Persians. The metre chiefly used is the iambic. As a versifier
+Pisida is correct and even elegant; as a chronicler of contemporary
+events he is exceedingly useful; and later Byzantine writers
+enthusiastically compared him with, and even preferred him to Euripides.
+Recent criticism, however, characterizes his compositions as artificial
+and almost uniformly dull.
+
+ Complete works in J.P. Migne, _Patrologia Graeca_, xcii.; see also _De
+ Georgii Pisidae apud Theophanem aliosque historicos reliquiis_.
+ (1900), by S.L. Sternbach, who has edited several new poems for the
+ first time from a Paris MS. in _Wiener Studien_, xiii., xiv.
+ (1891-1892); C. Krumbacher, _Geschichte der byzantinischen Litteratur_
+ (1897); C.F. Bahr in Ersch and Gruber's _Allgemeine Encyklopadie_.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE, LAKE, a lake in the E. part of New York, U.S.A., among the S.E.
+foothills of the Adirondack Mountains. It extends from N.N.E. to S.S.W.
+about 34 m., and varies in width from 2 to 4 m. It has a maximum depth
+of about 400 ft., and is 323 ft. above the sea and 227 ft. above Lake
+Champlain, into which it has an outlet to the northward through a narrow
+channel and over falls and rapids. The lake is fed chiefly by mountain
+brooks and submerged springs; its bed is for the most part covered with
+a clean sand; its clear water is coloured with beautiful tints of blue
+and green; and its surface is studded with about 220 islands and islets,
+all except nineteen of which belong to the state and constitute a part
+of its forest reserve. Near the head of the lake is Prospect Mountain,
+rising 1736 ft. above the sea, while several miles farther down the
+shores is Black Mountain, 2661 ft. in height. Lake George has become a
+favourite summer resort. Lake steamers ply between the village of Lake
+George (formerly Caldwell) at the southern end of the lake and Baldwin,
+whence there is rail connexion with Lake Champlain steamers.
+
+Lake George was formed during the Glacial period by glacial drift which
+clogged a pre-existing valley. According to Prof. J.F. Kemp the valley
+occupied by Lake George was a low pass before the Glacial period; a dam
+of glacial drift at the southern end and of lacustrine clays at the
+northern end formed the lake which has submerged the pass, leaving
+higher parts as islands. Before the advent of the white man the lake was
+a part of the war-path over which the Iroquois Indians frequently made
+their way northward to attack the Algonquins and the Hurons, and during
+the struggle between the English and the French for supremacy in
+America, waterways being still the chief means of communication, it was
+of great strategic importance (see CHAMPLAIN, _Lake_). Father Isaac
+Jogues, Rene Goupil and Guillaume Couture seem to have been the first
+white men to see the lake (on the 9th of August 1642) as they were being
+taken by their Iroquois captors from the St Lawrence to the towns of the
+Mohawks, and in 1646 Father Jogues, having undertaken a half-religious,
+half-political mission to the Mohawks, was again at the lake, to which,
+in allusion to his having reached it on the eve of Corpus Christi, he
+gave the name Lac Saint Sacrement. This name it bore until the summer of
+1755, when General William Johnson renamed it Lake George in honour of
+King George II.
+
+General Johnson was at this time in command of a force of colonists and
+Indians sent against the French at Crown Point on Lake Champlain. The
+expedition, however, had proceeded no farther than to the head of Lake
+George when Johnson was informed that a force of French and Indians
+under Baron Ludwig August Dieskau was pushing on from Crown Point to
+Fort Lyman (later Fort Edward), 14 m. to the S. of their encampment.
+Accordingly, on the morning of the 8th of September a detachment of 1000
+colonials under Colonel Ephraim Williams (1715-1755) and 200 Indians
+under Hendrick, a Mohawk chief, was sent to aid Fort Lyman, but when
+about 3 m. S. of the lake this detachment fell into an ambuscade
+prepared for it by Dieskau and both Williams and Hendrick were killed.
+The survivors were pursued to their camp, and then followed on the same
+day the main battle of Lake George, in which 1000 colonials fighting at
+first behind a hastily prepared barricade defeated about 1400 French and
+Indians. Both commanders were wounded; Dieskau was captured; the French
+lost about 300; and the colonials nearly the same (including those who
+fell earlier in the day). Johnson now built on the lake shore, near the
+battlefield, a fort of gravel and logs and called it Fort William Henry
+(the site was occupied by the Fort William Henry Hotel till it was
+burned in 1909). In the meantime the French entrenched themselves at
+Ticonderoga at the foot of the lake. In March 1757 Fort William Henry
+successfully withstood an attack of 1600 men sent out by the marquis de
+Vaudreuil, governor of Canada, but on the 9th of August of the same year
+its garrison, after being reduced to desperate straits, surrendered to
+the marquis de Montcalm. By the terms of surrender the garrison was to
+be allowed to march out with the honours of war and was to be escorted
+to Fort Edward, but the guard provided by Montcalm was inadequate to
+protect them from his Indian allies and on the day following the
+surrender many were massacred or taken prisoners. The fort was razed to
+the ground. In 1758 General James Abercrombie proceeded by way of Lake
+George against Fort Ticonderoga, and in 1759 Baron Jeffrey Amherst,
+while on his way to co-operate with General James Wolfe against Quebec,
+built near the site of Fort William Henry one bastion of a fort since
+known as Fort George, the ruins of which still remain.
+
+A monument commemorative of the battle of Lake George was unveiled on
+the 8th of September 1903, on the site of the battle, and within the
+state reservation of 35 acres known as Fort George Battle Park. Horicon
+is a name that was given to the lake by James Fenimore Cooper. The
+Indian name of the lake was Andia-ta-roc-te.
+
+ See Francis Parkman, _Montcalm and Wolfe_ (Boston, 1884); and E.E.
+ Seelye, _Lake George in History_ (Lake George, 1897).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGE JUNIOR REPUBLIC, an American industrial institution, situated
+near the small village of Freeville, in Tompkins county, New York,
+U.S.A., 9 m. E.N.E. of Ithaca, at the junction of the Sayre-Auburn and
+the Elmira-Cortland branches of the Lehigh Valley railway. The George
+Junior Republic forms a miniature state whose economic, civic and social
+conditions, as nearly as possible, reproduce those of the United States,
+and whose citizenship is vested in young people, especially those who
+are neglected or wayward, who are thus taught self-reliance,
+self-control and morality. The founder, William Reuben George (b. 1866),
+was a native of West Dryden, a village near Freeville, who as a business
+man in New York City became interested in the Fresh Air Fund charity
+supervised by the New York _Tribune_, took charge of summer outings for
+city children (1890-1894), and, becoming convinced that such charities
+tended to promote pauperism and crime among the older of their proteges,
+devised first (1894) the plan of requiring payment by the children in
+labour for all they received during these summer jaunts, then (1895)
+self-government for a summer colony near Freeville, and finally a
+permanent colony, in which the children stay for several years. The
+Republic was founded on the 10th of July 1895; the only check on the
+powers of executive, representative and judicial branches of the
+government lies in the veto of the superintendent. "Nothing without
+labour" is the motto of the community, so strictly carried out that a
+girl or boy in the Republic who has not money[1] to pay for a night's
+lodging must sleep in jail and work the next day for the use of the
+cell. The legislative body, originally a House of Representatives and a
+Senate, in 1899 became more like the New England town meeting. The
+respect for the law that follows its enactment by the citizens
+themselves is remarkable in a class so largely of criminal tendencies;
+and it is particularly noticeable that positions on the police force are
+eagerly coveted. Fifteen is the age of majority; suffrage is universal,
+children under fifteen must be in charge of a citizen guardian. The
+average age of citizens was seventeen in 1908. The proportion of girls
+to boys was originally small, but gradually increased; in 1908 there
+were about 70 girls and 90 boys. The tendency is to admit only those
+aged at least sixteen and physically well equipped. In the Republic's
+earlier years the citizens lived in boarding-houses of different grades,
+but later in family groups in cottages (there were in 1910 twelve
+cottages) under the care of "house-mothers." The labour of the place is
+divided into sewing, laundry work, cooking and domestic service for the
+girls, and furniture making, carpentry, farm work, baking bread and
+wafers (the business of an Auburn biscuit factory was bought in 1903),
+plumbing and printing for the boys. Masonry and shoe and harness making
+were tried for a few years. There is an efficient preparatory and high
+school, from which students enter directly leading colleges. The
+religious influence is strong, wholesome and unsectarian; students in
+Auburn Theological Seminary have assisted in the religious work; Roman
+Catholic and Hebrew services are also held; and attendance at church
+services is compulsory only on convicts and prisoners.
+
+There are "Woman's Aid" societies in New York City, Ithaca, Syracuse,
+Buffalo, Boston and elsewhere, to promote the work of the Republic. A
+"republic" for younger boys, begun at Freeville, was established in
+Litchfield, Connecticut; and a National Junior Republic near Annapolis
+Junction, Maryland, and a Carter Junior Republic at Readington, near
+Easton, Pennsylvania, are modelled on the George Junior Republic. In
+1908-1910 new "states" were established at Chino, California, Grove
+City, Pennsylvania, and Flemington Junction, New Jersey. In February
+1908 the National Association of Junior Republics was formed with Mr
+George (its founder) as its director, its aims being to establish at
+least one "republic" in each state of the Union, and in other countries
+similar institutions for youth and miniature governments modelled on
+that of the country in which each "state" is established, and to
+establish colonies for younger children, to be sent at the age of
+fifteen to the Junior Republic. At the time of its formation the
+National Association included the "states" at Freeville, N.Y.,
+Litchfield, Conn., and Annapolis Junction, Md.; others joined the
+federation later.
+
+ See William R. George, _The Junior Republic: its History and Ideals_
+ (New York, 1910); _The Junior Republic Citizen_ (Freeville, 1895
+ sqq.), written and printed by "citizens"; _Nothing Without Labor,
+ George Junior Republic_ (7th ed., Freeville, 1909), a manual; J.R.
+ Commons, "The Junior Republic," in _The American Journal of Sociology_
+ (1898); D.F. Lincoln, "The George Junior Republic," in _The Coming
+ Age_ (1900); and Lyman Abbott, "A Republic within a Republic," in the
+ _Outlook_ for February 15, 1908.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] The "government" issued its own currency in tin and later in
+ aluminium, and "American" money could not be passed within the 48
+ acres of the Republic until 1906, when depreciation forced the
+ Republic's coinage out of use and "American" coin was made legal
+ tender.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, the capital of British Guiana (see GUIANA), and the seat of
+the colonial government, situated on the left bank of the Demerara river
+at its mouth, in 6 deg. 29' 24" N. and 58 deg. 11' 30" W. It was known
+during the Dutch occupation as Stabroek, and was established as the seat
+of government of the combined colonies of Essequibo and Demerara (now
+with Berbice forming the three counties of British Guiana) in 1784, its
+name being changed to Georgetown in 1812. It is one of the finest towns
+in this part of the world, the streets being wide and straight,
+intersecting each other at right angles, several having double roadways
+with lily-covered canals in the centre, the grass banks on either side
+carrying rows of handsome shade trees. In Main Street, the finest street
+in Georgetown, the canal has been filled in to form a broad walk, an
+obvious precedent for the treatment of the other canals, which (however
+beautiful) are useless and merely act as breeding grounds for
+mosquitoes. The principal residences, standing in their own gardens
+surrounded by foliage and flowers, are scattered over the town, as are
+also the slums, almost the worst of which abut on the best residential
+quarters. Water Street, the business centre, runs parallel to the river
+for about 2-1/2 m. and contains the stores of the wholesale and retail
+merchants, their wharves running out into the river to allow steamers to
+come alongside. Most of the houses and public buildings are constructed
+of wood, the former generally raised on brick pillars some 4 ft. to 10
+ft. from the ground, the bright colouring of the wooden walls, jalousies
+and roofs adding to the beauty of the best streets. The large structure
+known as the Public Buildings in the centre of the city, containing the
+offices of the executive government and the hall of the court of policy,
+was erected between 1829 and 1834. It is a handsome, E-shaped,
+brick-plastered building of considerable size, with deep porticos and
+marble-paved galleries carried on cast-iron columns. The law courts,
+built in the 'eighties, have a ground floor of concrete and iron, the
+upper storey being of hardwood. Among other public buildings are the
+town hall, the Anglican and Roman Catholic cathedrals, several handsome
+churches, the local banks and insurance offices, and the almshouse. The
+public hospital consists of several large blocks. The Royal
+Agricultural and Commercial Society has a large reading-room and
+lending library. The assembly rooms, above and owned by the Georgetown
+club, has a good stage and is admirably adapted to dramatic and musical
+entertainments. A museum (free), belonging to the Royal Agricultural and
+Commercial Society, is chiefly devoted to the fauna of British Guiana,
+but also contains an instructive collection of local economic,
+mineralogical and botanical exhibits, a miscellaneous collection of
+foreign birds and mammals, and an interesting series of views of the
+colony. The botanical gardens to the east of the city are of
+considerable extent and admirably laid out. The nurseries cover a large
+area and are devoted chiefly to the raising of plants of economic
+importance which can be purchased at nominal rates. The collections of
+ferns and orchids are very fine. In the gardens are also located the
+fields of the board of agriculture, where experimental work in the
+growth of sugar-cane, rice, cotton and all tropical plants of economic
+importance is carried on. Other popular resorts are the sea wall and the
+promenade gardens in the centre of the city.
+
+The local government of Georgetown is vested in a mayor and town council
+elected under a very restricted franchise. The city is divided into
+fourteen wards each with one representative. A councillor must possess,
+either personally or through his wife, premises within the city of the
+appraised value of at least $1500. A voter must either own house
+property of the appraised value of $250 or occupy premises of an annual
+rental of $240. There are indeed only 297 municipal voters in a
+population of nearly 50,000. The revenue, just over L50,000 annually, is
+mainly derived from a direct rate on house property. The colonial
+government pays rates on its property and also gives a grant-in-aid
+towards the upkeep of the streets. The expenditure is principally on
+sanitation, fire brigade, streets, water-supply, street lighting and
+drainage. Street lighting is carried out under contract by the Demerara
+Electric Company, which has a monopoly of private lighting and works an
+excellent tram service. Water for public and domestic purposes is taken
+from the conservancy of the east coast and is delivered by pumping
+throughout the city, but drinking-water is collected in tanks attached
+to the dwellings from the rain falling on the roofs. The fire brigade is
+a branch of the police force, half the cost being borne by the rates and
+half by the general revenue. There is an excellent service of
+telephones, a branch of the post office, and halfpenny postage within
+the city boundaries. There are in Georgetown two well-equipped
+foundries, a dry dock, and factories for the manufacture of rice,
+cigars, soap, boots, chocolate, candles, aerated waters and ice.
+Georgetown is connected by rail and ferry with New Amsterdam, by ferry
+and rail with the west coast of Demerara, and by steamer with all the
+country districts along the coast and up the navigable reaches of the
+principal rivers. (A. G. B.*)
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, formerly a city of the District of Columbia, U.S.A., and now
+part (sometimes called West Washington) of the city of Washington,
+U.S.A., at the confluence of the Potomac river and Rock Creek, and on
+the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal, about 2-1/2 m. W.N.W. of the National
+Capitol. Pop. (1890) 14,046; (1900) 14,549. The streets are
+old-fashioned, narrow and well shaded. On the "Heights" are many fine
+residences with beautiful gardens; the Monastery and Academy (for girls)
+of Visitation, founded in 1799 by Leonard Neale, second archbishop of
+Baltimore; and the college and the astronomical observatory (1842) of
+Georgetown University. The university was founded as a Roman Catholic
+Academy in 1789, was opened in 1791, transferred to the Society of Jesus
+in 1805, authorized in 1815 by Congress to confer college or university
+degrees, and by the Holy See in 1833 to confer degrees in philosophy and
+theology, incorporated as Georgetown College by Act of Congress in 1844,
+and began graduate work about 1856. The college library includes the
+historical collection of James Gilmary Shea. A school of medicine was
+opened in 1851, a dental school in 1901 and a school of law in 1870. In
+1909-1910 the university had an enrolment of 859 students. Rising in
+terraces from Rock Creek is Oak Hill Cemetery, a beautiful
+burying-ground containing the graves of John Howard Payne, the author
+of "Home, Sweet Home," Edwin McMasters Stanton and Joseph Henry. On the
+bank of the Potomac is a brick house which was for several years the
+home of Francis Scott Key, author of "The Star-Spangled Banner"; on
+Analostan Island in the river was a home of James Murray Mason;
+Georgetown Heights was the home of the popular novelist, Mrs Emma
+Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899). Before the advent of
+railways Georgetown had an important commerce by way of the Chesapeake
+and Ohio Canal, by which considerable coal as well as some grain is
+still brought hither, and of which Georgetown is now a terminus; the
+canal formerly crossed the Potomac at this point on an aqueduct bridge
+(1446 ft. long), but in 1887 the crossing was abandoned and the old
+bridge was purchased by the United States government, which in 1889
+constructed a new steel bridge upon the old masonry piers. Chief among
+the manufactories are several large flour mills--Georgetown flour was
+long noted for its excellence. There is a very large fish-market here.
+Georgetown was settled late in the 17th century, was laid out as a town
+in 1751, chartered as a city in 1789, merged in the District of Columbia
+in 1871, and annexed to the city of Washington in 1878. In the early
+days of Washington it was a social centre of some importance, where many
+members of Congress as well as some cabinet officers and representatives
+of foreign countries lived and the President gave state dinners; and
+here were the studio, for two years, of Gilbert Stuart, and "Kalorama,"
+the residence of Joel Barlow.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, a city and the county-seat of Scott county, Kentucky,
+U.S.A., about 11 miles N. of Lexington. Pop. (1900) 3823 (1677 negroes);
+(1910) 4533. Georgetown is served by the Cincinnati Southern (Queen &
+Crescent Route), the Frankfort & Cincinnati, and the Southern railways,
+and is connected with Lexington by an electric line. It is the seat of
+Georgetown College (Baptist, co-educational), chartered in 1829 as the
+successor of Rittenhouse Academy, which was founded in 1798. Georgetown
+is situated in the Blue Grass region of Kentucky, and the surrounding
+country is devoted to agriculture and stock-raising. One of the largest
+independent oil refineries in the country (that of the Indian Refining
+Co.) is in Georgetown, and among manufactures are bricks, flour, ice,
+bagging and hemp. The remarkable "Royal Spring," which rises near the
+centre of the city, furnishes about 200,000 gallons of water an hour for
+the city's water supply, and for power for the street railway and for
+various industries. The first settlement was made in 1775, and was named
+McClellan's, that name being changed to Lebanon a few years afterwards.
+In 1790 the place was incorporated as a town under its present name
+(adopted in honour of George Washington), and Georgetown was chartered
+as a city of the fourth class in 1894. Bacon College, which developed
+into Kentucky (now Transylvania) University (see Lexington, Ky.), was
+established here by the Disciples of Christ in 1836, but in 1839 was
+removed to Harrodsburg.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, a city, a port of entry and the county-seat of Georgetown
+county, South Carolina, U.S.A., at the head of Winyah Bay, and at the
+mouth of the Pedee river, about 15 m. from the Atlantic Ocean, and about
+55 m. N.E. of Charleston. Pop. (1890) 2895; (1900) 4138 (2718 negroes);
+(1910) 5530. Georgetown is served by the Georgetown & Western railway,
+has steamship communication with Charleston, Wilmington, New York City
+and other Atlantic ports, and, by the Pedee river and its tributaries
+(about 1000 m. of navigable streams), has trade connexions with a large
+area of South Carolina and part of North Carolina. The principal public
+buildings are the post office and custom house. Among the city's
+manufactures are lumber, foundry and machine-shop products, naval stores
+and oars; and there are shad and sturgeon fisheries. The growing of
+cotton and truck-gardening are important industries in the neighbouring
+region, and there is considerable trade in such products. The first
+settlement here was made about 1700; and the town was laid out a short
+time before 1734. The Winyah Indigo Society grew out of a social club
+organized about 1740, and was founded in 1757 by a group of planters
+interested in raising indigo; It long conducted a school (discontinued
+during the Civil War) which eventually became part of the city's public
+school system. In 1780 Georgetown was occupied by a body of Loyalist
+troops, with whom the American troops had several skirmishes, but on the
+10th of August 1781 General Francis Marion forced the evacuation of the
+town and took possession of it. A few days later, an American named
+Manson, who had joined the British forces, attacked the town from an
+armed vessel, and burned about forty houses, the small body of militia
+being unable to make an effective resistance. General Lafayette first
+landed on American soil at Georgetown on the 24th of April 1777.
+Georgetown was incorporated as a town in 1805, and was chartered as a
+city in 1895.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGETOWN, a city and the county-seat of Williamson county, Texas,
+U.S.A., on the San Gabriel river, about 25 m. N. by E. of Austin. Pop.
+(1890) 2447; (1900) 2790 (608 negroes); (1910) 3096. The city is served
+by the International & Great Northern, and the Missouri, Kansas & Texas
+railways. Georgetown is the seat of the Southwestern University
+(Methodist Episcopal, South, co-educational), formed in 1873 (chartered
+1875) by the combination of Ruterville College (Methodist Episcopal, at
+Ruterville, Texas, chartered in 1840, and closed in 1850), McKenzie
+College (at Clarksville, Texas, founded in 1841 and closed in 1872),
+Wesleyan College at San Augustine (chartered in 1844, burned a few years
+later, and not rebuilt), and Soule University at Chapel Hill (chartered
+in 1856, but closed in 1870). The university includes a fitting school
+at Georgetown, and a medical department at Dallas, Texas; in 1909 it had
+an enrolment of 1037 students. The principal manufactures of Georgetown
+are cotton and cotton-seed oil, and planing-mill products. In Page Park
+are mineral springs, whose waters have medicinal qualities similar to
+the famous Karlsbad waters. The first settlement was made here in 1848;
+and Georgetown was incorporated as a town in 1866, and was chartered as
+a city in 1890.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGIA, a southern state of the United States of America, one of the
+thirteen original states, situated between 30 deg. 31' 39" and 35 deg.
+N., and between 81 deg. and 85 deg. 53' 38" W. It is bounded N. by
+Tennessee and North Carolina, E. by South Carolina and the Atlantic
+Ocean, S. by Florida, and W. by Alabama. The total area of the state is
+59,265 sq. m., of which 540 sq. m. are water surface.
+
+ The surface of Georgia is divided into five physiographic zones. From
+ the sea coast, which is skirted by fertile, semi-tropical islands, a
+ plain of 35,000 sq. m., known as South Georgia, extends northward to
+ the "fall-line" passing from Augusta, through Milledgeville and Macon,
+ to Columbus. This is a part of the great Atlantic Coastal Plain. For
+ 20 m. from the coast its elevation is 10 ft., then it rises abruptly
+ 70 ft. higher, and 20 m. farther N. another elevation begins, which
+ reaches 575 ft. at Milledgeville, the average elevation of the entire
+ region being 250 ft. North of the line mentioned, and collectively
+ known as North Georgia, are the four other regions, each with
+ well-defined characteristics. The largest and southernmost, a broad
+ belt extending from the "fall-line" to a line passing through
+ Clarkesville, Habersham county, Cartersville, Bartow county and
+ Buchanan, Haralson county (approximately), is known as the Piedmont
+ Belt or Plateau, being a region of faint relief eroded on highly
+ complicated crystalline rocks. The Blue Ridge escarpment, a striking
+ topographic feature in Virginia and the Carolinas, extends into
+ Georgia along the north-eastern border of this belt, but is less
+ strongly developed here than elsewhere, dying out entirely towards the
+ south-west. North of the Piedmont Belt lie the Appalachian Mountains
+ Region and the Great Valley Region, the former to the east, the latter
+ to the west of a dividing line from Cartersville northward. The former
+ region consists of detached mountain masses of crystalline rocks, not
+ yet eroded down to the level of the Piedmont Belt. In Towns county, in
+ the Appalachian Region, is the highest point in the state, Brasstown
+ Bald, also called Enota Mountain (4768 ft.). The Great Valley Region
+ consists of folded sedimentary rocks, extensive erosion having removed
+ the soft layers to form valleys, leaving the hard layers as ridges,
+ both layers running in a N.E.-S.W. direction. In the extreme
+ north-west corner of the state is a small part of the Cumberland
+ Plateau, represented by Lookout and Sand Mts.
+
+ On the Blue Ridge escarpment near the N.E. corner of the state is a
+ water-parting separating the waters which find their way respectively
+ N.W. to the Tennessee river, S.W. to the Gulf of Mexico and S.E. to
+ the Atlantic Ocean; indeed, according to B.M. and M.R. Hall (_Water
+ Resources of Georgia_, p. 2), "there are three springs in north-east
+ Georgia within a stone's throw of each other that send out their
+ waters to Savannah, Ga., to Apalachicola, Fla., and to New Orleans,
+ La." The water-parting between the waters flowing into the Atlantic
+ and those flowing into the Gulf extends from this point first S.E. for
+ a few miles, then turns S.W. to Atlanta, and from there extends S.S.E.
+ to the Florida line. West of where the escarpment dies out, the Great
+ Valley Region and a considerable portion of the Appalachian Mountains
+ Region are drained by the Coosa, the Tallapoosa and their tributaries,
+ into Mobile Bay, but the Cumberland Plateau, like that part of the
+ Appalachian Mountains Region which lies directly N. of the Blue Ridge
+ escarpment, constitutes a part of the Tennessee Basin. The principal
+ rivers of the state are the Chattahoochee and the Flint, which unite
+ in the S.W. corner to form the Apalachicola; the Ocmulgee (whose
+ western tributary, the Towaliga, falls 96 ft. in less than a quarter
+ of a mile), and the Oconee, which unite in the S.E. to form the
+ Altamaha; and the Savannah, which forms the boundary between Georgia
+ and South Carolina. All of these rise in the upper part of the
+ Piedmont Plateau, through which they pursue a rapid course over rocky
+ beds, and are navigable only south of the "fall-line," at which and
+ north of which they furnish an abundance of water-power. The upper
+ Savannah river first flows S.W., then turns abruptly S.E., while the
+ Chattahoochee river rises near this point and continues S.W. This is
+ because the upper Savannah[1] was formerly part of the Chattahoochee,
+ but was captured and turned S.E. by headward growth of the Savannah.
+ As a result of the capture there is a deep gorge along the upper
+ Savannah, especially along the branch called the Tallulah river; and
+ the upper Tallulah, in a series of cascades, 2-2/3 m. long, falls 525
+ ft. from the former higher level down to the main bed of the upper
+ Savannah, at Tallulah Falls, a summer resort.
+
+ The fauna and flora have no distinctive features. (See UNITED STATES.)
+
+_Climate and Soils._--The climate of Georgia, though temperate, differs
+considerably in different parts of the state. All the nine climate belts
+in the United States, except that of southern Florida, are represented
+within its borders. The lowest mean annual temperature, 40 deg. F. and
+below, is that of some of the mountain tops of northern Georgia; from
+the mountain-sides to the Piedmont Plateau this mean temperature varies
+from 45 deg. to 60 deg.; on the Piedmont Plateau from 60 deg. to 65
+deg.; and on the Coastal Plain from 60 deg. to 70 deg. The July isotherm
+of 80 deg. crosses the state a little N. of Augusta and Macon, touching
+the W. boundary at West Point, Troup county. The mean July temperature
+for the whole state is 81.8 deg.; for the part S. of the 80 deg.
+isotherm the average temperature for July is between 80 deg. and 85 deg.
+The average rainfall for the state is 49.3 in.; the maximum is 71.7 in.,
+at Rabun Gap in the extreme N.E. part of the state; the minimum is 39.4
+at Swainsboro, Emanuel county, a little S.E. of the centre of the state.
+
+Georgia is also notable for the variety of its soils. In the Cumberland
+Plateau and Great Valley Regions are a red or brown loam, rich in
+decomposed limestone and calcareous shales, and sandy or gravelly loams.
+In the Piedmont Plateau and Appalachian Mountains Regions the surface
+soil is generally sandy, but in considerable areas the subsoil is a red
+clay derived largely from the decomposition of hornblende. By far the
+greatest variety of soils is found in the Coastal Plain Region. Here the
+Central Cotton Belt, extending from the "fall-line" as far S. as a line
+bisecting Early county in the W. and passing through Baker, Worth,
+Dooly, Dodge, Laurens, Johnson, Jefferson and Burke counties, has three
+distinct kinds of soil; a sand, forming what is known as the sand-hill
+region; red clay derived from silicious rock in the red hills; and grey,
+sandy soils with a subsoil of yellow loam. South of the Cotton Belt is
+the Lime Sink Region, which includes Miller, Baker, Mitchell, Colquitt
+and Worth counties, the northern portions of Decatur, Grady, Thomas,
+Brooks and Lowndes, the eastern parts of Dooly and Lee, and the eastern
+portions of Berrien, Irwin, Wilcox, Dodge, and some parts of Burke,
+Screven and Bulloch. The soft limestone underlying this region is
+covered, in the uplands, with grey, sandy soils, which have a subsoil of
+loam; in the lowlands the surface soils are loams, the subsoils clays.
+Adjoining this region are the pine barrens, which extend S. to a line
+passing through the northern portions of Pierce, Wayne, Liberty, Bryan
+and Effingham counties. Here the prevailing soils are grey and sandy
+with a subsoil of loam, but they are less fertile than those of the Lime
+Sink or Cotton Belts. The coast counties of the S.E. and generally those
+on the Florida frontier are not suitable for cultivation, on account of
+the numerous marshes and swamps, Okefinokee Swamp being 45 m. long and
+approximately 30 m. wide; but the southern portions of Decatur, Grady,
+Thomas and Brooks counties are sufficiently elevated for agriculture,
+and the islands off the coast are exceedingly productive.
+
+ _Minerals._--The mineral resources of Georgia are as varied as its
+ climate and soils, a total of thirty-nine different mineral products
+ being found within its borders. The most important is stone: in 1905
+ the value of the granite quarried in the state was $971,207 (Georgia
+ ranking fifth in the United States), of the marble $774,550 (Georgia
+ ranking third in the United States, Vermont and New York being first
+ and second); in 1908 the granite was valued at $970,832 (Georgia
+ ranking fifth in the United States), and the marble at $916,281
+ (Georgia ranking second in the United States, Vermont being first).
+ Generally more than one-fourth of the granite is used for paving;
+ curb, building and monument stone are next in importance in the order
+ named. Stone Mountain (1686 ft.) in De Kalb county near Atlanta is a
+ remarkable mass of light-coloured muscovite granite, having a
+ circumference at its base of 7 m. Stone Mountain granite was first
+ quarried about 1850; it is extensively used as building material in
+ Georgia and other southern states. A laminated granite, otherwise like
+ the Stone Mountain granite, is found in De Kalb, Rockdale and Gwinnett
+ counties, and is used for curbing and building. Biotite granites,
+ which take a good polish and are used for monuments and for
+ decoration, are quarried in Oglethorpe and Elbert counties. Georgia
+ marble was first quarried on a large scale in Pickens county in 1884;
+ the pure white marble of this county had been worked for tombstones
+ near Tate, the centre of the marble belt, in 1840; after its
+ commercial exploitation it was used in the capitol buildings of
+ Georgia, Rhode Island, Mississippi and Minnesota, in the Corcoran Art
+ Gallery, Washington, D.C., and in St Luke's Hospital, New York City.
+ It is sometimes used for the entire building, and sometimes only for
+ decoration. Other colours than the snowy white are found in the main
+ marble belt of the state, which runs from Canton, Cherokee county, 60
+ m. generally N. to the northern boundary of the state. Other deposits,
+ less well known, are the dark brown and light grey marbles of
+ Whitfield county, which resemble the stone quarried in eastern
+ Tennessee. Limestone and slate are quarried at Rock Mart, Polk county,
+ and there are cement quarries at Cement, near Kingston, Bartow county.
+ Iron deposits occur in Bartow, Polk and Floyd counties, where are the
+ more important brown ores, and (red ores) in Walker and Chattooga
+ counties. The quantity of iron ore mined in Georgia declined from 1890
+ to 1900; it was 200,842 long tons in 1905 and 321,060 long tons in
+ 1908, when 319,812 tons were brown haematite and 1248 tons were red
+ haematite. Before the discovery of gold in California the Georgia
+ "placers" were very profitable, the earliest mining being in 1829 by
+ placer miners from the fields of Burke county, North Carolina, who
+ began work in what is now White county, and went thence to Habersham
+ and Lumpkin counties. Dahlonega and Auraria, the latter named by John
+ C. Calhoun, who owned a mine there, were the centres of this early
+ gold mining. Work was summarily stopped by Federal troops enforcing
+ the governor's proclamation in 1831, because of the disorder in the
+ mining region; but it was soon renewed and a mint was established at
+ Dahlonega in 1838. After the discovery of gold in California, mining
+ in Georgia was not renewed on anything but the smallest scale until
+ the early 'eighties. In 1908 the gold product was valued at $56,207
+ (it was $96,910 in 1905) and the silver product at $106. Up to 1909
+ the gold product of Georgia (see State Geol. Survey _Bulletin 19_) was
+ about $17,500,000. Extensive clay deposits occur in all parts of the
+ state, and are remarkable for their comparative freedom from
+ impurities and for their high fusion point; the most valuable are
+ sedimentary, and form a belt several miles wide across the middle of
+ the state from Augusta to Columbus. In 1908 the clay products of the
+ state were valued at $1,928,611. More asbestos has been found in
+ Georgia than in any other state of the Union; it occurs in the
+ amphibole form throughout the N. part of the state, and most of the
+ country's domestic supply comes from the Sall Mountain mine in White
+ county. Manganese ores, found in Bartow, Polk and Floyd counties, were
+ formerly important; in 1896 4096 long tons were mined, in 1905 only
+ 150 tons, and in 1908 none. Bauxite was found in Georgia first of the
+ United States, near Rome, in 1887; the output, principally from Floyd,
+ Bartow and Polk counties, was the entire product of the United States
+ until 1891, and in 1902 was more than half the country's product, but
+ in 1908, even when combined with the Alabama output, was less than the
+ amount mined in Arkansas. Coal is not extensively found, but the mine
+ on Sand Mountain, in Walker county, was one of the first opened S. of
+ the Ohio river; in 1908 the value of the coal mined in the state was
+ $364,279 (264,822 short tons), the value of coke at the ovens was
+ $137,524 (39,422 short tons), and the value of ammonium sulphate, coal
+ tar, illuminating gas and gas coke was more than $800,000. Copper was
+ mined in Fannin and Cherokee counties before the Civil War. In 1906
+ the copper mined was valued at $5057. Corundum was discovered on
+ Laurel Creek in Rabun county in 1871, and was worked there and at
+ Trackrock, Union county, especially between 1880 and 1893, but in
+ later years low prices closed most of the mines. The limestone
+ formations furnished most of the lime for domestic use. Sandstone,
+ ochre, slate, soapstone, graphite are also mined, and lead, zinc,
+ barytes, gypsum and even diamonds have been discovered but not
+ exploited.
+
+_Agriculture._--The principal occupation in Georgia is agriculture,
+which in 1900 engaged seven-tenths of the land surface of the state and
+the labour of three-fifths of the population, ten years old and over,
+who are employed in profitable occupations. The products are so
+diversified that, with the exception of some tropical fruits of
+California and Florida, almost everything cultivated in the United
+States can be produced. The chief staple is cotton, of which a valuable
+hybrid called the Floradora, a cross of long and short staple, has been
+singularly successful. Cotton is raised in all counties of the state
+except Rabun, Towns and Fannin in the extreme north, and about one-third
+of the total cultivated land of the state was devoted to it in
+1900-1907. In 1899-1904 the crop exceeded that of the other
+cotton-producing states except Texas, and in 1899, 1900 and 1903
+Mississippi, averaging 1,467,121 commercial bales per annum; the crop in
+1904 was 1,991,719 bales, and in 1907-1908 the crop was 1,815,834 bales,
+second only to the crop of Texas. The cause of this extensive
+cultivation of cotton is not a high average yield per acre, but the fact
+that before 1860 "Cotton was King," and that the market value of the
+staple when the Civil War closed was so high that farmers began to
+cultivate it to the exclusion of the cereals, whose production, Indian
+corn excepted, showed a decline during each decade from 1879 to 1899.
+But in the 'nineties the price of the cotton fell below the cost of
+production, owing to the enormous supply, and this was accompanied by
+economic depression. These conditions have caused some diversification
+of crops, and successful experiments in cattle-raising, movements
+encouraged by the Department of Agriculture and the leading newspapers.
+
+The principal cereals cultivated are Indian corn (product, 53,750,000
+bushels in 1908) and wheat; the cultivation of the latter, formerly
+remunerative, declined on account of the competition of the Western
+States, but revived after 1899, largely owing to the efforts of the
+Georgia Wheat Growers' Association (organized in 1897), and in 1908 the
+yield was 2,208,000 bushels. The sugar-cane crop declined in value after
+1890, and each year more of it was made into syrup. In 1908 the tobacco
+crop was 2,705,625 lb., and the average farm price was 35 cents, being
+nearly as high as that of the Florida crop; Sumatra leaf for wrappers is
+grown successfully. The acreage and product of tobacco and peanuts
+increased from 1890 to 1900 respectively 188% and 319.2%, and 92.6% and
+129.9%, and in the production of sweet potatoes Georgia was in 1899
+surpassed only by North Carolina. Alfalfa and grasses grow well. Truck
+farming and the cultivation of orchard and small fruits have long been
+remunerative occupations; the acreage devoted to peaches doubled between
+1890 and 1900. Pecan nuts are an increasingly important crop.
+
+ Agriculture in Georgia was in a state of transition at the beginning
+ of the 20th century. Owing to the abundance of land and to negro
+ slavery, exploitative methods of cultivation were employed before the
+ Civil War, and such methods, by which lands after being worked to
+ exhaustion are deserted for new fields, had not yet been altogether
+ abandoned. One reason for this was that, according to the census of
+ 1900, 36.9% of the farms were operated by negroes, of whom 86% were
+ tenants who desired to secure the greatest possible product without
+ regard to the care of the soil. Consequently there were large tracts
+ of untilled "waste" land; but these rapidly responded to fertilization
+ and rotation of crops, often yielding 800 to 1200 lb. of cotton per
+ acre, and Georgia in 1899 used more fertilizers than any other state
+ in the Union. Another feature of agriculture in Georgia was the great
+ increase in the number of farms, the average size of plantations
+ having declined from 440 acres in 1860 to 117.5 in 1900, or almost
+ 75%, while the area in cultivation increased only 15.6% between 1850
+ and 1900. The tenantry system was also undergoing a change--the share
+ system which developed in the years succeeding the Civil War being
+ replaced by a system of cash rental.
+
+[Illustration: Georgia.]
+
+_Manufactures._--Although excelled by Alabama in the manufacture of
+mineral products, and by North Carolina and South Carolina in the number
+and output of cotton mills, in 1900 and in 1905 Georgia surpassed each
+of those states in the total value of factory products, which was,
+however, less than the value of the factory products of Louisiana and
+Virginia among the southern states. The chief features of this
+industrial activity are its early beginning and steady, constant
+development. As far back as 1850 there were 1522 manufacturing
+establishments (35 of which were cotton mills) in the state, whose total
+product was valued at $7,082,075. Despite the Civil War, there was some
+advance during each succeeding decade, the most prosperous relatively
+being that from 1880 to 1890. In 1900 the number of establishments was
+7504, an increase of 75.1% over the number in 1890; the capital invested
+was $89,789,656, an increase of 57.7%, and the value of products
+($106,654,527) was 54.8% more than in 1890. Of the 7504 establishments
+in 1900, 3015 were conducted under the "factory system," and had a
+capital of $79,303,316 and products valued at $94,532,368. In 1905 there
+were 3219 factories, with a capital of $135,211,551 (an increase of
+70.5% over 1900), and a gross product valued at $151,040,455 (59.8%
+greater than the value of the factory product in 1900).
+
+ The most important manufacturing industries are those that depend upon
+ cotton for raw material, with a gross product in 1900 valued at
+ $26,521,757. In that year[2] there were 67 mills engaged in the
+ manufacture of cotton goods, with a capital of $24,158,159, and they
+ yielded a gross product valued at $18,457,645; the increase between
+ 1900 and 1905 was actually much larger (and proportionately very much
+ larger) than between 1890 and 1900; the number of factories in 1905
+ was 103 (an increase of 53.7% over 1900); their capital was
+ $42,349,618 (75.3% more than in 1900); and their gross product was
+ valued at $35,174,248 (an increase of 90.6% since 1900). The rank of
+ Georgia among the cotton manufacturing states was seventh in 1900 and
+ fourth in 1905. Cotton-seed oil and cake factories increased in number
+ from 17 to 43 from 1890 to 1900, and to 112 in 1905, and the value of
+ their product increased from $1,670,196 to $8,064,112, or 382.8% in
+ 1890-1900, and to $13,539,899 in 1905, or an increase of 67.9% over
+ 1900, and in 1900 and in 1905 the state ranked second (to Texas) in
+ this industry in the United States. This growth in cotton manufactures
+ is due to various causes, among them being the proximity of raw
+ material, convenient water-power, municipal exemption from taxation
+ and the cheapness of labour. The relation between employer and
+ employee is in the main far more personal and kindly than in the mills
+ of the Northern States.
+
+ The forests of Georgia, next to the fields, furnish the largest amount
+ of raw material for manufactures. The yellow pines of the southern
+ part of the state, which have a stand of approximately 13,778,000 ft.,
+ yielded in 1900 rosin and turpentine valued at $8,110,468 (more than
+ the product of any other state in the Union) and in 1905 valued at
+ $7,705,643 (second only to the product of Florida). From the same
+ source was derived most of the lumber product valued[3] in 1900 at
+ $13,341,160 (more than double what it was in 1890) and in 1905 at
+ $16,716,594. The other important woods are cypress, oak and poplar.
+
+ Fourth in value in 1905 (first, cotton goods; second, lumber and
+ timber; third, cotton-seed oil and cake) were fertilizers, the value
+ of which increased from $3,367,353 in 1900 to $9,461,415 in 1905, when
+ the state ranked first of the United States in this industry; in 1900
+ it had ranked sixth.
+
+ _Communications._--Means of transportation for these products are
+ furnished by the rivers, which are generally navigable as far north as
+ the "fall line" passing through Augusta, Milledgeville, Macon and
+ Columbus; by ocean steamship lines which have piers at St Mary's,
+ Brunswick, Darien and Savannah; and by railways whose mileage in
+ January 1909 was 6,871.8 m. The most important of the railways are the
+ Central of Georgia, the Southern, the Atlantic Coast Line, the
+ Seaboard Air Line, the Georgia and the Georgia Southern & Florida. In
+ 1878 a state railway commission was established which has mandatory
+ power for the settlement of all traffic problems and makes annual
+ reports.
+
+_Population._--The population of Georgia in 1880 was 1,542,180; in 1890
+1,837,353, an increase of 19.1%; in 1900 2,216,331, a further increase
+of 20.6%[4]; in 1910, 2,609,121. Of the 1900 population, 53.3% were
+whites and 46.7% were negroes,[5] the centre of the black population
+being a little south of the "fall line." Here the negroes increased,
+from 1890 to 1900, faster than the whites in eighteen counties, but in
+northern Georgia, where the whites are in the majority, the negro
+population declined in twelve counties. Also the percentage of negro
+illiteracy is higher in northern Georgia than in other parts of the
+state, the percentage of negro male illiterates of voting age being
+38.3% in Atlanta in 1900, and in Savannah only 30.7%. The population of
+Georgia has a very slight foreign-born element (.6% in 1900) and a small
+percentage (1.7% in 1900) of people of foreign parentage. The urban
+population (i.e. the population in places of 2500 inhabitants and over)
+was 15.6% of the total in 1900, and the number of incorporated cities,
+towns and villages was 372. Of these only forty had a population
+exceeding 2000, and thirteen exceeding 5000. The largest city in 1900
+was Atlanta, the capital since 1868 (Louisville, Jefferson county, was
+the capital in 1795-1804, and Milledgeville in 1804-1868), with 89,872
+inhabitants. Savannah ranked second with 54,244, and Augusta third with
+39,441. In 1900 the other cities in the state with a population of more
+than 5000 were: Macon (23,272), Columbus (17,614), Athens (10,245),
+Brunswick (9081), Americus (7674), Rome (7291), Griffin (6857), Waycross
+(5919), Valdosta (5613), and Thomasville (5322).
+
+The total membership of the churches in 1906 was about 1,029,037, of
+whom 596,319 were Baptists, 349,079 were Methodists, 24,040 were
+Presbyterians, 19,273 were Roman Catholics, 12,703 were Disciples of
+Christ, 9790 were Protestant Episcopalians, and 5581 were
+Congregationalists.
+
+_Government._--The present constitution, which was adopted in 1877,[6]
+provides for a system of government similar in general to that of the
+other states (see UNITED STATES). The executive officials are elected
+for a term of two years, and the judges of the Supreme Court and of the
+court of appeals for six years, while those of the superior court and of
+the ordinaries and the justices of the peace are chosen every four
+years. Before 1909 all male citizens of the United States at least
+twenty-one years of age (except those mentioned below), who had lived in
+the state for one year immediately preceding an election and in the
+county six months, and had paid their taxes, were entitled to vote. From
+the suffrage and the holding of office are excluded idiots and insane
+persons and all those who have been convicted of treason, embezzlement,
+malfeasance in office, bribery or larceny, or any crime involving moral
+turpitude and punishable under the laws of the state by imprisonment in
+the penitentiary--this last disqualification, however, is removable by a
+pardon for the offence. Before 1909 there was no constitutional
+discrimination aimed against the exercise of the suffrage by the negro,
+but in fact the negro vote had in various ways been greatly reduced. By
+a constitutional amendment adopted by a large majority at a special
+election in October 1908, new requirements for suffrage, designed
+primarily to exclude negroes, especially illiterate negroes, were
+imposed (supplementary to the requirements mentioned above concerning
+age, residence and the payment of taxes), the amendment coming into
+effect on the 1st of January 1909: in brief this amendment requires that
+the voter shall have served in land or naval forces of the United States
+or of the Confederate States or of the state of Georgia in time of war,
+or be lawfully descended from some one who did so serve; or that he be a
+person of good character who proves to the satisfaction of the
+registrars of elections that he understands the duties and obligations
+of a citizen; or that he read correctly in English and (unless
+physically disabled) write any paragraph of the Federal or state
+constitution; or that he own 40 acres of land or property valued at $500
+and assessed for taxation. After the 1st of January 1915 no one may
+qualify as a voter under the first or second of these clauses (the
+"grandfather" and "understanding" clauses); but those who shall have
+registered under their requirements before the 1st of January 1915 thus
+become voters for life.
+
+The governor, who receives a salary of $5000, must be at least thirty
+years old, must at the time of his election have been a citizen of the
+United States for fifteen years and of the state for six years, and
+"shall not be eligible to re-election after the expiration of a second
+term, for the period of four years." In case of his "death, removal or
+disability," the duties of his office devolve in the first instance upon
+the president of the Senate, and in the second upon the speaker of the
+House of Representatives. The governor's power of veto extends to
+separate items in appropriation bills, but in every case his veto may be
+overridden by a two-thirds vote of the legislature. An amendment to the
+constitution may be proposed by a two-thirds vote of the legislature,
+and comes into effect on receiving a majority of the popular vote.
+Members of the Senate must be at least twenty-five years old, must be
+citizens of the United States, and must, at the time of their election,
+have been citizens of the state for four years, and of the senatorial
+district for one year; representatives must be at least twenty-one years
+old, and must, at the time of their election, have been citizens of the
+state for two years. By law, in Georgia, lobbying is a felony.
+
+Habitual intoxication, wilful desertion for three years, cruel
+treatment, and conviction for an offence the commission of which
+involved moral turpitude and for which the offender has been sentenced
+to imprisonment for at least two years, are recognized as causes for
+divorce. All petitions for divorce must be approved by two successive
+juries, and a woman holds in her own name all property acquired before
+and after marriage. Marriage between the members of the white and negro
+races is prohibited by law.
+
+As the result of the general campaign against child labour, an act was
+passed in 1906 providing that no child under 10 shall be employed or
+allowed to labour in or about any factory, under any circumstances;
+after the 1st of January 1907 no child under 12 shall be so employed,
+unless an orphan with no other means of support, or unless a widowed
+mother or disabled or aged father is dependent on the child's labour, in
+which case a certificate to the facts, holding good for one year only,
+is required; after the 1st of January 1908 no child under 14 shall be
+employed in a factory between the hours of 7 P.M. and 6 A.M.; after the
+same date no child under 14 shall be employed in any factory without a
+certificate of school attendance for 12 weeks (of which 6 weeks must be
+consecutive) of the preceding year; no child shall be employed without
+the filing of an affidavit as to age. Making a false affidavit as to age
+or as to other facts required by the act, and the violation of the act
+by any agent or representative of a factory or by any parent or guardian
+of a child are misdemeanours.
+
+In 1907 a state law was passed prohibiting after the 1st of January 1908
+the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors; nine-tenths of the
+counties of the state, under local option laws, were already "dry" at
+the passage of this bill. The law permits druggists to keep for sale no
+other form of alcoholic drink than pure alcohol; physicians prescribing
+alcohol must fill out a blank, specifying the patient's ailment, and
+certifying that alcohol is necessary; the prescription must be filled
+the day it is dated, must be served directly to the physician or to the
+patient, must not call for more than a pint, and may not be refilled.[7]
+
+The state supports four benevolent institutions: a lunatic asylum for
+the whites and a similar institution for the negroes, both at
+Milledgeville, an institute for the deaf and dumb at Cave Spring, and an
+academy for the blind at Macon. There are also a number of private
+charitable institutions, the oldest being the Bethesda orphan asylum,
+near Savannah, founded by George Whitefield in 1739. The Methodist,
+Baptist, Roman Catholic and Protestant Episcopal Churches, and the
+Hebrews of the state also support homes for orphans. A penitentiary was
+established in 1817 at Milledgeville. In 1866 the lease system was
+introduced, by which the convicts were leased for a term of years to
+private individuals. In 1897 this was supplanted by the contract system,
+by which a prison commission accepted contracts for convict labour, but
+the prisoners were cared for by state officials. But the contract system
+for convicts and the peonage system (under which immigrants were held in
+practical slavery while they "worked out" advances made for
+passage-money, &c.) were still sources of much injustice. State laws
+made liable to prosecution for misdemeanour any contract labourer who,
+having received advances, failed for any but good cause to fulfil the
+contract; or any contract labourer who made a second contract without
+giving notice to his second employer of a prior and unfulfilled
+contract; or any employer of a labourer who had not completed the term
+of a prior contract. In September 1908, after an investigation which
+showed that many wardens had been in the pay of convict lessees and that
+terrible cruelty had been practised in convict camps, an extra session
+of the legislature practically put an end to the convict lease or
+contract system; the act then passed provided that after the 31st of
+March 1909, the date of expiration of leases in force, no convicts may
+be leased for more than twelve months and none may be leased at all
+unless there are enough convicts to supply all demands for convict
+labour on roads made by counties, each county to receive its _pro rata_
+share on a population basis, and to satisfy all demands made by
+municipalities which thus secure labour for $100 per annum (per man)
+paid into the state treasury, and all demands made by the state prison
+farm and factory established by this law.
+
+_Education._--Georgia's system of public instruction was not instituted
+until 1870, but as early as 1817 the legislature provided a fund for the
+education in the private schools of the state of children of indigent
+parents. The constitution of 1868 authorized "a thorough system of
+general education, to be for ever free to all children of the State,"
+and in 1870 the first public school law was enacted. Education, however,
+has never been made compulsory. The constitution, as amended in 1905,
+provides that elections on the question of local school taxes for
+counties or for school districts may be called upon a petition signed by
+one-fourth of the qualified voters of the county, or district, in
+question; under this provision several counties and a large number of
+school districts are supplementing the general fund. But the principal
+source of the annual school revenue is a state tax; the fund derived
+from this tax, however, is not large enough. In 1908 the common school
+fund approximated $3,786,830, of which amount the state paid $2,163,200
+and about $1,010,680 was raised by local taxation. In 1908 69% of the
+school population (79% of whites; 58% of negroes) were enrolled in the
+schools; in 1902 it was estimated that the negroes, 52.3% of whom (10
+years of age and over) were illiterates (i.e. could not write or could
+neither read nor write) in 1900 (81.6% of them were illiterate in 1880),
+received the benefit of only about a fifth of the school fund. Of the
+total population, 10 years of age and over, 30.5% were illiterates in
+1900--49.9% were illiterates in 1880--and as regards the whites of
+native birth alone, Georgia ranked ninth in illiteracy, in 1900, among
+the states and territories of the Union. Of the illiterates about
+four-fifths were negroes in 1900. In addition to the public schools, the
+state also supports the University of Georgia; and in 1906 $235,000 was
+expended for the support of higher education. In 1906-1907 eleven
+agricultural and mechanical arts colleges were established, one in each
+congressional district of the state. Of the colleges of the university,
+Franklin was the first state college chartered in America (1785); the
+Medical College of Georgia, at Augusta, was opened in 1829; the State
+College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts was established at Athens in
+1872; the North Georgia Agricultural College, at Dahlonega, was opened
+in 1873; the Georgia School of Technology, at Atlanta, in 1888; the
+Georgia Normal and Industrial College (for women), in Milledgeville, in
+1899; the Georgia State Normal School, at Athens, in 1895; the Georgia
+State Industrial College for Coloured Youth, near Savannah, in 1890; the
+School of Pharmacy, at Athens, in 1903; and the School of Forestry, and
+the Georgia State College of Agriculture, at Athens, in 1906. Affiliated
+with the university, but not receiving state funds, are three
+preparatory schools, the South Georgia Military and Agricultural College
+at Thomasville, the Middle Georgia Military and Agricultural College at
+Milledgeville, and the West Georgia Agricultural and Mechanical College
+at Hamilton. Among the institutions generally grouped as denominational
+are--Baptist: Mercer University, at Macon (Penfield, 1837; Macon, 1871),
+Shorter College (1877) at Rome, Spelman Seminary (1881) in Atlanta for
+negro women and girls, and Bessie Tift College, formerly Monroe College
+(1849) for women, at Forsyth; Methodist Episcopal: Emory College (1836),
+at Oxford, and Wesleyan Female College (1836) at Macon, both largely
+endowed by George Ingraham Seney (1837-1893), and the latter one of the
+earliest colleges for women in the country; Methodist Episcopal Church,
+South: Young Harris College (1855) at Young Harris, Andrew Female
+College (1854) at Cuthbert, and Dalton Female College (1872) at Dalton;
+Presbyterian: Agnes Scott College at Decatur; and African Methodist
+Episcopal: Morris Brown College (1885) at Atlanta. A famous school for
+negroes is the non-sectarian Atlanta University (incorporated in 1867,
+opened in 1869), which has trained many negroes for teaching and other
+professions. Non-sectarian colleges for women are: Lucy Cobb Institute
+(1858) at Athens, Cox College (1843) at College Park, near Atlanta, and
+Brenau College Conservatory (1878) at Gainesville.
+
+ _Finance._--The assessed value of taxable property in 1910 was about
+ $735,000,000. A general property tax, which furnishes about
+ four-fifths of the public revenue, worked so inequitably that a Board
+ of Equalization was appointed in 1901. By the Constitution the tax
+ rate is limited to $5 on the thousand, and, as the rate of taxation
+ has increased faster than the taxable property, the state has been
+ forced to contract several temporary loans since 1901, none of which
+ has exceeded $200,000, the limit for each year set by the
+ Constitution. On the 1st of January 1910 the bonded debt was
+ $6,944,000, mainly incurred by the extravagance of the Reconstruction
+ administration (see _History_, below). Each year $100,000 of this debt
+ is paid off, and there are annual appropriations for the payment of
+ interest (about $303,260 in 1910). The state owns the Western &
+ Atlantic railway (137 m. long) from Chattanooga, Tennessee, to
+ Atlanta, which has valuable terminal facilities in both cities, and
+ which in 1910 was estimated to be worth $8,400,240 (more than the
+ amount of the bonded debt); this railway the state built in 1841-1850,
+ and in 1890 leased for 29 years, at an annual rental of $420,012, to
+ the Nashville, Chattanooga & St Louis railway.
+
+ Banking in Georgia is in a prosperous condition. The largest class of
+ depositors are the farmers, who more and more look to the banks for
+ credit, instead of to the merchants and cotton speculators. Hence the
+ number of banks in agricultural districts is increasing. The state
+ treasurer is the bank examiner, and to him all banks must make a
+ quarterly statement and submit their books for examination twice a
+ year. The legal rate of interest is 7%, but by contract it may be 8%.
+
+_History._--Georgia derives its name from King George II. of Great
+Britain. It was the last to be established of the English colonies in
+America. Its formation was due to a desire of the British government to
+protect South Carolina from invasion by the Spaniards from Florida and
+by the French from Louisiana, as well as to the desire of James Edward
+Oglethorpe (q.v.) to found a refuge for the persecuted Protestant sects
+and the unfortunate but worthy indigent classes of Europe. A charter was
+granted in 1732 to "the Trustees for establishing the colony of Georgia
+in America," and parliament gave L10,000 to the enterprise. The first
+settlement was made at Savannah in 1733 under the personal supervision
+of Oglethorpe. The early colonists were German Lutherans (Salzburgers),
+Piedmontese, Scottish Highlanders, Swiss, Portuguese Jews and
+Englishmen; but the main tide of immigration, from Virginia and the
+Carolinas, did not set in until 1752. As a bulwark against the Spanish,
+the colony was successful, but as an economic experiment it was a
+failure. The trustees desired that there should be grown in the colony
+wine grapes, hemp, silk and medical plants (barilla, kali, cubeb, caper,
+madder, &c.) for which England was dependent upon foreign countries;
+they required the settlers to plant mulberry trees, and forbade the sale
+of rum, the chief commercial staple of the colonies. They also forbade
+the introduction of negro slaves. Land was leased by military tenure,
+and until 1739 grants were made only in male tail and alienations were
+forbidden. The industries planned for the colony did not thrive, and as
+sufficient labour could not be obtained, the importation of slaves was
+permitted under certain conditions in 1749. About the same time the
+House of Commons directed the trustees to remove the prohibition on the
+sale of rum. In 1753 the charter of the trustees expired and Georgia
+became a royal province.
+
+Under the new regime the colony was so prosperous that Sir James Wright
+(1716-1785), the last of the royal governors, declared Georgia to be
+"the most flourishing colony on the continent." The people were led to
+revolt against the mother country through sympathy with the other
+colonies rather than through any grievance of their own. The centre of
+revolutionary ideas was St John's Parish, settled by New Englanders
+(chiefly from Dorchester, Massachusetts). The Loyalist sentiment was so
+strong that only five of the twelve parishes sent representatives to the
+First Provincial Congress, which met on the 18th of January 1775, and
+its delegates to the Continental Congress therefore did not claim seats
+in that assembly. But six months later all the parishes sent
+representatives to another Provincial Congress which met on the 4th of
+July 1775. Soon afterward the royal government collapsed and the
+administration of the colony was assumed by a council of safety.
+
+The war that followed was really a severe civil conflict, the Loyalist
+and Revolutionary parties being almost equal in numbers. In 1778 the
+British seized Savannah, which they held until 1782, meanwhile reviving
+the British civil administration, and in 1779 they captured Augusta and
+Sunbury; but after 1780 the Revolutionary forces were generally
+successful. Civil affairs also fell into confusion. In 1777 a state
+constitution was adopted, but two factions soon appeared in the
+government, led by the governor and the executive council respectively,
+and harmony was not secured until 1781.
+
+Georgia's policy in the formation of the United States government was
+strongly national. In the constitutional convention of 1787 its
+delegates almost invariably gave their support to measures designed to
+strengthen the central government. Georgia was the fourth state to
+ratify (January 2, 1788), and one of the three that ratified
+unanimously, the Federal Constitution. But a series of conflicts between
+the Federal government and the state government caused a decline of this
+national sentiment and the growth of States Rights theories.
+
+First of these was the friction involved in the case, before the Supreme
+Court of the United States, of _Chisolm_ v. _Georgia_, by which the
+plaintiff, one Alexander Chisolm, a citizen of South Carolina, secured
+judgment in 1793 against the state of Georgia (see 2 Dallas Reports
+419). In protest, the Georgia House of Representatives, holding that the
+United States Supreme Court had no constitutional power to try suits
+against a sovereign state, resolved that any Federal marshal who should
+attempt to execute the court's decision would be "guilty of felony, and
+shall suffer death, without benefit of clergy, by being hanged." No
+effort was made to execute the decision, and in 1798 the Eleventh
+Amendment to the Federal Constitution was adopted, taking from Federal
+courts all jurisdiction over any suit brought "against one of the United
+States by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects of any
+foreign state."
+
+The position of Congress and of the Supreme Court with reference to
+Georgia's policy in the Yazoo Frauds also aroused distrust of the
+Federal government. In 1795 the legislature granted for $500,000 the
+territory extending from the Alabama and Coosa rivers to the Mississippi
+river and between 35 deg. and 31 deg. N. lat. (almost all of the present
+state of Mississippi and more than half of the present state of Alabama)
+to four land companies, but in the following year a new legislature
+rescinded the contracts on the ground that they had been fraudulently
+and corruptly made, as was probably the case, and the rescindment was
+embodied in the Constitution of 1798., In the meantime the United States
+Senate had appointed a committee to inquire into Georgia's claim to the
+land in question, and as this committee pronounced that claim invalid,
+Congress in 1800 established a Territorial government over the region.
+The legislature of Georgia remonstrated but expressed a willingness to
+cede the land to the United States, and in 1802 the cession was
+ratified, it being stipulated among other things that the United States
+should pay to the state $1,250,000, and should extinguish "at their own
+expense, for the use of Georgia, as soon as the same can be peaceably
+obtained on reasonable terms," the Indian title to all lands within the
+state of Georgia. Eight years later the Supreme Court of the United
+States decided in the case of _Fletcher_ v. _Peck_ (6 Cranch 87) that
+such a rescindment as that in the new state constitution was illegal, on
+the ground that a state cannot pass a law impairing the obligation of
+contracts; and at an expense of more than four millions of dollars the
+Federal government ultimately extinguished all claims to the lands.
+
+This decision greatly irritated the political leaders of Georgia, and
+the question of extinguishing the Indian titles, on which there had long
+been a disagreement, caused further and even more serious friction
+between the Federal and state authorities. The National government,
+until the administration of President Jackson, regarded the Indian
+tribes as sovereign nations with whom it alone had the power to treat,
+while Georgia held that the tribes were dependent communities with no
+other right to the soil than that of tenants at will. In 1785 Georgia
+made treaties with the Creeks by which those Indians ceded to the state
+their lands S. and W. of the Altamaha river and E. of the Oconee river,
+but after a remonstrance of one of their half-breed chiefs Congress
+decided that the cessions were invalid, and the National government
+negotiated, in 1790, a new treaty which ceded only the lands E. of the
+Oconee. The state appealed to the National government to endeavour to
+secure further cessions, but none had been made when, in 1802, the
+United States assumed its obligation to extinguish all Indian titles
+within the state. Several cessions were made between 1802 and 1824, but
+the state in the latter year remonstrated in vigorous terms against the
+dilatory manner in which the National government was discharging its
+obligation, and the effect of this was that in 1825 a treaty was
+negotiated at Indian Springs by which nearly all the Lower Creeks agreed
+to exchange their remaining lands in Georgia for equal territory beyond
+the Mississippi. But President J.Q. Adams, learning that this treaty was
+not approved by the entire Creek nation, authorized a new one, signed at
+Washington in 1826, by which the treaty of 1825 was abrogated and the
+Creeks kept certain lands W. of the Chattahoochee. The Georgia
+government, under the leadership of Governor George M. Troup
+(1780-1856), had proceeded to execute the first treaty, and the
+legislature declared the second treaty illegal and unconstitutional. In
+reply to a communication of President Adams early in 1827 that the
+United States would take strong measures to enforce its policy, Governor
+Troup declared that he felt it his duty to resist to the utmost any
+military attack which the government of the United States should think
+proper to make, and ordered the military companies to prepare to resist
+"any hostile invasion of the territory of this state." But the strain
+produced by these conditions was relieved by information that new
+negotiations had been begun for the cession of all Creek lands in
+Georgia. These negotiations were completed late in the year.
+
+There was similar conflict in the relation of the United States and
+Georgia with the Cherokees. In 1785 the Cherokees of Georgia placed
+themselves under the protection of the Federal government, and in 1823
+their chiefs, who were mostly half-breeds, declared: "It is the fixed
+and unalterable determination of this nation never again to cede one
+foot more of land," and that they could not "recognize the sovereignty
+of any state within the limits of their territory"; in 1827 they framed
+a constitution and organized a representative government. President
+Monroe and President J.Q. Adams treated the Cherokees with the courtesy
+due to a sovereign nation, and held that the United States had done all
+that was required to meet the obligation assumed in 1802. The Georgia
+legislature, however, contended that the United States had not acted in
+good faith, declared that all land within the boundaries of the state
+belonged to Georgia, and in 1828 extended the jurisdiction of Georgia
+law to the Cherokee lands. Then President Jackson, holding that Georgia
+was in the right on the Indian question, informed the Cherokees that
+their only alternative to submission to Georgia was emigration.
+Thereupon the chiefs resorted to the United States Supreme Court, which
+in 1832 declared that the Cherokees formed a distinct community "in
+which the laws of Georgia have no force," and annulled the decision of a
+Georgia court that had extended its jurisdiction into the Cherokee
+country (_Worcester_ v. _Georgia_). But the governor of Georgia declared
+that the decision was an attempt at usurpation which would meet with
+determined resistance, and President Jackson refused to enforce the
+decree. The President did, however, work for the removal of the Indians,
+which was effected in 1838.
+
+On account of these conflicts a majority of Georgians adopted the
+principles of the Democratic-Republican party, and early in the 19th
+century the people were virtually unanimous in their political ideas.
+Local partisanship centred in two factions: one, led by George M. Troup,
+which represented the interests of the aristocratic and slave-holding
+communities; the other, formed by John Clarke (1766-1832) and his
+brother Elijah, found support among the non-slave-holders and the
+frontiersmen. The cleavage of these factions was at first purely
+personal; but by 1832 it had become one of principle. Then the Troup
+faction under the name of States Rights party, endorsed the
+nullification policy of South Carolina, while the Clarke faction,
+calling itself a Union party, opposed South Carolina's conduct, but on
+the grounds of expediency rather than of principle. On account, however,
+of its opposition to President Jackson's attitude toward nullification,
+the States Rights party affiliated with the new Whig party, which
+represented the national feeling in the South, while the Union party was
+merged into the Democratic party, which emphasized the sovereignty of
+the states.
+
+The activity of Georgia in the slavery controversy was important. As
+early as 1835 the legislature adopted a resolution which asserted the
+legality of slavery in the Territories, a principle adopted by Congress
+in the Kansas Bill in 1854, and in 1847 ex-Governor Wilson Lumpkin
+(1783-1870) advocated the organization of the Southern states to resist
+the aggression of the North. Popular opinion at first opposed the
+Compromise of 1850, and some politicians demanded immediate secession
+from the Union; and the legislature had approved the Alabama Platform of
+1848. But Congressmen Robert Toombs, Alexander H. Stephens, Whigs, and
+Howell Cobb, a Democrat, upon their return from Washington, contended
+that the Compromise was a great victory for the South, and in a campaign
+on this issue secured the election of such delegates to the state
+convention (at Milledgeville) of 1850 that that body adopted on the 10th
+of December, by a vote of 237 to 19, a series of conciliatory
+resolutions, since known as the "Georgia Platform," which declared in
+substance: (1) that, although the state did not wholly approve of the
+Compromise, it would "abide by it as a permanent adjustment of this
+sectional controversy," to preserve the Union, as the thirteen original
+colonies had found compromise necessary for its formation; (2) that the
+state "will and ought to resist, even (as a last resort) to the
+disruption of every tie that binds her to the Union," any attempt to
+prohibit slavery in the Territories or a refusal to admit a slave state.
+The adoption of this platform was accompanied by a party reorganization,
+those who approved it organizing the Constitutional Union party, and
+those who disapproved, mostly Democrats, organizing the Southern Rights
+party; the approval in other states of the Georgia Platform in
+preference to the Alabama Platform (see ALABAMA) caused a reaction in
+the South against secession. The reaction was followed for a short
+interval by a return to approximately the former party alignment, but in
+1854 the rank and file of the Whigs joined the American or Know-Nothing
+party while most of the Whig leaders went over to the Democrats. The
+Know-Nothing party was nearly destroyed by its crushing defeat in 1856
+and in the next year the Democrats by a large majority elected for
+governor Joseph Emerson Brown (1821-1894) who by three successive
+re-elections was continued in that office until the close of the Civil
+War. Although Governor Brown represented the poorer class of white
+citizens he had taken a course in law at Yale College, had practised
+law, and at the time of his election was judge of a superior court;
+although he had never held slaves he believed that the abolition of
+slavery would soon result in the ruin of the South, and he was a man of
+strong convictions. The Kansas question and the attitude of the North
+toward the decision in the Dred Scott case were arousing the South when
+he was inaugurated the first time, and in his inaugural address he
+clearly indicated that he would favour secession in the event of any
+further encroachment on the part of the North. In July 1859 Senator
+Alfred Iverson (1798-1874) declared that in the event of the election of
+a Free-Soil resident in 1860 he would favour the establishment of an
+independent confederacy; later in the same year Governor Brown expressed
+himself to a similar effect and urged the improvement of the military
+service. On the 7th of November following the election of President
+Lincoln the governor, in a special message to the legislature,
+recommended the calling of a convention to decide the question of
+secession, and Alexander H. Stephens was about the only prominent
+political leader who contended that Lincoln's election was insufficient
+ground for such action. On the 17th of November the legislature passed
+an act directing the governor to order an election of delegates on the
+2nd of January 1861 and their meeting in a convention on the 16th. On
+the 19th this body passed an ordinance of secession by a vote of 208 to
+89. Already the first regiment of Georgia Volunteers, under Colonel
+Alexander Lawton (1818-1896) had seized Fort Pulaski at the mouth of the
+Savannah river and now Governor Brown proceeded to Augusta and seized
+the Federal arsenal there. Toward the close of the same year, however,
+Federal warships blockaded Georgia's ports, and early in 1862 Federal
+forces captured Tybee Island, Fort Pulaski, St Mary's, Brunswick and St
+Simon Island. Georgia had responded freely to the call for volunteers,
+but when the Confederate Congress had passed, in April 1862, the
+Conscript Law which required all white men (except those legally
+exempted from service) between the ages of 18 and 35 to enter the
+Confederate service, Governor Brown, in a correspondence with President
+Davis which was continued for several months, offered serious
+objections, his leading contentions being that the measure was
+unnecessary as to Georgia, unconstitutional, subversive of the state's
+sovereignty, and therefore "at war with the principles for the support
+of which Georgia entered into this revolution."
+
+In 1863 north-west Georgia was involved in the Chattanooga campaign. In
+the following spring Georgia was invaded from Tennessee by a Federal
+army under General William T. Sherman; the resistance of General Joseph
+E. Johnston and General J.B. Hood proved ineffectual; and on the 1st of
+September Atlanta was taken. Then Sherman began his famous "march to the
+sea," from Atlanta to Savannah, which revealed the weakness of the
+Confederacy. In the spring of 1865, General J.H. Wilson with a body of
+cavalry entered the state from Alabama, seized Columbus and West Point
+on the 16th of April, and on the 10th of May captured Jefferson Davis,
+president of the Confederacy, at Irwinville in Irwin county.
+
+In accord with President Andrew Johnson's plan for reorganizing the
+Southern States, a provisional governor, James Johnson, was appointed on
+the 17th of June 1865, and a state convention reformed the constitution
+to meet the new conditions, rescinding the ordinance of secession,
+abolishing slavery and formally repudiating the state debt incurred in
+the prosecution of the war. A governor and legislature were elected in
+November 1865, the legislature ratified the Thirteenth Amendment on the
+9th of December and five days later the governor-elect was inaugurated.
+But both the convention and legislature incurred the suspicion and
+ill-will of Congress; the convention had congratulated the president on
+his policy, memorialized him on behalf of Jefferson Davis, and provided
+pensions for disabled Confederate soldiers and the widows of those who
+had lost their lives during the war, while the legislature passed
+apprenticeship, labour and vagrancy laws to protect and regulate the
+negroes, and rejected the Fourteenth Amendment. Although the civil
+rights were conferred upon the freedmen, Congress would not tolerate the
+political incapacity and social inferiority which the legislature had
+assigned to them, and therefore Georgia was placed under military
+government, as part of the third military district, by the
+Reconstruction Act of the 2nd of March 1867. Under the auspices of the
+military authorities registration of electors for a new state convention
+was begun and 95,168 negroes and 96,333 whites were registered. The
+acceptance of the proposition to call the convention and the election of
+many conscientious and intelligent delegates were largely due to the
+influence of ex-Governor Brown, who was strongly convinced that the
+wisest course for the South was to accept quickly what Congress had
+offered. The convention met in Atlanta on the 9th of December 1867 and
+by March 1868 had revised the constitution to meet the requirements of
+the Reconstruction Acts. The constitution was duly adopted by popular
+vote, and elections were held for the choice of a governor and
+legislature. Rufus Brown Bullock (b. 1834), Republican, was chosen
+governor, the Senate had a majority of Republicans, but in the House of
+Representatives a tie vote was cast for the election of a speaker. On
+the 21st of July the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, and a section of
+the state constitution (which denied the power of state courts to
+entertain against any resident of the state suits founded on contracts
+existing on the 15th of June 1865) was repealed by the legislature in
+pursuance of the congressional "Omnibus Bill" of the 25th of June 1868,
+and as evidence of the restoration of Georgia to the Union the
+congressmen were seated on the 25th of July in that year.
+
+But in September of the same year the Democrats in the state
+legislature, being assisted by some of the white Republicans, expelled
+the 27 negro members and seated their defeated white contestants,
+relying upon the legal theory that the right to hold office belonged
+only to those citizens designated by statute, the common law or custom.
+In retaliation the 41st Congress excluded the state's representatives on
+a technicality, and, on the theory that the government of Georgia was a
+provisional organization, passed an act requiring the ratification of
+the Fifteenth Amendment before the admission of Georgia's senators and
+representatives. The war department now concluded that the state was
+still subject to military authority, and placed General A.H. Terry in
+command. With his aid, and that of Congressional requirements that all
+members of the legislature must take the Test Oath and none be excluded
+on account of colour, a Republican majority was secured for both houses,
+and the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified. Georgia was now finally
+admitted to the Union by Act of Congress, on the 15th of July 1870.
+
+The Reconstruction period in Georgia is remarkable for its comparative
+moderation. Although there was great political excitement, there was not
+as much extravagance in public administration as there was in other
+Southern States, the state debt increasing approximately from $6,600,000
+to $16,000,000. The explanation lies in the fact that there were
+comparatively few "carpet-baggers" or adventurers in the state, and that
+a large number of conservative citizens, under the leadership of
+ex-Governor Brown, supported the Reconstruction policy of Congress and
+joined the Republican party.
+
+The election of 1871 gave the Democrats a majority in the legislature;
+Governor Bullock, fearing impeachment, resigned, and at a special
+election James M. Smith was chosen to fill the unexpired term. After
+that the control of the Democrats was complete. In 1891 the Populist
+party was organized, but it never succeeded in securing a majority of
+the votes in the state.
+
+LIST OF GOVERNORS
+
+ I. _Administration of the Trustees._
+
+ James Edward Oglethorpe[8] 1732-1743
+ William Stephens[9] 1743-1751
+ Henry Parker[9] 1751-1753
+ Patrick Graham[9] 1753-1754
+
+ II. _Royal Administration._
+
+ John Reynolds 1754-1757
+ Henry Ellis 1757-1760
+ Sir James Wright 1760-1782
+
+ III. _Provincial Administration._
+
+ William Ewen[10] 1775
+ Archibald Bulloch[11] 1776
+ Button Gwinnett[11] 1777
+ Jonathan Bryan[11] 1777
+
+ IV. _Georgia as a State._
+
+ John A. Treutlen[12] 1777-1778
+ John Houston 1778-1779
+ John Wereat[13] 1779
+ George Walton 1779-1780
+ Richard Hawley 1780
+ Stephen Heard[13] 1780-1781
+ Myrick Davies[13] 1781
+ Nathan Brownson 1781-1782
+ John Martin 1782-1783
+ Lyman Hall 1783-1785
+ Samuel Elbert 1785-1786
+ Edward Telfair 1786-1787
+ George Matthews 1787-1788
+ George Handley 1788-1789
+ George Walton 1789-1790 Democratic-Republican
+ Edward Telfair 1790-1793 " "
+ George Matthews 1793-1796 " "
+ Jared Irwin 1796-1798 " "
+ James Jackson 1798-1801 " "
+ David Emanuel 1801 " "
+ Josiah Tattnall 1801-1802 " "
+ John Milledge 1802-1806 " "
+ Jared Irwin 1806-1809 " "
+ David B. Mitchell 1809-1813 " "
+ Peter Early 1813-1815 " "
+ David B. Mitchell 1815-1817 " "
+ William Rabun[14] 1817-1819 " "
+ Matthew Talbot[14] 1819 " "
+ John Clarke 1819-1823 " "
+ George M. Troup 1823-1827 " "
+ John Forsyth 1827-1829 " "
+ George R. Gilmer 1829-1831 National Republican
+ Wilson Lumpkin 1831-1835 Democratic-Republican
+ William Schley 1835-1837 Union
+ George Gilmer 1837-1839 Democrat
+ Charles J. McDonald 1839-1843 Union
+ George W. Crawford 1843-1847 Whig
+ George W.B. Towns 1847-1851 Democrat
+ Howell Cobb 1851-1853 Constitutional Union
+ Herschell V. Johnson 1853-1856 Democrat
+ Joseph E. Brown 1857-1865 "
+ James Johnson[15] 1865 "
+ Charles J. Jenkins 1865-1868 "
+ Thomas H. Ruger 1868 "
+ Rufus B. Bullock 1868-1871 Republican
+ Benjamin Conley[14] 1871-1872 "
+ James M. Smith 1872-1876 Democrat
+ Alfred H. Colquitt 1876-1882 "
+ Alexander H. Stephens 1882-1883 "
+ James S. Boynton[14] 1883 "
+ Henry D. McDaniel 1883-1886 "
+ John B. Gordon 1886-1890 "
+ W.J. Northen 1890-1894 "
+ W.Y. Atkinson 1894-1898 "
+ A.D. Candler 1898-1902 "
+ Joseph M. Terrell 1902-1907 "
+ Hoke Smith 1907-1909 "
+ Joseph M. Brown 1909-1911 "
+ Hoke Smith 1911- "
+
+ A brief bibliography, chiefly of historical materials, is given by
+ U.B. Phillips in his monograph "Georgia and State Rights," in vol. ii.
+ of the _Annual Report of the American Historical Association for 1901_
+ (Washington, 1902). Valuable information concerning the resources and
+ products of the state is given in the publications of the Department
+ of Agriculture, which include weekly and monthly _Bulletins_, biennial
+ _Reports_ and a volume entitled _Georgia, Historical and Industrial_
+ (Atlanta, 1901). The Reports of the United States Census (especially
+ the Twelfth Census for 1900 and the special census of manufactures for
+ 1905) should be consulted, and _Memoirs of Georgia_ (2 vols., Atlanta,
+ Ga., 1895) contains chapters on industrial conditions.
+
+ The principal sources for public administration are the annual reports
+ of the state officers, philanthropic institutions, the prison
+ commission and the railroad commission, and the revised Code of
+ Georgia (Atlanta, 1896), adopted in 1895; see also L.F. Schmeckebier's
+ "Taxation in Georgia" (_Johns Hopkins University Studies_, vol.
+ xviii.) and "Banking in Georgia" (_Banker's Magazine_, vol. xlviii.).
+ Education and social conditions are treated in C.E. Jones's _History
+ of Education in Georgia_ (Washington, 1890), the Annual Reports of the
+ School Commissioner, and various magazine articles, such as "Georgia
+ Cracker in the Cotton Mill" (_Century Magazine_, vol. xix.) and "A
+ Plea for Light" (_South Atlantic Quarterly_, vol. iii.). The view of
+ slavery given in Frances A. Kemble's _Journal of a Residence on a
+ Georgia Plantation in 1838-1839_ (New York, 1863) should be compared
+ with R.Q. Mallard's _Plantation Life before Emancipation_ (Richmond,
+ Va., 1897), and with F.L. Olmsted's _A Journey in the Seaboard Slave
+ States_ (New York, 1856).
+
+ The best book for the entire field of Georgia history is Lawton B.
+ Evans's _A Student's History of Georgia_ (New York, 1898), a textbook
+ for schools. This should be supplemented by C.C. Jones's _Antiquities
+ of the Southern Indians, particularly of the Georgia Tribes_ (New
+ York, 1873), for the aborigines; W.B. Stevens's _History of Georgia to
+ 1798_ (2 vols., Philadelphia, 1847-1859) and C.C. Jones, jun., History
+ of Georgia (2 vols., Boston, 1883) for the Colonial and Revolutionary
+ periods; C.H. Haskins's _The Yazoo Land Companies_ (Washington, 1891);
+ the excellent monograph (mentioned above) by U.B. Phillips for
+ politics prior to 1860; Miss Annie H. Abel's monograph "The History of
+ Events Resulting in Indian Consolidation West of the Mississippi," in
+ vol. i. of the _Annual Report of the American Historical Association
+ for 1906_ (Washington, 1908) for a good account of the removal of the
+ Indians from Georgia; the judicious monograph by E.C. Woolley,
+ _Reconstruction in Georgia_ (New York, 1901); and I.W. Avery's
+ _History of Georgia from 1850 to 1881_ (New York, 1881), which is
+ marred by prejudice but contains material of value. _The Confederate
+ Records of the State of Georgia_ were published at Atlanta in 1909.
+ See also: E.J. Harden's _Life of George M. Troup_ (Savannah, 1840);
+ R.M. Johnston and W.H. Browne, _Life of Alexander H. Stephens
+ (Philadelphia, 1878), and Louis Pendleton, Life of Alexander H.
+ Stephens_ (Philadelphia, 1907); P.A. Stovall's _Robert Toombs_ (New
+ York, 1892); H. Fielder's _Life, Times and Speeches of Joseph E.
+ Brown_ (Springfield, Mass., 1883) and C.C. Jones, jun., _Biographical
+ Sketches of Delegates from Georgia to the Continental Congress_ (New
+ York, 1891). There is much valuable material, also, in the
+ publications (beginning with 1840) of the Georgia Historical Society
+ (see the list in vol. ii. of the _Report of the American Historical
+ Association for 1905_).
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] According to the usual nomenclature, the branch flowing S.W. is
+ called the Chattooga; this unites with the Tallulah to form the
+ Tugaloo, which in turn unites with the Kiowee to form the Savannah
+ proper.
+
+ [2] The manufacturing statistics for 1900 which follow are not those
+ given in the Twelfth Census, but are taken from the _Census of
+ Manufactures_, 1905, the 1900 figures here given being only for
+ "establishments on a factory basis," and thus being comparable with
+ those of 1905. In 1890 there were 53 mills with a capital of
+ $17,664,675 and a product valued at $12,035,629.
+
+ [3] In these valuations for 1900 and for 1905 the rough lumber
+ dressed or remanufactured in planing mills enters twice into the
+ value of the product.
+
+ [4] The population of the state was 82,548 in 1790, 162,686 in 1800,
+ 252,433 in 1810, 340,989 in 1820, 516,823 in 1830, 691,392 in 1840,
+ 906,185 in 1850, 1,057,286 in 1860, and 1,184,100 in 1870.
+
+ [5] This negro percentage includes 211 Chinese, Japanese and Indians.
+
+ [6] The state has had four other constitutions--those of 1777, 1789,
+ 1798 and 1868.
+
+ [7] Owing to the custom which holds in Georgia of choosing state
+ senators in rotation from each of the counties making up a senatorial
+ district, it happened in 1907 that few cities were represented
+ directly by senators chosen from municipalities. It is believed that
+ this fact contributed to the passage of the prohibition law.
+
+ [8] _De facto._
+
+ [9] President of the Colony.
+
+ [10] President of the Council of Safety.
+
+ [11] President of Georgia.
+
+ [12] First Governor under a State Constitution.
+
+ [13] President Executive Council and _de facto_ Governor.
+
+ [14] President of Senate.
+
+ [15] Provisional.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGIA, a former kingdom of Transcaucasia, which existed historically
+for more than 2000 years. Its earliest name was Karthli or Karthveli;
+the Persians knew it as Gurjistan, the Romans and Greeks as Iberia,
+though the latter placed Colchis also in the west of Georgia. Vrastan is
+the Armenian name and Gruzia the Russian. Georgia proper, which included
+Karthli and Kakhetia, was bounded on the N. by Ossetia and Daghestan, on
+the S. by the principalities of Erivan and Kars, and on the W. by Guria
+and Imeretia; but the kingdom also included at different times Guria,
+Mingrelia, Abkhasia, Imeretia and Daghestan, and extended from the
+Caucasus range on the N. to the Aras or Araxes on the S. It is now
+divided between the Russian governments of Tiflis and Kutais, under
+which headings further geographical particulars are given. (See also
+CAUCASIA.)
+
+_History._--According to traditional accounts, the Georgian (Karthlian),
+Kakhetian, Lesghian, Mingrelian and other races of Transcaucasia are the
+descendants of Thargamos, great-grandson of Japheth, son of Noah, though
+Gen. x. 3 makes Togarmah to be the son of Gomer, who was the son of
+Japheth. These various races were subsequently known under the general
+name of Thargamosides. Karthlos, the second son of Thargamos, is the
+eponymous king of his race, their country being called Karthli after
+him. Mtskhethos, son of Karthlos, founded the city of Mtskhetha (the
+modern Mtskhet) and made it the capital of his kingdom. We come,
+however, to firmer historic ground when we read that Georgia was
+conquered by Alexander the Great, or rather by one of his generals. The
+Macedonian yoke was shaken off by Pharnavaz or Pharnabazus, a prince of
+the royal race, who ruled from 302 to 237 B.C. All through its history
+Georgia, being on the outskirts of Armenia and Persia, both of them
+more powerful neighbours than itself, was at times more or less closely
+affected by their destinies. In this way it was sometimes opposed to
+Rome, sometimes on terms of friendship with Byzantium, according as
+these were successively friendly or hostile to the Armenians and the
+Persians. In the end of the 2nd century B.C. the last Pharnavazian
+prince was dethroned by his own subjects and the crown given to Arsaces,
+king of Armenia, whose son Arshag, ascending the throne of Georgia in 93
+B.C., established there the Arsacid dynasty. This close association with
+Armenia brought upon the country an invasion (65 B.C.) by the Roman
+general Pompey, who was then at war with Mithradates, king of Pontus and
+Armenia; but Pompey did not establish his power permanently over Iberia.
+A hundred and eighty years later the Emperor Trajan penetrated (A.D.
+114) into the heart of the country, and chastised the Georgians; yet his
+conquest was only a little more permanent than Pompey's. During one of
+the internecine quarrels, which were not infrequent in Georgia, the
+throne fell to Mirhan or Mirian (265-342), a son of the Persian king,
+who had married a daughter of Asphagor, the last sovereign of the
+Arsacid dynasty.
+
+With Mirian begins the Sassanian dynasty. He and his subjects were
+converted to Christianity by a nun Nuno (Nino), who had escaped from the
+religious persecutions of Tiridates, king of Armenia. Mirian erected the
+first Christian church in Georgia on the site now occupied by the
+cathedral of Mtskhet. In or about the year 371 Georgia was overrun by
+the Persian king Shapur or Sapor II., and in 379 a Persian general built
+the stronghold of Tphilis (afterwards Tiflis) as a counterpoise to
+Mtskhet. The Persian grasp upon Georgia was loosened by Tiridates, who
+reigned from 393 to 405. One of Mirian's successors, Vakhtang (446-499),
+surnamed Gurgaslan or Gurgasal, the Wolf-Lion, established a
+patriarchate at Mtskhet and made Tphilis his capital. This sovereign,
+having conquered Mingrelia and Abkhasia, and subdued the Ossetes, made
+himself master of a large part of Armenia. Then, co-operating for once
+with the king of Persia, he led an army into India; but towards the end
+of his reign there was enmity between him and the Persians, against whom
+he warred unsuccessfully. His son Dachi or Darchil (499-514) upon
+ascending the throne transferred the seat of government permanently from
+Mtskhet to Tphilis (Tiflis). Again Persia stretched out her hand over
+Georgia, and proved a formidable menace to the existence of the kingdom,
+until, owing to the severe pressure of the Turks on the one side and of
+the Byzantine Greeks on the other, she found it expedient to relax her
+grasp. The Georgians, seizing the opportunity, appealed (571) to the
+Byzantine emperor, Justin II. who gave them a king in the person of
+Guaram, a prince of the Bagratid family of Armenia, conferring upon him
+the title, not of king, but of viceroy. Thus began the dynasty of the
+Bagratids, who ruled until 1803.
+
+This was not, however, the first time that Byzantine influence had been
+effectively exercised in Georgia. As early as the reign of Mirian, in
+the 3rd century, the organizers of the early Georgian church had looked
+to Byzantium, the leading Christian power in the East, for both
+instruction and guidance, and the connexion thus begun had been
+strengthened as time went on. From this period until the Arab (i.e.
+Mahommedan) invasions began, the authority of Byzantium was supreme in
+Georgia. Some seventy years after the Bagratids began to rule in Georgia
+the all-conquering Arabs appeared on the frontiers of the country, and
+for the next one hundred and eighty years they frequently devastated the
+land, compelling its inhabitants again and again to accept Islam at the
+sword's point. But it was not until the death of the Georgian king Ashod
+(787-826) that they completely subdued the Caucasian state and imposed
+their will upon it. Nevertheless they were too much occupied elsewhere
+or too indifferent to its welfare to defend it against alien aggressors,
+for in 842 Bogha, a Turkish chief, invaded the country, and early in the
+10th century the Persians again overran it. But a period of relief from
+these hostile incursions was afforded by the reign of Bagrat III.
+(980-1014). During his father's lifetime he had been made king of
+Abkhasia, his mother belonging to the royal house of that land, and
+after ascending the Georgian throne he made his power felt far beyond
+the frontiers of his hereditary dominions, until his kingdom extended
+from the Black Sea to the Caspian, while Armenia, Azerbaijan and Kirman
+all paid him tribute. Not only did he encourage learning and patronize
+the fine arts, but he built, in 1003, the cathedral at Kutais, one of
+the finest examples extant of Georgian architecture. During the reign of
+Bagrat IV. (1027-1072) the Seljuk Turks more than once burst, after
+1048, into the country from Asia Minor, but they were on the whole
+successfully repulsed, although they plundered Tiflis. During the reign
+of the next king, George II., they again devastated Tiflis. But once
+more fortune changed after the accession of David II. (1089-1125),
+surnamed the Renovator, one of the greatest of Georgian kings. With the
+help of the Kipchaks, a Mongol or Turkish race, from the steppe lands to
+the north of the Caucasus, whom he admitted into his country, David
+drove the Seljuks out of his domains and forced them back over the
+Armenian mountains. Under George III. (1156-1184), a grandson of David
+II., Armenia was in part conquered, and Ani, one of its capitals, taken.
+George's daughter Thamar or Tamara, who succeeded him, reigned over the
+kingdom as left by David II. and further extended her power over
+Trebizond, Erzerum, Tovin (in Armenia) and Kars. These successes were
+continued by her son George IV. (1212-1223), who conquered Ganja (now
+Elisavetpol) and repulsed the attacks of the Persians; but in the last
+years of his reign there appeared (1220 and 1222) the people who were to
+prove the ruin of Georgia, namely the Mongol hosts of Jenghiz Khan, led
+by his sons. George IV. was succeeded by his sister Rusudan, whose
+capital was twice captured by the Persians and her kingdom overrun and
+fearfully devastated by the Mongols in 1236. Then, after a period of
+wonderful recovery under George V. (1318-1346), who conquered Imeretia
+and reunited it to his crown, Georgia was again twice (1386 and
+1393-1394) desolated by the Mongols under Timur (Tamerlane), prince of
+Samarkand, who on the second occasion laid waste the entire country with
+fire and sword, and crushed it under his relentless heel until the year
+1403. Alexander I. (1413-1442) freed his country from the last of the
+Mongols, but at the end of his reign divided his territory between his
+three sons, whom he made sovereigns of Imeretia, Kakhetia and Karthli
+(Georgia) respectively. The first mentioned remained a separate state
+until its annexation to Russia in 1810; the other two were soon
+reunited.
+
+Political relations between Russia and Georgia began in the end of the
+same century, namely in 1492, when the king of Kakhetia sought the
+protection of Ivan III. during a war between the Turks and the Persians.
+In the 17th century the two states were brought into still closer
+relationship. In 1619, when Georgia was harried by Shah Abbas of Persia,
+Theimuraz (1629-1634), king of Georgia, appealed for help to Michael,
+the first of the Romanov tsars of Russia, and his example was followed
+later in the century by the rulers of other petty Thargamosid or
+Caucasian states, namely Imeretia and Guria. In 1638 the prince of
+Mingrelia took the oath of allegiance to the Russian tsar, and in 1650
+the same step was taken by the prince of Imeretia. Vakhtang VI. of
+Georgia put himself under the protection of Peter the Great early in the
+18th century. When Persia fell into the grip of the Afghans early in the
+18th century the Turks seized the opportunity, and, ousting the Persians
+from Georgia, captured Tiflis and compelled Vakhtang to abdicate. But in
+1735 they renounced all claim to supremacy over the Caucasian states.
+This left Persia with the predominating influence, for though Peter the
+Great extorted from Persia (1722) her prosperous provinces beside the
+Caspian, he left the mountaineers to their own dynastic quarrels.
+Heraclius II. of Georgia declared himself the vassal of Russia in 1783,
+and when, twelve years later, he was hard pressed by Agha Mahommed, shah
+of Persia, who seized Tiflis and laid it in ruins, he appealed to Russia
+for help. The appeal was again renewed by the next king of Georgia,
+George XIII., in 1798, and in the following year he renounced his crown
+in favour of the tsar, and in 1801 Georgia was converted into a Russian
+province. The state of Guria submitted to Russia in 1829. (J. T. Be.)
+
+_Ethnology._--Of the three main groups into which the Caucasian races
+are now usually divided, the Georgian is in every respect the most
+important and interesting. It has accordingly largely occupied the
+attention of Orientalists almost incessantly from the days of Klaproth.
+Yet such are the difficulties connected with the origin and mutual
+relations of the Caucasian peoples that its affinities are still far
+from being clearly established. Anton von Schiefner and P.V. Uslar,
+however, arrived at some negative conclusions valuable as
+starting-points for further research. In their papers, published in the
+_Memoirs_ of the St Petersburg Imperial Academy of Sciences and
+elsewhere (1859 et seq.), they finally disposed of the views of Bopp and
+Brosset (1836), who attempted on linguistic grounds to connect the
+Georgians with the Indo-European family. They also clearly show that Max
+Muller's "Turanian" theory is untenable, and they go a long way towards
+proving that the Georgian, with all the other Caucasian languages except
+the Ossetian, forms a distinct linguistic family absolutely independent
+of all others. This had already been suspected by Klaproth, and the same
+conclusion was arrived at by Fr. Muller and Zagarelli.
+
+Uslar's "Caucasian Family" comprises the following three great
+divisions:
+
+ 1. Western Group. Typical races: Circassians and Abkhasians.
+ 2. Eastern Group. Typical races: Chechens and Lesghians.
+ 3. Southern Group. Typical race: Georgians.
+
+Here the term "family" must be taken in a far more elastic sense than
+when applied, for instance, to the Indo-European, Semitic or Eastern
+Polynesian divisions of mankind. Indeed the three groups present at
+least as wide divergences as are found to exist between the Semitic and
+Hamitic linguistic families. Thus, while the Abkhasian of group 1 is
+still at the agglutinating, the Lesghian of group 2 has fairly reached
+the inflecting stage, and the Georgian seems still to waver between the
+two. In consequence of these different stages of development, Uslar
+hesitated finally to fix the position of Georgian in the family,
+regarding it as possibly a connecting link between groups 1 and 2, but
+possibly also radically distinct from both.
+
+Including all its numerous ramifications, the Georgian or southern group
+occupies the greater part of Transcaucasia, reaching from about the
+neighbourhood of Batum on the Black Sea eastwards to the Caspian, and
+merging southwards with the Armenians of Aryan stock. It comprises
+altogether nine subdivisions, as in the subjoined table:
+
+ 1. The GEORGIANS PROPER, who are the Iberians of the ancients and the
+ Grusians of the Russians, but who call themselves Karthlians, and who
+ in medieval times were masters of the Rion and Upper Kura as far as
+ its confluence with the Alazan.
+
+ 2. The IMERETIANS, west of the Suram mountains as far as the river
+ Tskheniz-Tskhali.
+
+ 3. The GURIANS, between the Rion and Lazistan.
+
+ 4. The LAZIS of Lazistan on the Black Sea.
+
+ 5. The SVANETIANS, SHVANS or SWANIANS, on the Upper Ingur and
+ Tskheniz-Tskhali rivers.
+
+ 6. The MINGRELIANS, between the rivers Tskheniz-Tskhali, Rion, Ingur
+ and the Black Sea.
+
+ 7. The TUSHES or MOSOKS \
+ | about the headstreams of the
+ 8. The PSHAVS or PH'CHAVY > Alazan and Yora rivers.
+ |
+ 9. The KHEVSURS /
+
+The representative branch of the race has always been the Karthlians. It
+is now pretty well established that the Georgians are the descendants of
+the aborigines of the Pambak highlands, and that they found their way to
+their present homes from the south-east some four or five thousand years
+ago, possibly under pressure from the great waves of Aryan migration
+flowing from the Iranian tableland westwards to Asia Minor and Europe.
+The Georgians proper are limited on the east by the Alazan, on the north
+by the Caucasus, on the west by the Meskes hills, separating them from
+the Imeretians, and on the south by the Kura river and Kara-dagh and
+Pambak mountains. Southwards, however, no hard and fast ethnical line
+can be drawn, for even immediately south of Tiflis, Georgians, Armenians
+and Tatars are found intermingled confusedly together.
+
+The Georgian race, which represents the oldest elements of civilization
+in the Caucasus, is distinguished by some excellent mental qualities,
+and is especially noted for personal courage and a passionate love of
+music. The people, however, are described as fierce and cruel, and
+addicted to intemperance, though Max von Thielmann (_Journey in the
+Caucasus_, &c., 1875) speaks of them as "rather hard drinkers than
+drunkards." Physically they are a fine athletic race of pure Caucasian
+type; hence during the Moslem ascendancy Georgia supplied, next to
+Circassia, the largest number of female slaves for the Turkish harems
+and of recruits for the Osmanli armies, more especially for the select
+corps of the famous Mamelukes.
+
+The social organization rested on a highly aristocratic basis, and the
+lowest classes were separated by several grades of vassalage from the
+highest. But since their incorporation with the Russian empire, these
+relations have become greatly modified, and a more sharply defined
+middle class of merchants, traders and artisans has been developed. The
+power of life and death, formerly claimed and freely exercised by the
+nobles over their serfs, has also been expressly abolished. The
+Georgians are altogether at present in a fairly well-to-do condition,
+and under Russian administration they have become industrious, and have
+made considerable moral and material progress.
+
+Missionaries sent by Constantine the Great introduced Christianity about
+the beginning of the 4th century. Since that time the people have,
+notwithstanding severe pressure from surrounding Mahommedan communities,
+remained faithful to the principles of Christianity, and are still
+amongst the most devoted adherents of the Orthodox Greek Church. Indeed
+it was their attachment to the national religion that caused them to
+call in the aid of the Christian Muscovites against the proselytizing
+attempts of the Shiite Persians--a step which ultimately brought about
+their political extinction.
+
+As already stated, the Karthli language is not only fundamentally
+distinct from the Indo-European linguistic family, but cannot be shown
+to possess any clearly ascertained affinities with either of the two
+northern Caucasian groups. It resembles them chiefly in its phonetic
+system, so that according to Rosen (_Sprache der Lazen_) all the
+languages of central and western Caucasus might be adequately rendered
+by the Georgian alphabet. Though certainly not so harsh as the Avar,
+Lesghian and other Daghestan languages, it is very far from being
+euphonious, and the frequent recurrence of such sounds as ts, ds, thz,
+kh, khh, gh (Arab. [Arabic: gh]), q (Arab. [Arabic: q]), for all of
+which there are distinct characters, renders its articulation rather
+more energetic and rugged than is agreeable to ears accustomed to the
+softer tones of the Iranian and western Indo-European tongues. It
+presents great facilities for composition, the laws of which are very
+regular. Its peculiar morphology, standing midway between agglutination
+and true inflexion, is well illustrated by its simple declension common
+to noun, adjective and pronoun, and its more intricate verbal
+conjugation, with its personal endings, seven tenses and incorporation
+of pronominal subject and object, all showing decided progress towards
+the inflecting structure of the Indo-European and Semitic tongues.
+
+Georgian is written in a native alphabet obviously based on the
+Armenian, and like it attributed to St Mesropius (Mesrop), who
+flourished in the 5th century. Of this alphabet there are two forms,
+differing so greatly in outline and even in the number of the letters
+that they might almost be regarded as two distinct alphabetic systems.
+The first and oldest, used exclusively in the Bible and liturgical
+works, is the square or monumental Khutsuri, i.e. "sacerdotal,"
+consisting of 38 letters, and approaching the Armenian in appearance.
+The second is the Mkhedruli kheli, i.e. "soldier's hand," used in
+ordinary writing, and consisting of 40 letters, neatly shaped and full
+of curves, hence at first sight not unlike the modern Burmese form of
+the Pali.
+
+Of the Karthli language there are several varieties; and, besides those
+comprised in the above table, mention should be made of the Kakhetian
+current in the historic province of Kakhetia. A distinction is sometimes
+drawn between the Karthlians proper and the Kakhetians, but it rests on
+a purely political basis, having originated with the partition in 1424
+of the ancient Iberian estates into the three new kingdoms of
+Karthlinia, Kakhetia and Imeretia. On the other hand, both the Laz of
+Lazistan and the Svanetian present such serious structural and verbal
+differences from the common type that they seem to stand rather in the
+relation of sister tongues than of dialects to the Georgian proper. All
+derive obviously from a common source, but have been developed
+independently of each other. The Tush or Mosok appears to be
+fundamentally a Kistinian or Chechen idiom affected by Georgian
+influences.
+
+The Bible is said to have been translated into Georgian as early as the
+5th century. The extant version, however, dates only from the 8th
+century, and is attributed to St Euthymius. But even so, it is far the
+most ancient work known to exist in the language. Next in importance is,
+perhaps, the curious poem entitled _The Amours of Turiel and Nestan
+Darejan_, or _The man clothed in the panther's skin_, attributed to
+Rustevel, who lived during the prosperous reign of Queen Thamar (11th
+century). Other noteworthy compositions are the national epics of the
+_Baramiani_ and the _Rostomiani_, and the prose romances of _Visramiani_
+and _Darejaniani_, the former by Sarg of Thmogvi, the latter by Mosi of
+Khoni. Apart from these, the great bulk of Georgian literature consists
+of ecclesiastical writings, hymns sacred and profane, national codes and
+chronicles.
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY.--The standard authority on the history is M.F. Brosset's
+ translation of the Georgian chronicles under the title of _Histoire de
+ la Georgie_ (5 vols., St Petersburg, 1849-1858); but compare also
+ Khakanov, _Histoire de Georgie_ (Paris, 1900). See further A. Leist,
+ _Das georgische Volk_ (Dresden, 1903); M. de Villeneuve, _La Georgie_
+ (Paris, 1870); O. Wardrop, _The Kingdom of Georgia_ (London, 1888);
+ and Langlois, _Numismatique georgienne_ (Paris, 1860). For the
+ philology see Zagarelli, _Examen de la litterature relative a la
+ grammaire georgienne_ (1873); _Friedrich Muller, Grundriss der
+ Sprachwissenschaft_ (1887), iii. 2; Leist, _Georgische Dichter_
+ (1887); Erskert, _Sprachen des kaukasischen Stammes_ (1895). For other
+ points as to anthropology, Michel Smirnow's paper in _Revue
+ d'anthropologie_ (April 15, 1878); Chantre, _Recherches
+ anthropologiques dans le Caucase_ (1885-1887); and Erckert, _Der
+ Kaukasus und seine Volker_ (1887).
+
+
+
+
+GEORGIAN BAY, the N.E. section of Lake Huron, separated from it by
+Manitoulin Island and the peninsula comprising the counties of Grey and
+Bruce, Ontario. It is about 100 m. long and 50 m. wide, and is said to
+contain 30,000 islands. It receives numerous rivers draining a large
+extent of country; of these the chief are the French river draining Lake
+Nipissing, the Maganatawan draining a number of small lakes, the Muskoka
+draining the Muskoka chain of lakes (Muskoka, Rosseau, Joseph, &c.) and
+the Severn draining Lake Simcoe. Into its southern extremity, known as
+Nottawasaga Bay, flows the river of the same name. The Trent valley
+canal connects Georgian Bay with the Bay of Quinte and Lake Ontario, and
+a canal system has long been projected to Montreal by way of the French
+and Ottawa rivers and Lake Nipissing.
+
+
+
+
+GEORGSWALDE, a town of Bohemia, Austria, 115 m. N.E. of Prague by rail.
+Pop. (1900) 8131, including Neu-Georgswalde, Wiesenthal and
+Philippsdorf, which form together a single commune. Georgswalde is one
+of the oldest industrial places of Bohemia, and together with the
+neighbouring town of Rumburg is the principal centre of the linen
+industry. The village of Philippsdorf, now incorporated with
+Georgswalde, has become since 1866 a famous place of pilgrimage, owing
+to the miracles attributed to an image of the Virgin, placed now in a
+magnificent new church (1885).
+
+
+
+
+GEPHYREA, the name used for several groups of worm-like animals with
+certain resemblances but of doubtful affinity. In the article "Annelida"
+in the 9th edition of this Encyclopaedia, W.C. McIntosh followed the
+accepted view in associating in this group the _Echiuridae_,
+_Sipunculidae_ and _Priapulidae_. E. Ray Lankester, in the preface to
+the English translation of C. Gegenbaur's _Comparative Anatomy_ (1878),
+added the _Phoronidae_ to these forms. Afterwards the same author
+(article "Zoology," _Ency. Brit._, 9th ed.) recognized that the
+_Phoronidae_ had other affinities, and placed the other "gephyreans" in
+association with the Polyzoa as the two classes of a phylum _Podaxonia_.
+In the present state of knowledge the old group _Gephyrea_ is broken up
+into _Echiuroidea_ (q.v.) or _Gephyrea armata_, which are certainly
+Annelids; the _Sipunculoidea_ (q.v.) or _Gephyrea achaeta_, an independent
+group, certainly coelomate, but of doubtful affinity; the _Priapuloidea_
+(q.v.), equally of doubtful affinity; and the _Phoronidea_ (q.v.), which
+are almost certainly _Hemichordata_.
+
+
+
+
+GERA, a town of Germany, capital of the principality of Reuss-Schleiz
+(called also Reuss younger line), situated in a valley on the banks of
+the White Elster, 45 m. S.S.W. of Leipzig on the railway to Probstzella.
+Pop. (1885) 34,152; (1905) 47,455. It has been mostly rebuilt since a
+great fire in 1780, and the streets are in general wide and straight,
+and contain many handsome houses. There are three Evangelical churches
+and one Roman Catholic. Among other noteworthy buildings are the
+handsome town-hall (1576, afterwards restored) and the theatre (1902).
+Its educational establishments include a gymnasium, a commercial and a
+weaving school. The castle of Osterstein, the residence of the princes
+of Reuss, dates from the 9th century, but has been almost entirely
+rebuilt in modern times. Gera is noted for its industrial activity. Its
+industries include wool-weaving and spinning, dyeing, iron-founding, the
+manufacture of cotton and silk goods, machinery, sewing machines and
+machine oil, leather and tobacco, and printing (books and maps) and
+flower gardening.
+
+Gera (in ancient chronicles _Geraha_) was raised to the rank of a town
+in the 11th century, at which time it belonged to the counts of Groitch.
+In the 12th century it came into the possession of the lords of Reuss.
+It was stormed and sacked by the Bohemians in 1450, was two-thirds
+burned down by the Swedes in 1639 during the Thirty Years' War, and
+suffered afterwards from great conflagrations in 1686 and 1780, being in
+the latter year almost completely destroyed.
+
+
+
+
+GERALDTON, a town in the district of Victoria, West Australia, on
+Champion Bay, 306 m. by rail N.W. of Perth. Pop. (1901) 2593. It is the
+seat of a Roman Catholic bishop, an important seaport carrying on a
+considerable trade with the surrounding gold-fields and agricultural
+districts, the centre of a considerable railway system and an
+increasingly popular seaside resort. The harbour is safe and extensive,
+having a pier affording accommodation for large steamers. The chief
+exports are gold, copper, lead, wool and sandalwood.
+
+
+
+
+GERANDO, MARIE JOSEPH DE (1772-1842), French philosopher, was born at
+Lyons on the 29th of February 1772. When the city was besieged in 1793
+by the armies of the Republic, de Gerando took up arms, was made
+prisoner and with difficulty escaped with his life. He took refuge in
+Switzerland, whence he afterwards fled to Naples. In 1796 the
+establishment of the Directory allowed him to return to France. At the
+age of twenty-five he enlisted as a private in a cavalry regiment. About
+this time the Institute proposed as a subject for an essay this
+question,--"What is the influence of symbols on the faculty of thought?"
+De Gerando gained the prize, and heard of his success after the battle
+of Zurich, in which he had distinguished himself. This literary triumph
+was the first step in his upward career. In 1799 he was attached to the
+ministry of the interior by Lucien Bonaparte; in 1804 he became general
+secretary under Champagny; in 1805 he accompanied Napoleon into Italy;
+in 1808 he was nominated master of requests; in 1811 he received the
+title of councillor of state; and in the following year he was appointed
+governor of Catalonia. On the overthrow of the empire, de Gerando was
+allowed to retain this office; but having been sent during the hundred
+days into the department of the Moselle to organize the defence of that
+district, he was punished at the second Restoration by a few months of
+neglect. He was soon after, however, readmitted into the council of
+state, where he distinguished himself by the prudence and conciliatory
+tendency of his views. In 1819 he opened at the law-school of Paris a
+class of public and administrative law, which in 1822 was suppressed by
+government, but was reopened six years later under the Martignac
+ministry. In 1837 he was made a baron. He died at Paris on the 9th of
+November 1842.
+
+De Gerando's best-known work is his _Histoire comparee des systemes de
+philosophie relativement aux principes des connaissances humaines_
+(Paris, 1804, 3 vols.). The germ of this work had already appeared in
+the author's _Memoire de la generation des connaissances humaines_
+(Berlin, 1802), which was crowned by the Academy of Berlin. In it de
+Gerando, after a rapid review of ancient and modern speculations on the
+origin of our ideas, singles out the theory of primary ideas, which he
+endeavours to combat under all its forms. The latter half of the work,
+devoted to the analysis of the intellectual faculties, is intended to
+show how all human knowledge is the result of experience; and reflection
+is assumed as the source of our ideas of substance, of unity and of
+identity. It is divided into two parts, the first of which is purely
+historical, and devoted to an exposition of various philosophical
+systems; in the second, which comprises fourteen chapters of the entire
+work, the distinctive characters and value of these systems are compared
+and discussed. In spite of the disadvantage that it is impossible to
+separate advantageously the history and critical examination of any
+doctrine in the arbitrary manner which de Gerando chose, the work has
+great merits. In correctness of detail and comprehensiveness of view it
+was greatly superior to every work of the same kind that had hitherto
+appeared in France. During the Empire and the first years of the
+Restoration, de Gerando found time to prepare a second edition (Paris,
+1822, 4 vols.), which is enriched with so many additions that it may
+pass for an entirely new work. The last chapter of the part published
+during the author's lifetime ends with the revival of letters and the
+philosophy of the 15th century. The second part, carrying the work down
+to the close of the 18th century, was published posthumously by his son
+in 4 vols. (Paris, 1847). Twenty-three chapters of this were left
+complete by the author in manuscript; the remaining three were supplied
+from other sources, chiefly printed but unpublished memoirs.
+
+His essay _Du perfectionnement moral et de l'education de soi-meme_ was
+crowned by the French Academy in 1825. The fundamental idea of this work
+is that human life is in reality only a great education, of which
+perfection is the aim.
+
+ Besides the works already mentioned, de Gerando left many others, of
+ which we may indicate the following:--_Considerations sur diverses
+ methodes d'observation des peuples sauvages_ (Paris, 1801); _Eloge de
+ Dumarsais,--discours qui a remporte le prix propose par la seconde
+ classe de l'Institut National_ (Paris, 1805); _Le Visiteur de pauvre_
+ (Paris, 1820); _Instituts du droit administratif_ (4 vols., Paris,
+ 1830); _Cours normal des instituteurs primaires ou directions
+ relatives a l'education physique, morale, et intellectuelle dans les
+ ecoles primaires_ (Paris, 1832); _De l'education des sourds-muets_ (2
+ vols., Paris, 1832); _De la bienfaisance publique_ (4 vols., 1838). A
+ detailed analysis of the _Histoire comparee des systemes_ will be
+ found in the _Fragments philosophiques_ of M. Cousin. In connexion
+ with his psychological studies, it is interesting that in 1884 the
+ French Anthropological Society reproduced his instructions for the
+ observation of primitive peoples, and modern students of the
+ beginnings of speech in children and the cases of deaf-mutes have
+ found useful matter in his works. See also J.P. Damiron, _Essai sur la
+ philosophie en France au XIX^e siecle_.
+
+
+
+
+GERANIACEAE, in botany, a small but very widely distributed natural
+order of Dicotyledons belonging to the subclass Polypetalae, containing
+about 360 species in 11 genera. It is represented in Britain by two
+genera, _Geranium_ (crane's-bill) and _Erodium_ (stork's-bill), to which
+belong nearly two-thirds of the total number of species. The plants are
+mostly herbs, rarely becoming shrubby, with generally simple glandular
+hairs on the stem and leaves. The opposite or alternate leaves have a
+pair of small stipules at the base of the stalk and a palminerved blade.
+The flowers, which are generally arranged in a cymose inflorescence, are
+hermaphrodite, hypogynous, and, except in _Pelargonium_, regular. The
+parts are arranged in fives. There are five free sepals, overlapping in
+the bud, and, alternating with these, five free petals. In _Pelargonium_
+the flower is zygomorphic with a spurred posterior sepal and the petals
+differing in size or shape. In _Geranium_ the stamens are
+obdiplostemonous, i.e. an outer whorl of five opposite the petals
+alternates with an inner whorl of five opposite the sepals; at the base
+of each of the antisepalous stamens is a honey-gland. In _Erodium_ the
+members of the outer whorl are reduced to scale-like structures
+(staminodes), and in _Pelargonium_ from two to seven only are fertile.
+There is no satisfactory explanation of this break in the regular
+alternation of successive whorls; the outer whorl of stamens arises in
+course of development before the inner, so that there is no question of
+subsequent displacement. There are five, or sometimes fewer, carpels,
+which unite to form an ovary with as many chambers, in each of which are
+one or two, rarely more, pendulous anatropous ovules, attached to the
+central column in such a way that the micropyle points outwards and the
+raphe is turned towards the placenta. The long beak-like style divides
+at the top into a corresponding number of slender stigmas.
+
+[Illustration: Meadow Crane's-bill, _Geranium pratense_. (After Curtis,
+_Flora Londinensis_.)
+
+ 1, Flower after removal of petals.
+
+ 2, Fruit after splitting. 1 and 2 about natural size.
+
+ 3, Floral diagram, the dots opposite the inner stamens represent
+ honey-glands.]
+
+The larger-flowered species of _Geranium_ are markedly protandrous, the
+outer stamens, inner stamens and stigmas becoming functional in
+succession. For instance, in meadow crane's-bill _G. pratense_, each
+whorl of stamens ripens in turn, becoming erect and shedding their
+pollen; as the anthers wither the filaments bend outwards, and when all
+the anthers have diverged the stigmas become mature and ready for
+pollination. By this arrangement self-pollination is prevented and
+cross-pollination ensured by the visits of bees which come for the honey
+secreted by the glands at the base of the inner stamens.
+
+In species with smaller and less conspicuous flowers, such as _G.
+molle_, the flowers of which are only 1/3 to 1/2 in. in diameter,
+self-pollination is rendered possible, since the divisions of the stigma
+begin to separate before the outer stamens have shed all their pollen;
+the nearness of the stigmas to the dehiscing anthers favours
+self-pollination.
+
+In the ripe fruit the carpels separate into five one-seeded portions
+(_cocci_), which break away from the central column, either rolling
+elastically outwards and upwards or becoming spirally twisted. In most
+species of _Geranium_ the cocci split open on the inside and the seeds
+are shot out by the elastic uptwisting (fig. 1); in _Erodium_ and
+_Pelargonium_ each coccus remains closed, and the long twisted upper
+portion separates from the central column, forming an awn, the
+distribution of which is favoured by the presence of bristles or hairs.
+The embryo generally fills the seed, and the cotyledons are rolled or
+folded on each other.
+
+_Geranium_ is the most widely distributed genus; it has 160 species and
+is spread over all temperate regions with a few species in the tropics.
+Three British species--_G. sylvaticum_, _G. pratense_ and _G.
+Robertianum_ (herb-Robert)--reach the arctic zone, while _G.
+patagonicum_ and _G. magellanicum_ are found in the antarctic. _Erodium_
+contains 50 species (three are British), most of which are confined to
+the Mediterranean region and west Asia, though others occur in America,
+in South Africa and West Australia. _Pelargonium_, with 175 species, has
+its centre in South Africa; the well-known garden and greenhouse
+"geraniums" are species of _Pelargonium_ (see GERANIUM).
+
+
+
+
+GERANIUM, the name of a genus of plants, which is taken by botanists as
+the type of the natural order Geraniaceae. The name, as a scientific
+appellation, has a much more restricted application than when taken in
+its popular sense. Formerly the genus _Geranium_ was almost conterminous
+with the order Geraniaceae. Then as now the geranium was very popular as
+a garden plant, and the species included in the original genus became
+widely known under that name, which has more or less clung to them ever
+since, in spite of scientific changes which have removed the large
+number of them to the genus _Pelargonium_. This result has been probably
+brought about in some degree by an error of the nurserymen, who seem in
+many cases to have acted on the conclusion that the group commonly known
+as _Scarlet Geraniums_ were really geraniums and not pelargoniums, and
+were in consequence inserted under the former name in their trade
+catalogues. In fact it may be said that, from a popular point of view,
+the pelargoniums of the botanist are still better known as geraniums
+than are the geraniums themselves, but the term "zonal Pelargonium" is
+gradually making its way amongst the masses.
+
+The species of _Geranium_ consist mostly of herbs, of annual or
+perennial duration, dispersed throughout the temperate regions of the
+world. They number about 160, and bear a considerable family
+resemblance. The leaves are for the most part palmately-lobed, and the
+flowers are regular, consisting of five sepals, five imbricating petals,
+alternating with five glandules at their base, ten stamens and a beaked
+ovary. Eleven species are natives of the British Isles and are popularly
+known as crane's-bill. _G. Robertianum_ is herb-Robert, a common plant
+in hedgebanks. _G. sanguineum_, with flowers a deep rose colour, is
+often grown in borders, as are also the double-flowered varieties of _G.
+pratense_. Many others of exotic origin form handsome border plants in
+our gardens of hardy perennials; amongst these _G. armenum_, _G.
+Endressi_, _G. ibericum_ and its variety _platypetalum_ are conspicuous.
+
+From these regular-flowered herbs, with which they had been mixed up by
+the earlier botanists, the French botanist L'Heritier in 1787 separated
+those plants which have since borne the name of _Pelargonium_, and
+which, though agreeing with them in certain points of structure, differ
+in others which are admitted to be of generic value. One obvious
+distinction of _Pelargonium_ is that the flowers are irregular, the two
+petals which stand uppermost being different--larger, smaller or
+differently marked--from the other three, which latter are occasionally
+wanting. This difference of irregularity the modern florist has done
+very much to annul, for the increased size given to the flowers by high
+breeding has usually been accompanied by the enlargement of the smaller
+petals, so that a very near approach to regularity has been in some
+cases attained. Another well-marked difference, however, remains in
+_Pelargonium_: the back or dorsal sepal has a hollow spur, which spur is
+adnate, i.e. joined for its whole length with the flower-stalk; while in
+_Geranium_ there is no spur. This peculiarity is best seen by cutting
+clean through the flower-stalk just behind the flower, when in
+_Pelargonium_ there will be seen the hollow tube of the spur, which in
+the case of _Geranium_ will not be found, but the stalk will appear as a
+solid mass. There are other characters which support those already
+pointed out, such as the absence of the glandules, and the declination
+of the stamens; but the features already described offer the most ready
+and obvious distinctions.
+
+To recapitulate, the geraniums properly so-called are regular-flowered
+herbs with the flower-stalks solid, while many geraniums falsely
+so-called in popular language are really pelargoniums, and may be
+distinguished by their irregular flowers and hollow flower-stalks. In a
+great majority of cases too, the pelargoniums so commonly met with in
+greenhouses and summer parterres are of shrubby or sub-shrubby habit.
+
+The various races of pelargoniums have sprung from the intermixture of
+some of the species obtained from the Cape. The older show-flowered
+varieties have been gradually acquired through a long series of years.
+The fancy varieties, as well as the French spotted varieties and the
+market type, have been evolved from them. The zonal or bedding race, on
+the other hand, has been more recently perfected; they are supposed to
+have arisen from hybrids between _Pelargonium inquinans_ and _P.
+zonale_. In all the sections the varieties are of a highly ornamental
+character, but for general cultivation the market type is preferable for
+indoor purposes, while the zonals are effective either in the greenhouse
+or flower garden. Some of the Cape species are still in cultivation--the
+leaves of many of them being beautifully subdivided, almost fern-like in
+character, and some of them are deliciously scented; _P. quercifolium_
+is the oak-leaf geranium. The ivy-leaf geranium, derived from _P.
+peltatum_, has given rise to an important class of both double- and
+single-flowered forms adapted especially for pot culture, hanging
+baskets, window boxes and the greenhouse. Of late years the ivy-leaf
+"geraniums" have been crossed with the "zonals," and a new race is being
+gradually evolved from these two distinct groups.
+
+The best soil for pelargoniums is a mellow fibrous loam with good
+well-rotted stable manure or leaf-mould in about the proportion of
+one-fifth; when used it should not be sifted, but pulled to pieces by
+the hand, and as much sand should be added as will allow the water to
+pass freely through it. The large-flowered and fancy kinds cannot bear
+so much water as most soft-wooded plants, and the latter should have a
+rather lighter soil.
+
+All the pelargoniums are readily increased by cuttings made from the
+shoots when the plants are headed down after flowering, or in the
+spring, when they will root freely in a temperature of 65 deg. to 70
+deg. They must not be kept too close, and must be very moderately
+watered. When rooted they may be moved into well-drained 3-in. pots, and
+when from 6 to 8 in. high, should have the points pinched out in order
+to induce them to push out several shoots nearer the base. These shoots
+are, when long enough, to be trained in a horizontal direction; and when
+they have made three joints they should have the points again pinched
+out. These early-struck plants will be ready for shifting into 6-in.
+pots by the autumn, and should still be trained outwards. The show
+varieties after flowering should be set out of doors in a sunny spot to
+ripen their wood, and should only get water enough to keep them from
+flagging. In the course of two or three weeks they will be ready to cut
+back within two joints of where these were last stopped, when they
+should be placed in a frame or pit, and kept close and dry until they
+have broken. When they have pushed an inch or so, turn them out of their
+pots, shake off the old soil, trim the straggling roots, and repot them
+firmly in smaller pots if practicable; keep them near the light, and as
+the shoots grow continue to train them outwardly. They require to be
+kept in a light house, and to be set well up to the glass; the night
+temperature should range about 45 deg.; and air should be given on all
+mild days, but no cold currents allowed, nor more water than is
+necessary to keep the soil from getting parched. The young shoots should
+be topped about the end of October, and when they have grown an inch or
+two beyond this, they may be shifted into 7-in. pots for flowering. The
+shoots must be kept tied out so as to be fully exposed to the light. If
+required to flower early they should not be stopped again; if not until
+June they may be stopped in February.
+
+The zonal varieties, which are almost continuous bloomers, are of much
+value as decorative subjects; they seldom require much pruning after the
+first stopping. For winter flowering, young plants should be raised
+from cuttings about March, and grown on during the summer, but should
+not be allowed to flower. When blossoms are required, they should be
+placed close up to the glass in a light house with a temperature of 65
+deg., only just as much water being given as will keep them growing. For
+bedding purposes the zonal varieties are best struck towards the middle
+of August in the open air, taken up and potted or planted in boxes as
+soon as struck, and preserved in frames or in the greenhouse during
+winter.
+
+The fancy varieties root best early in spring from the half-ripened
+shoots; they are slower growers, and rather more delicate in
+constitution than the zonal varieties, and very impatient of excess of
+water at the root.
+
+
+
+
+GERARD (d. 1108), archbishop of York under Henry I., began his career as
+a chancery clerk in the service of William Rufus. He was one of the two
+royal envoys who, in 1095, persuaded Urban II. to send a legate and
+Anselm's pallium to England. Although the legate disappointed the king's
+expectations, Gerard was rewarded for his services with the see of
+Hereford (1096). On the death of Rufus he at once declared for Henry I.,
+by whom he was nominated to the see of York. He made difficulties when
+required to give Anselm the usual profession of obedience; and it was
+perhaps to assert the importance of his see that he took the king's side
+on the question of investitures. He pleaded Henry's cause at Rome with
+great ability, and claimed that he had obtained a promise, on the pope's
+part, to condone the existing practice of lay investiture. But this
+statement was contradicted by Paschal, and Gerard incurred the suspicion
+of perjury. About 1103 he wrote or inspired a series of tracts which
+defended the king's prerogative and attacked the oecumenical pretensions
+of the papacy with great freedom of language. He changed sides in 1105,
+becoming a stanch friend and supporter of Anselm. Gerard was a man of
+considerable learning and ability; but the chroniclers accuse him of
+being lax in his morals, an astrologer and a worshipper of the devil.
+
+ See the _Tractatus Eboracenses_ edited by H. Bochmer in _Libelli de
+ lite Sacerdotii et Imperii_, vol. iii. (in the _Monumenta hist.
+ Germaniae_, quarto series), and the same author's _Kirche und Staat in
+ England und in der Normandie_ (Leipzig, 1899). (H. W. C. D.)
+
+
+
+
+GERARD (c. 1040-1120), variously surnamed TUM, TUNC, TENQUE or THOM,
+founder of the order of the knights of St John of Jerusalem (q.v.), was
+born at Amalfi about the year 1040. According to other accounts
+Martigues in Provence was his birthplace, while one authority even names
+the Chateau d'Avesnes in Hainaut. Either as a soldier or a merchant, he
+found his way to Jerusalem, where a hospice had for some time existed
+for the convenience of those who wished to visit the holy places. Of
+this institution Gerard became guardian or provost at a date not later
+than 1100; and here he organized that religious order of St John which
+received papal recognition from Paschal II. in 1113, by a bull which was
+renewed and confirmed by Calixtus II. shortly before the death of Gerard
+in 1120.
+
+
+
+
+GERARD OF CREMONA (c. 1114-1187), the medieval translator of Ptolemy's
+Astronomy, was born at Cremona, Lombardy, in or about 1114. Dissatisfied
+with the meagre philosophies of his Italian teachers, he went to Toledo
+to study in Spanish Moslem schools, then so famous as depositories and
+interpreters of ancient wisdom; and, having thus acquired a knowledge of
+the Arabic language, he appears to have devoted the remainder of his
+life to the business of making Latin translations from its literature.
+The date of his return to his native town is uncertain, but he is known
+to have died there in 1187. His most celebrated work is the Latin
+version by which alone Ptolemy's _Almagest_ was known to Europe until
+the discovery of the original [Greek: Megale Suntaxis]. In addition to
+this, he translated various other treatises, to the number, it is said,
+of sixty-six; among these were the _Tables_ of "Arzakhel," or Al Zarkala
+of Toledo, Al Farabi _On the Sciences_ (_De scientiis_), Euclid's
+_Geometry_, Al Farghani's _Elements of Astronomy_, and treatises on
+algebra, arithmetic and astrology. In the last-named latitudes are
+reckoned from Cremona and Toledo. Some of the works, however, with which
+he has been credited (including the _Theoria_ or _Theorica planetarum_,
+and the versions of Avicenna's _Canon of Medicine_--the basis of the
+numerous subsequent Latin editions of that well-known work--and of the
+_Almansorius_ of Abu Bakr Razi) are probably due to a later Gerard, of
+the 13th century, also called Cremonensis but more precisely de
+Sabloneta (Sabbionetta). This writer undertook the task of interpreting
+to the Latin world some of the best work of Arabic physicians, and his
+translation of Avicenna is said to have been made by order of the
+emperor Frederic II.
+
+ See Pipini, "Cronica," in Muratori, _Script. rer. Ital._ vol. ix.;
+ Nicol. Antonio, _Bibliotheca Hispana vetus_, vol. ii.; Tiraboschi,
+ _Storia della letteratura Italiana_, vols. iii. (333) and iv.; Arisi,
+ _Cremona literata_; Jourdain, Recherches sur ... _l'origine des
+ traductions latines d'Aristote_; Chasles, _Apercu historique des
+ methodes en geometrie_, and in _Comptes rendus de l'Academie des
+ Sciences_, vol. xiii. p. 506; J.T. Reinaud, _Geographie d'Aboulfeda_,
+ introduction, vol. i. pp. ccxlvi.-ccxlviii.; Boncompagni, _Della vita
+ e delle opere di Gherardo Cremonese e di Gherardo da Sabbionetta_
+ (Rome, 1851). Much of the work of both the Gerards remains in
+ manuscript, as in Paris, National Library, MSS. Lat. 7400, 7421; MSS.
+ Suppl. Lat. 49; Rome, Vatican library, 4083, and Ottobon, 1826;
+ Oxford, Bodleian library, Digby, 47, 61. The Vatican MS. 2392 is
+ stated to contain a eulogy of "Gerard of Cremona" and a list of "his"
+ translations, apparently confusing the two scholars. The former's most
+ valuable work was in astronomy; the latter's in medicine.
+ (C. R. B.)
+
+
+
+
+GERARD, ETIENNE MAURICE, COUNT (1773-1852), French general, was born at
+Damvilliers (Meuse), on the 4th of April 1773. He joined a battalion of
+volunteers in 1791, and served in the campaigns of 1792-1793 under
+Generals Dumouriez and Jourdan. In 1795 he accompanied Bernadotte as
+aide-de-camp. In 1799 he was promoted _chef d'escadron_, and in 1800
+colonel. He distinguished himself at the battles of Austerlitz and Jena,
+and was made general of brigade in November 1806, and for his conduct in
+the battle of Wagram he was created a baron. In the Spanish campaign of
+1810 and 1811 he gained special distinction at the battle of Fuentes
+d'Onor; and in the expedition to Russia he was present at Smolensk and
+Valutina, and displayed such bravery and ability in the battle of
+Borodino that he was made general of division. He won further
+distinction in the disastrous retreat from Moscow. In the campaign of
+1813, in command of a division, he took part in the battles of Lutzen
+and Bautzen and the operations of Marshal Macdonald, and at the battle
+of Leipzig (in which he commanded the XI. corps) he was dangerously
+wounded. After the battle of Bautzen he was created by Napoleon a count
+of the empire. In the campaign of France of 1814, and especially at La
+Rothiere and Montereau, he won still greater distinction. After the
+first restoration he was named by Louis XVIII. grand cross of the Legion
+of Honour and chevalier of St Louis. In the Hundred Days Napoleon made
+Gerard a peer of France and placed him in command of the IV. corps of
+the Army of the North. In this capacity Gerard took a brilliant part in
+the battle of Ligny (see WATERLOO CAMPAIGN), and on the morning of the
+18th of June he was foremost in advising Marshal Grouchy to march to the
+sound of the guns. Gerard retired to Brussels after the fall of
+Napoleon, and did not return to France till 1817. He sat as a member of
+the chamber of deputies in 1822-1824, and was re-elected in 1827. He
+took part in the revolution of 1830, after which he was appointed
+minister of war and named a marshal of France. On account of his health
+he resigned the office of war minister in the October following, but in
+1831 he took the command of the northern army, and was successful in
+thirteen days in driving the army of Holland out of Belgium. In 1832 he
+commanded the besieging army in the famous scientific siege of the
+citadel of Antwerp. He was again chosen war minister in July 1834, but
+resigned in the October following. In 1836 he was named grand chancellor
+of the Legion of Honour in succession to Marshal Mortier, and in 1838
+commander of the National Guards of the Seine, an office which he held
+till 1842. He became a senator under the empire in 1852, and died on the
+17th of April in the same year.
+
+
+
+
+GERARD, FRANCOIS, BARON (1770-1837), French painter, was born on the 4th
+of May 1770, at Rome, where his father occupied a post in the house of
+the French ambassador. At the age of twelve Gerard obtained admission
+into the Pension du Roi at Paris. From the Pension he passed to the
+studio of Pajou (sculptor), which he left at the end of two years for
+that of the painter Brenet, whom he quitted almost immediately to place
+himself under David. In 1789 he competed for the Prix de Rome, which was
+carried off by his comrade Girodet. In the following year (1790) he
+again presented himself, but the death of his father prevented the
+completion of his work, and obliged him to accompany his mother to Rome.
+In 1791 he returned to Paris; but his poverty was so great that he was
+forced to forgo his studies in favour of employment which should bring
+in immediate profit. David at once availed himself of his help, and one
+of that master's most celebrated pictures--Le Pelletier de St
+Fargeau--may owe much to the hand of Gerard. This painting was executed
+early in 1793, the year in which Gerard, at the request of David, was
+named a member of the revolutionary tribunal, from the fatal decisions
+of which he, however, invariably absented himself. In 1794 he obtained
+the first prize in a competition, the subject of which was "The Tenth of
+August," and, further stimulated by the successes of his rival and
+friend Girodet in the Salons of 1793 and 1794, Gerard (nobly aided by
+Isabey the miniaturist) produced in 1795 his famous "Belisaire." In 1796
+a portrait of his generous friend (in the Louvre) obtained undisputed
+success, and the money received from Isabey for these two works enabled
+Gerard to execute in 1797 his "Psyche et l'Amour." At last, in 1799, his
+portrait of Madame Bonaparte established his position as one of the
+first portrait-painters of the day. In 1808 as many as eight, in 1810 no
+less than fourteen portraits by him, were exhibited at the Salon, and
+these figures afford only an indication of the enormous numbers which he
+executed yearly; all the leading figures of the empire and of the
+restoration, all the most celebrated men and women of Europe, sat to
+Gerard. This extraordinary vogue was due partly to the charm of his
+manner and conversation, for his _salon_ was as much frequented as his
+studio; Madame de Stael, Canning, Talleyrand, the duke of Wellington,
+have all borne witness to the attraction of his society. Rich and
+famous, Gerard was stung by remorse for earlier ambitions abandoned; at
+intervals he had indeed striven to prove his strength with Girodet and
+other rivals, and his "Bataille d'Austerlitz" (1810) showed a breadth of
+invention and style which are even more conspicuous in "L'Entree d'Henri
+IV" (Versailles)--the work with which in 1817 he did homage to the
+Bourbons. After this date Gerard declined, watching with impotent grief
+the progress of the Romantic school. Loaded with honours--baron of the
+empire, member of the Institute, officer of the legion of honour, first
+painter to the king--he worked on sad and discouraged; the revolution of
+1830 added to his disquiet; and on the 11th of January 1837, after three
+days of fever, he died. By his portraits Gerard is best remembered; the
+colour of his paintings has suffered, but his drawings show in uninjured
+delicacy the purity of his line; and those of women are specially
+remarkable for a virginal simplicity and frankness of expression.
+
+ M. Ch. Lenormant published in 1846 _Essai de biographie et de critique
+ sur Francois Gerard_, a second edition of which appeared in 1847; and
+ M. Delecluze devoted several pages to the same subject in his work
+ _Louis David, son ecole et son temps_.
+
+
+
+
+GERARD, JEAN IGNACE ISIDORE (1803-1847), French caricaturist, generally
+known by the pseudonym of Grandville--the professional name of his
+grandparents, who were actors--was born at Nancy on the 13th of
+September 1803. He received his first instruction in drawing from his
+father, a miniature painter, and at the age of twenty-one came to Paris,
+where he soon afterwards published a collection of lithographs entitled
+_Les Tribulations de la petite propriete_. He followed this by Les
+Plaisirs de toutage and _La Sibylle des salons_; but the work which
+first established his fame was _Metamorphoses du jour_, published in
+1828, a series of seventy scenes in which individuals with the bodies of
+men and faces of animals are made to play a human comedy. These drawings
+are remarkable for the extraordinary skill with which human
+characteristics are represented in animal features. The success of this
+work led to his being engaged as artistic contributor to various
+periodicals, such as _La Silhouette_, _L'Artiste_, _La Caricature_, _Le
+Charivari_; and his political caricatures, which were characterized by
+marvellous fertility of satirical humour, soon came to enjoy a general
+popularity. Besides supplying illustrations for various standard works,
+such as the songs of Beranger, the fables of La Fontaine, _Don Quixote_,
+_Gulliver's Travels_, _Robinson Crusoe_, he also continued the issue of
+various lithographic collections, among which may be mentioned _La Vie
+privee et publique des animaux_, _Les Cent Proverbes_, _L'Autre Monde_
+and _Les Fleurs animees_. Though the designs of Gerard are occasionally
+unnatural and absurd, they usually display keen analysis of character
+and marvellous inventive ingenuity, and his humour is always tempered
+and refined by delicacy of sentiment and a vein of sober thoughtfulness.
+He died of mental disease on the 17th of March 1847.
+
+ A short notice of Gerard, under the name of Grandville, is contained
+ in Theophile Gautier's _Portraits contemporains_. See also Charles
+ Blanc, _Grandville_ (Paris, 1855).
+
+
+
+
+GERARD, JOHN (1545-1612), English herbalist and surgeon, was born
+towards the end of 1545 at Nantwich in Cheshire. He was educated at
+Wisterson, or Willaston, 2 m. from Nantwich, and eventually, after
+spending some time in travelling, took up his abode in London, where he
+exercised his profession. For more than twenty years he also acted as
+superintendent of the gardens in London and at Theobalds, in
+Hertfordshire, of William Cecil, Lord Burghley. In 1596 he published a
+catalogue of plants cultivated in his own garden in Holborn, London,
+1039 in number, inclusive of varieties of the same species. Their
+English as well as their Latin names are given in a revised edition of
+the catalogue issued in 1599. In 1597 appeared Gerard's well-known
+_Herball_, described by him in its preface as "the first fruits of these
+mine own labours," but more truly an adaptation of the _Stirpium
+historiae pemptades_ of Rembert Dodoens (1518-1585), published in 1583,
+or rather of a translation of the whole or part of the same by Dr
+Priest, with M. Lobel's arrangement. Of the numerous illustrations of
+the _Herball_ sixteen appear to be original, the remainder are mostly
+impressions from the wood blocks employed by Jacob Theodorus
+Tabernaemontanus in his _Icones stirpium_, published at Frankfort in
+1590. A second edition of the _Herball_, with considerable improvements
+and additions, was brought out by Thomas Johnson in 1633, and reprinted
+in 1636. Gerard was elected a member of the court of assistants of the
+barber-surgeons in 1595, by which company he was appointed an examiner
+in 1598, junior warden in 1605, and master in 1608. He died in February
+1612, and was buried at St Andrews, Holborn.
+
+ See Johnson's preface to his edition of the _Herball_; and _A
+ Catalogue of Plants cultivated in the Garden of John Gerard in the
+ years 1596-1599, edited with Notes, References to Gerard's Herball,
+ the Addition of modern Names, and a Life of the Author, by Benjamin
+ Daydon Jackson, F.L.S._, privately printed (London, 1876, 4to).
+
+
+
+
+GERARDMER, a town of north-eastern France, in the department of Vosges,
+33 m. E.S.E. of Epinal by rail. Pop. (1906) of the town, 3993; of the
+commune, 10,041. Gerardmer is beautifully situated at a height of 2200
+ft. at the eastern end of the small Lake of Gerardmer (285 acres in
+extent) among forest-clad mountains. It is the chief summer-resort of
+the French Vosges and is a centre for excursions, among which may be
+mentioned those to the Hohneck (4481 ft.), the second highest summit in
+the Vosges, the Schlucht, the mountain pass from France to Germany, and,
+nearer the town, the picturesque defile of Granges, watered by the
+Vologne, which at one point forms the cascade known as the Saut des
+Cuves. The town itself, in which the chief object of interest is the
+huge lime-tree in the market-place, carries on cloth-weaving, bleaching,
+wood-sawing and the manufacture of wooden goods; there is trade in the
+cheeses (_geromes_) manufactured in the neighbourhood. Gerardmer is said
+to owe its name to Gerard of Alsace, 1st duke of Lorraine, who in the
+11th century built a tower on the bank of the lake or _mer_, near which,
+in 1285, a new town was founded.
+
+
+
+
+GERASA (mod. _Gerash_ or _Jerash_), a city of Palestine, and a member of
+the league known as the Decapolis (q.v.), situated amid the mountains of
+Gilead, about 1757 ft. above the sea, 20 m. from the Jordan and 21 m. N.
+of Philadelphia. Of its origin nothing is known; it has been suggested
+that it represents the biblical Ramoth Gilead. From Josephus we learn
+that it was captured by Alexander Jannaeus (c. 83 B.C.), rebuilt by the
+Romans (c. A.D. 65), burned by the Jews in revenge for the massacre at
+Caesarea, and again plundered and depopulated by Annius, the general of
+Vespasian; but, in spite of these disasters, it was still in the 2nd and
+3rd centuries of the Christian era one of the wealthiest and most
+flourishing cities of Palestine. It was a centre of Greek civilization,
+devoted especially to the worship of Artemis, and producing famous
+teachers, of whom Stephen the Byzantine mentions Ariston, Kerykos and
+Plato. As late as 1121 the soldiers of Baldwin II. found it defended by
+a castle built by a king of Damascus; but at the beginning of the
+following century the Arabian geographer Yaqut speaks of it as deserted
+and overthrown. The ruins of Jerash, discovered about 1806, and since
+then frequently visited and described, still attest the splendour of the
+Roman city. They are distributed along both banks of the Kerwan, a brook
+which flows south through the Wadi-ed-Der to join the Zerka or Jabbok;
+but all the principal buildings are situated on the level ground to the
+right of the stream. The town walls, which can still be traced and
+indeed are partly standing, had a circuit of not more than 2 m., and the
+main street was less than half a mile in length; but remains of
+buildings on the road for fully a mile beyond the south gate, show that
+the town had outgrown the limit of its fortifications. The most striking
+feature of the ruins is the profusion of columns, no fewer than 230
+being even now in position; the main street is a continuous colonnade, a
+large part of which is still entire, and it terminates to the south in a
+forum of similar formation. Among the public buildings still
+recognizable are a theatre capable of accommodating 6000 spectators, a
+naumachia (circus for naval combats) and several temples, of which the
+largest was probably the grandest structure in the city, possessing a
+portico of Corinthian pillars 38 ft. high. The desolation of the city is
+probably due to earthquake; and the absence of Moslem erections or
+restorations seems to show that the disaster took place before the
+Mahommedan period.
+
+The town is now occupied by a colony of Circassians, whose houses have
+been built with materials from the earlier buildings, and there has been
+much destruction of the interesting ruins. "The country of the
+Gerasenes" (Matt. viii. 28 and parallels; other readings, Gadarenes,
+Gergesenes) must be looked for in another quarter--on the E. coast of
+the Sea of Galilee, probably in the neighbourhood of the modern Khersa
+(C.W. Wilson in _Recovery of Jerusalem_, p. 369). (R. A. S. M.)
+
+
+
+
+GERAULT-RICHARD, ALFRED LEON (1860- ), French journalist and politician,
+was born at Bonnetable in the department of Sarthe, of a peasant family.
+He began life as a working upholsterer, first at Mans, then at Paris
+(1880), where his peasant and socialist songs soon won him fame in the
+Montmartre quarter. Lissagaray, the communist, offered him a position on
+_La Bataille_, and he became a regular contributor to the advanced
+journals, especially to _La Petite Republique_, of which he became
+editor-in-chief in 1897. In 1893 he founded _Le Chambard_, and was
+imprisoned for a year (1894) on account of a personal attack upon the
+president, Casimir-Perier. In January 1895 he was elected to the chamber
+as a Socialist for the thirteenth arrondissement of Paris. He was
+defeated at the elections of 1898 at Paris, but was re-elected in 1902
+and in 1906 by the colony of Guadeloupe.
+
+
+
+
+GERBER, ERNST LUDWIG (1746-1819), German musician, author of a famous
+dictionary of musicians, was born at Sondershausen in the principality of
+Schwarzburg-Sondershausen on the 29th of September 1746. His father,
+Henry Nicolas Gerber (1702-1775), a pupil of J.S. Bach, was an organist
+and composer of some distinction, and under his direction Ernst Ludwig at
+an early age had made great progress in his musical studies. In 1765 he
+went to Leipzig to study law, but the claims of music, which had gained
+additional strength from his acquaintanceship with J.A. Hiller, soon came
+to occupy almost his sole attention. On his return to Sondershausen he
+was appointed music teacher to the children of the prince, and in 1775 he
+succeeded his father as court organist. Afterwards he devoted much of his
+time to the study of the literature and history of music, and with this
+view he made himself master of several modern languages. His
+_Historisch-biographisches Lexikon der Tonkunstler_ appeared in 1790 and
+1792 in two volumes; and the first volume of what was virtually an
+improved and corrected edition of this work was published in 1810 under
+the title _Neues historisch-biographisches Lexikon der Tonkunstler_,
+followed by other three volumes in 1812, 1813 and 1814. Gerber also
+contributed a number of papers to musical periodicals, and published
+several minor musical compositions. He died at Sondershausen on the 30th
+of June 1819.
+
+
+
+
+GERBERON, GABRIEL (1628-1711), French Jansenist monk, was born on the
+12th of August 1628 at St Calais, in the department of Sarthe. At the
+age of twenty he took the vows of the Benedictine order at the abbey of
+Ste Melaine, Rennes, and afterwards taught rhetoric and philosophy in
+several monasteries. His open advocacy of Jansenist opinions, however,
+caused his superiors to relegate him to the most obscure houses of the
+order, and finally to keep him under surveillance at the abbey of St
+Germain-des-Pres at Paris. Here he wrote a defence of the doctrine of
+the Real Presence against the Calvinists in the form of an apology for
+Rupert, abbot of Deutz (_Apologia pro Ruperto abbate Tuitensi_, Paris,
+1669). In 1676 he published at Brussels, under the name of "Sieur Flore
+de Ste Foi" his _Miroir de la piete chretienne_, an enlarged edition of
+which appeared at Liege in the following year. This was condemned by
+certain archbishops and theologians as the repetition of the five
+condemned propositions of Jansen, and Gerberon defended it, under the
+name of "Abbe Valentin" in _Le Miroir sans tache_ (Paris, 1680). He had
+by this time aroused against him the full fury of the Jesuits, and at
+their instigation a royal provost was sent to Corbie to arrest him. He
+had, however, just time to escape, and fled to the Low Countries, where
+he lived in various towns. He was invited by the Jansenist clergy to
+Holland, where he wrote another controversial work against the
+Protestants: _Defense de l'Eglise Romain contre la calomnie des
+Protestants_ (Cologne, 1688-1691). This produced unpleasantness with the
+Reformed clergy, and feeling himself no longer safe he returned to
+Brussels. In 1700 he published his history of Jansenism (_Histoire
+generale du Jansenisme_), a dry work, by which, however, he is best
+remembered. He adhered firmly to the Augustinian doctrine of
+Predestination, and on the 30th of May 1703 he was arrested at Brussels
+at the instance of the archbishop of Malines, and ordered to subscribe
+the condemnation of the five sentences of Jansen. On his refusal, he was
+handed over to his superiors and imprisoned in the citadel of Amiens and
+afterwards at Vincennes. Every sort of pressure was brought to bear upon
+him to make his submission, and at last, broken in health and spirit, he
+consented to sign a formula which the cardinal de Noailles claimed as a
+recantation. Upon this he was released in 1710. The first use he made of
+his freedom was to write a work (which, however, his friends prudently
+prevented him from publishing), _Le Vaine Triomphe du cardinal de
+Noailles_, containing a virtual withdrawal of the compulsory
+recantation. He died at the abbey of St Denis on the 29th of March 1711.
+
+
+
+
+GERBERT, MARTIN (1720-1793), German theologian, historian and writer on
+music, belonged to the noble family of Gerbert von Hornau, and was born
+at Horb on the Neckar, Wurttemberg, on the 12th (or 11th or 13th) of
+August 1720. He was educated at Freiburg in the Breisgau, at Klingenau
+in Switzerland and at the Benedictine abbey of St Blasien in the Black
+Forest, where in 1737 he took the vows. In 1744 he was ordained priest,
+and immediately afterwards appointed professor, first of philosophy and
+later of theology. Between 1754 and 1764 he published a series of
+theological treatises, their main tendency being to modify the rigid
+scholastic system by an appeal to the Fathers, notably Augustine; from
+1759 to 1762 he travelled in Germany, Italy and France, mainly with a
+view to examining the collections of documents in the various monastic
+libraries. In 1764 he was elected prince-abbot of St Blasien, and proved
+himself a model ruler both as abbot and prince. His examination of
+archives during his travels had awakened in him a taste for historical
+research, and under his rule St Blasien became a notable centre of the
+methodical study of history; it was here that Marquard Herrgott wrote
+his _Monumenta domus Austriacae_, of which the first two volumes were
+edited, for the second edition, by Gerbert, who also published a _Codex
+epistolaris Rudolphi I., Romani regis_ (1772) and _De Rudolpho Suevico
+comite de Rhinfelden, duce et rege, deque ejus familia_ (1785). It was,
+however, in sacramental theology, liturgiology, and notably
+ecclesiastical music that Gerbert was mainly interested. In 1774 he
+published two volumes _De cantu et musica sacra_; in 1777, _Monumenta
+veteris liturgiae Alemannicae_; and in 1784, in three volumes,
+_Scriptores ecclesiastici de musica sacra_, a collection of the
+principal writers on church music from the 3rd century till the
+invention of printing. The materials for this work he had gathered
+during his travels, and although it contains many textual errors, its
+publication has been of great importance for the history of music, by
+preserving writings which might either have perished or remained
+unknown. His interest in music led to his acquaintance with the composer
+Gluck, who became his intimate friend.
+
+As a prince of the Empire Gerbert was devoted to the interests of the
+house of Austria; as a Benedictine abbot he was opposed to Joseph II.'s
+church policy. In the Febronian controversy (see FEBRONIANISM) he had
+early taken a mediating attitude, and it was largely due to his
+influence that Bishop Hontheim had been induced to retract his extreme
+views.
+
+In 1768 the abbey of St Blasien, with the library and church, was burnt
+to the ground, and the splendid new church which rose on the ruins of
+the old (1783) remained until its destruction by fire in 1874, at once a
+monument of Gerbert's taste in architecture and of his Habsburg
+sympathies. It was at his request that it was made the mausoleum of all
+the Austrian princes buried outside Austria, whose remains were solemnly
+transferred to its vaults. In connexion with its consecration he
+published his _Historia Nigrae Silvae, ordinis S. Benedicti coloniae_ (3
+vols., St Blasien, 1783).
+
+Gerbert, who was beloved and respected by Catholics and Protestants
+alike, died on the 3rd of May 1793.
+
+ See Joseph Bader, _Das ehemalige Kloster St Blasien und seine
+ Gelehrtenakademie_ (Freiburg-im-Breisgau, 1874), which contains a
+ chronological list of Gerbert's works.
+
+
+
+
+GERBIL, or GERBILLE, the name of a group of small, elegant, large-eyed,
+jumping rodents typified by the North African _Gerbillus aegyptiacus_
+(or _gerbillus_), and forming a special subfamily, _Gerbillinae_, of the
+rat tribe or _Muridae_. They are found over the desert districts of both
+Asia and Africa, and are classed in the genera _Gerbillus_ (or
+_Tatera_), _Pachyuromys_, _Meriones_, _Psammomys_ and _Rhombomys_, with
+further divisions into subgenera. They have elongated hind-limbs and
+long hairy tails; and progress by leaps, in the same manner as jerboas,
+from which they differ in having five hind-toes. The cheek-teeth have
+transverse plates of enamel on the crowns; the number of such plates
+diminishing from three in the first tooth to one or one and a half in
+the third. The upper incisor teeth are generally marked by grooves.
+Gerbils are inhabitants of open sandy plains, where they dwell in
+burrows furnished with numerous exits, and containing large grass-lined
+chambers. The Indian _G. indicus_ produces at least a dozen young at a
+birth. All are more or less completely nocturnal.
+
+
+
+
+GERENUK, the Somali name of a long-necked aberrant gazelle, commonly
+known as Waller's gazelle (_Lithocranius walleri_), and ranging from
+Somaliland to Kilimanjaro. The long neck and limbs, coupled with
+peculiarities in the structure of the skull, entitle the gerenuk, which
+is a large species, to represent a genus. The horns of the bucks are
+heavy, and have a peculiar forward curvature at the tips; the colour of
+the coat is red-fawn, with a broad brown band down the back. Gerenuk are
+browsing ruminants, and, in Somaliland, are found in small
+family-parties, and feed more by browsing on the branches and leaves of
+trees and shrubs than by grazing. Frequently they raise themselves by
+standing on their hind-legs with the fore-feet resting against the trunk
+of the tree on which they are feeding. Their usual pace is an awkward
+trot, not unlike that of a camel; and they seldom break into a gallop.
+The Somali form has been separated as _L. sclateri_, but is not more
+than a local race. (See ANTELOPE.)
+
+
+
+
+GERGOVIA (mod. _Gergovie_), in ancient geography, the chief town of the
+Arverni, situated on a hill in the Auvergne, about 8 m. from the Puy de
+Dome, France. Julius Caesar attacked it in 52 B.C., but was beaten off;
+some walls and earthworks seem still to survive from this period. Later,
+when Gaul had been subdued, the place was dismantled and its Gaulish
+inhabitants resettled 4 m. away in the plain at the new Roman city of
+Augustonemetum (mod. _Clermont-Ferrand_).
+
+
+
+
+GERHARD, FRIEDRICH WILHELM EDUARD (1795-1867), German archaeologist, was
+born at Posen on the 29th of November 1795, and was educated at Breslau
+and Berlin. The reputation he acquired by his _Lectiones Apollonianae_
+(1816) led soon afterwards to his being appointed professor at the
+gymnasium of Posen. On resigning that office in 1819, on account of
+weakness of the eyes, he went in 1822 to Rome, where he remained for
+fifteen years. He contributed to Platner's _Beschreibung der Stadt Rom_,
+then under the direction of Bunsen, and was one of the principal
+originators and during his residence in Italy director of the _Instituto
+di corrispondenza archeologica_, founded at Rome in 1828. Returning to
+Germany in 1837 he was appointed archaeologist at the Royal Museum of
+Berlin, and in 1844 was chosen a member of the Academy of Sciences, and
+a professor in the university. He died at Berlin on the 12th of May
+1867.
+
+ Besides a large number of archaeological papers in periodicals, in the
+ _Annali_ of the Institute of Rome, and in the Transactions of the
+ Berlin Academy, and several illustrated catalogues of Greek, Roman and
+ other antiquities in the Berlin, Naples and Vatican Museums, Gerhard
+ was the author of the following works: _Antike Bildwerke_ (Stuttgart,
+ 1827-1844); _Auserlesene griech. Vasenbilder_ (1839-1858);
+ _Etruskische Spiegel_ (1839-1865); _Hyperboreisch-rom. Studien_ (vol.
+ i., 1833; vol. ii., 1852); _Prodromus mytholog. Kunsterklarung_
+ (Stuttgart and Tubingen, 1828); and _Griech. Mythologie_ (1854-1855).
+ His _Gesammelte akademische Abhandlungen und kleine Schriften_ were
+ published posthumously in 2 vols., Berlin, 1867.
+
+
+
+
+GERHARD, JOHANN (1582-1637), Lutheran divine, was born in Quedlinburg on
+the 17th of October 1582. In his fifteenth year, during a dangerous
+illness, he came under the personal influence of Johann Arndt, author of
+_Das wahre Christenthum_, and resolved to study for the church. He
+entered the university of Wittenberg in 1599, and first studied
+philosophy. He also attended lectures in theology, but, a relative
+having persuaded him to change his subject, he studied medicine for two
+years. In 1603, however, he resumed his theological reading at Jena, and
+in the following year received a new impulse from J.W. Winckelmann
+(1551-1626) and Balthasar Mentzer (1565-1627) at Marburg. Having
+graduated and begun to give lectures at Jena in 1605, he in 1606
+accepted the invitation of John Casimir, duke of Coburg, to the
+superintendency of Heldburg and mastership of the gymnasium; soon
+afterwards he became general superintendent of the duchy, in which
+capacity he was engaged in the practical work of ecclesiastical
+organization until 1616, when he became theological professor at Jena,
+where the remainder of his life was spent. Here, with Johann Major and
+Johann Himmel, he formed the "Trias Johannea." Though still
+comparatively young, Gerhard had already come to be regarded as the
+greatest living theologian of Protestant Germany; in the numerous
+"disputations" of the period he was always protagonist, while on all
+public and domestic questions touching on religion or morals his advice
+was widely sought. It is recorded that during the course of his lifetime
+he had received repeated calls to almost every university in Germany
+(e.g. Giessen, Altdorf, Helmstadt, Jena, Wittenberg), as well as to
+Upsala in Sweden. He died in Jena on the 20th of August 1637.
+
+ His writings are numerous, alike in exegetical, polemical, dogmatic
+ and practical theology. To the first category belong the _Commentarius
+ in harmoniam historiae evangelicae de passione Christi_ (1617), the
+ _Comment, super priorem D. Petri epistolam_ (1641), and also his
+ commentaries on Genesis (1637) and on Deuteronomy (1658). Of a
+ controversial character are the _Confessio Catholica_ (1633-1637), an
+ extensive work which seeks to prove the evangelical and catholic
+ character of the doctrine of the Augsburg Confession from the writings
+ of approved Roman Catholic authors; and the _Loci communes theologici_
+ (1610-1622), his principal contribution to science, in which
+ Lutheranism is expounded "nervose, solide, et copiose," in fact with
+ a fulness of learning, a force of logic and a minuteness of detail
+ that had never before been approached. _The Meditationes sacrae_
+ (1606), a work expressly devoted to the uses of Christian edification,
+ has been frequently reprinted in Latin and has been translated into
+ most of the European languages, including Greek. The English
+ translation by R. Winterton (1631) has passed through at least
+ nineteen editions. There is also an edition by W. Papillon in English
+ blank verse (1801). His life, _Vita Joh. Gerhardi_, was published by
+ E.R. Fischer in 1723, and by C.J. Bottcher, _Das Leben Dr Johann
+ Gerhards_, in 1858. See also W. Gass, _Geschichte der protestantischen
+ Dogmatik_ (1854-1867), and the article in the _Allgemeine deutsche
+ Biographie_.
+
+
+
+
+GERHARDT, CHARLES FREDERIC (1816-1856), French chemist, was born at
+Strassburg on the 21st of August 1816. After attending the gymnasium at
+Strassburg and the polytechnic at Karlsruhe, he was sent to the school
+of commerce at Leipzig, where he studied chemistry under Otto Erdmann.
+Returning home in 1834 he entered his father's white lead factory, but
+soon found that business was not to his liking, and after a sharp
+disagreement with his father enlisted in a cavalry regiment. In a few
+months military life became equally distasteful, and he purchased his
+discharge with the assistance of Liebig, with whom, after a short
+interval at Dresden, he went to study at Giessen in 1836. But his stay
+at Giessen was also short, and in 1837 he re-entered the factory. Again,
+however, he quarrelled with his father, and in 1838 went to Paris with
+introductions from Liebig. There he attended Jean Baptiste Dumas'
+lectures and worked with Auguste Cahours (1813-1891) on essential oils,
+especially cumin, in Michel Eugene Chevreul's laboratory, while he
+earned a precarious living by teaching and making translations of some
+of Liebig's writings. In 1841, by the influence of Dumas, he was charged
+with the duties of the chair of chemistry at the Montpellier faculty of
+sciences, becoming titular professor in 1844. In 1842 he annoyed his
+friends in Paris by the matter and manner of a paper on the
+classification of organic compounds, and in 1845 he and his opinions
+were the subject of an attack by Liebig, unjustifiable in its
+personalities but not altogether surprising in view of his wayward
+disregard of his patron's advice. The two were reconciled in 1850, but
+his faculty for disagreeing with his friends did not make it easier for
+him to get another appointment after resigning the chair at Montpellier
+in 1851, especially as he was unwilling to go into the provinces. He
+obtained leave of absence from Montpellier in 1848 and from that year
+till 1855 resided in Paris. During that period he established an "Ecole
+de chimie pratique" of which he had great hopes; but these were
+disappointed, and in 1855, after refusing the offer of a chair of
+chemistry at the new Zurich Polytechnic in 1854, he accepted the
+professorships of chemistry at the Faculty of Sciences and the Ecole
+Polytechnique at Strassburg, where he died on the 19th of August in the
+following year. Although Gerhardt did some noteworthy experimental
+work--for instance, his preparation of acid anhydrides in 1852--his
+contributions to chemistry consist not so much in the discovery of new
+facts as in the introduction of new ideas that vitalized and organized
+an inert accumulation of old facts. In particular, with his
+fellow-worker Auguste Laurent (1807-1853), he did much to reform the
+methods of chemical formulation by insisting on the distinction between
+atoms, molecules and equivalents; and in his unitary system, directly
+opposed to the dualistic doctrines of Berzelius, he combined Dumas'
+substitution theory with the old radicle theory and greatly extended the
+notion of types of structure. His chief works were _Precis de chimie
+organique_ (1844-1845), and _Traite de chimie organique_ (1853-1856).
+
+ See _Charles Gerhardt, sa vie, son oeuvre, sa correspondance_, by his
+ son, Charles Gerhardt, and E. Grimaux (Paris, 1900).
+
+
+
+
+GERHARDT, PAUL (c. 1606-1676), German hymn-writer, was born of a good
+middle-class family at Grafenhainichen, a small town on the railway
+between Halle and Wittenberg, in 1606 or 1607--some authorities, indeed,
+give the date March 12, 1607, but neither the year nor the day is
+accurately known. His education appears to have been retarded by the
+troubles of the period, the Thirty Years' War having begun about the
+time he reached his twelfth year. After completing his studies for the
+church he is known to have lived for some years at Berlin as tutor in
+the family of an advocate named Berthold, whose daughter he subsequently
+married, on receiving his first ecclesiastical appointment at Mittelwald
+(a small town in the neighbourhood of Berlin) in 1651. In 1657 he
+accepted an invitation as "diaconus" to the Nicolaikirche of Berlin;
+but, in consequence of his uncompromising Lutheranism in refusing to
+accept the elector Frederick William's "syncretistic" edict of 1664, he
+was deprived in 1666. Though absolved from submission and restored to
+office early in the following year, on the petition of the citizens, his
+conscience did not allow him to retain a post which, as it appeared to
+him, could only be held on condition of at least a tacit repudiation of
+the Formula Concordiae, and for upwards of a year he lived in Berlin
+without fixed employment. In 1668 he was appointed archdeacon of Lubben
+in the duchy of Saxe-Merseburg, where, after a somewhat sombre ministry
+of eight years, he died on the 7th of June 1676. Gerhardt is the
+greatest hymn-writer of Germany, if not indeed of Europe. Many of his
+best-known hymns were originally published in various church hymn-books,
+as for example in that for Brandenburg, which appeared in 1658; others
+first saw the light in Johann Cruger's _Geistliche Kirchenmelodien_
+(1649) and _Praxis pietatis melica_ (1656). The first complete set of
+them is the _Geistliche Andachten_, published in 1666-1667 by Ebeling,
+music director in Berlin. No hymn by Gerhardt of a later date than 1667
+is known to exist.
+
+ The life of Gerhardt has been written by Roth (1829), by Langbecker
+ (1841), by Schultz (1842), by Wildenhahn (1845) and by Bachmann
+ (1863); also by Kraft in Ersch u. Gruber's _Allg. Encycl._ (1855). The
+ best modern edition of the hymns, published by Wackernagel in 1843,
+ has often been reprinted. There is an English translation by Kelly
+ (_Paul Gerhardt's Spiritual Songs_, 1867).
+
+
+
+
+GERICAULT, JEAN LOUIS ANDRE THEODORE (1791-1824), French painter, the
+leader of the French realistic school, was born at Rouen in 1791. In
+1808 he entered the studio of Charles Vernet, from which, in 1810, he
+passed to that of Guerin, whom he drove to despair by his passion for
+Rubens, and by the unorthodox manner in which he persisted in
+interpreting nature. At the Salon of 1812 Gericault attracted attention
+by his "Officier de Chasseurs a Cheval" (Louvre), a work in which he
+personified the cavalry in its hour of triumph, and turned to account
+the solid training received from Guerin in rendering a picturesque point
+of view which was in itself a protest against the cherished convictions
+of the pseudo-classical school. Two years later (1814) he re-exhibited
+this work accompanied with the reverse picture "Cuirassier blesse"
+(Louvre), and in both subjects called attention to the interest of
+contemporary aspects of life, treated neglected types of living form,
+and exhibited that mastery of and delight in the horse which was a
+feature of his character. Disconcerted by the tempest of contradictory
+opinion which arose over these two pictures, Gericault gave way to his
+enthusiasm for horses and soldiers, and enrolled himself in the
+_mousquetaires_. During the Hundred Days he followed the king to
+Bethune, but, on his regiment being disbanded, eagerly returned to his
+profession, left France for Italy in 1816, and at Rome nobly illustrated
+his favourite animal by his great painting "Course des Chevaux Libres."
+Returning to Paris, Gericault exhibited at the Salon of 1819 the "Radeau
+de la Meduse" (Louvre), a subject which not only enabled him to prove
+his zealous and scientific study of the human form, but contained those
+elements of the heroic and pathetic, as existing in situations of modern
+life, to which he had appealed in his earliest productions. Easily
+depressed or elated, Gericault took to heart the hostility which this
+work excited, and passed nearly two years in London, where the "Radeau"
+was exhibited with success, and where he executed many series of
+admirable lithographs now rare. At the close of 1822 he was again in
+Paris, and produced a great quantity of projects for vast compositions,
+models in wax, and a horse _ecorche_, as preliminary to the production
+of an equestrian statue. His health was now completely undermined by
+various kinds of excess, and on the 26th of January 1824 he died, at the
+age of thirty-three.
+
+ Gericault's biography, accompanied by a _catalogue raisonne_ of his
+ works, was published by M.C. Clement in 1868.
+
+
+
+
+GERIZIM, a mountain in the hill-country of Samaria, 2849 ft. above the
+sea-level, and enclosing, with its companion Ebal, the valley in which
+lies the town of Nablus (Shechem). It is the holy place of the community
+of the Samaritans, who hold that it was the scene of the sacrifice of
+Isaac--a tradition accepted by Dean Stanley but no other western writers
+of importance. Here, on the formal entrance of the Israelites into the
+possession of the Promised Land, were pronounced the blessings connected
+with a faithful observance of the law (Josh. viii. 33, 34; cf. Deut. xi.
+29, 30, xxvii. 12-26), the six tribes, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar,
+Joseph and Benjamin, standing here for the purpose while the remaining
+tribes stood on Ebal to accept the curses attached to specific
+violations thereof. Gerizim was probably chosen as the mount of blessing
+as being on the right hand, the fortunate side, of a spectator facing
+east. The counter-suggestion of Eusebius and Jerome that the Ebal and
+Gerizim associated with this solemnity were not the Shechem mountains at
+all, but two small hills near Jericho, is no longer considered
+important. From this mountain Jotham spoke his parable to the elders of
+Shechem (Judg. ix. 7). Manasseh, the son of the Jewish high-priest in
+the days of Nehemiah, married the daughter of Sanballat and, about 432
+B.C., erected on this mountain a temple for the Samaritans; it was
+destroyed by Hyrcanus about 300 years afterwards. Its site is a small
+level plateau a little under the summit of the mountain. Close to this
+is the place where the Passover is still annually celebrated in exact
+accordance with the rites prescribed in the Pentateuch. On the summit of
+the mountain, which commands a view embracing the greater part of
+Palestine, are a small Moslem shrine and the ruins of a castle probably
+dating from Justinian's time. There was an octagonal Byzantine church
+here, but the foundations alone remain. Josephus describes it as the
+highest of the mountains of Samaria, but Ebal and Tell Azur are both
+higher. (R. A. S. M.)
+
+
+
+
+GERLACHE, ETIENNE CONSTANTIN, BARON DE (1785-1871), Belgian politician
+and historian, was born at Biourge, Luxemburg, on the 24th of December
+1785. He studied law in Paris and practised there for some time, but
+settled at Liege after the establishment of the kingdom of the
+Netherlands. As member of the states-general he was an energetic member
+of the opposition, and, though he repudiated an ultramontane policy, he
+supported the alliance of the extreme Catholics with the Liberal party,
+which paved the way for the revolution of 1830. On the outbreak of
+disturbance in August 1830 he still, however, thought the Orange-Nassau
+dynasty and the union with the Dutch states essential; but his views
+changed, and, after holding various offices in the provisional
+government, he became president of congress, and brought forward the
+motion inviting Leopold of Saxe-Coburg to become king of the Belgians.
+In 1832 he was president of the chamber of representatives, and for
+thirty-five years he presided over the court of appeal. He presided over
+the Catholic congresses held at Malines between 1863 and 1867. That his
+early Liberal views underwent some modification is plain from the
+Conservative principles enunciated in his _Essai sur le mouvement des
+partis en Belgique_ (Brussels, 1852). As an historian his work was
+strongly coloured by his anti-Dutch prejudices and his Catholic
+predilections. His _Histoire des Pays-Bas depuis 1814 jusqu'en 1830_
+(Brussels, 2 vols., 1839), which reached a fourth edition in 1875, was a
+piece of special pleading against the Dutch domination. The most
+important of his other works were his _Histoire de Liege_ (Brussels,
+1843) and his _Etudes sur Salluste et sur quelques-uns des principaux
+historiens de l'antiquite_ (Brussels, 1847).
+
+ A complete edition of his works (6 vols., Brussels, 1874-1875)
+ contains a biography by M. Thonissen.
+
+
+
+
+GERLE, CHRISTOPHE ANTOINE (1736-c. 1801), French revolutionist and
+mystic, was born at Riom in Auvergne. Entering the Carthusian order
+early in life, he became prior of Laval-Dieu in Perche, and afterwards
+of Pont-Sainte-Marie at Moulins. Elected deputy to the states-general in
+1789, Gerle became very popular, and though he had no seat in the
+assembly until after the Tennis Court oath, being only deputy
+_suppleant_, he is represented in David's classic painting as taking
+part in it. In 1792 he was chosen elector of Paris. In the
+revolutionary turmoil Gerle developed a strong vein of mysticism,
+mingled with ideas of reform, and in June 1790 the prophetic powers of
+Suzanne Labrousse (1747-1821), a visionary who had predicted the
+Revolution ten years before, were brought by him to the notice of the
+Convention. In Paris, where he lived first with a spiritualistic doctor
+and afterwards, like Robespierre, at the house of a cabinetmaker, his
+mystical tendencies were strengthened. The insane fancies of Catherine
+Theot, a convent servant turned prophetess, who proclaimed herself the
+Virgin, the "Mother of God" and the "new Eve," were eminently attractive
+to Gerle; in the person of Robespierre he recognized the Messiah, and at
+the meetings of the Theotists he officiated with the aged prophetess as
+co-president. But the activities of Catherine and her adepts were
+short-lived. The Theotists' cult of Robespierre was a weapon in the
+hands of his opponents; and shortly after the festival of the Supreme
+Being, Vadier made a report to the Convention calling for the
+prosecution of Catherine, Gerle and others as fanatics and conspirators.
+They were arrested, thrown into prison and, in the confusion of
+Robespierre's fall, apparently forgotten. Catherine died in prison, but
+Gerle, released by the Directory, became one of the editors of the
+_Messager du soir_, and was afterwards in the office of Pierre Benezech
+(1775-1802), minister of the interior. Having renounced his monastic
+vows in Paris, he is thought to have married, towards the close of his
+life, Christine Raffet, aunt of the artist Denis Raffet. The date of his
+death is uncertain.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN BAPTIST BRETHREN, or GERMAN BRETHREN, a sect of American Baptists
+which originated in Germany, and whose members are popularly known in
+the United States as "Dunkers," "Dunkards" or "Tunkers," corruptions of
+the German verb _tunken_, "to dip," in recognition of the sect's
+continued adherence to the practice of trine immersion. The sect was the
+outcome of one of the many Pietistic movements of the 17th century, and
+was founded in 1708 by Andrew Mack of Swartzenau, Germany, and seven of
+his followers, upon the general issue that both the Lutheran and
+Reformed churches were taking liberties with the literal teachings of
+the Scriptures. The new sect was scarcely organized in Germany when its
+members were compelled by persecution to take refuge in Holland, whence
+they emigrated to Pennsylvania, in small companies, between 1719 and
+1729. The first congregation in America was organized on Christmas Day
+1723 by Peter Becker at Germantown, Pennsylvania, and here in 1743
+Christopher Sauer, one of the sect's first pastors, and a printer by
+trade, printed the first Bible (a few copies of which are still in
+existence) published in a European language in America. From
+Pennsylvania the sect spread chiefly westward, and, after various
+vicissitudes, caused by defections and divisions due to doctrinal
+differences, in 1908 were most numerous in Pennsylvania, Maryland,
+Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas and
+North Dakota.
+
+There is much uncertainty about the early theological history of the
+sect, but it is probable that Mack and his followers were influenced by
+both the Greek Catholics and the Waldensians. P.H. Bashor in his
+historical sketch, read before the World's Fair Congress of the Brethren
+Church (1894), says: "From the history of extended labour by Greek
+missionaries, from the active propaganda of doctrine by scattered
+Waldensian refugees, through parts of Germany and Bavaria, from the
+credence that may generally be given to local tradition, and from the
+strong similarity between the three churches in general features of
+circumstantial service, the conclusion, without additional evidence, is
+both reasonable and natural that the founders of the new church received
+their teaching, their faith and much of their church idea from intimate
+acquaintance with the established usages of both societies, and from
+their amplification and enforcement by missionaries and pastors.... In
+doctrine the church has been from the first contentious for believers'
+baptism, holding that nowhere in the New Testament can be found any
+authority even by inference, precept or example for the baptism of
+infants. On questions of fundamental doctrine they held to the belief
+in one self-existing supreme ruler of the Universe--the Divine
+Godhead--the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit--the tri-personality."
+Hence their practice of triple immersion, which provides that the
+candidate shall kneel in the water and be immersed, face first, three
+times--in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. (From
+this practice the sect received the less commonly used nickname
+"Dompelaers," meaning "tumblers.") They accept implicitly and literally
+the New Testament as the infallible guide in spiritual matters, holding
+it to be the inspired word of God, revealed through Jesus Christ and, by
+inspiration, through the Apostles. They also believe in the inspiration
+of the Old Testament. In their celebration of the communion service they
+aim exactly to imitate the forms observed by Christ. It is celebrated in
+the evening, and is accompanied by the ancient love feast (partaken by
+all communicants seated at a common table), by the ceremony of the
+washing of feet and by the salutation of the holy kiss, the three
+last-named ceremonies being observed by the sexes separately. They pray
+over their sick and, when so requested, anoint them with oil. They are
+rigid non-resistants, and will not bear arms or study the art of war;
+they refuse to take oaths, and discountenance going to law over issues
+that can possibly be settled out of the courts. The taking of interest
+was at first forbidden, but that prohibition is not now insisted upon.
+They "testify" against the use of intoxicating liquor and tobacco, and
+advocate simplicity in dress. In its earlier history the sect opposed
+voting or taking any active part in political affairs, but these
+restrictions have quite generally disappeared. Similarly the earlier
+prejudice against higher education, and the maintenance of institutions
+for that purpose, has given place to greater liberality along those
+lines. In 1782 the sect forbade slave-holding by its members.
+
+The church officers (generally unpaid) comprise bishops (or
+ministers), elders, teachers, deacons (or visiting brethren) and
+deaconesses--chiefly aged women who are permitted at times to take
+leading parts in church services. The bishops are chosen from the
+teachers; they are itinerant, conduct marriage and funeral services, and
+are present at communions, at ordinations, when deacons are chosen or
+elected, and at trials for the excommunication of members. The elders
+are the first or oldest teachers of congregations, for which there is no
+regular bishop. They have charge of the meetings of such congregations,
+and participate in excommunication proceedings, besides which they
+preach, exhort, baptize, and may, when needed, take the offices of the
+deacons. The teachers, who are chosen by vote, may also exhort or
+preach, when their services are needed for such purposes, and may, at
+the request of a bishop, perform marriage or baptismal ceremonies. The
+deacons have general oversight of the material affairs of the
+congregation, and are especially charged with the care of poor widows
+and their children. In the discharge of these duties they are expected
+to visit each family in the congregation at least once a year. The
+government of the church is chiefly according to the congregational
+principle, and the women have an equal voice with the men; but annual
+meetings, attended by the bishops, teachers and other delegates from the
+several congregations are held, and at these sessions the larger
+questions involving church polity are considered and decided by a
+committee of five bishops.
+
+An early secession from the general body of Dunkers was that of the
+Seventh Day Dunkers, whose distinctive principle was that the seventh
+day was the true Sabbath. Their founder was Johann Conrad Beissel
+(1690-1768), a native of Eberbach and one of the first emigrants, who,
+after living as a hermit for several years on Mill Creek, Lancaster
+county, Pennsylvania, founded the sect (1725), then again lived as a
+hermit in a cave (formerly occupied by another hermit, one Elimelech) on
+the Cocalico Creek in Pennsylvania, and in 1732-1735 established a
+semi-monastic community (the "Order of the Solitary") with a convent
+(the "Sister House") and a monastery (the "Brother House") at Ephrata,
+in what is now Lancaster county, about 55 m. W. by N. from Philadelphia.
+Among the industries of the men were printing (in both English and
+German), book-binding, tanning, quarrying, and the operation of a saw
+mill, a bark mill, and perhaps a pottery; the women did embroidery,
+quilting, and engrossing in a beautiful but peculiar hand, known as
+Fracturschrift.[1] The monastic feature was gradually abandoned, and in
+1814 the Society was incorporated as the Seventh Day Baptists, its
+affairs being placed in the hands of a board of trustees. More important
+in the history of the modern church was the secession, in the decade
+between 1880 and 1890, of the Old Order Brethren, who opposed Sunday
+Schools and the missionary work of the Brethren, in Asia Minor and
+India, and in several European countries; and also in 1882 of the
+radicals, or Progressives, who objected to a distinctive dress and to
+the absolute supremacy of the yearly conferences. Higher education was
+long forbidden and is consistently opposed by the Old Order. The same
+element in the Brethren opposed a census, but according to Howard
+Miller's census of 1880 (_Record of the Faithful_) the number of Dunkers
+was 59,749 in that year; by the United States census of 1890 it was then
+73,795; the figures for 1904 are given by Henry King Carroll in his
+"Statistics of the Churches" in the _Christian Advocate_ (Jan. 5, 1905):
+Conservatives, or German Baptist Brethren, 95,000; Old Order, 4000;
+Progressives or Brethren, 15,000; Seventh Day, 194; total, 114,194. In
+1909 the German Baptist Brethren had an estimated membership of
+approximately 100,000, and the Brethren of 18,000. The main body, or
+Conservatives, support schools at Huntingdon, Pennsylvania; Mt. Morris,
+Illinois; Lordsburg, California; McPherson, Kansas; Bridgewater,
+Virginia; Canton, Ohio; Chicago, Illinois; North Manchester, Indiana;
+Plattsburg, Missouri; Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania; Union Bridge,
+Maryland; and Fruitdale, Alabama. They have a publishing house at Elgin,
+Illinois, and maintain missions in Denmark, Sweden, France, Italy, India
+and China. The Progressives have a college, a theological seminary and a
+publishing house at Ashland, Ohio; and they carry on missionary work in
+Canada, South America and Persia.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--Lamech and Agrippa, _Chronicon Ephratense_, in German
+ (Ephrata, Penn., 1786) and in English (Lancaster, 1889); G.N.
+ Falkenstein, "The German Baptist Brethren, or Dunkers," part 8 of
+ "Pennsylvania: The German Influence in its Settlement and
+ Development," in vol. x. of the _Pennsylvania German Society,
+ Proceedings and Addresses_ (Lancaster, Penn., 1900); Julius Friedrich
+ Sachse, _The German Sectarians of Pennsylvania, 1742-1800: A Critical
+ and Legendary History of the Ephrata Cloister and the Dunkers_
+ (Philadelphia, 1900); and John Lewis Gillin, _The Dunkers: A
+ Sociological Interpretation_ (New York, 1906), a doctor's
+ dissertation, with full bibliography.
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] Beissel (known in the community as "Friedsam") was their leader
+ until his death; he published several collections of hymns. The stone
+ over his grave bears the inscription: "Here rests an outgrowth of the
+ love of God, 'Friedsam,' a Solitary Brother, afterwards a leader of
+ the Solitary and the Congregation of Grace in and around Ephrata ...
+ Fell asleep July 6, 1768, in the 52nd year of his spiritual life, but
+ the 72nd year and fourth month of his natural life." The borough of
+ Ephrata was separated from the township in 1891. Pop. (1900) of the
+ borough, 2451; of the township, 2390. The "Brother House" and the
+ "Sister House" are still standing (though in a dilapidated
+ condition). In 1777, after the battle of Brandywine, many wounded
+ American soldiers were nursed here by the Sisters, and about 200 are
+ buried here.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN CATHOLICS (_Deutschkatholiken_), the name assumed in Germany
+towards the close of 1844 by certain dissentients from the Church of
+Rome. The most prominent leader of the German Catholic movement was
+Johann Ronge, a priest who in the _Sachsische Vaterlandsblatter_ for the
+15th of October 1844 made a vigorous attack upon Wilhelm Arnoldi, bishop
+of Trier since 1842, for having ordered (for the first time since 1810)
+the exposition of the "holy coat of Trier," alleged to be the seamless
+robe of Christ, an event which drew countless pilgrims to the cathedral.
+Ronge, who had formerly been chaplain at Grottkau, was then a
+schoolmaster at Laurahutte near the Polish border. The article made a
+great sensation, and led to Ronge's excommunication by the chapter of
+Breslau in December 1844. The ex-priest received a large amount of
+public sympathy, and a dissenting congregation was almost immediately
+formed at Breslau with a very simple creed, in which the chief articles
+were belief in God the Father, creator and ruler of the universe; in
+Jesus Christ the Saviour, who delivers from the bondage of sin by his
+life, doctrine and death; in the operation of the Holy Ghost; in a holy,
+universal, Christian church; in forgiveness of sins and the life
+everlasting. The Bible was made the sole rule, and all external
+authority was barred. Within a few weeks similar communities were formed
+at Leipzig, Dresden, Berlin, Offenbach, Worms, Wiesbaden and elsewhere;
+and at a "council" convened at Leipzig at Easter 1845, twenty-seven
+congregations were represented by delegates, of whom only two or at most
+three were in clerical orders.
+
+Even before the beginning of the agitation led by Ronge, another
+movement fundamentally distinct, though in some respects similar, had
+been originated at Schneidemuhl, Posen, under the guidance of Johann
+Czerski (1813-1893), also a priest, who had come into collision with the
+church authorities on the then much discussed question of mixed
+marriages, and also on that of the celibacy of the clergy. The result
+had been his suspension from office in March 1844; his public
+withdrawal, along with twenty-four adherents, from the Roman communion
+in August; his excommunication; and the formation, in October, of a
+"Christian Catholic" congregation which, while rejecting clerical
+celibacy, the use of Latin in public worship, and the doctrines of
+purgatory and transubstantiation, retained the Nicene theology and the
+doctrine of the seven sacraments. Czerski had been at some of the
+sittings of the "German Catholic" council of Leipzig; but when a formula
+somewhat similar to that of Breslau had been adopted, he refused his
+signature because the divinity of Christ had been ignored, and he and
+his congregation continued to retain by preference the name of
+"Christian Catholics," which they had originally assumed. Of the German
+Catholic congregations which had been represented at Leipzig some
+manifested a preference for the fuller and more positive creed of
+Schneidemuhl, but a great majority continued to accept the comparatively
+rationalistic position of the Breslau school. The number of these
+rapidly increased, and the congregations scattered over Germany numbered
+nearly 200. External and internal checks, however, soon limited this
+advance. In Austria, and ultimately also in Bavaria, the use of the name
+German Catholics was officially prohibited, that of "Dissidents" being
+substituted, while in Prussia, Baden and Saxony the adherents of the new
+creed were laid under various disabilities, being suspected both of
+undermining religion and of encouraging the revolutionary tendencies of
+the age. Ronge himself was a foremost figure in the troubles of 1848;
+after the dissolution of the Frankfort parliament he lived for some time
+in London, returning in 1861 to Germany. He died at Vienna on the 26th
+of October 1887. In 1859 some of the German Catholics entered into
+corporate union with the "Free Congregations," an association of
+free-thinking communities that had since 1844 been gradually withdrawing
+from the orthodox Protestant Church, when the united body took the title
+of "The Religious Society of Free Congregations." Before that time many
+of the congregations which were formed in 1844 and the years immediately
+following had been dissolved, including that of Schneidemuhl itself,
+which ceased to exist in 1857. There are now only about 2000 strict
+German Catholics, all in Saxony. The movement has been superseded by the
+Old Catholic (q.v.) organization.
+
+ See G.G. Gervinus, _Die Mission des Deutschkatholicismus_ (1846); F.
+ Kampe, _Das Wesen des Deutschkatholicismus_ (1860); Findel, _Der
+ Deutschkatholicismus in Sachsen_ (1895); Carl Mirbt, in Herzog-Hauck's
+ _Realencyk. fur prot. Theol._ iv. 583.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN EAST AFRICA, a country occupying the east-central portion of the
+African continent. The colony extends at its greatest length north to
+south from 1 deg. to 11 deg. S., and west to east from 30 deg. to 40
+deg. E. It is bounded E. by the Indian Ocean (the coast-line extending
+from 4 deg. 20' to 10 deg. 40' S.), N.E. and N. by British East Africa
+and Uganda, W. by Belgian Congo, S.W. by British Central Africa and S.
+by Portuguese East Africa.
+
+[Illustration: German East Africa.]
+
+ _Area and Boundaries._--On the north the boundary line runs N.W. from
+ the mouth of the Umba river to Lake Jipe and Mount Kilimanjaro
+ including both in the protectorate, and thence to Victoria Nyanza,
+ crossing it at 1 deg. S., which parallel it follows till it reaches 30
+ deg. E. In the west the frontier is as follows: From the point of
+ intersection of 1 deg. S. and 30 deg. E., a line running S. and S.W.
+ to the north-west end of Lake Kivu, thence across that lake near its
+ western shore, and along the river Rusizi, which issues from it, to
+ the spot where the Rusizi enters the north end of Lake Tanganyika;
+ along the middle line of Tanganyika to near its southern end, when it
+ is deflected eastward to the point where the river Kalambo enters the
+ lake (thus leaving the southern end of Tanganyika to Great Britain).
+ From this point the frontier runs S.E. across the plateau between
+ Lakes Tanganyika and Nyasa, in its southern section following the
+ course of the river Songwe. Thence it goes down the middle of Nyasa as
+ far as 11 deg. 30' S. The southern frontier goes direct from the
+ last-named point eastward to the Rovuma river, which separates German
+ and Portuguese territory. A little before the Indian Ocean is reached
+ the frontier is deflected south so as to leave the mouth of the Rovuma
+ in German East Africa. These boundaries include an area of about
+ 364,000 sq. m. (nearly double the size of Germany), with a population
+ estimated in 1910 at 8,000,000. Of these above 10,000 were Arabs,
+ Indians, Syrians and Goanese, and 3000 Europeans (over 2000 being
+ Germans). The island of Mafia (see below) is included in the
+ protectorate.
+
+ _Physical Features._--The coast of German East Africa (often spoken of
+ as the Swahili coast, after the inhabitants of the seaboard) is
+ chiefly composed of coral, is little indented, and is generally low,
+ partly sandy, partly rich alluvial soil covered with dense bush or
+ mangroves. Where the Arabs have established settlements the coco-palm
+ and mango tree introduced by them give variety to the vegetation. The
+ coast plain is from 10 to 30 m. wide and 620 m. long; it is bordered
+ on the west by the precipitous eastern side of the interior plateau of
+ Central Africa. This plateau, considerably tilted from its horizontal
+ position, attains its highest elevation north of Lake Nyasa (see
+ LIVINGSTONE MOUNTAINS), where several peaks rise over 7000 ft., one to
+ 9600, while its mean altitude is about 3000 to 4000 ft. From this
+ region the country slopes towards the north-west, and is not
+ distinguished by any considerable mountain ranges. A deep narrow
+ gorge, the so-called "eastern rift-valley," traverses the middle of
+ the plateau in a meridional direction. In the northern part of the
+ country it spreads into several side valleys, from one of which rises
+ the extinct volcano Kilimanjaro (q.v.), the highest mountain in Africa
+ (19,321 ft.). Its glaciers send down a thousand rills which combine to
+ form the Pangani river. About 40 m. west of Kilimanjaro is Mount Meru
+ (14,955 ft.), another volcanic peak, with a double crater. The greater
+ steepness of its sides makes Meru in some aspects a more striking
+ object than its taller neighbour. South-east of Mount Kilimanjaro are
+ the Pare Mountains and Usambara highlands, separated from the coast by
+ a comparatively narrow strip of plain. To the south of the Usambara
+ hills, and on the eastern edge of the plateau, are the mountainous
+ regions of Nguru (otherwise Unguru), Useguha and Usagara. As already
+ indicated, the southern half of Victoria Nyanza and the eastern
+ shores, in whole or in part, of Lakes Kivu, Tanganyika and Nyasa, are
+ in German territory. (The lakes are separately described.) Several
+ smaller lakes occur in parts of the eastern rift-valley. Lake Rukwa
+ (q.v.) north-west of Nyasa is presumably only the remnant of a much
+ larger lake. Its extent varies with the rainfall of each year.
+ North-west of Kilimanjaro is a sheet of water known as the Natron Lake
+ from the mineral alkali it contains. In the northern part of the
+ colony the Victoria Nyanza is the dominant physical feature. The
+ western frontier coincides with part of the eastern wall of another
+ depression, the Central African or Albertine rift-valley, in which lie
+ Tanganyika, Kivu and other lakes. Along the north-west frontier north
+ of Kivu are volcanic peaks (see MFUMBIRO).
+
+ The country is well watered, but with the exception of the Rufiji the
+ rivers, save for a few miles from their mouths, are unnavigable. The
+ largest streams are the Rovuma and Rufiji (q.v.), both rising in the
+ central plateau and flowing to the Indian Ocean. Next in importance is
+ the Pangani river, which, as stated above, has its head springs on the
+ slopes of Kilimanjaro. Flowing in a south-easterly direction it
+ reaches the sea after a course of some 250 m. The Wami and Kingani,
+ smaller streams, have their origin in the mountainous region fringing
+ the central plateau, and reach the ocean opposite the island of
+ Zanzibar. Of inland river systems there are four--one draining to
+ Victoria Nyanza, another to Tanganyika, a third to Nyasa and a fourth
+ to Rukwa. Into Victoria Nyanza are emptied, on the east, the waters of
+ the Mori and many smaller streams; on the west, the Kagera (q.v.),
+ besides smaller rivers. Into Tanganyika flows the Malagarasi, a
+ considerable river with many affluents, draining the west-central part
+ of the plateau. The Kalambo river, a comparatively small stream near
+ the southern end of Tanganyika, flows in a south-westerly direction.
+ Not far from its mouth there is a magnificent fall, a large volume of
+ water falling 600 ft. sheer over a rocky ledge of horse-shoe shape. Of
+ the streams entering Nyasa the Songwe has been mentioned. The Ruhuhu,
+ which enters Nyasa in 10 deg. 30' S., and its tributaries drain a
+ considerable area west of 36 deg. E. The chief feeders of Lake Rukwa
+ are the Saisi and the Rupa-Songwe.
+
+ Mafia Island lies off the coast immediately north of 8 deg. N. It has
+ an area of 200 sq. m. The island is low and fertile, and extensively
+ planted with coco-nut palms. It is continued southwards by an
+ extensive reef, on which stands the chief village, Chobe, the
+ residence of a few Arabs and Banyan traders. Chobe stands on a shallow
+ creek almost inaccessible to shipping.
+
+ _Geology._--The narrow foot-plateau of British East Africa broadens
+ out to the south of Bagamoyo to a width of over 100 m. This is covered
+ to a considerable extent by rocks of recent and late Tertiary ages.
+ Older Tertiary rocks form the bluffs of Lindi. Cretaceous marls and
+ limestones appear at intervals, extending in places to the edge of the
+ upper plateau, and are extensively developed on the Makonde plateau.
+ They are underlain by Jurassic rocks, from beneath which sandstones
+ and shales yielding _Glossopteris browniana_ var. _indica_, and
+ therefore of Lower Karroo age, appear in the south but are overlapped
+ on the north by Jurassic strata. The central plateau consists almost
+ entirely of metamorphic rocks with extensive tracts of granite in
+ Unyamwezi. In the vicinity of Lakes Nyasa and Tanganyika, sandstones
+ and shales of Lower Karroo age and yielding seams of coal are
+ considered to owe their position and preservation to being let down by
+ rift faults into hollows of the crystalline rocks. In Karagwe certain
+ quartzites, slates and schistose sandstones resemble the ancient
+ gold-bearing rocks of South Africa.
+
+ The volcanic plateau of British East Africa extends over the boundary
+ in the region of Kilimanjaro. Of the sister peaks, Kibo and Mawenzi,
+ the latter is far the oldest and has been greatly denuded, while Kibo
+ retains its crateriform shape intact. The rift-valley faults continue
+ down the depression, marked by numerous volcanoes, in the region of
+ the Natron Lake and Lake Manyara; while the steep walls of the deep
+ depression of Tanganyika and Nyasa represent the western rift system
+ at its maximum development.
+
+ Fossil remains of saurians of gigantic size have been found; one thigh
+ bone measures 6 ft. 10 in., the same bone in the _Diplodocus Carnegii_
+ measuring only 4 ft. 11 in.
+
+ _Climate._--The warm currents setting landwards from the Indian Ocean
+ bring both moisture and heat, so that the Swahili coast has a higher
+ temperature and heavier rainfall than the Atlantic seaboard under the
+ same parallels of latitude. The mean temperature on the west and east
+ coasts of Africa is 72 deg. and 80 deg. Fahr. respectively, the
+ average rainfall in Angola 36 in., in Dar-es-Salaam 60 in. On the
+ Swahili coast the south-east monsoon begins in April and the
+ north-east monsoon in November. In the interior April brings
+ south-east winds, which continue until about the beginning of October.
+ During the rest of the year changing winds prevail. These winds are
+ charged with moisture, which they part with on ascending the
+ precipitous side of the plateau. Rain comes with the south-east
+ monsoon, and on the northern part of the coast the rainy season is
+ divided into two parts, the great and the little Masika: the former
+ falls in the months of September, October, November; the latter in
+ February and March. In the interior the climate has a more continental
+ character, and is subject to considerable changes of temperature; the
+ rainy season sets in a little earlier the farther west and north the
+ region, and is well marked, the rain beginning in November and ending
+ in April; the rest of the year is dry. On the highest parts of the
+ plateau the climate is almost European, the nights being sometimes
+ exceedingly cold. Kilimanjaro has a climate of its own; the west and
+ south sides of the mountain receive the greatest rainfall, while the
+ east and north sides are dry nearly all the year. Malarial diseases
+ are rather frequent, more so on the coast than farther inland. The
+ Kilimanjaro region is said to enjoy immunity. Smallpox is frequent on
+ the coast, but is diminishing before vaccination; other epidemic
+ diseases are extremely rare.
+
+ _Flora and Fauna._--The character of the vegetation varies with and
+ depends on moisture, temperature and soil. On the low littoral zone
+ the coast produced a rich tropical bush, in which the mangrove is very
+ prominent. Coco-palms and mango trees have been planted in great
+ numbers, and also many varieties of bananas. The bush is grouped in
+ copses on meadows, which produce a coarse tall grass. The river banks
+ are lined with belts of dense forest, in which useful timber occurs.
+ The _Hyphaene_ palm is frequent, as well as various kinds of
+ gum-producing mimosas. The slopes of the plateau which face the
+ rain-bringing monsoon are in some places covered with primeval forest,
+ in which timber is plentiful. The silk-cotton tree (_Bombax ceiba_),
+ miomba, tamarisk, copal tree (_Hymenaea courbaril_) are frequent,
+ besides sycamores, banyan trees (_Ficus indica_) and the deleb palm
+ (_Borassus aethiopum_). It is here we find the _Landolphia florida_,
+ which yields the best rubber. The plateau is partly grass land without
+ bush and forest, partly steppe covered with mimosa bush, which
+ sometimes is almost impenetrable. Mount Kilimanjaro and Mount Meru
+ exhibit on a vertical scale the various forms of vegetation which
+ characterize East Africa (see KILIMANJARO).
+
+ East Africa is rich in all kinds of antelope, and the elephant,
+ rhinoceros and hippopotamus are still plentiful in parts.
+ Characteristic are the giraffe, the chimpanzee and the ostrich.
+ Buffaloes and zebras occur in two or three varieties. Lions and
+ leopards are found throughout the country. Crocodiles are numerous in
+ all the larger rivers. Snakes, many venomous, abound. Of birds there
+ are comparatively few on the steppe, but by rivers, lakes and swamps
+ they are found in thousands. Locusts occasion much damage, and ants of
+ various kinds are often a plague. The tsetse fly (_Glossina
+ morsitans_) infests several districts; the sand-flea has been imported
+ from the west coast. Land and water turtles are numerous.
+
+_Inhabitants._--On the coast and at the chief settlements inland are
+Arab and Indian immigrants, who are merchants and agriculturists. The
+Swahili (q.v.) are a mixed Bantu and Semitic race inhabiting the
+seaboard. The inhabitants of the interior may be divided into two
+classes, those namely of Bantu and those of Hamitic stock. What may be
+called the indigenous population consists of the older Bantu races.
+These tribes have been subject to the intrusion from the south of more
+recent Bantu folk, such as the Yao, belonging to the Ama-Zulu branch of
+the race, while from the north there has been an immigration of
+Hamito-Negroid peoples. Of these the Masai and Wakuafi are found in the
+region between Victoria Nyanza and Kilimanjaro. The Masai (q.v.) and
+allied tribes are nomads and cattle raisers. They are warlike, and live
+in square mud-plastered houses called _tembe_ which can be easily
+fortified and defended. The Bantu tribes are in general peaceful
+agriculturists, though the Bantus of recent immigration retain the
+warlike instincts of the Zulus. The most important group of the Bantus
+is the Wanyamwezi (see UNYAMWEZI), divided into many tribes. They are
+spread over the central plains, and have for neighbours on the
+south-east, between Nyasa and the Rufiji, the warlike Wahehe. The
+Wangoni (Angoni), a branch of the Ama-Zulu, are widely spread over the
+central and Nyasa regions. Other well-known tribes are the Wasambara,
+who have given their name to the highlands between Kilimanjaro and the
+coast, and the Warundi, inhabiting the district between Tanganyika and
+the Kagera. In Karagwe, a region adjoining the south-west shores of
+Victoria Nyanza, the Bahima are the ruling caste. Formerly Karagwe under
+its Bahima kings was a powerful state. Many different dialects are
+spoken by the Bantu tribes, Swahili being the most widely known (see
+BANTU LANGUAGES). Their religion is the worship of spirits, ancestral
+and otherwise, accompanied by a vague and undefined belief in a Supreme
+Being, generally regarded as indifferent to the doings of the people.
+
+The task of civilizing the natives is undertaken in various ways by the
+numerous Protestant and Roman Catholic missions established in the
+colony, and by the government. The slave trade has been abolished, and
+though domestic slavery is allowed, all children of slaves born after
+the 31st of December 1905 are free. For certain public works the Germans
+enforce a system of compulsory labour. Efforts are made by instruction
+in government and mission schools to spread a knowledge of the German
+language among the natives, in order to fit them for subordinate posts
+in administrative offices, such as the customs. Native chiefs in the
+interior are permitted to help in the administration of justice. The
+Mission du Sacre Coeur in Bagamoyo, the oldest mission in the colony,
+has trained many young negroes to be useful mechanics. The number of
+native Christians is small. The Moslems have vigorous and successful
+missions.
+
+ _Chief Towns._--The seaports of the colony are Tanga (pop. about
+ 6000), Bagamoyo 5000 (with surrounding district some 18,000),
+ Dar-es-Salaam 24,000, Kilwa 5000, (these have separate notices),
+ Pangani, Sadani, Lindi and Mikindani. Pangani (pop. about 3500) is
+ situated at the mouth of the river of the same name; it serves a
+ district rich in tropical products, and does a thriving trade with
+ Zanzibar and Pemba. Sadani is a smaller port midway between Pangani
+ and Bagamoyo. Lindi (10 deg. 0' S., 39 deg. 40' E.) is 80 m. north of
+ Cape Delgado. Lindi (Swahili for The Deep Below) Bay runs inland 6 m.
+ and is 3 m. across, affording deep anchorage. Hills to the west of the
+ bay rise over 1000 ft. The town (pop. about 4000) is picturesquely
+ situated on the north side of the bay. The Arab _boma_, constructed in
+ 1800, has been rebuilt by the Germans, who have retained the fine
+ sculptured gateway. Formerly a rendezvous for slave caravans Lindi now
+ has a more legitimate trade in white ivory. Mikindani is the most
+ southern port in the colony. Owing to the prevalence of malaria there,
+ few Europeans live at the town, and trade is almost entirely in the
+ hands of Banyans.
+
+ Inland the principal settlements are Korogwe, Mrogoro, Kilossa, Mpapua
+ and Tabora. Korogwe is in the Usambara hills, on the north bank of the
+ Pangani river, and is reached by railway from Tanga. Mrogoro is some
+ 140 m. due west of Dar-es-Salaam, and is the first important station
+ on the road to Tanganyika. Kilossa and Mpapua are farther inland on
+ the same caravan route. Tabora (pop. about 37,000), the chief town of
+ the Wanyamwezi tribes, occupies an important position on the central
+ plateau, being the meeting-place of the trade routes from Tanganyika,
+ Victoria Nyanza and the coast. In the railway development of the
+ colony Tabora is destined to become the central junction of lines
+ going north, south, east and west.
+
+ On Victoria Nyanza there are various settlements. Mwanza, on the
+ southern shore, is the lake terminus of the route from Bagamoyo:
+ Bukoba is on the western shore, and Schirati on the eastern shore;
+ both situated a little south of the British frontier. On the German
+ coast of Tanganyika are Ujiji (q.v.), pop. about 14,000, occupying a
+ central position; Usumbura, at the northern end of the lake where is a
+ fort built by the Germans; and Bismarckburg, near the southern end. On
+ the shores of the lake between Ujiji and Bismarckburg are four
+ stations of the Algerian "White Fathers," all possessing churches,
+ schools and other stone buildings. Langenburg is a settlement on the
+ north-east side of Lake Nyasa. The government station, called New
+ Langenburg, occupies a higher and more healthy site north-west of the
+ lake. Wiedhafen is on the east side of Nyasa at the mouth of the
+ Ruhuhu, and is the terminus of the caravan route from Kilwa.
+
+ _Productions._--The chief wealth of the country is derived from
+ agriculture and the produce of the forests. From the forests are
+ obtained rubber, copal, bark, various kinds of fibre, and timber
+ (teak, mahogany, &c.). The cultivated products include coffee, the
+ coco-nut palm, tobacco, sugar-cane, cotton, vanilla, sorghum,
+ earth-nuts, sesame, maize, rice, beans, peas, bananas (in large
+ quantities), yams, manioc and hemp. Animal products are ivory, hides,
+ tortoise-shell and pearls. On the plateaus large numbers of cattle,
+ goats and sheep are reared. The natives have many small smithies.
+ Gold, coal, iron, graphite, copper and salt have been found. Garnets
+ are plentiful in the Lindi district, and agates, topaz, moonstone and
+ other precious stones are found in the colony. The chief gold and iron
+ deposits are near Victoria Nyanza. In the Mwanza district are
+ conglomerate reefs of great extent. Mining began in 1905, Mica is
+ mined near Mrogoro. The chief exports are sisal fibre, rubber, hides
+ and skins, wax, ivory, copra, coffee, ground-nuts and cotton. The
+ imports are chiefly articles of food, textiles, and metals and
+ hardware. More than half the entire trade, both export and import, is
+ with Zanzibar. Germany takes about 30% of the trade. In the ten years
+ 1896-1905 the value of the external trade increased from about
+ L600,000 to over L1,100,000. In 1907 the imports were valued at
+ L1,190,000, the exports at L625,000.
+
+ Numerous companies are engaged in developing the resources of the
+ country by trading, planting and mining. The most important is the
+ _Deutsch-Ostafrikanische Gesellschaft_, founded in 1885, which has
+ trading stations in each seaport, and flourishing plantations in
+ various parts of the country. It is the owner of vast tracts of land.
+ From 1890 to 1903 this company was in possession of extensive mining,
+ railway, banking and coining rights, but in the last-named year, by
+ agreement with the German government, it became a land company purely.
+ The company has a right to a fifth part of the land within a zone of
+ 10 m. on either side of any railway built in the colony previously to
+ 1935. In addition to the companies a comparatively large number of
+ private individuals have laid out plantations, Usambara and Pare
+ having become favourite districts for agricultural enterprise. In the
+ delta of the Rufiji and in the Kilwa district cotton-growing was begun
+ in 1901. The plantations are all worked by native labour. The
+ government possesses large forest reserves.
+
+ _Communications._--Good roads for foot traffic have been made from the
+ seaports to the trading stations on Lakes Nyasa, Tanganyika and
+ Victoria. Caravans from Dar-es-Salaam to Tanganyika take 60 days to do
+ the journey. The lack of more rapid means of communication hindered
+ the development of the colony and led to economic crises (1898-1902),
+ which were intensified, and in part created, by the building of a
+ railway in the adjacent British protectorate from Mombasa to Victoria
+ Nyanza, the British line securing the trade with the lake. At that
+ time the only railway in the country was a line from Tanga to the
+ Usambara highlands. This railway passes through Korogwe (52 m. from
+ Tanga) and is continued via Mombo to Wilhelmstal, a farther distance
+ of 56 m. The building of a trunk line from Dar-es-Salaam to Mrogoro
+ (140 m.), and ultimately to Ujiji by way of Tabora, was begun in 1905.
+ Another proposed line would run from Kilwa to Wiedhafen on Lake Nyasa.
+ This railway would give the quickest means of access to British
+ Central Africa and the southern part of Belgian Congo. On each of the
+ three lakes is a government steamer. British steamers on Victoria
+ Nyanza maintain communication between the German stations and the take
+ terminus of the Uganda railway. The German East Africa Line of Hamburg
+ runs a fleet of first-class steamers to East Africa, which touch at
+ Tanga, Dar-es-Salaam and Zanzibar. There is a submarine cable from
+ Dar-es-Salaam to Zanzibar, and an overland line connecting all the
+ coast stations.
+
+ _Administration, Revenue, &c._--For administrative purposes the
+ country is divided into districts (_Bezirksamter_), and stations
+ (_Stationsbezirke_). Each station has a chief, who is subordinate to
+ the official of his district, these in their turn being under the
+ governor, who resides in Dar-es-Salaam. The governor is commander of
+ the colonial force, which consists of natives under white officers.
+ District councils are constituted, on which the European merchants and
+ planters are represented. Revenue is raised by taxes on imports and
+ exports, on licences for the sale of land and spirituous liquors, and
+ for wood-cutting, by harbour and other dues, and a hut tax on natives.
+ The deficiency between revenue and expenditure is met by a subsidy
+ from the imperial government. In no case during the first twenty-one
+ years' existence of the colony had the local revenue reached 60% of
+ the local expenditure, which in normal years amounted to about
+ L500,000. In 1909, however, only the expenditure necessary for
+ military purposes (L183,500) was received by way of subsidy.
+
+_History._--Until nearly the middle of the 19th century only the coast
+lands of the territory now forming German East Africa were known either
+to Europeans or to the Arabs. When at the beginning of the 16th century
+the Portuguese obtained possession of the towns along the East African
+coast, they had been, for periods extending in some cases fully five
+hundred years, under Arab dominion. After the final withdrawal of the
+Portuguese in the early years of the 18th century, the coast towns north
+of Cape Delgado fell under the sway of the Muscat Arabs, passing from
+them to the sultan of Zanzibar. From about 1830, or a little earlier,
+the Zanzibar Arabs began to penetrate inland, and by 1850 had
+established themselves at Ujiji on the eastern shore of Lake Tanganyika.
+The Arabs also made their way south to Nyasa. This extension of Arab
+influence was accompanied by vague claims on the part of the sultan of
+Zanzibar to include all these newly opened countries in his empire. How
+far from the coast the real authority of the sultan extended was never
+demonstrated. Zanzibar at this time was in semi-dependence on India, and
+British influence was strong at the court of Bargash, who succeeded to
+the sultanate in 1870. Bargash in 1877 offered to Sir (then Mr) William
+Mackinnon a lease of all his mainland territory. The offer, made in the
+year in which H.M. Stanley's discovery of the course of the Congo
+initiated the movement for the partition of the continent, was declined.
+British influence was, however, still so powerful in Zanzibar that the
+agents of the German Colonization Society, who in 1884 sought to secure
+for their country territory on the east coast, deemed it prudent to act
+secretly, so that both Great Britain and Zanzibar might be confronted
+with accomplished facts. Making their way inland, three young Germans,
+Karl Peters, Joachim Count Pfeil and Dr Juhlke, concluded a "treaty" in
+November 1884 with a chieftain in Usambara who was declared to be
+independent of Zanzibar. Other treaties followed, and on the 17th of
+February 1885, the German emperor granted a charter of protection to the
+Colonization Society. The German acquisitions were resented by Zanzibar,
+but were acquiesced in by the British government (the second Gladstone
+administration). The sultan was forced to acknowledge their validity,
+and to grant a German company a lease of his mainland territories south
+of the mouth of the Umba river, a British company formed by Mackinnon
+taking a lease of the territories north of that point. The story of the
+negotiations between Great Britain, Germany and France which led to this
+result is told elsewhere (see AFRICA, section 5). By the agreement of
+the 1st of July 1890, between the British and German governments, and by
+agreements concluded between Germany and Portugal in 1886 and 1894, and
+Germany and the Congo Free State in 1884 and later dates, the German
+sphere of influence attained its present area. On the 28th of October
+1890 the sultan of Zanzibar ceded absolutely to Germany the mainland
+territories already leased to a German company, receiving as
+compensation L200,000.
+
+While these negotiations were going on, various German companies had set
+to work to exploit the country, and on the 16th of August 1888 the
+German East African Company, the lessee of the Zanzibar mainland strip,
+took over the administration from the Arabs. This was followed, five
+days later, by a revolt of all the coast Arabs against German rule--the
+Germans, raw hands at the task of managing Orientals, having aroused
+intense hostility by their brusque treatment of the dispossessed rulers.
+The company being unable to quell the revolt, Captain Hermann
+Wissmann--subsequently Major Hermann von Wissmann (1853-1905)--was sent
+out by Prince Bismarck as imperial commissioner. Wissmann, with 1000
+soldiers, chiefly Sudanese officered by Germans, and a German naval
+contingent, succeeded by the end of 1889 in crushing the power of the
+Arabs. Wissmann remained in the country until 1891 as commissioner, and
+later (1895-1896) was for eighteen months governor of the colony--as the
+German sphere had been constituted by proclamation (1st of January
+1897). Towards the native population Wissmann's attitude was
+conciliatory, and under his rule the development of the resources of the
+country was pushed on. Equal success did not attend the efforts of other
+administrators; in 1891-1892 Karl Peters had great trouble with the
+tribes in the Kilimanjaro district and resorted to very harsh methods,
+such as the execution of women, to maintain his authority. In 1896
+Peters was condemned by a disciplinary court for a misuse of official
+power, and lost his commission. After 1891, in which year the Wahehe
+tribe ambushed and almost completely annihilated a German military force
+of 350 men under Baron von Zelewski, there were for many years no
+serious risings against German authority, which by the end of 1898 had
+been established over almost the whole of the hinterland. The
+development of the country was, however, slow, due in part to the
+disinclination of the Reichstag to vote supplies sufficient for the
+building of railways to the fertile lake regions. Count von Gotzen
+(governor 1901-1906) adopted the policy of maintaining the authority of
+native rulers as far as possible, but as over the greater part of the
+colony the natives have no political organizations of any size, the
+chief burden of government rests on the German authorities. In August
+1905 serious disturbances broke out among the Bantu tribes in the
+colony. The revolt was due largely to resentment against the
+restrictions enforced by the Germans in their efforts at civilization,
+including compulsory work on European plantations in certain districts.
+Moreover, it is stated that the Herero in rebellion in German South-west
+Africa sent word to the east coast natives to follow their example, an
+instance of the growing solidarity of the black races of Africa. Though
+the revolt spread over a very large area, the chief centre of
+disturbance was the region between Nyasa and the coast at Kilwa and
+Lindi. Besides a number of settlers a Roman Catholic bishop and a party
+of four missionaries and nuns were murdered in the Kilwa hinterland,
+while nearer Nyasa the warlike Wangoni held possession of the country.
+The Germans raised levies of Masai and Sudanese, and brought natives
+from New Guinea to help in suppressing the rising, besides sending naval
+and military contingents from Germany. In general, the natives, when
+encountered, were easily dispersed, but it was not until March 1906 that
+the coast regions were again quiet. In July following the Wangoni were
+beaten in a decisive engagement. It was officially stated that the
+death-roll for the whole war was not below 120,000 men, women and
+children. In 1907 a visit was paid to the colony by Herr B. Dernburg,
+the colonial secretary. As a result of this visit more humane methods in
+the treatment of the natives were introduced, and measures taken to
+develop more fully the economic resources of the country.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--S. Passarge and others, _Das deutsche Kolonialreich_,
+ Erster Band (Leipzig, 1909); P. Reichard, _Deutsch Ostafrika, das Land
+ und seine Bewohner_ (Leipzig, 1892); F. Stuhlmann, _Mit Emin Pasha im
+ Herzen von Afrika_ (Berlin, 1894); Brix Foerster, _Deutsch-Ostafrika;
+ Geographie und Geschichte_ (Leipzig, 1890); Oscar Baumann, In
+ _Deutsch-Ostafrika wahrend des Aufstands_ (Vienna, 1890), _Usambara
+ und seine Nachbargebiete_ (Berlin, 1891), and _Durch Massailand zur
+ Nilquelle_ (Berlin, 1894). For special studies see P. Samassa, _Die
+ Besiedelung Deutsch-Ostafrikas_ (Leipzig, 1909); A. Engler, _Die
+ Pflanzenwelt Ost-Afrikas und der Nachbargebiete_ (Berlin, 1895-1896)
+ and other works by the same author; Stromer von Reichenbach, _Die
+ Geologie der deutschen Schutzgebiete in Afrika_ (Munich and Leipzig,
+ 1896); W. Bornhardt, _Deutsch-Ostafrika_ (Berlin, 1898); F.
+ Fullerborn, _Beitrage zur physischen Anthropologie der
+ Nord-Nyassalander_ (Berlin, 1902), a fine series of pictures of native
+ types, and _Das Deutsche Nyassa- und Ruwuma-gebiet, Land und Leute_
+ (Berlin, 1906); K. Weule, _Native Life in East Africa_ (London, 1909);
+ Hans Meyer, _Der Kilimandjaro_ (Berlin, 1900) and _Die Eisenbahnen im
+ tropischen Afrika_ (Leipzig, 1902); J. Strandes, _Die Portugiesenzeit
+ von Deutsch- u. Englisch-Ostafrika_ (Berlin, 1899), a valuable
+ monograph on the Portuguese period. See also British Official Reports
+ on East Africa (specially No. 4221 ann. ser.), the German White Books
+ and annual reports, the _Mitteilungen aus den deutschen
+ Schutzgebiete_, and the _Deutsches Kolonialblatt_, published
+ fortnightly at Berlin since 1890. The _Deutscher Kolonial-Atlas_ has
+ maps on the 1:1,000,000 scale. (F. R. C.)
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN EVANGELICAL SYNOD OF NORTH AMERICA, a Protestant church dating
+from October 1840, and known, in its early years, as the German
+Evangelical Association of the West. It was formed by six German
+ministers who had been ordained in Prussia and were engaged in
+missionary and pioneer work in Missouri and Illinois. The original
+organization was strengthened in 1858 by amalgamation with the German
+Evangelical Church Association of Ohio, and later by the inclusion of
+the German United Evangelical Synod of the East (1860), the Evangelical
+Synod of the North-West (1872) and the United Evangelical Synod of the
+East (1872). The church bases its position on the Bible as interpreted
+by the symbols of the Lutheran and Reformed churches so far as they are
+in agreement, points of difference being left to "that liberty of
+conscience which, as a component part of the basis of man's ultimate
+responsibility to God himself, is the inalienable privilege of every
+believer." The church, which has (1909) 985 ministers and some 238,000
+communicant members, is divided into seventeen districts, with officers
+responsible to the General Synod, which meets every four years. There
+are boards for home and foreign missions, the latter operating chiefly
+in the Central Provinces of India. The literature of the church is
+mainly in German, though English is rapidly gaining ground.
+
+
+
+
+GERMANIC LAWS, EARLY. Of those Germanic laws of the early middle ages
+which are known as _leges barbarorum_, we here deal with the principal
+examples other than Frankish, viz. (1) _Leges Wisigothorum_, (2) _Lex
+Burgundionum_, (3) _Pactus Alamannorum_ and _Lex Alamannorum_, (4) _Lex
+Bajuvariorum_, (5) _Lex Saxonum_, (6) _Lex Frisionum_, (7) _Lex
+Angliorum et Werinorum, hoc est, Thuringorum_, and (8) _Leges
+Langobardorum_. All these laws may in general be described as codes of
+procedure and tariffs of compositions. They present somewhat similar
+features with the Salic law, but often differ from it in the date of
+compilation, the amount of fines, the number and nature of the crimes,
+the number, rank, duties and titles of the officers, &c. For the Salic
+law and other Frankish laws, see SALIC LAW, and for the edict of
+Theodoric I., which was applicable to the Ostrogoths and Romans, see
+ROMAN LAW.
+
+ For the whole body of the Germanic laws see P. Canciani, _Barbarorum
+ leges antiquae_ (Venice, 1781-1789); F. Walter, _Corpus juris
+ germanici antiqui_ (Berlin, 1824); _Monumenta Germaniae historica,
+ Leges_. For further information on the codes in general, see H.M.
+ Zopfl, _Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte_ (4th ed., Heidelberg, 1871-1876);
+ J.E.O. Stobbe, _Geschichte der deutschen Rechtsquellen_ (Brunswick,
+ 1860-1864); Paul Viollet, _Histoire du droit civil francais_ (2nd ed.,
+ Paris, 1893); H. Brunner, _Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte_ (2nd ed.,
+ Leipzig, 1906).
+
+1. _Leges Wisigothorum._--Karl Zeumer's edition of these laws in the 4to
+series of the _Mon. Germ. Hist._ throws new light on all questions
+relating to their date and composition. It is now certain that the
+earliest written code of the Visigoths dates back to King Euric
+(466-485). Besides his own constitutions, Euric included in this
+collection constitutions of his predecessors, Theodoric I. (419-451),
+Thorismund (451-453), and Theodoric II. (453-466), and he arranged the
+whole in a logical order. Of this code fragments of chapters cclxxvi. to
+cccxxxvi.[1] have been discovered in a palimpsest MS. in the
+Bibliotheque Nationale at Paris (Latin coll., No. 12161), a fact which
+proves that the code ran over a large area. Euric's code was used for
+all cases between Goths, and between them and Romans; in cases between
+Romans, Roman law was used. At the instance of Euric's son, Alaric II.,
+an examination was made of the Roman laws in use among Romans in his
+dominions, and the resulting compilation was approved in 506 at an
+assembly at Aire, in Gascony, and is known as the Breviary of Alaric,
+and sometimes as the _Liber Aniani_, from the fact that the authentic
+copies bear the signature of the _referendarius_ Anian.
+
+Euric's code remained in force among the Visigoths of Spain until the
+reign of Leovigild (568-586), who made a new one, improving upon that of
+his predecessor. This work is lost, and we have no direct knowledge of
+any fragment of it. In the 3rd codification, however, many provisions
+have been taken from the 2nd, and these are designated by the word
+"_antiqua_"; by means of these "_antiqua_" we are enabled in a certain
+measure to reconstruct the work of Leovigild.
+
+After the reign of Leovigild the legislation of the Visigoths underwent
+a transformation. The new laws made by the kings were declared to be
+applicable to all the subjects in the kingdom, of whatever race--in
+other words, they became territorial; and this principle of
+territoriality was gradually extended to the ancient code. Moreover, the
+conversion of Reccared I. (586-601) to orthodoxy effaced the religious
+differences among his subjects, and all subjects, _qua_ Christians, had
+to submit to the canons of the councils, which were made obligatory by
+the kings. After this change had been accepted, Recceswinth (649-672)
+made a new code, which was applicable to Visigoths and Romans alike.
+This code, known as the _Liber judiciorum_, is divided into 12 books,
+which are subdivided into _tituli_ and chapters (_aerae_). It comprises
+324 constitutions taken from Leovigild's collection, a few of the laws
+of Reccared and Sisebut, 99 laws of Chindaswinth (642-653), and 87 of
+Recceswinth. A recension of this code of Recceswinth was made in 681 by
+King Erwig (680-687), and is known as the _Lex Wisigothorum renovata_;
+and, finally, some additamenta were made by Egica (687-702). In Zeumer's
+edition of the _Leges Wisigothorum_ the versions of Recceswinth and
+Erwig, where they differ from each other, are shown in parallel columns,
+and the laws later than Erwig are denoted by the sign "_nov_."
+
+ For further information see the preface to Zeumer's edition; H.
+ Brunner, _Deutsche Rechtsgeschichte_ (2nd ed., Leipzig, 1906); Urena y
+ Smenyaud, _La Legislacion Gotico-hispana_ (Madrid, 1905).
+
+2. _Lex Burgundionum._--This code was compiled by King Gundobald
+(474-516), very probably after his defeat by Clovis in 500. Some
+additamenta were subsequently introduced either by Gundobald himself or
+by his son Sigismund. This law bears the title of _Liber
+Constitutionum_, which shows that it emanated from the king; it is also
+known as the _Lex Gundobada_ or _Lex Gombata_. It was used for cases
+between Burgundians, but was also applicable to cases between
+Burgundians and Romans. For cases between Romans, however, Gundobald
+compiled the _Lex Romana Burgundionum_, called sometimes, through a
+misreading of the MSS., the _Liber Papiani_ or simply _Papianus_. The
+barbarian law of the Burgundians shows strong traces of Roman influence.
+It recognizes the will and attaches great importance to written deeds,
+but on the other hand sanctions the judicial duel and the _cojuratores_
+(sworn witnesses). The vehement protest made in the 9th century by
+Agobard, bishop of Lyons, against the _Lex Gundobada_ shows that it was
+still in use at that period. So late as the 10th and even the 11th
+centuries we find the law of the Burgundians invoked as personal law in
+Cluny charters, but doubtless these passages refer to accretions of
+local customs rather than to actual paragraphs of the ancient code.
+
+ The text of the _Lex Burgundionum_ has been published by F. Bluhme in
+ the _Mon. Germ. hist._, _Leges_, iii. 525; by Karl Binding in the
+ _Fontes rerum Bernensium_ (vol. i., 1880); by J.E. Valentin Smith
+ (Paris, 1889 seq.); and by von Salis (1892) in the 4to series of the
+ _Mon. Germ. hist._ Cf. R. Dareste, "La Loi Gombette," in the _Journal
+ des savants_ (July 1891).
+
+3. _Pactus Alamannorum_ and _Lex Alamannorum._--Of the laws of the
+Alamanni, who dwelt between the Rhine and the Lech, and spread over
+Alsace and what is now Switzerland to the south of Lake Constance, we
+possess two different texts. The earlier text, of which five short
+fragments have come down to us, is known as the _Pactus Alamannorum_,
+and from the persistent recurrence of the expression "et sic convenit"
+was most probably drawn up by an official commission. The reference to
+affranchisement _in ecclesia_ shows that it was composed at a period
+subsequent to the conversion of the Alamanni to Christianity. There is
+no doubt that the text dates back to the reign of Dagobert I., i.e. to
+the first half of the 7th century. The later text, known as the _Lex
+Alamannorum_, dates from a period when Alamannia was independent under
+national dukes, but recognized the theoretical suzerainty of the
+Frankish kings. There seems no reason to doubt the St Gall MS., which
+states that the law had its origin in an agreement between the great
+Alamannic lords and Duke Landfrid, who ruled the duchy from 709 to 730.
+
+ The two texts have been published by J. Merkel in the _Mon. Germ.
+ hist._, _Leges_, iii., and by Karl Lehmann in the 4to series of the
+ same collection.
+
+4. _Lex Bajuvariorum._--We possess an important law of the Bavarians,
+whose duchy was situated in the region east of the Lech, and was an
+outpost of Germany against the Huns, known later as Avars. Parts of this
+law have been taken directly from the Visigothic law of Euric and from
+the law of the Alamanni. The Bavarian law, therefore, is later than that
+of the Alamanni. It dates unquestionably from a period when the Frankish
+authority was very strong in Bavaria, when the dukes were vassals of the
+Frankish kings. Immediately after the revolt of Bavaria in 743 the
+Bavarian duke Odilo was forced to submit to Pippin and Carloman, the
+sons of Charles Martel, and to recognize the Frankish suzerainty. About
+the same period, too, the church of Bavaria was organized by St
+Boniface, and the country divided into several bishoprics; and we find
+frequent references to these bishops (in the plural) in the law of the
+Bavarians. On the other hand, we know that the law is anterior to the
+reign of Duke Tassilo III. (749-788). The date of compilation must,
+therefore, be placed between 743 and 749.
+
+ There is an edition of the _Lex Bajuvariorum_ by J. Merkel in the
+ _Mon. Germ. hist._, _Leges_, iii. 183, and another was undertaken by
+ E. von Schwind for the 4to series of the same collection. Cf. von
+ Schwind's article in the _Neues Archiv_, vol. xxxi.
+
+5. _Lex Saxonum._--Germany comprised two other duchies, Saxony and
+Frisia, of each of which we possess a text of law. The _Lex Saxonum_ has
+come down to us in two MSS. and two old editions (those of B.J. Herold
+and du Tillet), and the text has been edited by Karl von Richthofen in
+the _Mon. Germ. hist._, _Leges_, v. The law contains ancient customary
+enactments of Saxony, and, in the form in which it has reached us, is
+later than the conquest of Saxony by Charlemagne. It is preceded by two
+capitularies of Charlemagne for Saxony--the _Capitulatio de partibus
+Saxoniae_ (A. Boretius i. 68), which dates undoubtedly from 782, and is
+characterized by great severity, death being the penalty for every
+offence against the Christian religion; and the _Capitulare Saxonicum_
+(A. Boretius i. 71), of the 28th of October 797, in which Charlemagne
+shows less brutality and pronounces simple compositions for misdeeds
+which formerly entailed death. The _Lex Saxonum_ apparently dates from
+803, since it contains provisions which are in the _Capitulare legi
+Ribuariae additum_ of that year. The law established the ancient
+customs, at the same time eliminating anything that was contrary to the
+spirit of Christianity; it proclaimed the peace of the churches, whose
+possessions it guaranteed and whose right of asylum it recognized.
+
+6. _Lex Frisionum._--This consists of a medley of documents of the most
+heterogeneous character. Some of its enactments are purely pagan--thus
+one paragraph allows the mother to kill her new-born child, and another
+prescribes the immolation to the gods of the defiler of their temple;
+others are purely Christian, such as those which prohibit incestuous
+marriages and working on Sunday. The law abounds in contradictions and
+repetitions, and the compositions are calculated in different moneys.
+From this it would appear that the documents were merely materials
+collected from various sources and possibly with a view to the
+compilation of a homogeneous law. These materials were apparently
+brought together at the beginning of the 9th century, at a time of
+intense legislative activity at the court of Charlemagne.
+
+ There are no MSS. of the document extant; our knowledge of it is based
+ upon B.J. Herold's edition (_Originum ac Germanicarum antiquitatum
+ libri_, Basel, 1557), which has been reproduced by Karl von Richthofen
+ in the _Mon. Germ. hist._, _Leges_, iii. 631.
+
+7. _Lex Angliorum el Werinorum, hoc est, Thuringorum._--In early times
+there dwelt in Thuringia, south of the river Unstrut, the Angli, who
+gave their name to the _pagus Engili_, and to the east, between the
+Saale and the Elster, the Warni (Werini, or Varini), whose name is seen
+in Werenofeld. In the 9th century, however, this region (then called
+Werenofeld) was occupied by the Sorabi, and the Warni and Angli either
+coalesced with the Thuringi or sought an asylum in the north of Germany.
+A collection of laws has come down to us bearing the name of these two
+peoples, the _Lex Angliorum et Werinorum, hoc est, Thuringorum_. This
+text is a collection of local customs arranged in the same order as the
+law of the Ripuarians. Parts of it are based on the _Capitulare legi
+Ribuariae additum_ of 803, and it seems to have been drawn up in the
+same conditions and circumstances as the law of the Saxons. There is an
+edition of this code by Karl von Richthofen in the _Mon. Germ. hist._,
+_Leges_, v. 103. The old opinion that the law originated in south
+Holland is entirely without foundation.
+
+8. _Leges Langobardorum._--We possess a fair amount of information on
+the origin of the last barbarian code, the laws of the Lombards. The
+first part, consisting of 388 chapters, is known as the _Edictus
+Langobardorum_, and was promulgated by King Rothar at a diet held at
+Pavia on the 22nd of November 643. This work, composed at one time and
+arranged on a systematic plan, is very remarkable. The compilers knew
+Roman law, but drew upon it only for their method of presentation and
+for their terminology; and the document presents Germanic law in its
+purity. Rothar's edict was augmented by his successors; Grimoald (668)
+added nine chapters; Liutprand (713-735), fifteen volumes, containing a
+great number of ecclesiastical enactments; Ratchis (746), eight
+chapters; and Aistulf (755), thirteen chapters. After the union of the
+Lombards to the Frankish kingdom, the capitularies made for the entire
+kingdom were applicable to Italy. There were also special capitularies
+for Italy, called _Capitula Italica_, some of which were appended to the
+edict of Rothar.
+
+At an early date compilations were formed in Italy for the use of legal
+practitioners and jurists. Eberhard, duke and margrave of Rhaetia and
+Friuli, arranged the contents of the edict with its successive
+additamenta into a _Concordia de singulis causis_ (829-832). In the 10th
+century a collection was made of the capitularies in use in Italy, and
+this was known as the _Capitulare Langobardorum_. Then appeared, under
+the influence of the school of law at Pavia, the _Liber legis
+Langobardorum_, also called _Liber Papiensis_ (beginning of 11th
+century), and the _Lombarda_ (end of 11th century) in two forms--that
+given in a Monte Cassino MS. and known as the _Lombarda Casinensis_, and
+the _Lombarda Vulgata_.
+
+ There are editions of the _Edictus_, the _Concordia_, and the _Liber
+ Papiensis_ by F. Bluhme and A. Boretius in the _Mon. Germ. hist.,
+ Leges_, iv. Bluhme also gives the rubrics of the _Lombardae_, which
+ were published by F. Lindenberg in his _Codex legum antiquarum_ in
+ 1613. For further information on the laws of the Lombards see J.
+ Merkel, _Geschichte des Langobardenrechts_ (1850); A. Boretius, _Die
+ Kapitularien im Langobardenreich_ (1864); and C. Kier, _Edictus
+ Rotari_ (Copenhagen, 1898). Cf. R. Dareste in the _Nouvelle Revue
+ historique de droit francais et etranger_ (1900, p. 143). (C. Pf.)
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] The lacunae in these fragments have been filled in by the aid of
+ the law of the Bavarians, where the chief provisions are reproduced.
+
+
+
+
+GERMANICUS CAESAR (15 B.C.-A.D. 19), a Roman general and provincial
+governor in the reign of Tiberius. The name Germanicus, the only one by
+which he is known in history, he inherited from his father, Nero
+Claudius Drusus, the famous general, brother of Tiberius and stepson of
+Augustus. His mother was the younger Antonia, daughter of Marcus
+Antonius and niece of Augustus, and he married Agrippina, the
+granddaughter of the same emperor. It was natural, therefore, that he
+should be regarded as a candidate for the purple. Augustus, it would
+seem, long hesitated whether he should name him as his successor, and as
+a compromise required his uncle Tiberius to adopt him, though Tiberius
+had a son of his own. Of his early years and education little is known.
+That he possessed considerable literary abilities, and that these were
+carefully trained, we gather, both from the speeches which Tacitus puts
+into his mouth, and from the reputation he left as an orator, as
+attested by Suetonius and Ovid, and from the extant fragments of his
+works.
+
+At the age of twenty he served his apprenticeship as a soldier under
+Tiberius, and was rewarded with the triumphal insignia for his services
+in crushing the revolt in Dalmatia and Pannonia. In A.D. 11 he
+accompanied Tiberius in his campaign on the Rhine, undertaken, in
+consequence of the defeat of Varus, with the object of securing the
+German frontier. In 12 he was made consul, and increased his popularity
+by appearing as an advocate in the courts of justice, and by the
+celebration of brilliant games. Soon afterwards he was appointed by
+Augustus to the important command of the eight legions on the Rhine. The
+news of the emperor's death (14) found Germanicus at Lugdunum (Lyons),
+where he was superintending the census of Gaul. Close upon this came the
+report that a mutiny had broken out among his legions on the lower
+Rhine. Germanicus hurried back to the camp, which was now in open
+insurrection. The tumult was with difficulty quelled, partly by
+well-timed concessions, for which the authority of the emperor was
+forged, but chiefly owing to his personal popularity. Some of the
+insurgents actually proposed that he should put himself at their head
+and secure the empire for himself, but their offer was rejected with
+indignation. In order to calm the excitement Germanicus determined at
+once on an active campaign. Crossing the Rhine, he attacked and routed
+the Marsi, and laid waste the valley of the Ems. In the following year
+he marched against Arminius, the conqueror of Varus, and performed the
+last rites over the remains of the Roman soldiers that still lay there
+unburied, erecting a barrow to mark the spot. Arminius, however,
+favoured by the marshy ground, was able to hold his own, and it required
+another campaign before he was finally defeated. A masterly combined
+movement by land and water enabled Germanicus to concentrate his forces
+against the main body of the Germans encamped on the Weser, and to crush
+them in two obstinately contested battles. A monument erected on the
+field proclaimed that the army of Tiberius had conquered every tribe
+between the Rhine and the Elbe. Great, however, as the success of the
+Roman arms had been, it was not such as to justify this boastful
+inscription; we read of renewed attacks from the barbarians, and plans
+of a fourth campaign for the next summer.
+
+But the success of Germanicus had already stirred the jealousy and fears
+of Tiberius, and he was reluctantly compelled to return to Rome. On the
+26th of May 17 he celebrated a triumph. The enthusiasm with which he was
+welcomed, not only by the populace, but by the emperor's own
+praetorians, was so great that the earliest pretext was seized to remove
+him from the capital. He was sent to the East with extraordinary powers
+to settle a disputed succession in Parthia and Armenia. At the same time
+Gnaeus Calpurnius Piso, one of the most violent and ambitious of the old
+nobility, was sent as governor of Syria to watch his movements.
+Germanicus proceeded by easy stages to his province, halting on his way
+in Dalmatia, and visiting the battlefield of Actium, Athens, Ilium, and
+other places of historic interest. At Rhodes he met his coadjutor Piso,
+who was seeking everywhere to thwart and malign him. When at last he
+reached his destination, he found little difficulty in effecting the
+settlement of the disturbed provinces, notwithstanding Piso's violent
+and persistent opposition. At Artaxata Zeno, the popular candidate for
+the throne, was crowned king of Armenia. To the provinces of Cappadocia
+and Commagene Roman governors were assigned; Parthia was conciliated by
+the banishment of the dethroned king Vonones.
+
+After wintering in Syria Germanicus started for a tour in Egypt. The
+chief motive for his journey was love of travel and antiquarian study,
+and it seems never to have occurred to him, till he was warned by
+Tiberius, that he was thereby transgressing an unwritten law which
+forbade any Roman of rank to set foot in Egypt without express
+permission. On his return to Syria he found that all his arrangements
+had been upset by Piso. Violent recriminations followed, the result of
+which, it would seem, was a promise on the part of Piso to quit the
+province. But at this juncture Germanicus was suddenly attacked at
+Epidaphne near Antioch by a violent illness, which he himself and his
+friends attributed to poison administered by Plancina, the wife of Piso,
+at the instigation of Tiberius. Whether these suspicions were true is
+open to question; it seems more probable that his death was due to
+natural causes. His ashes were brought to Rome in the following year
+(20) by his wife Agrippina, and deposited in the grave of Augustus. He
+had nine children, six of whom, three sons and three daughters, survived
+him, amongst them the future emperor Gaius and the notorious Agrippina,
+the mother of Nero. The news of his death cast a gloom over the whole
+empire. Nor was Germanicus unworthy of this passionate devotion. He had
+wiped out a great national disgrace; he had quelled the most formidable
+foe of Rome. His private life had been stainless, and he possessed a
+singularly attractive personality. Yet there were elements of weakness
+in his character which his short life only half revealed: an impetuosity
+which made him twice threaten to take his own life; a superstitious vein
+which impelled him to consult oracles and shrink from bad omens; an
+amiable dilettantism which led him to travel in Egypt while his enemy
+was plotting his ruin; a want of nerve and resolution which prevented
+him from coming to an open rupture with Piso till it was too late.
+
+He possessed considerable literary abilities; his speeches and Greek
+comedies were highly spoken of by his contemporaries. But the only
+specimen of his work that has come down to us is the translation in
+Latin hexameters (generally attributed to him, although some consider
+Domitian the author), together with scholia, of the _Phaenomena_ of
+Aratus, which is superior to those of Cicero and Avienus (best edition
+by A. Breysig, 1867; 1899, without the scholia). A few extant Greek and
+Latin epigrams also bear the name Germanicus.
+
+ In addition to monographs by A. Zingerle (Trent, 1867) and A. Breysig
+ (Erfurt, 1892), there are treatises on the German campaigns by E. von
+ Wietersheim (1850), P. Hofer (1884), F. Knoke (1887, 1889), W. Fricke
+ (1889), A. Taramelli (1891), Dahm (1902).
+
+ See Tacitus, _Annals_, i.-iv. (ed. Furneaux); Suetonius, _Augustus,
+ Tiberius_; J.C. Tarver, _Tiberius_ (1902); Merivale, _Hist. of the
+ Romans under the Empire_, chs. 42, 43; H. Schiller, _Geschichte der
+ romischen Kaiserzeit_, i. 1 (1883), pp. 227, 258, 261-266, 270-276; M.
+ Schanz, _Geschichte der romischen Litteratur_, pt. ii. (2nd ed.,
+ 1901), and Teuffel-Schwabe, _Hist. of Roman Literature_ (Eng. tr.,
+ 1900), 275.
+
+
+
+
+GERMANIUM (symbol Ge, atomic weight 72.5); one of the metallic elements
+included in the same natural family as carbon, silicon, tin and lead. It
+was discovered in 1886 by C. Winkler in argyrodite, a mineral found at
+Freiberg in Saxony. On examination of the metal and its salts it was
+shown to be identical with the hypothetical element _ekasilicon_, whose
+properties had been predicted by D. Mendeleeff many years previously.
+The element is of extremely rare occurrence, being met with only in
+argyrodite and, to a very small extent, in euxenite. It may be obtained
+from argyrodite by heating the mineral in a current of hydrogen; or by
+heating the dioxide to redness with carbon. It forms grey coloured
+octahedra of specific gravity 5.496 at 20 deg. C., melting at 900 deg.
+C.; it burns at a red heat, is insoluble in hydrochloric acid, but
+dissolves in _aqua regia_, and is also soluble in molten alkalis. Two
+oxides of germanium are known, the _dioxide_, GeO2, being obtained by
+roasting the sulphide and treatment with nitric acid. It is a white
+powder, very slightly soluble in water, and possesses acid properties.
+By heating with a small quantity of magnesium it is converted into
+_germanious oxide_, GeO. By heating the metal with chlorine, _germanic
+chloride_, GeCl4, is obtained as a colourless fuming liquid boiling at
+86-87 deg. C., it is decomposed by water forming a hydrated germanium
+dioxide. _Germanium dichloride_, GeCl2, and _germanium chloroform_,
+GeHCl3, have also been described.
+
+Germanium compounds on fusion with alkaline carbonates and sulphur form
+salts known as _thiogermanates_. If excess of a mineral acid be added to
+a solution of an alkaline thiogermanate a white precipitate of
+_germanium disulphide_, GeS2, is obtained. It can also be obtained by
+passing sulphuretted hydrogen through a solution of the dioxide in
+hydrochloric acid. It is appreciably soluble in water, and also in
+solutions of the caustic alkalis and alkaline sulphides. By heating the
+disulphide in a current of hydrogen, _germanious sulphide_, GeS, is
+formed. It sublimes in thin plates of a dark colour and metallic lustre,
+and is soluble in solutions of the caustic alkalis. Alkyl compounds of
+germanium such as _germanium tetra-ethyl_, Ge(C2H5)4, a liquid boiling
+at 160 deg. C., have been obtained. The germanium salts are most readily
+recognized by the white precipitate of the disulphide, formed in acid
+solutions, on passing sulphuretted hydrogen. The atomic weight of the
+element was determined by C. Winkler by analysis of the pure chloride
+GeCl4, the value obtained being 72.32, whilst Lecoq de Boisbaudran
+(_Comptes rendus_, 1886, 103, 452), by a comparison of the lines in the
+spark spectrum of the element, deduced the value 72.3.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN LANGUAGE. Together with English and Frisian, the German language
+forms part of the West Germanic group of languages. To this group
+belongs also Langobardian, a dialect which died out in the 9th or 10th
+century, while Burgundian, traces of which are not met with later than
+the 5th century, is usually classed with the East Germanic group. Both
+these tongues were at an early stage crushed out by Romance dialects, a
+fate which also overtook the idiom of the Western Franks, who, in the
+so-called _Strassburg Oaths_[1] of 842, use the Romance tongue, and are
+addressed in that tongue by Louis the German.
+
+Leaving English and Frisian aside, we understand by _Deutsche_
+_Sprache_ the language of those West Germanic tribes, who, at their
+earliest appearance in history, spoke a Germanic tongue, and still speak
+it at the present day. The chief of these tribes are: the Saxons, the
+Franks (but with the restriction noted above), the Chatti (Hessians),
+Thuringians, Alemannians and Bavarians. This definition naturally
+includes the languages spoken in the Low Countries, Flemish and Dutch,
+which are offsprings of the Low Franconian dialect, mixed with Frisian
+and Saxon elements; but, as the literary development of these languages
+has been in its later stages entirely independent of that of the German
+language, they are excluded from the present survey.
+
+The German language, which is spoken by about seventy-one millions, and
+consequently occupies in this respect the third place among European
+languages, borders, in the west and south, on Romance languages (French,
+Italian), and also to some extent on Slavonic. On Italian and Slovenian
+territory there are several German-speaking "islands," notably the Sette
+and Tredici Communi, east and north-east of the Lake of Garda, and the
+"Gottschee Landchen" to the south of Laibach. The former of these is,
+however, on the point of dying out. Neighbours on the east, where the
+boundary line runs by no means as straight as on the west or south, are
+the Magyars and again Slavonic races. Here, too, there are numerous
+"islands" on Hungarian and Slavonic territory. Danes and Frisians join
+hands with the Germans in the north.[2]
+
+In the west and south the German language has, compared with its status
+in earlier periods, undoubtedly lost ground, having been encroached upon
+by Romance tongues. This is the case in French Flanders, in Alsace and
+Lorraine, at any rate before the war of 1870, in the valleys south of
+Monte Rosa and in southern Tirol; in Styria and Carinthia the
+encroachment is less marked, but quite perceptible. On the east, on the
+other hand, German steadily spread from the days of Charles the Great
+down to recent times, when it has again lost considerable ground in
+Bohemia, Moravia and Livonia. At the time of Charles the Great the
+eastern frontier extended very little beyond the lower Elbe, following
+this river beyond Magdeburg, whence it passed over to the Saale, the
+Bohemian forest and the river Enns (cf. the map in F. Dahn,
+_Urgeschichte der germanischen und romanischen Volker_, vol. iii.).
+Partly as a result of victories gained by the Germans over the Avars and
+Slavs, partly owing to peaceful colonization, the eastern boundary was
+pushed forward in subsequent centuries; Bohemia was in this way won for
+the German tongue by German colonists in the 13th century, Silesia even
+a little earlier; in Livonia German gained the upper hand during the
+13th century, while about the same time the country of the Prussians was
+conquered and colonized by the knights of the Teutonic order. The
+dialect which these colonists and knights introduced bore the Middle
+German character; and this, in various modifications, combined with Low
+German and even Dutch elements, formed the German spoken in these
+newly-won territories. In the north (Schleswig), where at the time of
+Charles the Great the river Eider formed the linguistic boundary, German
+has gained and is still gaining on Danish.
+
+Before considering the development of the language spoken within these
+boundaries, a word of explanation is perhaps necessary with regard to
+the word _deutsch_. As applied to the language, _deutsch_ first appears
+in the Latin form _theotiscus_, _lingua theotisca_, _teutisca_, in
+certain Latin writings of the 8th and 9th centuries, whereas the
+original Old High German word _thiudisc_, _tiutisc_ (from _thiot_,
+_diot_, "people," and the suffix _-isc_) signified only "appertaining to
+the people," "in the manner of the people." Cf. also Gothic
+_[thorn]iudisko_ as a translation of [Greek: ethnikos] (Gal. ii. 14).
+It, therefore, seems probable that if the application of the word to the
+language (_lingua theotisca_) was not exactly an invention of Latin
+authors of German nationality, its use in this sense was at least
+encouraged by them in order to distinguish their own vernacular
+(_lingua vulgaris_) from Latin as well as from the _lingua romana_.[3]
+
+In the 8th and 9th centuries German or "Deutsch" first appears as a
+written language in the dialects of Old High German and Old Low German.
+Of an "Urdeutsch" or primitive German, i.e. the common language from
+which these sharply distinguished dialects of the earliest historical
+period must have developed, we have no record; we can only infer its
+character--and it was itself certainly not free from dialectic
+variations--by a study of the above-named and other Germanic dialects. It
+is usual to divide the history of the German language from this earliest
+period, when it appears only in the form of proper names and isolated
+words as glosses to a Latin text, down to the present day, into three
+great sections: (1) Old High German (_Althochdeutsch_) and Old Low German
+(Old Saxon; _Altniederdeutsch_, _Altsachsisch_); (2) Middle High German
+(_Mittelhochdeutsch_) and Middle Low German (Mittelniederdeutsch); and
+(3) Modern High German and Modern Low German (_Neuhochdeutsch_ and
+_Neuniederdeutsch_). It is more difficult to determine the duration of
+the different periods, for it is obvious that the transition from one
+stage of a language to another takes place slowly and gradually.
+
+The first or Old High German period is commonly regarded as extending to
+about the year 1100. The principal characteristic of the change from Old
+High German to Middle High German is the weakening of the unaccented
+vowels in final syllables (cf. O.H.G. _taga_, _gesti_, _geban_, _gabum_
+and M.H.G. _tage_, _geste_, _geben_, _gaben_). But it must be remembered
+that this process began tentatively as early as the 10th century in Low
+German, and also that long, unaccented vowels are preserved in the
+Alemannic dialect as late as the 14th century and even later. Opinion is
+more at variance with regard to the division between the second and
+third periods. Some would date Modern High German from the time of
+Luther, that is to say, from about 1500. But it must be noted that
+certain characteristics attributed to the Modern German vowel system,
+such as lengthening of Middle High German short vowels, the change from
+Middle High German _i_, _u_, _iu_ to Modern High German _ei_, _au_, _eu_
+(_ou_), of Middle High German _ie_, _uo_, _ue_ to Modern High German
+_i_, _u_, _u_, made their appearance long before 1500. Taking this fact
+into consideration, others distinguish a period of classical Middle High
+German extending to about 1250, and a period of transition (sometimes
+called _Fruhneuhochdeutsch_, or Early Modern High German) from 1250 to
+1650. The principal characteristics of Modern High German would then
+consist in a greater stability of the grammatical and syntactical rules,
+due to the efforts of earlier grammarians, such as Schottelius,
+Gottsched and others, and the substitution of a single vowel sound for
+the varying vowels of the singular and plural of the preterite of strong
+verbs (cf. Middle High German _schreib_, _schriben_, and Modern High
+German _schrieb_, _schrieben_, &c.). The much debated question of the
+origins of Modern High German has been recently reopened by O. Behaghel
+(_Geschichte der deutschen Sprache, l.c._ 661), who hopes that a more
+satisfactory solution may be arrived at by the study of certain
+syntactical peculiarities to be seen in the dialects of more recent
+periods.
+
+As the middle ages did not produce a German _Schriftsprache_ or literary
+language in the modern sense of the word, which--as is undoubtedly the
+case in Modern German--might have influenced the spoken language
+(_Umgangssprache_), the history of the language in its earlier stages is
+a history of different dialects. These dialects will, therefore, claim
+our attention at some length.
+
+It may be assumed that the languages of the different West Germanic
+tribes enumerated above were, before the appearance of the tribes in
+history, distinguished by many dialectic variations; this was certainly
+the case immediately after the Migrations, when the various races began
+to settle down. But these differences, consisting presumably in matters
+of phonology and vocabulary, were nowhere so pronounced as to exclude a
+mutual understanding of individuals belonging to different tribes. One
+might compare the case of the Poles and Czechs of the present day.
+During the 6th century, however, a phonological process set in, which
+ultimately resulted in the separation of Germany into two great
+linguistic divisions, south and north, or, as the languages are called,
+High and Low German. This fundamental change, which is known as the
+second or High German Soundshifting (_Lautverschiebung_), spread
+northward from the mountainous districts in the south, and, whatever its
+cause may have been,[4] left behind it clear and easily recognizable
+effects on the Germanic voiced stop _d_, which became changed to _t_,
+and more especially on the voiceless stops _t_, _p_ and _k_. Dialects
+which have shifted initial _t_ and _tt_ in the middle of a word to the
+affricate _tz_ (written _z_, _tz_) and _p_ and _k_ in corresponding
+positions to the affricates _pf_ and _k[chi]_ (written _ch_), further,
+_t_, _p_ and _k_ in the middle of words between vowels, to the double
+spirant _zz_ (now written _ss_, _sz_), _ff_, _hh_ (written _ch_), are
+called High German; those in which these changes have not taken place
+form the Low German group, this group agreeing in this respect with
+English and Frisian.
+
+Of these sound changes, that of _t_ to _tz_ and _zz_ (_ss_) is the most
+universal, extending over the whole region in which shifting occurs;
+that of _k_ to _k[chi]_ (_ch_), the most restricted, being only found in
+Old Bavarian, and in the Swiss pronunciation, e.g. in _chind_. The
+remaining dialects occupy positions between the two extremes of complete
+shifting and the absence of shifting. Some Franconian dialects, for
+instance, leave _p_ unchanged under certain conditions, and in one
+dialect at least, Middle Franconian, _t_ has remained after vowels in
+certain pronominal forms (_dat_, _wat_, _allet_, &c.). On this ground a
+subdivision has been made in the High German dialects into (a) an Upper
+German (_Oberdeutsch_) and (b) a Middle German (_Mitteldeutsch_) group;
+and this subdivision practically holds good for all periods of the
+language, although in Old High German times the Middle German group is
+only represented, as far as the written language is concerned, by
+Franconian dialects.
+
+As the scientific study of the German language advanced there arose a
+keen revival of interest--and that not merely on the part of
+scholars--in the dialects which were so long held in contempt as a mere
+corruption of the _Schriftsprache_.[5] We are still in the midst of a
+movement which, under the guidance of scholars, has, during the last
+three decades, bestowed great care on many of the existing dialects;
+phonological questions have received most attention, but problems of
+syntax have also not been neglected. Monumental works like Wenker's
+_Sprachatlas des deutschen Reiches_ and dialect dictionaries are either
+in course of publication or preparing;[6] while the difficult questions
+concerned with defining the boundaries of the various dialects and
+explaining the reasons for them form the subject of many monographs.[7]
+
+Beginning in the north we shall now pass briefly in review the dialects
+spoken throughout the German-speaking area.
+
+
+ A. THE LOW GERMAN DIALECTS
+
+ The Low German dialects, as we have seen, stand nearest to the English
+ and Frisian languages, owing to the total absence of the consonantal
+ shifting which characterizes High German, as well as to other
+ peculiarities of sounds and inflections, e.g. the loss of the nasals
+ _m_ and _n_ before the spirants _f_, _s_ and _p_. Cf. Old Saxon _fif_
+ (five), _us_ (us), _kup_ (cf. uncouth). The boundary-line between Low
+ and High German, the so-called _Benrather Linie_, may roughly be
+ indicated by the following place-names, on the understanding, however,
+ that the Ripuarian dialect (see below) is to be classed with High
+ German: Montjoie (French border-town), Eupen, Aachen, Benrath,
+ Dusseldorf, north of Siegen, Cassel, Heiligenstadt, Harzgerode, to the
+ Elbe south of Magdeburg; this river forms the boundary as far as
+ Wittenberg, whence the line passes to Lubben on the Spree, Furstenwald
+ on the Oder and Birnbaum near the river Warthe. Beyond this point the
+ Low Germans have Slavs as their neighbours. Compared with the
+ conditions in the 13th century, it appears that Low German has lost
+ ground; down to the 14th and 15th centuries several towns, such as
+ Mansfeld, Eisleben, Merseburg, Halle, Dessau and Wittenberg, spoke Low
+ German.
+
+ Low German falls into two divisions, a western division, namely, Low
+ Franconian, the parent, as we have already said, of Flemish and Dutch,
+ and an eastern division, Low Saxon (_Plattdeutsch_, or, as it is often
+ simply called, Low German). The chief characteristic of the division
+ is to be sought in the ending of the first and third person plural of
+ the present indicative of verbs, this being in the former case _-en_,
+ in the latter _-et_. Inasmuch as the south-eastern part of Low
+ Franconian--inclusive of Gelderland and Cleves--shifts final _k_ to
+ _ch_ (e.g. _ich_, _mich_, _auch_, _-lich_), it must obviously be
+ separated from the rest, and in this respect be grouped with High
+ German. Low Saxon is usually divided into Westphalian (to the west of
+ the Weser) and Low Saxon proper, between Weser and Elbe. The
+ south-eastern part of the latter has the verbal ending -en and further
+ shows the peculiarity that the personal pronoun has the same form in
+ the dative and accusative (_mik_, _dick_), whereas the remainder, as
+ well as the Westphalian, has _mi_, _di_ in the dative, and _mi_, _di_
+ or _mik_, _dik_ in the accusative. To these Low German dialects must
+ also be added those spoken east of the Elbe on what was originally
+ Slavonic territory; they have the ending _-en_ in the first and third
+ person plural of verbs.[8]
+
+
+ B. THE HIGH GERMAN DIALECTS
+
+ 1. _The Middle German Group._--This group, which comprises the
+ dialects of the Middle Rhine, of Hesse, Thuringia, Upper Saxony
+ (Meissen), Silesia and East Prussia to the east of the lower Vistula
+ between Bischofswerder, Marienburg, Elbing, Wormditt and Wartenberg--a
+ district originally colonized from Silesia--may be most conveniently
+ divided into an East and a West Middle German group. A common
+ characteristic of all these dialects is the diminutive suffix _-chen_,
+ as compared with the Low German form _-ken_ and the Upper German
+ _-lein_ (O.H.G. _lin_). East Middle German consists of Silesian, Upper
+ Saxon and Thuringian,[9] together with the linguistic colony in East
+ Prussia. While these dialects have shifted initial Germanic _p_ to
+ _ph_, or even to _f_ (_fert_ = _Pferd_), the West Middle German
+ dialects (roughly speaking to the west of the watershed of Werra and
+ Fulda) have retained it. If, following a convincing article in the
+ _Zeitschrift fur deutsches Altertum_ (37, 288 ff.) by F. Wrede, we
+ class East and South Franconian--both together may be called High
+ Franconian--with the Upper German dialects, there only remain in the
+ West Middle German group:[10] (a) Middle Franconian and (b) Rhenish
+ Franconian. The former of these,[11] which with its _dat_, _wat_,
+ _allet_, &c. (cf. above) and its retention of the voiced spirant _b_
+ (written _v_) represents a kind of transition dialect to Low German,
+ is itself divided into ([alpha]) Ripuarian or Low Rhenish with Cologne
+ and Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle) as centres, and ([beta]) Moselle
+ Franconian[12] with Trier (Treves) as principal town. The latter is
+ distinguished by the fact that in the Middle High German period it
+ shifts Germanic _-rp-_ and _-rd-_, which are retained in (a), to
+ _-rf-_ and _-rt-_ (cf. _werfen_, _hirtin_ with _werpen_,
+ _hirdin_).[13] The Rhenish Franconian dialect is spoken in the Rhenish
+ palatinate, in the northern part of Baden (Heidelberg), Hesse[14] and
+ Nassau, and in the German-speaking part of Lorraine. A line drawn from
+ Falkenberg at the French frontier to Siegen on the Lahn, touching the
+ Rhine near Boppard, roughly indicates the division between Middle and
+ Rhenish Franconian.
+
+ 2. _The Upper German Group._--The Upper German dialects, which played
+ the most important part in the literature of the early periods, may be
+ divided into (a) a Bavarian-Austrian group and (b) a High
+ Franconian-Alemannic group. Of all the German dialects the
+ Bavarian-Austrian has carried the soundshifting to its furthest
+ extreme; here only do we find the labial voiced stop _b_ written _p_
+ in the middle of a word, viz. old Bavarian _kapames_, old Alemannic
+ _kabames_ ("we gave"); here too, in the 12th century, we find the
+ first traces of that broadening of _i_, _u_, _iu_ (_u_) to _ei_, _au_,
+ _eu_, a change which, even at the present day, is still foreign to the
+ greater part of the Alemannic dialects. Only in Bavarian do we still
+ find the old pronominal dual forms _es_ and _enk_ (for _ihr_ and
+ _euch_). Finally, Bavarian forms diminutives in _-el_ and _-erl_
+ (_Madel_, _Maderl_), while the Franconian-Alemannic forms are _-la_
+ and _-le_ (_Madle_). On the other hand, the pronunciation of _-s_ as
+ _-sch_, especially _-st_ as _-scht_ (cf. _Last_, _Haspel_, pronounced
+ _Lascht_, _Haschpel_), may be mentioned as characteristic of the
+ Alemannic, just as the _fortis_ pronunciation of initial _t_ is
+ characteristic of High Franconian, while the other Franconian and
+ Upper German dialects employ the _lenis_.
+
+ The Alemannic dialect which, roughly speaking, is separated from
+ Bavarian by the Lech and borders on Italian territory in the south and
+ on French in the west, is subdivided into: (a) Swabian, the dialect of
+ the kingdom of Wurttemberg and the north-western part of Tirol (cf. H.
+ Fischer, _Geographie der schwabischen Mundart_, 1895); (b) High
+ Alemannic (Swiss), including the German dialects of Switzerland, of
+ the southern part of the Black Forest (the Basel-Breisgau dialect),
+ and that of Vorarlberg; (c) Low Alemannic, comprising the dialects of
+ Alsace and part of Baden (to the north of the Feldberg and south of
+ Rastatt), also, at the present day, the town of Basel. Only Swabian
+ has taken part in the change of _i_ to _ei_, &c., mentioned above,
+ while initial Germanic _k_ has been shifted to _ch_ ([chi]) only in
+ High Alemannic (cf. _chalt_, _chind_, _chorn_, for _kalt_, _kind_,
+ _korn_). The pronunciation of _u_ as _u_, _u_ (_Hus_ for _Haus_) is
+ peculiar to Alsatian.
+
+ The High Franconian dialects, that is to say, east and south (or
+ south-Rhenish) Franconian, which are separated broadly speaking by the
+ river Neckar, comprise the language spoken in a part of Baden, the
+ dialects of the Main valley from Wurzburg upwards to Bamberg, the
+ dialect of Nuremberg and probably of the Vogtland (Plauen) and
+ Egerland. During the older historical period the principal difference
+ between East and South Franconian consisted in the fact that initial
+ Germanic _d_ was retained in the latter dialect, while East Franconian
+ shifted it to _t_. Both, like Bavarian and Alemannic, shift initial
+ German _p_ to the affricate _pf_.
+
+ Finally, the Bavarian-Austrian dialect is spoken throughout the
+ greater part of the kingdom of Bavaria (i.e. east of the Lech and a
+ fine drawn from the point where the Lech joins the Danube to the
+ sources of the rivers Elster and Mulde, this being the East Franconian
+ border-line), in Austria, western Bohemia, and in the German
+ linguistic "islands" embedded in Hungary, in Gottschee and the Sette
+ and Tredici Communi (cf. above).[15]
+
+
+ THE OLD HIGH GERMAN PERIOD
+
+ The language spoken during the Old High German period, that is to say,
+ down to about the year 1050, is remarkable for the fulness and
+ richness of its vowel-sounds in word-stems as well as in inflections.
+ Cf. _elilenti_, _Elend_; _luginari_, _Lugner_; _karkari_, _Kerker_;
+ _menniskono slahta_, _Menschengeschlecht_; _herzono_, _Herzen_ (gen.
+ pl.); _furisto_, _vorderste_; _hartost_, (_am_) _hartesten_;
+ _sibunzug_, _siebzig_; _ziohemes_, (_wir_) _ziehen_; _salbota_, (_er_)
+ _salbte_; _gaworahtos_, (_du_) _wirktest_, &c. Of the consonantal
+ changes which took place during this period that of the spirant th
+ (preserved only in English) to d (_werthan_, _werdan_; _theob_,
+ _deob_) deserves mention. It spread from Upper Germany, where it is
+ noticeable as early as the 8th century to Middle and finally, in the
+ 11th and 12th centuries, to Low Germany. Further, the initial _h_ in
+ _hl_, _hn_, _hr_, _hw_ (cf. _hwer_, _wer_; _hreini_, _rein_;
+ _hlahhan_, _lachen_) and _w_ in _wr_ (_wrecceo_, _Recke_) disappeared,
+ this change also starting in Upper Germany and spreading slowly north.
+ The most important vowel-change is the so-called mutation
+ (_Umlaut_),[16] that is to say, the qualitative change of a vowel
+ (except _i_) in a stem-syllable, owing to the influence of an _i_ or
+ _j_ in the following syllable. This process commenced in the north
+ where it seems to have been already fully developed in Low German as
+ early as the 8th century. It is to be found, it may be noted, in
+ Anglo-Saxon, as early as the 6th century. It gradually worked its way
+ southwards to Middle and Upper Germany where, however, certain
+ consonants seem to have protected the stem syllable from the influence
+ of _i_ in a following syllable. Cf., for instance, Modern High German
+ _drucken_ and _drucken_; _glauben_, _kaufen_, _Haupt_, words which in
+ Middle German dialects show mutation. Orthographically, however, this
+ process is, during the first period, only to be seen in the change of
+ _a_ to _e_; from the 10th century onwards there are, it is true, some
+ traces of other changes, and vowels like _u_, _o_, _ou_ must have
+ already been affected, otherwise we could not account for the mutation
+ of these vowels at a period when the cause of it, the _i_ or _j_, no
+ longer existed. A no less important change, for it helped to
+ differentiate High from Low German, was that of Germanic _e_2 (a
+ closed _e_-sound) and _o_ diphthongs in Old High German, while they
+ were retained in Old Low German. Cf. O.H.G. _her_, _hear_, _hiar_,
+ O.L.G. _her_; O.H.G. _fuoz_, O.L.G. _fot_. The final result was that
+ in the 10th century ie (older forms, _ia_, _ea_) and _uo_ (older _ua_,
+ _oa_ in Alemannic, _ua_ in South Franconian) had asserted themselves
+ throughout all the High German dialects. Again while in Old High
+ German the older diphthongs _ai_ and _au_ were preserved as _ei_ and
+ _ou_, unless they happened to stand at the end of a word or were
+ followed by certain consonants (_h_, _w_, _r_ in the one case, and
+ _h_, _r_, _l_, _n_, _th_, _d_, _t_, _z_, _s_ in the other; cf. _zeh_
+ from _zihan_, _zoh_ from _ziohan_, _verlos_, &c.), the Old Low German
+ shows throughout the monophthongs _e_ (in Middle Low German a closed
+ sound) and _o_ (cf. O.L.G. _sten_, _oga_). These monophthongs are also
+ to be heard in Rhenish Franconian, the greater part of East Franconian
+ and the Upper Saxon and Silesian dialects of modern times (cf.
+ _Stein_: _Steen_ or _Stan_; _laufen_: _lofen_ or _lopen_).
+
+ Of the dialects enumerated above, Bavarian and Alemannic, High and
+ Rhenish Franconian as well as Old Saxon are more or less represented
+ in the literature of the first period. But this literature, the chief
+ monuments of which are Otfrid's _Evangelienbuch_ (in South
+ Franconian), the Old Saxon _Heliand_ (a life of Christ in alliterative
+ verse), the translation of Tatian's _Gospel Harmony_ (East Franconian)
+ and that of a theological tract by Bishop Isidore of Seville and of
+ parts of the Bible (Rhenish Franconian), is almost exclusively
+ theological and didactic in character. One is consequently inclined to
+ attach more value to the scanty remains of the _Hildebrandslied_ and
+ some interesting and ancient charms. The didactic spirit again
+ pervades the translations and commentaries of Notker of St Gall in the
+ early part of the 11th century, as well as a paraphrase of the _Song
+ of Songs_ by an abbot Williram of Ebersberg a little later. Latin,
+ however, reigned supreme throughout this period, it being the language
+ of the charters, the lawbooks (there is nothing in Germany to compare
+ with the laws of the Anglo-Saxons), of science, medicine, and even
+ poetry. It is thus needless to say that there was no recognized
+ literary language (_Schriftsprache_) during this period, nor even any
+ attempt to form one; at most, we might speak of schools in the large
+ monasteries, such as Reichenau, St Gall, Fulda, which contributed to
+ the spread and acceptance of certain orthographical rules.
+
+
+ THE MIDDLE HIGH GERMAN PERIOD
+
+ The following are the chief changes in sounds and forms which mark the
+ development of the language in the Middle High German period. The
+ orthography of the MSS. reveals a much more extensive employment of
+ mutation (_Umlaut_) than was the case in the first period; we find,
+ for instance, as the mutation of _o_, _o_, of _o_, _oe_, _of u_, _iu_
+ (_u_), of _uo_, _ue_, of _ou_, _ou_, and _eu_ (cf. _holer_, _boese_,
+ _hiuser_, _guete_, _boume_), although many scribes, and more
+ especially those of Middle and Low German districts, have no special
+ signs for the mutation of _u_, _u_, and _o_. Of special interest is
+ the so-called "later (or weaker) mutation" (_jungerer oder
+ schwacherer Umlaut_) of _a_ to a very open _e_ sound, which is often
+ written _a_. Cf. _mahte_ (O.H.G. _mahti_), _magede_ (O.H.G. _magadi_).
+ The earlier mutation of this sound produced an _e_(_e_), a closed
+ sound (i.e. nearer _i_). Cf. _geste_ (O.H.G. _gesti_).
+
+ The various Old High German vowels in unstressed syllables were either
+ weakened to an indifferent _e_ sound (_geben_, O.H.G. _geban_; _bote_,
+ O.H.G. _boto_; _sige_, O.H.G. _sigu_) or disappeared altogether. The
+ latter phenomenon is to be observed after _l_ and _r_, and partly
+ after _n_ and _m_ (cf. _ar(e)_, O.H.G. _aro_; _zal_, O.H.G. _zala_;
+ _wundern_, O.H.G. _wuntaron_, &c.); but it by no means took place
+ everywhere in the same degree and at the same time. It has been
+ already noted that the Alemannic dialect (as well as the archaic poets
+ of the German national epic) retained at least the long unstressed
+ vowels until as late as the 14th century (_gemarterot_, _gekriuzegot_,
+ &c., and Low and Middle German preserved the weakened _e_ sound in
+ many cases where Upper German dropped it. In this period the
+ beginnings are also to be seen in Low and Middle German (Heinrich von
+ Veldeke shows the first traces of it) of a process which became of
+ great importance for the formation of the Modern German literary
+ language. This is the lengthening of originally short vowels in open
+ syllables,[17] for example, in Modern High German _Tages_, _Weges_,
+ _lobe_ (Middle High German _tages_, _weges_, _lobe_). In Austria, on
+ the other hand, there began as far back as the first half of the 12th
+ century another movement of equal importance for Modern High German,
+ namely, the conversion of the long vowels, _i_, _u_, _u_, into _ei_
+ (_ou_), _au_, _eu_ (_au_).[18] It is, therefore, in MSS. written in
+ the south-east that we find forms like _zeit_, _lauter_ (_loter_),
+ _heute_, &c., for the first time. With the exception of Low German and
+ Alemannic--Swabian, however, follows in this respect the majority--all
+ the German dialects participated in this change between the 14th and
+ 16th centuries, although not all to the same degree. The change was
+ perhaps assisted by the influence of the literary language which had
+ recognized the new sounds. In England the same process has led to the
+ modern pronunciation of _time_, _house_, &c., and in Holland to that
+ of _tijd_, _huis_, &c. F. Wrede (_Zeitschrift fur deutsches Altertum_
+ xxxix. 257 ff.) has suggested that the explanation of the change is to
+ be sought in the apocope and syncope of the final _e_, and the greater
+ stress which was in consequence put on the stem-syllable. The tendency
+ to a change in the opposite direction, namely, the narrowing of
+ diphthongs to monophthongs, is to be noticed in Middle German
+ dialects, i.e. in dialects which resisted the apocope of the final
+ _e_, where _ie_, _uo_, _ue_ become _i_, _u_, _u_; thus we have for
+ _Brief_, _brif_, for _huon_, _hun_, for _brueder_, _bruder_, and this
+ too was taken over into the Modern High German literary language.[19]
+
+ No consonantal change was so widespread during this period as that of
+ initial _s_ to _sch_ before _l_, _n_, _m_, _w_, _p_ and _t_. Cf.
+ _slingen_, _schlingen_; _swer_ (_e_) _n_, _schworen_, &c. The forms
+ _scht_- and _schp_- are often to be met with in Alemannic MSS., but
+ they were discarded again, although modern German recognizes the
+ pronunciation _schp_, _scht_.[20] With regard to changes affecting the
+ inflections of verbs and nouns, it must suffice here to point out that
+ the weakening or disappearance of vowels in unstressed syllables
+ necessarily affected the characteristic endings of the older language;
+ groups of verbs and substantives which in Old High German were
+ distinct now become confused. This is best seen in the case of the
+ weak verbs, where the three Old High German classes (cf. _nerien_,
+ _salbon_, _dagen_) were fused into one. Similarly in the declensions
+ we find an increasing tendency of certain forms to influence
+ substantives belonging to other classes; there is, for instance, an
+ increase in the number of neuter nouns taking _-er_ (_-ir_) in the
+ plural, and of those which show mutation in the plural on the model of
+ the _i-_ stems (O.H.G. _gast_, pl. _gesti_; cf. forms like _ban_,
+ _benne_; _hals_, _helse_; _wald_, _welde_). Of changes in syntax the
+ gradual decay in the use of the genitive case dependent on a noun or
+ governed by a verb (cf. constructions like _eine brunne rotes goldes_,
+ or _des todes wunschen_) towards the end of the period, and also the
+ disappearance of the Old High German sequence of tenses ought at least
+ to be mentioned.
+
+ In the Middle High German period, the first classical period of German
+ poetry, the German language made great advances as a vehicle of
+ literary expression; its power of expression was increased and it
+ acquired a beauty of style hitherto unknown. This was the period of
+ the _Minnesang_ and the great popular and court epics, of Walther von
+ der Vogelweide, Hartmann von Aue, Wolfram von Eschenbach and Gottfried
+ von Strassburg; it was a period when literature enjoyed the fostering
+ care of the courts and the nobility. At the same time German prose
+ celebrated its first triumphs in the sermons of Berthold von
+ Regensburg, and in the mystic writings and sermons of Meister Eckhart,
+ Tauler and others. History (Eike von Repkow's _Weltchronik_) and law
+ (_Sachsenspiegel_, _Schwabenspiegel_) no longer despised the
+ vernacular, and from about the middle of the 13th century German
+ becomes, in an ever-increasing percentage, the language of deeds and
+ charters.
+
+ It has been a much debated question how far Germany in Middle High
+ German times possessed or aspired to possess a _Schriftsprache_ or
+ literary language.[21] About the year 1200 there was undoubtedly a
+ marked tendency towards a unification of the literary language on the
+ part of the more careful poets like Walther von der Vogelweide,
+ Hartmann von Aue and Gottfried von Strassburg; they avoid, more
+ particularly in their rhymes, dialectic peculiarities, such as the
+ Bavarian dual forms _es_ and _enk_, or the long vowels in unstressed
+ syllables, retained in Alemannic, and they do not make use of archaic
+ words or forms. We have thus a right to speak, if not of a Middle High
+ German literary language in the widest sense of the word, at least of
+ a Middle High German _Dichtersprache_ or poetic language, on an
+ Alemannic-Franconian basis. Whether, or in how far, this may have
+ affected the ordinary speech of the nobility or courts, is a matter of
+ conjecture; but it had an undeniable influence on Middle and Low
+ German poets, who endeavoured at least to use High German forms in
+ their rhymes. Attempts were also made in Low German districts, though
+ at a later stage of this period, to unify the dialects and raise them
+ to the level of an accepted literary language. It will be shown later
+ why these attempts were unsuccessful. Unfortunately, however, the
+ efforts of the High German poets to form a uniform language were also
+ shortlived; by the end of the 13th century the _Dichtersprache_ had
+ disappeared, and the dialects again reigned supreme.
+
+
+ MODERN HIGH GERMAN
+
+ Although the Middle High German period had thus not succeeded in
+ effecting any permanent advance in the direction of a uniform literary
+ language, the desire for a certain degree of uniformity was never
+ again entirely lost. At the close of the 13th century literature had
+ passed from the hands of the nobility to those of the middle classes
+ of the towns; the number of writers who used the German tongue rapidly
+ increased; later the invention of printing, the increased efficiency
+ of the schools, and above all the religious movement of the
+ Reformation, contributed to awakening the desire of being understood
+ by those who stood outside the dialectic community of the individual.
+ A single authoritative form of writing and spelling was felt on all
+ sides to be particularly necessary. This was found in the language
+ used officially by the various chanceries (_Kanzleien_), and more
+ especially the imperial chancery. Since the days of Charles IV.
+ (1347-1378) the latter had striven after a certain uniform language in
+ the documents it issued, and by the time of Maximilian I. (1493-1519)
+ all its official documents were characterized by pretty much the same
+ phonology, forms and vocabulary, in whatever part of Germany they
+ originated. And under Maximilian's successor, Charles V., the
+ conditions remained pretty much the same. The fact that the seat of
+ the imperial chancery had for a long time been in Prague, led to a
+ mingling of Upper and Middle German sounds and inflections; but when
+ the crown came with Frederick III. (1440-1493) to the Habsburgs, the
+ Upper German elements were considerably increased. The chancery of the
+ Saxon electorate, whose territory was exclusively Middle German, had
+ to some extent, under the influence of the imperial chancery, allowed
+ Upper German characteristics to influence its official language. This
+ is clearly marked in the second half of the 15th century, and about
+ the year 1500 there was no essential difference between the languages
+ of the two chanceries. Thuringia, Silesia and Brandenburg soon
+ followed suit, and even Low German could not ultimately resist the
+ accepted High German notation (_o_, _o_, _u_, _u_, _ou_, _ie_, &c.).
+ We have here very favourable conditions for the creation of a uniform
+ literary language, and, as has already been said, the tendency to
+ follow these authorities is clearly marked.
+
+ In the midst of this development arose the imposing figure of Luther,
+ who, although by no means the originator of a common High German
+ speech, helped very materially to establish it. He deliberately chose
+ (cf. the often quoted passage in his _Tischreden_, ch. 69) the
+ language of the Saxon chancery as the vehicle of his Bible translation
+ and subsequently of his own writings. The differences between Luther's
+ usage and that of the chancery, in phonology and inflection, are
+ small; still he shows, in his writings subsequent to 1524, a somewhat
+ more pronounced tendency towards Middle German. But it is noteworthy
+ that he, like the chancery, retained the old vowel-change in the
+ singular and plural of the preterite of the strong verbs (i.e.
+ _steig_, _stigen_; _starb_, _sturben_), although before Luther's time
+ the uniformity of the modern preterite had already begun to show
+ itself here and there. The adoption of the language of the chancery
+ gave rise to the mixed character of sounds and forms which is still a
+ feature of the literary language of Germany. Thus the use of the
+ monophthongs _i_, _u_, and _u_, instead of the old diphthongs _ie_,
+ _uo_ and _ue_, comes from Middle Germany; the forms of the words and
+ the gender of the nouns follow Middle rather than Upper German usage,
+ whereas, on the other hand, the consonantal system (_p_ to _pf_; _d_
+ to _t_) betrays in its main features its Upper German
+ (Bavarian-Austrian) origin.
+
+ The language of Luther no doubt shows greater originality in its style
+ and vocabulary (cf. its influence on Goethe and the writers of the
+ _Sturm und Drang_), for in this respect the chancery could obviously
+ afford him but scanty help. His vocabulary is drawn to a great extent
+ from his own native Middle German dialect, and the fact that, since
+ the 14th century, Middle German literature (cf. for instance, the
+ writings of the German mystics, at the time of and subsequent to
+ Eckhart) had exercised a strong influence over Upper Germany, stood
+ him in good stead. Luther is, therefore, strictly speaking, not the
+ father of the modern German literary language, but he forms the most
+ important link in a chain of development which began long before him,
+ and did not reach its final stage until long after him. To infer that
+ Luther's language made any rapid conquest of Germany would not be
+ correct. It was, of course, immediately acceptable to the eastern part
+ of the Middle German district (Thuringia and Silesia), and it did not
+ find any great difficulty in penetrating into Low Germany, at least
+ into the towns and districts lying to the east of the Saale and Elbe
+ (Magdeburg, Hamburg). One may say that about the middle of the 16th
+ century Luther's High German was the language of the chanceries, about
+ 1600 the language of the pulpit (the last Bible in Low German was
+ printed at Goslar in 1621) and the printing presses. Thus the
+ aspirations of Low Germany to have a literary language of its own were
+ at an early stage crushed. Protestant Switzerland, on the other hand,
+ resisted the "uncommon new German" until well into the 17th century.
+ It was also natural that the Catholic Lower Rhine (Cologne) and
+ Catholic South Germany held out against it, for to adopt the language
+ of the reformer would have seemed tantamount to offering a helping
+ hand to Protestant ideas. At the same time, geographical and political
+ conditions, as well as the pronounced character of the Upper German
+ dialects, formed an important obstacle to a speedy unification. South
+ German grammarians of the 16th century, such as Laurentius Albertus,
+ raise a warning voice against those who, although far distant from the
+ proper use of words and the true pronunciation, venture to teach _nos
+ puriores Germanos_, namely, the Upper Germans.
+
+ In 1593 J. Helber, a Swiss schoolmaster and notary, spoke of three
+ separate dialects as being in use by the printing presses:[22] (1)
+ _Mitteldeutsch_ (the language of the printers in Leipzig, Erfurt,
+ Nuremberg, Wurzburg, Frankfort, Mainz, Spires, Strassburg and Cologne;
+ at the last mentioned place in the event of their attempting to print
+ _Ober-Teutsch_); (2) _Donauisch_ (the printers' language in South
+ Germany, but limited to Bavaria and Swabia proper--here more
+ particularly the Augsburg idiom, which was considered to be
+ particularly _zierlich_);[23] (3) _Hochst Reinisch_, which corresponds
+ to Swiss German. Thus in the 16th century Germany was still far from
+ real unity in its language; but to judge from the number and the
+ geographical position of the towns which printed in _Mitteldeutsch_ it
+ is pretty clear which idiom would ultimately predominate. During the
+ 17th century men like M. Opitz (_Buch von der deutschen Poeterey_) and
+ J.G. Schottelius (_Teutsche Sprachkunst_, 1641, and _Von der teutschen
+ Sprachkunst_, 1663), together with linguistic societies like the
+ _Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft_ and the Nuremberg _Pegnitzorden_, did a
+ great deal to purify the German language from foreign (especially
+ French) elements; they insisted on the claims of the vernacular to a
+ place beside and even above Latin (in 1687 Christian Thomasius held
+ for the first time lectures in the German language at the university
+ of Leipzig), and they established a firm grammatical basis for
+ Luther's common language, which especially in the hymnals had become
+ modernized and more uniform. About the middle of the 17th century the
+ disparity between the vowels of the singular and plural of the
+ preterite of the strong verbs practically ceases; under East Middle
+ German influence the final _e_ is restored to words like _Knabe_,
+ _Jude_, _Pfaffe_, which in South German had been _Knab_, &c.; the
+ mixed declension (_Ehre_, _Ehren_; _Schmerz_, _Schmerzen_) was
+ established, and the plural in -_er_ was extended to some masculine
+ nouns (_Wald_, _Walder_);[24] the use of the mutated sound has now
+ become the rule as a plural sign (Vater, Baume). How difficult, even
+ in the first half of the 18th century, it was for a Swiss to write the
+ literary language which Luther had established is to be seen from the
+ often quoted words of Haller (1708-1777): "I am a Swiss, the German
+ language is strange to me, and its choice of words was almost unknown
+ to me." The Catholic south clung firmly to its own literary language,
+ based on the idiom of the imperial chancery, which was still an
+ influential force in the 17th century or on local dialects. This is
+ apparent in the writings of Abraham a Sancta Clara,[25] who died in
+ 1709, or in the attacks of the Benedictine monk, Augustin Dornbluth,
+ on the _Meissner Schriftsprache_ in 1755.
+
+ In the 18th century, to which these names have introduced us, the
+ grammatical writings of J.C. Gottsched (_Deutsche Sprachkunst_, 1748)
+ and J.C. Adelung (_Grammatisch-kritisches Worterbuch der hochdeutschen
+ Mundart_, 1774-1786) exercised a decisive and far-reaching influence.
+ Gottsched took as his basis the spoken language (_Umgangssprache_) of
+ the educated classes of Upper Saxony (Meissen), which at this time
+ approximated as nearly as possible to the literary language. His
+ _Grammar_ did enormous services to the cause of unification,
+ ultimately winning over the resisting south; but he carried his purism
+ to pedantic lengths, he would tolerate no archaic or dialectical
+ words, no unusual forms or constructions, and consequently made the
+ language unsuited for poetry. Meanwhile an interest in Old German
+ literature was being awakened by Bodmer; Herder set forth better ideas
+ on the nature of language, and insisted on the value of native idioms;
+ and the _Sturm und Drang_ led by Goethe encouraged all individualistic
+ tendencies. All this gave rise to a movement counter to Gottsched's
+ absolutism, which resulted in the revival of many obsolete German
+ words and forms, these being drawn partly from Luther's Bible
+ translation (cf. V. Hehn, "Goethe und die Sprache der Bibel," in the
+ _Goethe-Jahrbuch_, viii. p. 187 ff.), partly from the older language
+ and partly from the vocabulary peculiar to different social ranks and
+ trades.[26] The latter is still a source of linguistic innovations.
+ German literary style underwent a similar rejuvenation, for we are on
+ the threshold of the second classical period of German literature. It
+ had strengthened Gottsched's hand as a linguistic reformer that the
+ earlier leaders of German literature, such as Gellert, Klopstock and
+ Lessing, were Middle Germans; now Wieland's influence, which was
+ particularly strong in South Germany, helped materially towards the
+ establishment of one accepted literary language throughout all
+ German-speaking countries; and the movement reaches its culmination
+ with Goethe and Schiller. At the same time this unification did not
+ imply the creation of an unalterable standard; for, just as the
+ language of Opitz and Schottelius differed from that of Luther,
+ so--although naturally in a lesser degree--the literary language of
+ our day differs from that of the classic writers of the 18th century.
+ Local peculiarities are still to be met with, as is to be seen in the
+ modern German literature that emanates from Switzerland or Austria.
+
+ But this unity, imperfect as it is, is limited to the literary
+ language. The differences are much more sharply accentuated in the
+ _Umgangssprache_,[27] whereby we understand the language as it is
+ spoken by educated people throughout Germany; this is not only the
+ case with regard to pronunciation, although it is naturally most
+ noticeable here, but also with regard to the choice of words and the
+ construction of sentences. Compared with the times of Goethe and
+ Schiller a certain advance towards unification has undoubtedly been
+ made, but the differences between north and south are still very
+ great. This is particularly noticeable in the pronunciation of
+ _r_--either the uvular _r_ or the _r_ produced by the tip of the
+ tongue; of the voiced and voiceless stops, _b_, _p_, _d_, _t_, _g_ and
+ _k_; of the _s_ sounds; of the diphthongs; of the long vowels _e_ and
+ _oe_, &c. (cf. W. Vietor, _German Pronunciation_, 2nd ed., 1890). The
+ question as to whether a unified pronunciation (_Einheitaussprache_)
+ is desirable or even possible has occupied the attention of academies,
+ scholars and the educated public during recent years, and in 1898 a
+ commission made up of scholars and theatre directors drew up a scheme
+ of pronunciation for use in the royal theatres of Prussia.[28] This
+ scheme has since been recommended to all German theatres by the German
+ _Buhnenverein_. Desirable as such a uniform pronunciation is for the
+ national theatre, it is a much debated question how far it should be
+ adopted in the ordinary speech of everyday life. Some scholars, such
+ as W. Braune, declared themselves strongly in favour of its
+ adoption;[29] Braune's argument being that the system of modern
+ pronunciation is based on the spelling, not on the sounds produced in
+ speaking. The latter, he holds, is only responsible for the
+ pronunciation of _-chs-_ as _-ks-_ in _wachsen_, _Ochse_, &c., or for
+ that of _sp-_ and _st-_ in _spielen_, _stehen_, &c. Other scholars,
+ again, such as K. Luick and O. Brenner, warn against any such attempts
+ to create a living language on an artificial basis;[30] the
+ _Buhnendeutsch_ or "stage-German" they regard as little more than an
+ abstract ideal. Thus the decision must be left to time.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--_General Literature_: J. Grimm, _Geschichte der
+ deutschen Sprache_ (Leipzig, 1848; 4th ed., 1880); W. Scherer, _Zur
+ Geschichte der deutschen Sprache_ (Berlin, 1868; 2nd ed., 1878); E.
+ Forstemann, _Geschichte des deutschen Sprachstammes_ (Nordhausen,
+ 1874-1875); O. Behaghel, _Die deutsche Sprache_ (Leipzig, 1886; 2nd
+ ed., 1902); the same, "Geschichte der deutschen Sprache," in Paul's
+ _Grundriss der germanischen Philologie_ (2nd ed.), i. pp. 650 ff.; O.
+ Weise, _Unsere deutsche Sprache, ihr Werden und ihr Wesen_ (Leipzig,
+ 1898); K. von Raumer, _Geschichte der germanischen Philologie_
+ (Munich, 1870); J. Grimm, _Deutsche Grammatik_ (4 vols., vols. i.-iii.
+ in new edition, 1870-1890); Dieter, _Laut- und Formenlehre der
+ altgermanischen Dialekte_ (2 vols., Leipzig, 1898-1900); F. Kauffmann,
+ _Deutsche Grammatik_ (2nd ed., 1895); W. Wilmanns, _Deutsche
+ Grammatik_, so far, vols, i., ii. and iii., 1 (Strassburg, 1893-1906,
+ vol. i., 2nd ed., 1897); O. Brenner, _Grundzuge der geschichtlichen
+ Grammatik der deutschen Sprache_ (Munich, 1896); H. Lichtenberger,
+ _Histoire de la langue allemande_ (Paris, 1895).
+
+ _Old and Middle High German Period_: W. Braune, _Althochdeutsche
+ Grammatik_ (2nd ed., Halle, 1891); the same, _Abriss der
+ althochdeutschen Grammatik_ (3rd ed., 1900); F. Holthausen,
+ _Altsachsisches Elementarbuch_ (Heidelberg, 1899); W. Schluter,
+ _Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der altsachsichen Sprache_, i.
+ (Gottingen, 1892); O. Schade, _Altdeutsches Worterbuch_ (2nd ed.,
+ Halle, 1872-1882); G.E. Graff, _Althochdeutscher Sprachschatz_ (6
+ vols., Berlin, 1834-1842) (Index by Massmann, 1846); E. Steinmeyer and
+ E. Sievers, _Althochdeutsche Glossen_ (4 vols., Berlin, 1879-1898);
+ J.A. Schmeller, _Glossarium Saxonicum_ (Munich, 1840); K. Weinhold,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsche Grammatik_ (3rd ed., Paderborn, 1892); H. Paul,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsche Grammatik_ (5th ed., Halle, 1900); V. Michels,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsches Elementarbuch_ (Heidelberg, 1900); O. Brenner,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsche Grammatik_ (3rd ed., Munich, 1894); K. Zwierzina,
+ "Mittelhochdeutsche Studien," in _Zeitschrift fur deutsches Altertum_,
+ vols. xliv. and xlv.; A. Lubben, _Mittelniederdeutsche Grammatik_
+ (Leipzig, 1882); W. Muller and F. Zarncke, _Mittelhochdeutsches
+ Worterbuch_ (4 vols., Leipzig, 1854-1866); M. Lexer,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsches Handworterbuch_ (3 vols., 1872-1878); the same,
+ _Mittelhochdeutsches Taschenworterbuch_ (8th ed., 1906); K. Schiller
+ and A. Lubben, _Mittelniederdeutsches Worterbuch_ (6 vols., Bremen,
+ 1875-1881); A. Lubben, _Mittelniederdeutsches Handworterbuch_ (Norden,
+ 1888); F. Seiler, _Die Entwicklung der deutsch. Kultur im Spiegel des
+ deutschen Lehnworts_ (Halle, i., 1895, 2nd ed., 1905, ii., 1900).
+
+ _Modern High German Period_: E. Wulcker, "Die Entstehung der
+ kursachsischen Kanzleisprache" (in the _Zeitschrift des Vereins fur
+ kursachsische Geschichte_, ix. p. 349); the same, "Luthers Stellung
+ zur kursachsischen Kanzleisprache" (in _Germania_, xxviii. pp. 191
+ ff.); P. Pietsch, _Martin Luther und die hochdeutsche Schriftsprache_
+ (Breslau, 1883); K. Burdach, _Die Einigung der neuhochdeutschen
+ Schriftsprache_, (1883); E. Opitz, _Die Sprache Luthers_ (Halle,
+ 1869); J. Luther, _Die Sprache Luthers in der Septemberbibel_ (Halle,
+ 1887); F. Kluge, _Von Luther bis Lessing_ (Strassburg, 1888) (cf. E.
+ Schroder's review in the _Gottinger gelehrte Anzeiger_, 1888, 249); H.
+ Ruckert, _Geschichte der neuhochdeutschen Schriftsprache bis zur Mitte
+ des 18. Jahrhunderts_ (1875): J. Kehrein, _Grammatik der deutschen
+ Sprache des 15. bis 17. Jahrhunderts_ (Leipzig, 2nd ed., 1863); K. von
+ Bahder, _Grundlagen des neuhochdeutschen Lautsystems_ (Strassburg,
+ 1890); R. Meyer, _Einfuhrung in das altere Neuhochdeutsche_ (Leipzig,
+ 1894); W. Scheel, _Beitrage zur Geschichte der neuhochdeutschen
+ Gemeinsprache in Koln_ (Marburg, 1892); R. Brandstetter, _Die
+ Rezeption der neuhochdeutschen Schriftsprache in Stadt und Landschaft
+ Luzern_ (1892); K. Burdach, "Zur Geschichte der neuhochdeutschen
+ Schriftsprache" (_Forschungen zur deutschen Philologie_, 1894); the
+ same, "Die Sprache des jungen Goethe" (_Verhandlungen der Dessauer
+ Philologenversammlung_, 1884, p. 164 ff.); F. Kasch, _Die Sprache des
+ jungen Schiller_ (Dissertation, 1900); F. Kluge, "Uber die Entstehung
+ unserer Schriftsprache" (Beihefte zur _Zeitschrift des allgemeinen
+ Sprachvereins_, Heft 6, 1894); A. Waag, _Bedeutungsentwickelung
+ unseres Wortschatzes_ (Lahr, 1901).
+
+ Mention must also be made of the work of the German commission of the
+ Royal Prussian Academy, which in 1904 drew up plans for making an
+ inventory of all German literary MSS. dating from before the year 1600
+ and for the publication of Middle High German and early Modern High
+ German texts. This undertaking, which has made considerable progress,
+ provides rich material for the study of the somewhat neglected period
+ between the 14th and 16th centuries; at the same time it provides a
+ basis on which a monumental history of Modern High German may be built
+ up, as well as for a _Thesaurus linguae germanicae_. (R. Pr.)
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] K. Mullenhoff and W. Scherer, _Denkmaler deutscher Poesie und
+ Prosa_, 3rd ed., by E. Steinmeyer, 1892, No. lxvii.
+
+ [2] For a detailed description of the boundary line cf. O. Behaghel's
+ article in Paul's _Grundriss_, 2nd ed., pp. 652-657, where there is
+ also a map, and a very full bibliography relative to the changes in
+ the boundary.
+
+ [3] Cf. J. Grimm, _Deutsche Grammatik_, 3rd ed., i. p. 13; F. Kluge,
+ _Etymologisches Worterbuch_, 6th ed., pp. 75 ff.; K. Luick, "Zur
+ Geschichte des Wortes 'deutsch,'" in _Anzeiger fur deutsches
+ Altertum_, xv., pp. 135, 248; H. Fischer, "Theotiscus, Deutsch," in
+ Paul and Braune's _Beitrage_, xviii. p. 203; H. Paul, _Deutsches
+ Worterbuch_ (1897), p. 93.
+
+ [4] Cf. P. Kretschmer, _Einleitung in die Geschichte der griechischen
+ Sprache_ (Gottingen, 1896), who holds the mingling of Celtic and
+ Germanic elements in southern and south-western Germany responsible
+ for the change. It might also be mentioned here that H. Meyer
+ (_Zeitschrift f. deut. Altertum_, xlv. pp. 101 ff.) endeavours to
+ explain the first soundshifting by the change of abode of the
+ Germanic tribes from the lowlands to the highlands of the Carpathian
+ Mountains.
+
+ [5] Of writers who have made extensive use of dialects, it must
+ suffice to mention here the names of J.H. Voss, Hebel, Klaus Groth,
+ Fritz Reuter, Usteri, G.D. Arnold, Holtei, Castelli, J.G. Seidl and
+ Anzengruber, and in our own days G. Hauptmann.
+
+ [6] Cf. F. Staub and L. Tobler, _Schweizerisches Idiotikon_ (1881
+ ff.); E. Martin and F. Lienhart, _Worterbuch der elsassischen
+ Mundarten_ (Strassburg, 1899 ff.); H. Fischer, _Schwabisches
+ Worterbuch_ (Tubingen, 1901 ff.). Earlier works, which are already
+ completed, are J.A. Schmeller, _Bayrisches Worterbuch_ (2nd ed., 2
+ vols., Munich, 1872-1877); J.B. Schopf, _Tiroler Idiotikon_
+ (Innsbruck, 1886); M. Lexer, _Karntisches Worterbuch_ (1862); H.
+ Gradl, _Egerlander Worterbuch_, i. (Eger, 1883); A.F.C. Vilmar,
+ _Idiotikon von Kurhessen_ (Marburg, 1883) (with supplements by H. von
+ Pfister); W. Crecelius, _Oberhessisches Worterbuch_ (Darmstadt,
+ 1890-1898). Professor J. Franck is responsible for a _Rheinisches
+ Worterbuch_ for the Prussian Academy.
+
+ [7] Cf. the article "Mundarten" by R. Loewe in R. Bethge, _Ergebnisse
+ und Fortschritte der germanistischen Wissenschaft_ (Leipzig, 1902),
+ pp. 75-88; and F. Mentz, _Bibliographie der deutschen
+ Mundartforschung_ (Leipzig, 1892). Of periodicals may be mentioned
+ Deutsche Mundarten, by J.W. Nagl (Vienna, 1896 ff.); _Zeitschrift fur
+ hochdeutsche Mundarten_, by O. Heilig and Ph. Lenz (Heidelberg, 1900
+ ff.), continued as _Zeitschrift f. deutsche Mundarten_, Verlag des
+ Allgemeinen Deutschen Sprachvereins. Owing to its importance as a
+ model for subsequent monographs J. Kinteler's _Die Kerenzer Mundart
+ des Kantons Glarus_ (Leipzig, 1876) should not be passed unnoticed.
+
+ [8] Cf. especially H. Tumpel, "Die Mundarten des alten
+ niedersachsischen Gebietes zwischen 1300 und 1500" (Paul und Braune's
+ Beitrage, vii. pp. 1-104); _Niederdeutsche Studien_, by the same
+ writer (Bielefeld, 1898); Bahnke, "Uber Sprach- und Gaugrenzen
+ zwischen Elbe und Weser" (_Jahrbuch des Vereins fur niederdeutsche
+ Sprachforschung_, vii. p. 77).
+
+ [9] Upper Saxon and Thuringian are sometimes taken as a separate
+ group.
+
+ [10] Cf. W. Braune, "Zur Kenntnis des Frankischen" (_Beitrage_, i.
+ pp. 1-56); O. Bohme, _Zur Kenntnis des Oberfrankischen im 13., 14.
+ und 15. Jahrh._ (Dissertation) (Leipzig, 1893), where a good account
+ of the differences between the Rhenish Franconian and South
+ Franconian dialects will be found.
+
+ [11] Cf. C. Norrenberg, "Lautverschiebungsstufe des
+ Mittelfrankischen" (_Beitrage_, ix. 371 ff.); R. Heinzel, _Geschichte
+ der niederfrankischen Geschaftssprache_ (Paderborn, 1874).
+
+ [12] This is also the dialect of the so-called Siebenburger Sachsen.
+
+ [13] Cf. E. Sievers, _Oxforder Benediktinerregel_ (Halle, 1887), p.
+ xvi.; J. Meier, Jolande (1887), pp. vii. ff.; O. Bohme, l.c. p. 60.
+
+ [14] Lower Hesse (the northern and eastern parts) goes, however, in
+ many respects its own way.
+
+ [15] On the High German dialects cf. K. Weinhold, _Alemannische
+ Grammatik_ (Berlin, 1863); F. Kauffmann, _Geschichte der schwabischen
+ Mundart_ (Strassburg, 1870); E. Haendcke, _Die mundartlichen Elemente
+ in den elsassischen Urkunden_ (Strassburg, 1894); K. Weinhold,
+ _Bairische Grammatik_ (1867); J.A. Schmeller, _Die Mundarten Baierns_
+ (Munich, 1821); J.N. Schwabl, _Die altbairischen Mundarten_ (Munchen,
+ 1903); O. Brenner, _Mundarten und Schriftsprache in Bayern_ (Bamberg,
+ 1890); J. Schatz, _Die Mundart von Imst_ (Strassburg, 1897); J.W.
+ Nagl, _Der Vocalismus der bairisch-osterreichischen Mundarten_
+ (1890-1891); W. Gradl, _Die Mundarten Westbohmens_ (Munich, 1896); P.
+ Lessiak, "Die Mundart von Pernegg in Karnten" (Paul and Braune,
+ _Beitrage_, vol. xxviii.).
+
+ [16] Cf., for a hypothesis of two _Umlautsperioden_ during the Old
+ High German time, F. Kauffmann, _Geschichte der schwabischen Mundart_
+ (Strassburg, 1890), S. 152.
+
+ [17] Cf. W. Wilmanns, _Deutsche Grammatik_, i. (2nd edition) pp.
+ 300-304.
+
+ [18] Wilmanns, l.c. pp. 273-280. It might be mentioned that, in
+ Modern High German, these new diphthongs are neither in spelling nor
+ in educated pronunciation distinguished from the older ones.
+
+ [19] Cf. Wilmanns, pp. 280-284.
+
+ [20] Ibid. pp. 129-132.
+
+ [21] Cf. K. Lachmann, _Kleinere Schriften_, i. p. 161 ff.; Mullenhoff
+ and Scherer's _Denkmaler_ (3rd ed.), i. p. xxvii.; H. Paul, _Gab es
+ eine mhd. Schriftsprache?_ (Halle, 1873); O. Behaghel, _Zur Frage
+ nach einer mhd. Schriftsprache_ (Basel, 1886) (Cf. Paul and Braune's
+ _Beitrage_, xiii. p. 464 ff.); A. Socin, _Schriftsprache und
+ Dialekte_ (Heilbronn, 1888); H. Fischer, _Zur Geschichte des
+ Mittelhochdeutschen_ (Tubingen, 1889); O. Behaghel, _Schriftsprache
+ und Mundart_ (Giessen, 1896); K. Zwierzina, _Beobachtungen zum
+ Reimgebrauch Hartmanns und Wolframs_ (Haile, 1898); S. Singer, _Die
+ mhd. Schriftsprache_ (1900); C. Kraus, _Heinrich von Veldeke und die
+ mhd. Dichtersprache_ (Halle, 1899); G. Roethe, _Die Reimvorreden des
+ Sachsenspiegels_ (Berlin, 1899); H. Tumpel, _Niederdeutsche Studien_
+ (1898).
+
+ [22] For literature bearing on the complicated question of the
+ _Druckersprachen_, readers are referred to the article
+ "Neuhochdeutsche Schriftsprache," by W. Scheel, in Bethge's
+ _Ergebnisse ... der germanistischen Wissenschaft_ (1902), pp. 47, 50
+ f. Cf. also K. von Bahder, _Grundlagen des nhd. Lautsystems_ (1890),
+ pp. 15 ff.
+
+ [23] A German _Priamel_ mentions as an essential quality in a
+ beautiful woman: "die red dort her von Swaben."
+
+ [24] Cf. for a detailed discussion of the noun declension, K.
+ Boiunga, _Die Entwicklung der mhd. Substantivflexion_ (Leipzig,
+ 1890); and, more particularly for the masculine and neuter nouns, two
+ articles by H. Molz, "Die Substantivflexion seit mhd. Zeit," in Paul
+ and Braune's _Beitrage_, xxvii. p. 209 ff. and xxxi. 277 ff. For the
+ changes in the gender of nouns, A. Polzin, _Geschlechtswandel der
+ Substantiva im Deutschen_ (Hildesheim, 1903).
+
+ [25] Cf. C. Blanckenburg, _Studien uber die Sprache Abrahams a S.
+ Clara_ (Halle, 1897); H. Strigl, "Einiges uber die Sprache des P.
+ Abraham a Sancta Clara" (_Zeitschr. f. deutsche Wortforschung_, viii.
+ 206 ff.).
+
+ [26] Cf. F. Kluge, _Etymologisches Worterbuch_ (6th ed.), pp. 508 ff.
+ One can speak of: _Studenten-, Soldaten-, Weidmanns-, Bergmanns-,
+ Drucker-, Juristen-, und Zigeunersprache, und Rotwelsch_. Cf. F.
+ Kluge, _Die deutsche Studentensprache_ (Strassburg, 1894);
+ _Rotwelsch_ i. (Strassburg, 1901); R. Bethge, _Ergebnisse_, &c., p.
+ 55 f.
+
+ [27] Cf. H. Wunderlich, _Unsere Umgangssprache_ (Weimar, 1894).
+
+ [28] Cf. Th. Siebs, _Deutsche Buhnenaussprache_ (2nd ed., Berlin,
+ 1901), and the same writer's _Grundzuge der Buhnensprache_ (1900).
+
+ [29] W. Braune, _Uber die Einigung der deutschen Aussprache_ (Halle,
+ 1905); and the review by O. Brenner, in the _Zeitschrift des
+ allgemeinen deutschen Sprachvereins_, Beihefte iv. 27, pp. 228-232.
+
+ [30] Cf. K. Luick, _Deutsche Lautlehre mit besonderer
+ Berucksichtigung der Sprechweise Wiens und der osterreichischen
+ Alpenlander_ (1904); O. Brenner, "Zur Aussprache des Hochdeutschen"
+ l.c., pp. 218-228.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN LITERATURE. Compared with other literatures, that of the
+German-speaking peoples presents a strangely broken and interrupted
+course; it falls into more or less isolated groups, separated from each
+other by periods which in intellectual darkness and ineptitude are
+virtually without a parallel in other European lands. The explanation of
+this irregularity of development is to be sought less in the chequered
+political history of the German people--although this was often reason
+enough--than in the strongly marked, one might almost say, provocative
+character of the national mind as expressed in literature. The Germans
+were not able, like their partially latinized English cousins--or even
+their Scandinavian neighbours--to adapt themselves to the various waves
+of literary influence which emanated from Italy and France and spread
+with irresistible power over all Europe; their literary history has been
+rather a struggle for independent expression, a constant warring against
+outside forces, even when the latter--like the influence of English
+literature in the 18th century and of Scandinavian at the close of the
+19th--were hailed as friendly and not hostile. It is a peculiarity of
+German literature that in those ages when, owing to its own poverty and
+impotence, it was reduced to borrowing its ideas and its poetic forms
+from other lands, it sank to the most servile imitation; while the first
+sign of returning health has invariably been the repudiation of foreign
+influence and the assertion of the right of genius to untrammelled
+expression. Thus Germany's periods of literary efflorescence rarely
+coincide with those of other nations, and great European movements, like
+the Renaissance, passed over her without producing a single great poet.
+
+This chequered course, however, renders the grouping of German
+literature and the task of the historian the easier. The first and
+simplest classification is that afforded by the various stages of
+linguistic development. In accordance with the three divisions in the
+history of the High German language, there is an Old High German, a
+Middle High German and a New High German or Modern High German literary
+epoch. It is obvious, however, that the last of these divisions covers
+too enormous a period of literary history to be regarded as analogous to
+the first two. The present survey is consequently divided into six main
+sections:
+
+I. The Old High German Period, including the literature of the Old Saxon
+dialect, from the earliest times to the middle of the 11th century.
+
+II. The Middle High German Period, from the middle of the 11th to the
+middle of the 14th century.
+
+III. The Transition Period, from the middle of the 14th century to the
+Reformation in the 16th century.
+
+IV. The Period of Renaissance and Pseudo-classicism, from the end of the
+16th century to the middle of the 18th.
+
+V. The Classical Period of Modern German literature, from the middle of
+the 18th century to Goethe's death in 1832.
+
+VI. The Period from Goethe's death to the present day.
+
+
+I. THE OLD HIGH GERMAN PERIOD (c. 750-1050)
+
+Of all the Germanic races, the tribes with which we have more
+particularly to deal here were the latest to attain intellectual
+maturity. The Goths had, centuries earlier, under their famous bishop
+Ulfilas or Wulfila, possessed the Bible in their vernacular, the
+northern races could point to their _Edda_, the Germanic tribes in
+England to a rich and virile Old English poetry, before a written German
+literature of any consequence existed at all. At the same time, these
+continental tribes, in the epoch that lay between the Migrations of the
+5th century and the age of Charles the Great, were not without poetic
+literature of a kind, but it was not committed to writing, or, at least,
+no record of such a poetry has come down to us. Its existence is vouched
+for by indirect historical evidence, and by the fact that the sagas, out
+of which the German national epic was welded at a later date, originated
+in the great upheaval of the 5th century. When the vernacular literature
+began to emerge from an unwritten state in the 8th century, it proved to
+be merely a weak reflection of the ecclesiastical writings of the
+monasteries; and this, with very few exceptions, Old High German
+literature remained. Translations of the liturgy, of Tatian's _Gospel
+Harmony_ (c. 835), of fragments of sermons, form a large proportion of
+it. Occasionally, as in the so-called _Monsee Fragments_, and at the end
+of the period, in the prose of Notker Labeo (d. 1022), this
+ecclesiastical literature attains a surprising maturity of style and
+expression. But it had no vitality of its own; it virtually sprang into
+existence at the command of Charlemagne, whose policy with regard to the
+use of the vernacular in place of Latin was liberal and far-seeing; and
+it docilely obeyed the tastes of the rulers that followed, becoming
+severely orthodox under Louis the Pious, and consenting to immediate
+extinction when the Saxon emperors withdrew their favour from it. Apart
+from a few shorter poetic fragments of interest, such as the _Merseburg
+Charms_ (_Zauberspruche_), an undoubted relic of pre-Christian times,
+the _Wessobrunn Prayer_ (c. 780), the _Muspilli_, an imaginative
+description of the Day of Judgment, and the _Ludwigslied_ (881), which
+may be regarded as the starting point for the German historical ballad,
+the only High German poem of importance in this early period was the
+_Gospel Book_ (_Liber evangeliorum_) of Otfrid of Weissenburg (c.
+800-870). Even this work is more interesting as the earliest attempt to
+supersede alliteration in German poetry by rhyme, than for such poetic
+life as the monk of Weissenburg was able to instil into his narrative.
+In fact, for the only genuine poetry of this epoch we have to look, not
+to the High German but to the Low German races. They alone seemed able
+to give literary expression to the memories handed down in oral
+tradition from the 5th century; to Saxon tradition we owe the earliest
+extant fragment of a national saga, the _Lay of Hildebrand_
+(_Hildebrandslied_, c. 800), and a Saxon poet was the author of a
+vigorous alliterative version of the Gospel story, the _Heliand_ (c.
+830), and also of part of the Old Testament (_Genesis_). This
+alliterative epic--for epic it may be called--is the one poem of this
+age in which the Christian tradition has been adapted to German poetic
+needs. Of the existence of a lyric poetry we only know by hearsay; and
+the drama had nowhere in Europe yet emerged from its earliest purely
+liturgic condition. Such as it was, the vernacular literature of the Old
+High German period enjoyed but a brief existence, and in the 10th and
+11th centuries darkness again closed over it. The dominant "German"
+literature in these centuries is in Latin; but that literature is not
+without national interest, for it shows in what direction the German
+mind was moving. The _Lay of Walter_ (_Waltharilied_, c. 930), written
+in elegant hexameters by Ekkehard of St Gall, the moralizing dramas of
+Hrosvitha (Roswitha) of Gandersheim, the _Ecbasis captivi_ (c. 940),
+earliest of all the Beast epics, and the romantic adventures of
+_Ruodlieb_ (c. 1030), form a literature which, Latin although it is,
+foreshadows the future developments of German poetry.
+
+
+II. THE MIDDLE HIGH GERMAN PERIOD (1050-1350)
+
+(a) _Early Middle High German Poetry._--The beginnings of Middle High
+German literature were hardly less tentative than those of the preceding
+period. The Saxon emperors, with their Latin and even Byzantine tastes,
+had made it extremely difficult to take up the thread where Notker let
+it drop. Williram of Ebersberg, the commentator of the _Song of Songs_
+(c. 1063), did certainly profit by Notker's example, but he stands
+alone. The Church had no helping hand to offer poetry, as in the more
+liberal epoch of the great Charles; for, at the middle of the 11th
+century, when the linguistic change from Old to Middle High German was
+taking place, a movement of religious asceticism, originating in the
+Burgundian monastery of Cluny, spread across Europe, and before long all
+the German peoples fell under its influence. For a century there was no
+room for any literature that did not place itself unreservedly at the
+service of the Church, a service which meant the complete abnegation of
+the brighter side of life. Repellent in their asceticism are, for
+instance, poems like _Memento mori_ (c. 1050), _Vom Glauben_, a verse
+commentary on the creed by a monk Hartmann (c. 1120), and a poem on "the
+remembrance of death" (_Von des todes gehugede_) by Heinreich von Melk
+(c. 1150); only rarely, as in a few narrative Poems on Old Testament
+subjects, are the poets of this time able to forget for a time their
+lugubrious faith. In the _Ezzolied_ (c. 1060), a spirited lay by a monk
+of Bamberg on the life, miracles and death of Christ, and in the
+_Annolied_ (c. 1080), a poem in praise of the archbishop Anno of
+Cologne, we find, however, some traces of a higher poetic imagination.
+
+The transition from this rigid ecclesiastic spirit to a freer, more
+imaginative literature is to be seen in the lyric poetry inspired by the
+Virgin, in the legends of the saints which bulk so largely in the poetry
+of the 12th century, and in the general trend towards mysticism.
+Andreas, Pilatus, Aegidius, Albanius are the heroes of monkish romances
+of that age, and the stories of Sylvester and Crescentia form the most
+attractive parts of the _Kaiserchronik_ (c. 1130-1150), a long, confused
+chronicle of the world which contains many elements common to later
+Middle High German poetry. The national sagas, of which the poet of the
+_Kaiserchronik_ had not been oblivious, soon began to assert themselves
+in the popular literature. The wandering _Spielleute_, the lineal
+descendants of the jesters and minstrels of the dark ages, who were now
+rapidly becoming a factor of importance in literature, were here the
+innovators; to them we owe the romance of _Konig Rother_ (c. 1160), and
+the kindred stories of _Orendel_, _Oswald_ and _Salomon und Markolf_
+(_Salman und Morolf_). All these poems bear witness to a new element,
+which in these years kindled the German imagination and helped to
+counteract the austerity of the religious faith--the Crusades. With what
+alacrity the Germans revelled in the wonderland of the East is to be
+seen especially in the _Alexanderlied_ (c. 1130), and in _Herzog Ernst_
+(c. 1180), romances which point out the way to another important
+development of German medieval literature, the Court epic. The latter
+type of romance was the immediate product of the social conditions
+created by chivalry and, like chivalry itself, was determined and
+influenced by its French origin; so also was the version of the _Chanson
+de Roland_ (_Rolandslied_, c. 1135), which we owe to another priest,
+Konrad of Regensburg, who, with considerable probability, has been
+identified with the author of the _Kaiserchronik_.
+
+The Court epic was, however, more immediately ushered in by Eilhart von
+Oberge, a native of the neighbourhood of Hildesheim who, in his
+_Tristant_ (c. 1170), chose that Arthurian type of romance which from
+now on was especially cultivated by the poets of the Court epic; and of
+equally early origin is a knightly romance of _Floris und Blancheflur_,
+another of the favourite love stories of the middle ages. In these
+years, too, the Beast epic, which had been represented by the Latin
+_Ecbasis captivi_, was reintroduced into Germany by an Alsatian monk,
+Heinrich der Glichezaere, who based his _Reinhart Fuchs_ (c. 1180) on the
+French _Roman de Renart_. Lastly, we have to consider the beginning of
+the _Minnesang_, or lyric, which in the last decades of the 12th century
+burst out with extraordinary vigour in Austria and South Germany. The
+origins are obscure, and it is still debatable how much in the German
+Minnesang is indigenous and national, how much due to French and
+Provencal influence; for even in its earliest phases the Minnesang
+reveals correspondences with the contemporary lyric of the south of
+France. The freshness and originality of the early South German singers,
+such as Kurenberg, Dietmar von Eist, the Burggraf of Rietenburg and
+Meinloh von Sevelingen, are not, however, to be questioned; in spite of
+foreign influence, their verses make the impression of having been a
+spontaneous expression of German lyric feeling in the 12th century. The
+_Spruchdichtung_, a form of poetry which in this period is represented
+by at least two poets who call themselves Herger and "Der Spervogel,"
+was less dependent on foreign models; the pointed and satirical strophes
+of these poets were the forerunners of a vast literature which did not
+reach its highest development until after literature had passed from the
+hands of the noble-born knight to those of the burgher of the towns.
+
+(b) _The Flourishing of Middle High German Poetry._--Such was the
+preparation for the extraordinarily brilliant, although brief epoch of
+German medieval poetry, which corresponded to the reigns of the
+Hohenstaufen emperors, Frederick I. Barbarossa, Henry VI. and Frederick
+II. These rulers, by their ambitious political aspirations and
+achievements, filled the German peoples with a sense of "world-mission,"
+as the leading political power in medieval Europe. Docile pupils of
+French chivalry, the Germans had no sooner learned their lesson than
+they found themselves in the position of being able to dictate to the
+world of chivalry. In the same way, the German poets, who, in the 12th
+century, had been little better than clumsy translators of French
+romances, were able, at the beginning of the 13th, to substitute for
+French _chansons de geste_ epics based on national sagas, to put a
+completely German imprint on the French Arthurian romance, and to sing
+German songs before which even the lyric of Provence paled. National
+epic, Court epic and Minnesang--these three types of medieval German
+literature, to which may be added as a subordinate group didactic
+poetry, comprise virtually all that has come down to us in the Middle
+High German tongue. A Middle High German prose hardly existed, and the
+drama, such as it was, was still essentially Latin.
+
+The first place among the National or Popular epics belongs to the
+_Nibelungenlied_, which received its present form in Austria about the
+turn of the 12th and 13th centuries. Combining, as it does, elements
+from various cycles of sagas--the lower Rhenish legend of Siegfried, the
+Burgundian saga of Gunther and Hagen, the Gothic saga of Dietrich and
+Etzel--it stands out as the most representative epic of German medieval
+life. And in literary power, dramatic intensity and singleness of
+purpose its eminence is no less unique. The vestiges of gradual
+growth--of irreconcilable elements imperfectly welded together--may not
+have been entirely effaced, but they in no way lessen the impression of
+unity which the poem leaves behind it; whoever the welder of the sagas
+may have been, he was clearly a poet of lofty imagination and high epic
+gifts (see NIBELUNGENLIED). Less imposing as a whole, but in parts no
+less powerful in its appeal to the modern mind, is the second of the
+German national epics, _Gudrun_, which was written early in the 13th
+century. This poem, as it has come down to us, is the work of an
+Austrian, but the subject belongs to a cycle of sagas which have their
+home on the shores of the North Sea. It seems almost a freak of chance
+that Siegfried, the hero of the Rhineland, should occupy so prominent a
+position in the _Nibelungenlied_, whereas Dietrich von Bern (i.e. of
+Verona), the name under which Theodoric the Great had been looked up to
+for centuries by the German people as their national hero, should have
+left the stamp of his personality on no single epic of the intrinsic
+worth of the _Nibelungenlied_. He appears, however, more or less in the
+background of a number of romances--_Die Rabenschlacht_, _Dietrichs
+Flucht_, _Alpharts Tod_, _Biterolf und Dietlieb_, _Laurin_, &c.--which
+make up what is usually called the _Heldenbuch_. It is tempting, indeed,
+to see in this very unequal collection the basis for what, under more
+favourable circumstances, might have developed into an epic even more
+completely representative of the German nation than the
+_Nibelungenlied_.
+
+While the influence of the romance of chivalry is to be traced on all
+these popular epics, something of the manlier, more primitive ideals
+that animated German national poetry passed over to the second great
+group of German medieval poetry, the Court epic. The poet who, following
+Eilhart von Oberge's tentative beginnings, established the Court epic in
+Germany was Heinrich von Veldeke, a native of the district of the lower
+Rhine; his _Eneit_, written between 1173 and 1186, is based on a French
+original. Other poets of the time, such as Herbort von Fritzlar, the
+author of a _Liet von Troye_, followed Heinrich's example, and selected
+French models for German poems on antique themes; while Albrecht von
+Halberstadt translated about the year 1210 the _Metamorphoses_ of Ovid
+into German verse. With the three masters of the Court epic, Hartmann
+von Aue, Wolfram von Eschenbach and Gottfried von Strassburg--all of
+them contemporaries--the Arthurian cycle became the recognized theme of
+this type of romance, and the accepted embodiment of the ideals of the
+knightly classes. Hartmann was a Swabian, Wolfram a Bavarian, Gottfried
+presumably a native of Strassburg. Hartmann, who in his _Erec_ and
+_Iwein_, _Gregorius_ and _Der arme Heinrich_ combined a tendency towards
+religious asceticism with a desire to imbue the worldly life of the
+knight with a moral and religious spirit, provided the Court epic of the
+age with its best models; he had, of all the medieval court poets, the
+most delicate sense for the formal beauty of poetry, for language, verse
+and style. Wolfram and Gottfried, on the other hand, represent two
+extremes of poetic temperament. Wolfram's _Parzival_ is filled with
+mysticism and obscure spiritual significance; its flashes of humour
+irradiate, although they can hardly be said to illumine, the gloom; its
+hero is, unconsciously, a symbol and allegory of much which to the poet
+himself must have been mysterious and inexplicable; in other words,
+_Parzival_--and Wolfram's other writings, _Willehalm_ and _Titurel_,
+point in the same direction--is an instinctive or, to use Schiller's
+word, a "naive" work of genius. Gottfried, again, is hardly less gifted
+and original, but he is a poet of a wholly different type. His _Tristan_
+is even more lucid than Hartmann's _Iwein_, his art is more objective;
+his delight in it is that of the conscious artist who sees his work
+growing under his hands. Gottfried's poem, in other words, is free from
+the obtrusion of those subjective elements which are in so high a degree
+characteristic of _Parzival_; in spite of the tragic character of the
+story, _Tristan_ is radiant and serene, and yet uncontaminated by that
+tone of frivolity which the Renaissance introduced into love stories of
+this kind.
+
+_Parzival_ and _Tristan_ are the two poles of the German Court epic, and
+the subsequent development of that epic stands under the influence of
+the three poets, Hartmann, Wolfram and Gottfried; according as the poets
+of the 13th century tend to imitate one or other of these, they fall
+into three classes. To the followers and imitators of Hartmann belong
+Ulrich von Zatzikhoven, the author of a _Lanzelet_ (c. 1195); Wirnt von
+Gravenberg, a Bavarian, whose _Wigalois_ (c. 1205) shows considerable
+imaginative power; the versatile Spielmann, known as "Der Stricker"; and
+Heinrich von dem Turlin, author of an unwieldy epic, _Die Krone_ ("the
+crown of all adventures," c. 1220). The fascination of Wolfram's
+mysticism is to be seen in _Der jungere Titurel_ of a Bavarian poet,
+Albrecht von Scharfenberg (c. 1270), and in the still later _Lohengrin_
+of an unknown poet; whereas Gottfried von Strassburg dominates the
+_Flore und Blanscheflur_ of Konrad Fleck (c. 1220) and the voluminous
+romances of the two chief poets of the later 13th century, Rudolf von
+Ems, who died in 1254, and Konrad von Wurzburg, who lived till 1287. Of
+these, Konrad alone carried on worthily the traditions of the great age,
+and even his art, which excels within the narrow limits of romances like
+_Die Herzemoere_ and _Engelhard_, becomes diffuse and wearisome on the
+unlimited canvas of _Der Trojanerkrieg_ and _Partonopier und Meliur_.
+
+The most conspicuous changes which came over the narrative poetry of the
+13th century were, on the one hand, a steady encroachment of realism on
+the matter and treatment of the epic, and, on the other, a leaning to
+didacticism. The substitution of the "history" of the chronicle for the
+confessedly imaginative stories of the earlier poets is to be seen in
+the work of Rudolf von Ems, and of a number of minor chroniclers like
+Ulrich von Eschenbach, Berthold von Holle and Jans Enikel; while for the
+growth of realism we may look to the _Pfaffe Amis_, a collection of
+comic anecdotes by "Der Stricker," the admirable peasant romance _Meier
+Helmbrecht_, written between 1236 and 1250 by Wernher der Gartenaere in
+Bavaria, and to the adventures of Ulrich von Lichtenstein, as described
+in his _Frauendienst_ (1255) and _Frauenbuch_ (1257).
+
+More than any single poet of the Court epic, more even than the poet of
+the _Nibelungenlied_, Walther von der Vogelweide summed up in himself
+all that was best in the group of poetic literature with which he was
+associated--the Minnesang. The early Austrian singers already mentioned,
+poets like Heinrich von Veldeke, who in his lyrics, as in his epic,
+introduced the French conception of _Minne_, or like the manly Friedrich
+von Hausen, and the Swiss imitator of Provencal measures, Rudolf von
+Fenis appear only in the light of forerunners. Even more original
+poets, like Heinrich von Morungen and Walther's own master, Reinmar von
+Hagenau, the author of harmonious but monotonously elegiac verses, or
+among immediate contemporaries, Hartmann von Aue and Wolfram von
+Eschenbach, whose few lyric strophes are as deeply stamped with his
+individuality as his epics--seem only tributary to the full rich stream
+of Walther's genius. There was not a form of the German Minnesang which
+Walther did not amplify and deepen; songs of courtly love and lowly
+love, of religious faith and delight in nature, patriotic songs and
+political _Spruche_--in all he was a master. Of Walther's life we are
+somewhat better informed than in the case of his contemporaries: he was
+born about 1170 and died about 1230; his art he learned in Austria,
+whereupon he wandered through South Germany, a welcome guest wherever he
+went, although his vigorous championship of what he regarded as the
+national cause in the political struggles of the day won him foes as
+well as friends. For centuries he remained the accepted exemplar of
+German lyric poetry; not merely the Minnesanger who followed him, but
+also the Meistersinger of the 15th and 16th centuries looked up to him
+as one of the founders and lawgivers of their art. He was the most
+influential of all Germany's lyric poets, and in the breadth,
+originality and purity of his inspiration one of her greatest (see
+WALTHER VON DER VOGELWEIDE).
+
+The development of the German Minnesang after Walther's death and under
+his influence is easily summed up. Contemporaries had been impressed by
+the dual character of Walther's lyric; they distinguished a higher
+courtly lyric, and a lower more outspoken form of song, free from the
+constraint of social or literary conventions. The later Minnesang
+emphasized this dualism. Amongst Walther's immediate contemporaries,
+high-born poets, whose lives were passed at courts, naturally cultivated
+the higher lyric; but the more gifted and original singers of the time
+rejoiced in the freedom of Walther's poetry of _niedere Minne_. It was,
+in fact, in accordance with the spirit of the age that the latter should
+have been Walther's most valuable legacy to his successors; and the
+greatest of these, Neidhart von Reuental (c. 1180-c. 1250), certainly
+did not allow himself to be hampered by aristocratic prejudices.
+Neidhart sought the themes of his _hofische Dorfpoesie_ in the village,
+and, as the mood happened to dictate, depicted the peasant with humorous
+banter or biting satire. The lyric poets of the later 13th century were
+either, like Burkart von Hohenfels, Ulrich von Winterstetten and
+Gottfried von Neifen, echoes of Walther von der Vogelweide and of
+Neidhart, or their originality was confined to some particular form of
+lyric poetry in which they excelled. Thus the singer known as "Der
+Tannhauser" distinguished himself as an imitator of the French
+_pastourelle_; Reinmar von Zweter was purely a _Spruchdichter_. More or
+less common to all is the consciousness that their own ideas and
+surroundings were no longer in harmony with the aristocratic world of
+chivalry, which the poets of the previous generation had glorified. The
+solid advantages, material prosperity and increasing comfort of life in
+the German towns appealed to poets like Steinmar von Klingenau more than
+the unworldly ideals of self-effacing knighthood which Ulrich von
+Lichtenstein and Johann Hadlaub of Zurich clung to so tenaciously and
+extolled so warmly. On the whole, the Spruchdichter came best out of
+this ordeal of changing fashions; and the increasing interest in the
+moral and didactic applications of literature favoured the development
+of this form of verse. The confusion of didactic purpose with the lyric
+is common to all the later poetry, to that of the learned Marner, of
+Boppe, Rumezland and Heinrich von Meissen, who was known to later
+generations as "Frauenlob." The _Spruchdichtung_, in fact, was one of
+the connecting links between the Minnesang of the 13th and the lyric and
+satiric poetry of the 15th and 16th centuries.
+
+The disturbing and disintegrating element in the literature of the 13th
+century was thus the substitution of a utilitarian didacticism for the
+idealism of chivalry. In the early decades of that century, poems like
+_Der Winsbeke_, by a Bavarian, and _Der welsche Gast_, written in
+1215-1216 by Thomasin von Zirclaere (Zirclaria), a native of Friuli,
+still teach with uncompromising idealism the duties and virtues of the
+knightly life. But in the _Bescheidenheit_ (c. 1215-1230) of a wandering
+singer, who called himself Freidank, we find for the first time an
+active antagonism to the unworldly code of chivalry and an unmistakable
+reflection of the changing social order, brought about by the rise of
+what we should now call the middle class. Freidank is the spokesman of
+the _Burger_, and in his terse, witty verses may be traced the germs of
+German intellectual and literary development in the coming
+centuries--even of the Reformation itself. From the advent of Freidank
+onwards, the satiric and didactic poetry went the way of the epic; what
+it gained in quantity it lost in quality and concentration. The satires
+associated with the name of Seifried Helbling, an Austrian who wrote in
+the last fifteen years of the 13th century, and _Der Renner_ by Hugo von
+Trimberg, written at the very end of the century, may be taken as
+characteristic of the later period, where terseness and incisive wit
+have given place to diffuse moralizing and allegory.
+
+There is practically no Middle High German literature in prose; such
+prose as has come down to us--the tracts of David of Augsburg, the
+powerful sermons of Berthold von Regensburg (d. 1272), Germany's
+greatest medieval preacher, and several legal codes, as the
+_Sachsenspiegel_ and _Schwabenspiegel_--only prove that the Germans of
+the 13th century had not yet realized the possibilities of prose as a
+medium of literary expression.
+
+
+III. THE TRANSITION PERIOD (1350-1600)
+
+(a) _The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries._--As is the case with all
+transitional periods of literary history, this epoch of German
+literature may be considered under two aspects: on the one hand, we may
+follow in it the decadence and disintegration of the literature of the
+Middle High German period; on the other, we may study the beginnings of
+modern forms of poetry and the preparation of that spiritual revolution,
+which meant hardly less to the Germanic peoples than the Renaissance to
+the Latin races--the Protestant Reformation.
+
+By the middle of the 14th century, knighthood with its chivalric ideals
+was rapidly declining, and the conditions under which medieval poetry
+had flourished were passing away. The social change rendered the courtly
+epic of Arthur's Round Table in great measure incomprehensible to the
+younger generation, and made it difficult for them to understand the
+spirit that actuated the heroes of the national epic; the tastes to
+which the lyrics of the great Minnesingers had appealed were vitiated by
+the more practical demands of the rising middle classes. But the stories
+of chivalry still appealed as stories to the people, although the old
+way of telling them was no longer appreciated. The feeling for beauty of
+form and expression was lost; the craving for a moral purpose and
+didactic aim had to be satisfied at the cost of artistic beauty; and
+sensational incident was valued more highly than fine character-drawing
+or inspired poetic thought. Signs of the decadence are to be seen in the
+_Karlmeinet_ of this period, stories from the youth of Charlemagne, in a
+continuation of _Parzival_ by two Alsatians, Claus Wisse and Philipp
+Colin (c. 1335), in an _Apollonius von Tyrus_ by Heinrich von Neuenstadt
+(c. 1315), and a _Konigstochter von Frankreich_ by Hans von Buhel (c.
+1400). The story of Siegfried was retold in a rough ballad, _Das Lied
+von hurnen Seyfried_, the _Heldenbuch_ was recast in _Knittelvers_ or
+doggerel (1472), and even the Arthurian epic was parodied. A no less
+marked symptom of decadence is to be seen in a large body of allegorical
+poetry analogous to the _Roman de la rose_ in France; Heinzelein of
+Constance, at the end of the 13th, and Hadamar von Laber and Hermann von
+Sachsenheim, about the middle of the 15th century, were representatives
+of this movement. As time went on, prose versions of the old stories
+became more general, and out of these developed the _Volksbucher_, such
+as _Loher und Maller_, _Die Haimonskinder_, _Die schone Magelone_,
+_Melusine_, which formed the favourite reading of the German people for
+centuries. As the last monuments of the decadent narrative literature of
+the middle ages, we may regard the _Buch der Abenteuer_ of Ulrich
+Fuetrer, written at the end of the 15th century, and _Der Weisskonig_
+and _Teuerdank_ by the emperor Maximilian I. (1459-1519) printed in the
+early years of the 16th. At the beginning of the new epoch the Minnesang
+could still point to two masters able to maintain the great traditions
+of the 13th century, Hugo von Montfort (1357-1423) and Oswald von
+Wolkenstein (1367-1445); but as the lyric passed into the hands of the
+middle-class poets of the German towns, it was rapidly shorn of its
+essentially lyric qualities; _die Minne_ gave place to moral and
+religious dogmatism, emphasis was laid on strict adherence to the rules
+of composition, and the simple forms of the older lyric were superseded
+by ingenious metrical distortions. Under the influence of writers like
+Heinrich von Meissen ("Frauenlob," c. 1250-1318) and Heinrich von Mugeln
+in the 14th century, like Muskatblut and Michael Beheim (1416-c. 1480)
+in the 15th, the Minnesang thus passed over into the Meistergesang. In
+the later 15th and in the 16th centuries all the south German towns
+possessed flourishing Meistersinger schools in which the art of writing
+verse was taught and practised according to complicated rules, and it
+was the ambition of every gifted citizen to rise through the various
+grades from _Schuler_ to _Meister_ and to distinguish himself in the
+"singing contests" instituted by the schools.
+
+Such are the decadent aspects of the once rich literature of the Middle
+High German period in the 14th and 15th centuries. Turning now to the
+more positive side of the literary movement, we have to note a revival
+of a popular lyric poetry--the Volkslied--which made the futility and
+artificiality of the Meistergesang more apparent. Never before or since
+has Germany been able to point to such a rich harvest of popular poetry
+as is to be seen in the Volkslieder of these two centuries. Every form
+of popular poetry is to be found here--songs of love and war, hymns and
+drinking-songs, songs of spring and winter, historical ballads, as well
+as lyrics in which the old motives of the Minnesang reappear stripped of
+all artificiality. More obvious ties with the literature of the
+preceding age are to be seen in the development of the _Schwank_ or
+comic anecdote. Collections of such stories, which range from the
+practical jokes of _Till Eulenspiegel_ (1515), and the coarse witticisms
+of the _Pfaffe vom Kalenberg_ (end of 14th century) and _Peter Leu_
+(1550), to the religious and didactic anecdotes of J. Pauli's _Schimpf
+und Ernst_ (1522) or the more literary _Rollwagenbuchlein_ (1555) of
+Jorg Wickram and the _Wendunmut_ (1563 ff.) of H.W. Kirchhoff--these
+dominate in large measure the literature of the 15th and 16th centuries;
+they are the literary descendants of the medieval _Pfaffe Amis_,
+_Markolf_ and _Reinhart Fuchs_. An important development of this type of
+popular literature is to be seen in the _Narrenschiff_ of Sebastian
+Brant (1457-1521), where the humorous anecdote became a vehicle of the
+bitterest satire; Brant's own contempt for the vulgarity of the
+ignorant, and the deep, unsatisfied craving of all strata of society for
+a wider intellectual horizon and a more humane and dignified life, to
+which Brant gave voice, make the _Narrenschiff_, which appeared in 1494,
+a landmark on the way that led to the Reformation. Another form--the
+Beast fable and Beast epic--which is but sparingly represented in
+earlier times, appealed with peculiar force to the new generation. At
+the very close of the Middle High German period, Ulrich Boner had
+revived the Aesopic fable in his _Edelstein_ (1349), translations of
+Aesop in the following century added to the popularity of the fable
+(q.v.), and in the century of the Reformation it became, in the hands of
+Burkard Waldis (_Esopus_, 1548) and Erasmus Alberus (_Buch von der
+Tugend und Weisheit_, 1550), a favourite instrument of satire and
+polemic. A still more attractive form of the Beast fable was the epic of
+_Reinke de Vos_, which had been cultivated by Flemish poets in the 13th
+and 14th centuries and has come down to us in a Low Saxon translation,
+published at Lubeck in 1498. This, too, like Brant's poem, is a powerful
+satire on human folly, and is also, like the _Narrenschiff_, a harbinger
+of the coming Reformation.
+
+A complete innovation was the drama (q.v.), which, as we have seen, had
+practically no existence in Middle High German times. As in all European
+literatures, it emerged slowly and with difficulty from its original
+subservience to the church liturgy. As time went on, the vernacular was
+substituted for the original Latin, and with increasing demands for
+pageantry, the scene of the play was removed to the churchyard or the
+market-place; thus the opportunity arose in the 14th and 15th centuries
+for developing the _Weihnachtsspiel_, _Osterspiel_ and _Passionsspiel_
+on secular lines. The enlargement of the scope of the religious play to
+include legends of the saints implied a further step in the direction of
+a complete separation of the drama from ecclesiastical ceremony. The
+most interesting example of this encroachment of the secular spirit is
+the _Spiel von Frau Jutten_--Jutta being the notorious Pope Joan--by an
+Alsatian, Dietrich Schernberg, in 1480. Meanwhile, in the 15th century,
+a beginning had been made of a drama entirely independent of the church.
+The mimic representations--originally allegorical in character--with
+which the people amused themselves at the great festivals of the year,
+and more especially in spring, were interspersed with dialogue, and
+performed on an improvised stage. This was the beginning of the
+_Fastnachtsspiel_ or Shrovetide-play, the subject of which was a comic
+anecdote similar to those of the many collections of _Schwanke_. Amongst
+the earliest cultivators of the _Fastnachtsspiel_ were Hans Rosenplut
+(fl. c. 1460) and Hans Folz (fl. c. 1510), both of whom were associated
+with Nuremberg.
+
+(b) _The Age of the Reformation._--Promising as were these literary
+beginnings of the 15th century, the real significance of the period in
+Germany's intellectual history is to be sought outside literature,
+namely, in two forces which immediately prepared the way for the
+Reformation--mysticism and humanism. The former of these had been a more
+or less constant factor in German religious thought throughout the
+middle ages, but with Meister Eckhart (? 1260-1327), the most powerful
+and original of all the German mystics, with Heinrich Seuse or Suso (c.
+1300-1366), and Johannes Tauler (c. 1300-1361), it became a clearly
+defined mental attitude towards religion; it was an essentially personal
+interpretation of Christianity, and, as such, was naturally conducive to
+the individual freedom which Protestantism ultimately realized. It is
+thus not to be wondered at that we should owe the early translations of
+the Bible into German--one was printed at Strassburg in 1466--to the
+mystics. Johann Geiler von Kaisersberg (1445-1510), a pupil of the
+humanists and a friend of Sebastian Brant, may be regarded as a link
+between Eckhart and the earlier mysticists and Luther. Humanism was
+transplanted to German soil with the foundation of the university of
+Prague in 1348, and it made even greater strides than mysticism. Its
+immediate influence, however, was restricted to the educated classes;
+the pre-Reformation humanists despised the vernacular and wrote and
+thought only in Latin. Thus although neither Johann Reuchlin of
+Pforzheim (1455-1522), nor even the patriotic Alsatian, Jakob Wimpfeling
+(or Wimpheling) (1450-1528)--not to mention the great Dutch humanist
+Erasmus of Rotterdam (1466-1536)--has a place in the history of German
+literature, their battle for liberalism in thought and scholarship
+against the narrow orthodoxy of the Church cleared the way for a healthy
+national literature among the German-speaking peoples. The incisive wit
+and irony of humanistic satire--we need only instance the _Epistolae
+obscurorum virorum_ (1515-1517)--prevented the German satirists of the
+Reformation age from sinking entirely into that coarse brutality to
+which they were only too prone. To the influence of the humanists we
+also owe many translations from the Latin and Italian dating from the
+15th century. Prominent among the writers who contributed to the group
+of literature were Niklas von Wyl, chancellor of Wurttemberg, and his
+immediate contemporary Albrecht von Eyb (1420-1475).
+
+Martin Luther (1483-1546), Germany's greatest man in this age of
+intellectual new-birth, demands a larger share of attention in a survey
+of literature than his religious and ecclesiastical activity would in
+itself justify, if only because the literary activity of the age cannot
+be regarded apart from him. From the Volkslied and the popular _Schwank_
+to satire and drama, literature turned exclusively round the Reformation
+which had been inaugurated on the 31st of October 1517 by Luther's
+publication of the _Theses against Indulgences_ in Wittenberg. In his
+three tracts, _An den christlichen Adel deutscher Nation_, _De
+captivitate Babylonica ecclesiae_, and _Von der Freiheit eines
+Christenmenschen_ (1520), Luther laid down his principles of reform, and
+in the following year resolutely refused to recant his heresies in a
+dramatic scene before the Council of Worms. Luther's Bible (1522-1534)
+had unique importance not merely for the religious and intellectual
+welfare of the German people, but also for their literature. It is in
+itself a literary monument, a German classic, and the culmination and
+justification of that movement which had supplanted the medieval knight
+by the burgher and swept away Middle High German poetry. Luther, well
+aware that his translation of the Bible must be the keystone to his
+work, gave himself endless pains to produce a thoroughly German
+work--German both in language and in spirit. It was important that the
+dialect into which the Bible was translated should be comprehensible
+over as wide an area as possible of the German-speaking world, and for
+this reason he took all possible care in choosing the vocabulary and
+forms of his _Gemeindeutsch_. The language of the Saxon chancery thus
+became, thanks to Luther's initiative, the basis of the modern High
+German literary language. As a hymn-writer (_Geistliche Lieder_, 1564),
+Luther was equally mindful of the importance of adapting himself to the
+popular tradition; and his hymns form the starting-point for a vast
+development of German religious poetry which did not reach its highest
+point until the following century.
+
+The most powerful and virile literature of this age was the satire with
+which the losing side retaliated on the Protestant leaders. Amongst
+Luther's henchmen, Philipp Melanchthon (1497-1560), the "praeceptor
+Germaniae," and Ulrich von Hutten (1488-1523) were powerful allies in
+the cause, but their intellectual sympathies were with the Latin
+humanists; and with the exception of some vigorous German prose and
+still more vigorous German verse by Hutten, both wrote in Latin. The
+satirical dramas of Niklas Manuel, a Swiss writer and the polemical
+fables of Erasmus Alberus (c. 1500-1553), on the other hand, were
+insignificant compared with the fierce assault on Protestantism by the
+Alsatian monk, Thomas Murner (1475-1537). The most unscrupulous of all
+German satirists, Murner shrank from no extremes of scurrility, his
+attacks on Luther reaching their culmination in the gross personalities
+of _Von dem lutherischen Narren_ (1522). It was not until the following
+generation that the Protestant party could point to a satirist who in
+genius and power was at all comparable to Murner, namely, to Johann
+Fischart (c. 1550-c. 1591); but when Fischart's Rabelaisian humour is
+placed by the side of his predecessor's work, we see that, in spite of
+counter-reformations, the Protestant cause stood in a very different
+position in Fischart's day from that which it had occupied fifty years
+before. Fischart took his stand on the now firm union between humanism
+and Protestantism. His chief work, the _Affentheuerlich
+Naupengeheurliche Geschichtklitterung_ (1575), a Germanization of the
+first book of Rabelais' satire, is a witty and ingenious monstrosity, a
+satirical comment on the life of the 16th century, not the virulent
+expression of party strife. The day of a personal and brutal type of
+satire was clearly over, and the writers of the later 16th century
+reverted more and more to the finer methods of the humanists. The satire
+of Bartholomaeus Ringwaldt (1530-1599) and of Georg Rollenhagen
+(1542-1609), author of the _Froschmeuseler_ (1595), was more "literary"
+and less actual than even Fischart's.
+
+On the whole, the form of literature which succeeded best in
+emancipating itself from the trammels of religious controversy in the
+16th century was the drama. Protestantism proved favourable to its
+intellectual and literary development, and the humanists, who had always
+prided themselves on their imitations of Latin comedy, introduced into
+it a sense for form and proportion. The Latin school comedy in Germany
+was founded by J. Wimpfeling with his _Stylpho_ (1470) and by J.
+Reuchlin with his witty adaptation of _Maitre Patelin_ in his _Henno_
+(1498). In the 16th century the chief writers of Latin dramas were
+Thomas Kirchmair or Naogeorgus (1511-1563), Caspar Brulow (1585-1627),
+and Nikodemus Frischlin (1547-1590), who also wrote dramas in the
+vernacular. The work of these men bears testimony in its form and its
+choice of subjects to the close relationship between Latin and German
+drama in the 16th century. One of the earliest focusses for a German
+drama inspired by the Reformation was Switzerland. In Basel, Pamphilus
+Gengenbach produced moralizing _Fastnachtsspiele_ in 1515-1516; Niklas
+Manuel of Bern (1484-1530)--who has just been mentioned--employed the
+same type of play as a vehicle of pungent satire against the Mass and
+the sale of indulgences. But it was not long before the German drama
+benefited by the humanistic example: the _Parabell vam vorlorn Szohn_ by
+Burkard Waldis (1527), the many dramas on the subject of
+_Susanna_--notably those of Sixt Birck (1532) and Paul Rebhun(1535)--and
+Frischlin's German plays are attempts to treat Biblical themes according
+to classic methods. In another of the important literary centres of the
+16th century, however, in Nuremberg, the drama developed on indigenous
+lines. Hans Sachs (1494-1576), the Nuremberg cobbler and Meistersinger,
+the most productive writer of the age, went his own way; a voracious
+reader and an unwearied storyteller, he left behind him a vast literary
+legacy, embracing every form of popular literature from _Spruch_ and
+_Schwank_ to complicated _Meistergesang_ and lengthy drama. He laid
+under contribution the rich Renaissance literature with which the
+humanistic translators had flooded Germany, and he became himself an
+ardent champion of the "Wittembergisch Nachtigall" Luther. But in the
+progressive movement of the German drama he played an even smaller role
+than his Swiss and Saxon contemporaries; for his tragedies and comedies
+are deficient in all dramatic qualities; they are only stories in
+dialogue. In the _Fastnachtsspiele_, where dramatic form is less
+essential than anecdotal point and brevity, he is to be seen at his
+best. Rich as the 16th century was in promise, the conditions for the
+development of a national drama were unfavourable. At the close of the
+century the influence of the English drama--brought to Germany by
+English actors--introduced the deficient dramatic and theatrical force
+into the humanistic and "narrative" drama which has just been
+considered. This is to be seen in the work of Jakob Ayrer (d. 1605) and
+Duke Henry Julius of Brunswick (1564-1613). But unfortunately these
+beginnings had hardly made themselves felt when the full current of the
+Renaissance was diverted across Germany, bringing in its train the
+Senecan tragedy. Then came the Thirty Years' War, which completely
+destroyed the social conditions indispensable for the establishment of a
+theatre at once popular and national.
+
+The novel was less successful than the drama in extricating itself from
+satire and religious controversy. Fischart was too dependent on foreign
+models and too erratic--at one time adapting Rabelais, at another
+translating the old heroic romance of _Amadis de Gaula_--to create a
+national form of German fiction in the 16th century; the most important
+novelist was a much less talented writer, the Alsatian Meistersinger and
+dramatist Jorg Wickram (d. c. 1560), who has been already mentioned as
+the author of a popular collection of anecdotes, the _Rollwagenbuchlein_.
+His longer novels, _Der Knabenspiegel_ (1554) and Der Goldfaden (1557),
+are in form, and especially in the importance they attach to
+psychological developments, the forerunners of the movement to which we
+owe the best works of German fiction in the 18th century. But Wickram
+stands alone. So inconsiderable, in fact, is the fiction of the
+Reformation age in Germany that we have to regard the old _Volksbucher_
+as its equivalent; and it is significant that of all the prose writings
+of this age, the book which affords the best insight into the temper and
+spirit of the Reformation was just one of these crude _Volksbucher_,
+namely, the famous story of the magician _Doctor Johann Faust_, published
+at Frankfort in 1587.
+
+
+IV. THE RENAISSANCE (1600-1740)
+
+The 17th century in Germany presents a complete contrast to its
+predecessor; the fact that it was the century of the Thirty Years' War,
+which devastated the country, crippled the prosperity of the towns, and
+threw back by many generations the social development of the people,
+explains much, but it can hardly be held entirely responsible for the
+intellectual apathy, the slavery to foreign customs and foreign ideas,
+which stunted the growth of the nation. The freedom of Lutheranism
+degenerated into a paralyzing Lutheran orthodoxy which was as hostile to
+the "Freiheit eines Christenmenschen" as that Catholicism it had
+superseded; the idealism of the humanists degenerated in the same way
+into a dry, pedantic scholasticism which held the German mind in fetters
+until, at the very close of the century, Leibnitz set it free. Most
+disheartening of all, literature which in the 16th century had been so
+full of promise and had conformed with such aptitude to the new ideas,
+was in all its higher manifestations blighted by the dead hand of
+pseudo-classicism. The unkempt literature of the Reformation age
+admittedly stood in need of guidance and discipline, but the 17th
+century made the fatal mistake of trying to impose the laws and rules of
+Romance literatures on a people of a purely Germanic stock.
+
+There were, however, some branches of German poetry which escaped this
+foreign influence. The church hymn, continuing the great Lutheran
+traditions, rose in the 17th century to extraordinary richness both in
+quality and quantity. Paul Gerhardt (1607-1676), the greatest German
+hymn-writer, was only one of many Lutheran pastors who in this age
+contributed to the German hymnal. On the Catholic side, Angelus
+Silesius, or Johann Scheffler (1624-1677) showed what a wealth of poetry
+lay in the mystic speculations of Jakob Boehme, the gifted shoemaker of
+Gorlitz (1575-1624), and author of the famous _Aurora, oder Morgenrote
+im Aufgang_ (1612); while Friedrich von Spee (1591-1635), another
+leading Catholic poet of the century, cultivated the pastoral allegory
+of the Renaissance. The revival of mysticism associated with Boehme
+gradually spread through the whole religious life of the 17th century,
+Protestant as well as Catholic, and in the more specifically Protestant
+form of pietism, it became, at the close of the period, a force of
+moment in the literary revival. Besides the hymn, the Volkslied, which
+amidst the struggles and confusion of the great war bore witness to a
+steadily growing sense of patriotism, lay outside the domain of the
+literary theorists and dictators, and developed in its own way. But all
+else--if we except certain forms of fiction, which towards the end of
+the 17th century rose into prominence--stood completely under the sway
+of the Latin Renaissance.
+
+The first focus of the movement was Heidelberg, which had been a centre
+of humanistic learning in the sixteenth century. Here, under the
+leadership of J.W. Zincgref (1591-1635), a number of scholarly writers
+carried into practice that interest in the vernacular which had been
+shown a little earlier by the German translator of Marot, Paul Schede or
+Melissus, librarian in Heidelberg. The most important forerunner of
+Opitz was G.R. Weckherlin (1584-1653), a native of Wurttemberg who had
+spent the best part of his life in England; his _Oden und Gesange_
+(1618-1619) ushered in the era of Renaissance poetry in Germany with a
+promise that was but indifferently fulfilled by his successors. Of these
+the greatest, or at least the most influential, was Martin Opitz
+(1597-1639). He was a native of Silesia and, as a student in Heidelberg,
+came into touch with Zincgref's circle; subsequently, in the course of a
+visit to Holland, a more definite trend was given to his ideas by the
+example of the Dutch poet and scholar, Daniel Heinsius. As a poet, Opitz
+experimented with every form of recognized Renaissance poetry from ode
+and epic to pastoral romance and Senecan drama; but his poetry is for
+the most part devoid of inspiration; and his extraordinary fame among
+his contemporaries would be hard to understand, were it not that in his
+_Buch von der deutschen Poeterey_ (1624) he gave the German Renaissance
+its theoretical textbook. In this tract, in which Opitz virtually
+reproduced in German the accepted dogmas of Renaissance theorists like
+Scaliger and Ronsard, he not merely justified his own mechanical
+verse-making, but also gave Germany a law-book which regulated her
+literature for a hundred years.
+
+The work of Opitz as a reformer was furthered by another institution of
+Latin origin, namely, literary societies modelled on the _Accademia
+della Crusca_ in Florence. These societies, of which the chief were the
+_Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft_ or _Palmenorden_ (founded 1617), the
+_Elbschwanenorden_ in Hamburg and the _Gekronter Blumenorden an der
+Pegnitz or Gesellschaft der Pegnitzschafer_ in Nuremberg, were the
+centres of literary activity during the unsettled years of the war.
+Although they produced much that was trivial--such as the extraordinary
+_Nurnberger Trichter_ (1647-1653) by G.P. Harsdorffer (1607-1658), a
+treatise which professed to turn out a fully equipped German poet in the
+space of six hours--these societies also did German letters an
+invaluable service by their attention to the language, one of their
+chief objects having been to purify the German language from foreign and
+un-German ingredients. J.G. Schottelius (1612-1676), for instance, wrote
+his epoch-making grammatical works with the avowed purpose of furthering
+the objects of the _Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft_. Meanwhile the poetic
+centre of gravity in Germany had shifted from Heidelberg to the extreme
+north-east, to Konigsberg, where a group of academic poets gave
+practical expression to the Opitzian theory. Chief among them was Simon
+Dach (1605-1659), a gentle, elegiac writer on whom the laws of the _Buch
+von der deutschen Poeterey_ did not lie too heavily. He, like his more
+manly and vigorous contemporary Paul Fleming (1609-1640), showed, one
+might say, that it was possible to write good and sincere poetry
+notwithstanding Opitz's mechanical rules.
+
+In the previous century the most advanced form of literature had been
+satire, and under the new conditions the satiric vein still proved most
+productive; but it was no longer the full-blooded satire of the
+Reformation, or even the rich and luxuriant satiric fancy of Fischart,
+which found expression in the 17th century. Satire pure and simple was
+virtually only cultivated by two Low German poets, J. Lauremberg
+(1590-1658) and J. Rachel (1618-1669), of whom at least the latter was
+accepted by the Opitzian school; but the satiric spirit rose to higher
+things in the powerful and scathing sermons of J.B. Schupp (1610-1661),
+an outspoken Hamburg preacher, and in the scurrilous wit of the Viennese
+monk Abraham a Sancta Clara (1644-1709), who had inherited some of his
+predecessor Murner's intellectual gifts. Best of all are the epigrams of
+the most gifted of all the Silesian group of writers, Friedrich von
+Logau (1604-1655). Logau's three thousand epigrams (_Deutsche
+Sinngedichte_, 1654) afford a key to the intellectual temper of the 17th
+century; they are the epitome of their age. Here are to be seen
+reflected the vices of the time, its aping of French customs and its
+contempt for what was national and German; Logau held up to ridicule the
+vain bloodshed of the war in the interest of Christianity, and, although
+he praised Opitz, he was far from prostrating himself at the dictator's
+feet. Logau is an epigrammatist of the first rank, and perhaps the most
+remarkable product of the Renaissance movement in Germany.
+
+Opitz found difficulty in providing Germany with a drama according to
+the classic canon. He had not himself ventured beyond translations of
+Sophocles and Seneca, and Johann Rist (1607-1667) in Hamburg, one of the
+few contemporary dramatists, had written plays more in the manner of
+Duke Heinrich Julius of Brunswick than of Opitz. It was not until after
+the latter's death that the chief dramatist of the Renaissance movement
+came forward in the person of Andreas Gryphius (1616-1664). Like Opitz,
+Gryphius also was a Silesian, and a poet of no mean ability, as is to be
+seen from his lyric poetry; but his tragedies, modelled on the stiff
+Senecan pattern, suffered from the lack of a theatre, and from his
+ignorance of the existence of a more highly developed drama in France,
+not to speak of England. As it was, he was content with Dutch models. In
+the field of comedy, where he was less hampered by theories of dramatic
+propriety, he allowed himself to benefit by the freedom of the Dutch
+farce and the comic effects of the English actors in Germany; in his
+_Horribilicribrifax_ and _Herr Peter Squentz_--the latter an adaptation
+of the comic scenes of the _Midsummer Night's Dream_--Gryphius has
+produced the best German plays of the 17th century.
+
+The German novel of the 17th century was, as has been already indicated,
+less hampered by Renaissance laws than other forms of literature, and
+although it was none the less at the mercy of foreign influence, that
+influence was more varied and manifold in its character. _Don Quixote_
+had been partly translated early in the 17th century, the picaresque
+romance had found its way to Germany at a still earlier date; while H.M.
+Moscherosch (1601-1669) in his _Gesichte Philanders von Sittewald_
+(1642-1643) made the _Suenos_ of Quevedo the basis for vivid pictures of
+the life of the time, interspersed with satire. The best German novel of
+the 17th century, _Der abenteurliche Simplicissimus_ (1669) by H.J.
+Christoffel von Grimmelshausen (c. 1625-1676), is a picaresque novel,
+but one that owed little more than its form to the Spaniards. It is in
+great measure the autobiography of its author, and describes with
+uncompromising realism the social disintegration and the horrors of the
+Thirty Years' War. But this remarkable book stands alone;
+Grimmelshausen's other writings are but further contributions to the
+same theme, and he left no disciples worthy of carrying on the tradition
+he had created. Christian Weise (1642-1708), rector of the Zittau
+gymnasium, wrote a few satirical novels, but his realism and satire are
+too obviously didactic. He is seen to better advantage in his dramas, of
+which he wrote more than fifty for performance by his scholars.
+
+The real successor of _Simplicissimus_ in Germany was the English
+_Robinson Crusoe_, a novel which, on its appearance, was immediately
+translated into German (1721); it called forth an extraordinary flood of
+imitations, the so-called "Robinsonaden," the vogue of which is even
+still kept alive by _Der schweizerische Robinson_ of J.R. Wyss (1812
+ff.). With the exception of J.G. Schnabel's _Insel Felsenburg_
+(1731-1743), the literary value of these imitations is slight. They
+represented, however, a healthier and more natural development of
+fiction than the "galant" romances which were introduced in the train of
+the Renaissance movement, and cultivated by writers like Philipp von
+Zesen (1619-1689), Duke Anton Ulrich of Brunswick (1633-1714), A.H.
+Buchholtz (1607-1671), H.A. von Ziegler (1653-1697)--author of the
+famous _Asiatische Banise_ (1688)--and D.C. von Lohenstein (1635-1683),
+whose _Arminius_ (1689-1690) is on the whole the most promising novel of
+this group. The last mentioned writer and Christian Hofmann von
+Hofmannswaldau (1617-1679) are sometimes regarded as the leaders of a
+"second Silesian school," as opposed to the first school of Opitz. As
+the cultivators of the bombastic and Euphuistic style of the Italians
+Guarini and Marini, and of the Spanish writer Gongora, Lohenstein and
+Hofmannswaldau touched the lowest point to which German poetry ever
+sank.
+
+But this aberration of taste was happily of short duration. Although
+socially the recovery of the German people from the desolation of the
+war was slow and laborious, the intellectual life of Germany was rapidly
+recuperating under the influence of foreign thinkers. Samuel Pufendorf
+(1632-1694), Christian Thomasius (1655-1728), Christian von Wolff
+(1679-1754) and, above all, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibnitz (1646-1716), the
+first of the great German philosophers, laid the foundations of that
+system of rationalism which dominated Germany for the better part of the
+18th century; while German religious life was strengthened and enriched
+by a revival of pietism, under mystic thinkers like Philipp Jakob Spener
+(1635-1705), a revival which also left its traces on religious poetry.
+Such hopeful signs of convalescence could not but be accompanied by an
+improvement in literary taste, and this is seen in the first instance in
+a substitution for the bombast and conceits of Lohehstein and
+Hofmannswaldau, of poetry on the stricter and soberer lines laid down by
+Boileau. The so-called "court poets" who opposed the second Silesian
+school, men like Rudolf von Canitz (1654-1699), Johann von Besser
+(1654-1729) and Benjamin Neukirch (1665-1729), were not inspired, but
+they had at least a certain "correctness" of taste; and from their midst
+sprang one gifted lyric genius, Johann Christian Gunther (1695-1723),
+who wrote love-songs such as had not been heard in Germany since the
+days of the Minnesang. The methods of Hofmannswaldau had obtained
+considerable vogue in Hamburg, where the Italian opera kept the decadent
+Renaissance poetry alive. Here, however, the incisive wit of Christian
+Wernigke's (1661-1725) epigrams was an effective antidote, and Barthold
+Heinrich Brockes (1680-1747), a native of Hamburg, who had been deeply
+impressed by the appreciation of nature in English poetry, gave the
+artificialities of the Silesians their death-blow. But the influence of
+English literature was not merely destructive in these years; in the
+translations and imitations of the English _Spectator_, _Tatler_ and
+_Guardian_--the so-called _moralische Wochenschriften_--it helped to
+regenerate literary taste, and to implant healthy moral ideas in the
+German middle classes.
+
+The chief representative of the literary movement inaugurated by the
+Silesian "court poets" was Johann Christoph Gottsched (1700-1766), who
+between 1724 and 1740 succeeded in establishing in Leipzig, the
+metropolis of German taste, literary reforms modelled on the principles
+of French 17th-century classicism. He reformed and purified the stage
+according to French ideas, and provided it with a repertory of French
+origin; in his _Kritische Dichtkunst_ (1730) he laid down the principles
+according to which good literature was to be produced and judged. As
+Opitz had reformed German letters with the help of Ronsard, so now
+Gottsched took his standpoint on the principles of Boileau as
+interpreted by contemporary French critics and theorists. With
+Gottsched, whose services in purifying the German language have stood
+the test of time better than his literary or dramatic reforms, the
+period of German Renaissance literature reaches its culmination and at
+the same time its close. The movement of the age advanced too rapidly
+for the Leipzig dictator; in 1740 a new epoch opened in German poetry
+and he was soon left hopelessly behind.
+
+
+V. THE CLASSICAL PERIOD OF MODERN GERMAN LITERATURE (1740-1832)
+
+(a) _From the Swiss Controversy to the "Sturm und Drang."_--Between
+Opitz and Gottsched German literature passed successively through the
+various stages characteristic of all Renaissance literatures--from that
+represented by Trissino and the French Pleiade, by way of the
+aberrations of Marini and the _estilo culto_, to the _art poetique_ of
+Boileau. And precisely as in France, the next advance was achieved in a
+battle between the "ancients" and the "moderns," the German "ancients"
+being represented by Gottsched, the "moderns" by the Swiss literary
+reformers, J.J. Bodmer (1698-1783) and J.J. Breitinger (1701-1776). The
+latter in his _Kritische Dichtkunst_ (1739) maintained doctrines which
+were in opposition to Gottsched's standpoint in his treatise of the same
+name, and Bodmer supported his friend's initiative; a pamphlet war
+ensued between Leipzig and Zurich, with which in 1740-1741 the classical
+period of modern German literature may be said to open. The Swiss, men
+of little originality, found their theories in the writings of Italian
+and English critics; and from these they learned how literature might be
+freed from the fetters of pseudo-classicism. Basing their arguments on
+Milton's _Paradise Lost_, which Bodmer had translated into prose (1732),
+they demanded room for the play of genius and inspiration; they insisted
+that the imagination should not be hindered in its attempts to rise
+above the world of reason and common sense. Their victory was due, not
+to the skill with which they presented their arguments, but to the fact
+that literature itself was in need of greater freedom. It was in fact a
+triumph, not of personalities or of leaders, but of ideas. The effects
+of the controversy are to be seen in a group of Leipzig writers of
+Gottsched's own school, the _Bremer Beitrager_ as they were called after
+their literary organ. These men--C.F. Gellert (1715-1769), the author of
+graceful fables and tales in verse, G.W. Rabener (1714-1771), the mild
+satirist of Saxon provinciality, the dramatist J. Elias Schlegel
+(1719-1749), who in more ways than one was Lessing's forerunner, and a
+number of minor writers--did not set themselves up in active opposition
+to their master, but they tacitly adopted many of the principles which
+the Swiss had advocated. And in the _Bremer Beitrage_ there appeared in
+1748 the first instalment of an epic by F.G. Klopstock (1724-1803), _Der
+Messias_, which was the best illustration of that lawlessness against
+which Gottsched had protested. More effectively than Bodmer's dry and
+uninspired theorizing, Klopstock's _Messias_, and in a still higher
+degree, his _Odes_, laid the foundations of modern German literature in
+the 18th century. His immediate followers, it is true, did not help to
+advance matters; Bodmer and J.K. Lavater (1741-1801), whose
+"physiognomic" investigations interested Goethe at a later date, wrote
+dreary and now long forgotten epics on religious themes. Klopstock's
+rhapsodic dramas, together with Macpherson's _Ossian_, which in the
+'sixties awakened a widespread enthusiasm throughout Germany, were
+responsible for the so-called "bardic" movement; but the noisy
+rhapsodies of the leaders of this movement, the "bards" H.W. von
+Gerstenberg (1737-1823), K.F. Kretschmann (1738-1809) and Michael Denis
+(1729-1800), had little of the poetic inspiration of Klopstock's _Odes_.
+
+The indirect influence of Klopstock as the first inspired poet of modern
+Germany and as the realization of Bodmer's theories can, however, hardly
+be over-estimated. Under Frederick the Great, who, as the docile pupil
+of French culture, had little sympathy for unregulated displays of
+feeling, neither Klopstock nor his imitators were in favour in Berlin,
+but at the university of Halle considerable interest was taken in the
+movement inaugurated by Bodmer. Here, before Klopstock's name was known
+at all, two young poets, J.I. Pyra (1715-1744) and S.G. Lange
+(1711-1781), wrote _Freundschaftliche Lieder_ (1737), which were direct
+forerunners of Klopstock's rhymeless lyric poetry; and although the
+later Prussian poets, J.W.L. Gleim (1719-1803), J.P. Uz (1720-1796) and
+J.N. Gotz (1721-1781), who were associated with Halle, and K.W. Ramler
+(1725-1798) in Berlin, cultivated mainly the Anacreontic and the
+Horatian ode--artificial forms, which kept strictly within the classic
+canon--yet Friedrich von Hagedorn (1708-1754) in Hamburg showed to what
+perfection even the Anacreontic and the lighter _vers de societe_ could
+be brought. The Swiss physiologist Albrecht von Haller (1708-1777) was
+the first German poet to give expression to the beauty and sublimity of
+Alpine scenery (_Die Alpen_, 1734), and a Prussian officer, Ewald
+Christian von Kleist (1715-1759), author of _Der Fruhling_ (1749), wrote
+the most inspired nature-poetry of this period. Klopstock's supreme
+importance lay, however, in the fact that he was a forerunner of the
+movement of _Sturm und Drang_. But before turning to that movement we
+must consider two writers who, strictly speaking, also belong to the age
+under consideration--Lessing and Wieland.
+
+As Klopstock had been the first of modern Germany's inspired poets, so
+Gotthold Ephraim Lessing (1729-1781) was the first critic who brought
+credit to the German name throughout Europe. He was the most
+liberal-minded exponent of 18th-century rationalism. Like his
+predecessor Gottsched, whom he vanquished more effectually than Bodmer
+had done, he had unwavering faith in the classic canon, but "classic"
+meant for him, as for his contemporary, J.J. Winckelmann (1717-1768),
+Greek art and literature, and not the products of French
+pseudo-classicism, which it had been Gottsched's object to foist on
+Germany. He went, indeed, still further, and asserted that Shakespeare,
+with all his irregularities, was a more faithful observer of the spirit
+of Aristotle's laws, and consequently a greater poet, than were the
+French classic writers. He looked to England and not to France for the
+regeneration of the German theatre, and his own dramas were pioneer-work
+in this direction. _Miss Sara Sampson_ (1755) is a _burgerliche
+Tragodie_ on the lines of Lillo's _Merchant of London, Minna von
+Barnhelm_ (1767), a comedy in the spirit of Farquhar; in _Emilia
+Galotti_ (1772), again with English models in view, he remoulded the
+"tragedy of common life" in a form acceptable to the _Sturm und Drang_;
+and finally in _Nathan der Weise_ (1779) he won acceptance for iambic
+blank verse as the medium of the higher drama. His two most promising
+disciples--J.F. von Cronegk (1731-1758), and J.W. von Brawe
+(1738-1758)--unfortunately died young, and C.F. Weisse (1726-1804) was
+not gifted enough to advance the drama in its literary aspects.
+Lessing's name is associated with Winckelmann's in _Laokoon_ (1766), a
+treatise in which he set about defining the boundaries between painting,
+sculpture and poetry, and with those of the Jewish philosopher, Moses
+Mendelssohn (1729-1786) and the Berlin bookseller C.F. Nicolai
+(1733-1811) in the famous _Literaturbriefe_. Here Lessing identified
+himself with the best critical principles of the rationalistic
+movement--principles which, in the later years of his life, he employed
+in a fierce onslaught on Lutheran orthodoxy and intolerance.
+
+To the widening and deepening of the German imagination C.M. Wieland
+(1733-1813) also contributed, but in a different way. Although no enemy
+of pseudo-classicism, he broke with the stiff dogmatism of Gottsched and
+his friends, and tempered the pietism of Klopstock by introducing the
+Germans to the lighter poetry of the south of Europe. With the exception
+of his fairy epic _Oberon_ (1780), Wieland's work has fallen into
+neglect; he did, however, excellent service to the development of German
+prose fiction with his psychological novel, _Agathon_ (1766-1767), which
+may be regarded as a forerunner of Goethe's _Wilhelm Meister_, and with
+his humorous satire _Die Abderiten_ (1774). Wieland had a considerable
+following, both among poets and prose writers; he was particularly
+looked up to in Austria, towards the end of the 18th century, where the
+literary movement advanced more slowly than in the north. Here Aloys
+Blumauer (1755-1789) and J.B. von Alxinger (1755-1797) wrote their
+travesties and epics under his influence. In Saxony, M.A. von Thummel
+(1738-1817) showed his adherence to Wieland's school in his comic epic
+in prose, _Wilhelmine_ (1764), and in the general tone of his prose
+writings; on the other hand, K.A. Kortum (1745-1824), author of the most
+popular comic epic of the time, _Die Jobsiade_ (1784), was but little
+influenced by Wieland. The German novel owed much to the example of
+_Agathon_, but the groundwork and form were borrowed from English
+models; Gellert had begun by imitating Richardson in his _Schwedische
+Grafin_ (1747-1748), and he was followed by J.T. Hermes (1738-1821), by
+Wieland's friend Sophie von Laroche (1730-1807), by A. von Knigge
+(1752-1796) and J.K.A. Musaus (1735-1787), the last mentioned being,
+however, best known as the author of a collection of _Volksmarchen_
+(1782-1786). Meanwhile a rationalism, less materialistic and strict than
+that of Wolff, was spreading rapidly through educated middle-class
+society in Germany. Men like Knigge, Moses Mendelssohn, J.G. Zimmermann
+(1728-1795), T.G. von Hippel (1741-1796), Christian Garve (1742-1798),
+J.J. Engel (1741-1802), as well as the educational theorists J.B.
+Basedow (1723-1790) and J.H. Pestalozzi (1746-1827), wrote books and
+essays on "popular philosophy" which were as eagerly read as the
+_moralische Wochenschriften_ of the preceding epoch; and with this group
+of writers must also be associated the most brilliant of German
+18th-century satirists, G.C. Lichtenberg (1742-1799).
+
+Such was the _milieu_ from which sprang the most advanced pioneer of the
+classical epoch of modern German literature, J.G. Herder (1744-1803).
+The transition from the popular philosophers of the _Aufklarung_ to
+Herder was due in the first instance to the influence of Rousseau; and
+in Germany itself that transition is represented by men like Thomas Abbt
+(1738-1766) and J.G. Hamann (1730-1788). The revolutionary nature of
+Herder's thought lay in that writer's antipathy to hard and fast
+systems, to laws imposed upon genius; he grasped, as no thinker before
+him, the idea of historical evolution. By regarding the human race as
+the product of a slow evolution from primitive conditions, he
+revolutionized the methods and standpoint of historical science and
+awakened an interest--for which, of course, Rousseau had prepared the
+way--in the early history of mankind. He himself collected and published
+the _Volkslieder_ of all nations (1778-1779), and drew attention to
+those elements in German life and art which were, in the best and most
+precious sense, national--elements which his predecessors had despised
+as inconsistent with classic formulae and systems. Herder is thus not
+merely the forerunner, but the actual founder of the literary movement
+known as _Sturm und Drang_. New ground was broken in a similar way by a
+group of poets, who show the results of Klopstock's influence on the new
+literary movement: the Gottingen "Bund" or "Hain," a number of young
+students who met together in 1772, and for several years published their
+poetry in the _Gottinger Musenalmanach_. With the exception of the two
+brothers, Ch. zu Stolberg (1748-1821) and F.L. zu Stolberg (1750-1819),
+who occupied a somewhat peculiar position in the "Bund," the members of
+this coterie were drawn from the peasant class of the lower
+_bourgeoisie_; J.H. Voss (1751-1826), the leader of the "Bund," was a
+typical North German peasant, and his idyll, _Luise_ (1784), gives a
+realistic picture of German provincial life. L.H.C. Holty (1748-1776)
+and J.M. Miller (1750-1814), again, excelled in simple lyrics in the
+tone of the _Volkslied_. Closely associated with the Gottingen group
+were M. Claudius (1740-1815), the _Wandsbecker Bote_--as he was called
+after the journal he edited--an even more unassuming and homely
+representative of the German peasant in literature than Voss, and G.A.
+Burger (1748-1794) who contributed to the _Gottinger Musenalmanach_
+ballads, such as the famous Lenore (1774), of the very first rank. These
+ballads were the best products of the Gottingen school, and, together
+with Goethe's Strassburg and Frankfort songs, represent the highest
+point touched by the lyric and ballad poetry of the period.
+
+But the Gottingen "Bund" stood somewhat aside from the main movement of
+literary development in Germany; it was only a phase of _Sturm und
+Drang_, and quieter, less turbulent than that on which Goethe had set
+the stamp of his personality. Johann Wolfgang Goethe (1749-1832) had, as
+a student in Leipzig (1765-1768), written lyrics in the Anacreontic vein
+and dramas in alexandrines. But in Strassburg, where he went to continue
+his studies in 1770-1771, he made the personal acquaintance of Herder,
+who won his interest for the new literary movement. Herder imbued him
+with his own ideas of the importance of primitive history and Gothic
+architecture and inspired him with a pride in German nationality; Herder
+convinced him that there was more genuine poetry in a simple Volkslied
+than in all the ingenuity of the German imitators of Horace or Anacreon;
+above all, he awakened his enthusiasm for Shakespeare. The pamphlet _Von
+deutscher Art und Kunst_ (1773), to which, besides Goethe and Herder,
+the historian Justus Moser (1720-1794) also contributed, may be regarded
+as the manifesto of the _Sturm und Drang_. The effect on Goethe of the
+new ideas was instantaneous; they seemed at once to set his genius free,
+and from 1771 to 1775 he was extraordinarily fertile in poetic ideas and
+creations. His _Gotz von Berlichingen_ (1771-1773), the first drama of
+the _Sturm und Drang_, was followed within a year by the first novel of
+the movement, _Werthers Leiden_ (1774); he dashed off _Clavigo_ and
+_Stella_ in a few weeks in 1774 and 1775, and wrote a large number of
+_Singspiele_, dramatic satires and fragments--including _Faust_ in its
+earliest form (the so-called _Urfaust_)--not to mention love-songs which
+at last fulfilled the promise of Klopstock. Goethe's lyrics were no less
+epoch-making than his first drama and novel, for they put an end to the
+artificiality which for centuries had fettered German lyric expression.
+In all forms of literature he set the fashion to his time; the
+Shakespearian restlessness of _Gotz von Berlichingen_ found enthusiastic
+imitators in J.M.R. Lenz (1751-1792), whose _Anmerkungen ubers Theater_
+(1774) formulated theoretically the laws, or defiance of laws, of the
+new drama, in F.M. von Klinger (1752-1831), J.A. Leisewitz (1752-1806),
+H.L. Wagner (1747-1779) and Friedrich Muller, better known as Maler
+Muller (1749-1825): The dramatic literature of the _Sturm und Drang_ was
+its most characteristic product--indeed, the very name of the movement
+was borrowed from a play by Klinger; it was inspired, as _Gotz von
+Berlichingen_ had been, by the desire to present upon the stage figures
+of Shakespearian grandeur impelled and tortured by gigantic passions,
+all considerations of plot, construction and form being regarded as
+subordinate to the development of character. The fiction of the _Sturm
+und Drang_, again, was in its earlier stages dominated by _Werthers
+Leiden_, as may be seen in the novels of F.H. Jacobi (1743-1819) and
+J.M. Miller, who has been already mentioned. Later, in the hands of
+J.J.W. Heinse (1749-1803), author of _Ardinghello_ (1787), Klinger, K.
+Ph. Moritz (1757-1793), whose _Anton Reiser_ (1785) clearly foreshadows
+_Wilhelm Meister_, it reflected not merely the sentimentalism, but also
+the philosophic and artistic ideas of the period.
+
+With the production of _Die Rauber_ (1781) by Johann Friedrich Schiller
+(1759-1805), the drama of the _Sturm und Drang_ entered upon a new
+development. Although hardly less turbulent in spirit than the work of
+Klinger and Leisewitz, Schiller's tragedy was more skilfully adapted to
+the exigencies of the theatre; his succeeding dramas, _Fiesco_ and
+_Kabale und Liebe_, were also admirable stage-plays, and in _Don Carlos_
+(1787) he abandoned prose for the iambic blank verse which Lessing had
+made acceptable in _Nathan der Weise_. The "practical" character of the
+new drama is also to be seen in the work of Schiller's contemporary, O.
+von Gemmingen (1755-1836), the imitator of Diderot, in the excellent
+domestic dramas of the actors F.L. Schroder (1744-1816) and A.W. Iffland
+(1759-1814), and even in the popular medieval plays, the so-called
+_Ritterdramen_ of which _Gotz von Berlichingen_ was the model. Germany
+owes to the _Sturm und Drang_ her national theatre; permanent theatres
+were established in these years at Hamburg, Mannheim, Gotha, and even at
+Vienna, which, as may be seen from the dramas of C.H. von Ayrenhoff
+(1733-1819), had hardly then advanced beyond Gottsched's ideal of a
+national literature. The Hofburgtheater of Vienna, the greatest of all
+the German stages, was virtually founded in 1776.
+
+(b) _German Classical Literature._--The energy of the _Sturm und Drang_,
+which was essentially iconoclastic in its methods, soon exhausted
+itself. For Goethe this phase in his development came to an end with his
+departure for Weimar in 1775, while, after writing _Don Carlos_ (1787),
+Schiller turned from poetry to the study of history and philosophy.
+These subjects occupied his attention almost exclusively for several
+years, and not until the very close of the century did he, under the
+stimulus of Goethe's friendship, return to the drama. The first ten
+years of Goethe's life in Weimar were comparatively unproductive; he had
+left the _Sturm und Drang_ behind him; its developments, for which he
+himself had been primarily responsible, were distasteful to him; and he
+had not yet formed a new creed. Under the influence of the Weimar court,
+where classic or even pseudo-classic tastes prevailed, he was gradually
+finding his way to a form of literary art which should reconcile the
+humanistic ideals of the 18th century with the poetic models of ancient
+Greece. But he did not arrive at clearness in his ideas until after his
+sojourn in Italy (1786-1788), an episode of the first importance for his
+mental development. Italy was, in the first instance, a revelation to
+Goethe of the antique; he had gone to Italy to find realized what
+Winckelmann had taught, and here he conceived that ideal of a classic
+literature, which for the next twenty years dominated German literature
+and made Weimar its metropolis. In Italy he gave _Iphigenie auf Tauris_
+(1787) its final form, he completed _Egmont_ (1788)--like the exactly
+contemporary _Don Carlos_ of Schiller, a kind of bridge from _Sturm und
+Drang_ to classicism--and all but finished _Torquato Tasso_ (1790).
+_Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre_ (1795-1796) bears testimony to the clear
+and decisive views which he had acquired on all questions of art and of
+the practical conduct of life.
+
+Long before _Wilhelm Meister_ appeared, however, German thought and
+literature had arrived at that stability and self-confidence which are
+the most essential elements in a great literary period. In the year of
+Lessing's death, 1781, Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), the great philosopher,
+had published his _Kritik der reinen Vernunft_, and this, together with
+the two later treatises, _Kritik der praktischen Vernunft_ (1788) and
+_Kritik der Urteilskraft_ (1790), placed the Germans in the front rank
+of thinking nations. Under the influence of Kant, Schiller turned from
+the study of history to that of philosophy and more especially
+aesthetics. His philosophic lyrics, his treatises on _Anmut und Wurde_,
+on the _Asthetische Erziehung des Menschen_ (1795), and _Uber naive und
+sentimentalische Dichtung_ (1795) show, on the philosophic and the
+critical side, the movement of the century from the irresponsible
+subjectivity of _Sturm und Drang_ to the calm idealism of classic
+attainment. In the same way, German historical writing had in these
+years, under the leadership of men like Justus Moser, Thomas Abbt, I.
+Iselin, F.C. Schlosser, Schiller himself and, greatest of all, Johannes
+von Muller (1752-1809), advanced from disconnected, unsystematic
+chronicling to a clearly thought-out philosophic and scientific method.
+J.G.A. Forster (1754-1794), who had accompanied Cook round the world,
+and Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859), gave Germany models of clear and
+lucid descriptive writing. In practical politics and economics, when
+once the unbalanced vagaries of undiluted Rousseauism had fallen into
+discredit, Germany produced much wise and temperate thinking which
+prevented the spread of the French Revolution to Germany, and provided a
+practical basis on which the social and political fabric could be built
+up anew, after the Revolution had made the old regime impossible in
+Europe. Men like Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767-1835) and the philosopher
+J.G. Fichte (1762-1814) were, in two widely different spheres,
+representative of this type of intellectual eminence.
+
+Meanwhile, in 1794, that friendship between Goethe and Schiller had
+begun, which lasted, unbroken, until the younger poet's death in 1805.
+These years mark the summit of Goethe and Schiller's classicism, and the
+great epoch of Weimar's history as a literary focus. Schiller's
+treatises had provided a theoretical basis; his new journal, _Die
+Horen_, might be called the literary organ of the movement--although in
+this respect the subsequent _Musenalmanach_, in which the two poets
+published their magnificent ballad poetry, had more value. Goethe, as
+director of the ducal theatre, could to a great extent control dramatic
+production in Germany. Under his encouragement, Schiller turned from
+philosophy to poetry and wrote the splendid series of classic dramas
+beginning with the trilogy of _Wallenstein_ and closing with _Wilhelm
+Tell_ and the fragment of _Demetrius_; while to Goethe we owe, above
+all, the epic of _Hermann und Dorothea_. Less important were the
+latter's severely classical plays _Die naturliche Tochter_ and
+_Pandora_; but it must not be forgotten that it was chiefly owing to
+Schiller's stimulus that in those years Goethe brought the first part of
+_Faust_ (1808) to a conclusion.
+
+Although acknowledged leaders of German letters, Goethe and Schiller had
+considerable opposition to contend with. The _Sturm und Drang_ had by no
+means exhausted itself, and the representatives of the once dominant
+rationalistic movement were particularly arrogant and overbearing. The
+literature associated with both _Sturm und Drang_ and rationalism was at
+this period palpably decadent; no comparison could be made between the
+magnificent achievements of Goethe and Schiller, or even of Herder and
+Wieland with the "family" dramas of Iffland, still less with the
+extraordinarily popular plays of A. von Kotzebue (1761-1819), or with
+those bustling medieval _Ritterdramen_, which were especially cultivated
+in south Germany. There is a wide gap between Moritz's _Anton Reiser_ or
+the philosophic novels which Klinger wrote in his later years, and
+Goethe's _Meister_; nor can the once so fervently admired novels of Jean
+Paul Richter (1763-1825) take a very high place. Neither the fantastic
+humour nor the penetrating thoughts with which Richter's books are
+strewn make up for their lack of artistic form and interest; they are
+essentially products of _Sturm und Drang_. Lastly, in the province of
+lyric and epic poetry, it is impossible to regard poets like the gentle
+F. von Matthisson (1761-1831), or the less inspired G.L. Kosegarten
+(1758-1818) and C.A. Tiedge (1752-1841), as worthily seconding the
+masterpieces of Goethe and Schiller. Thus when we speak of the greatness
+of Germany's classical period, we think mainly of the work of her two
+chief poets; the distance that separated them from their immediate
+contemporaries was enormous. Moreover, at the very close of the 18th
+century a new literary movement arose in admitted opposition to the
+classicism of Weimar, and to this movement, which first took definite
+form in the Romantic school, the sympathies of the younger generation
+turned. Just as in the previous generation the _Sturm und Drang_ had
+been obliged to make way for a return to classic and impersonal
+principles of literary composition, so now the classicism of Goethe and
+Schiller, which had produced masterpieces like _Wallenstein_ and
+_Hermann und Dorothea_, had to yield to a revival of individualism and
+subjectivity, which, in the form of Romanticism, profoundly influenced
+the literature of the whole 19th century.
+
+(c) _The Romantic Movement._--The first Romantic school, however, was
+founded, not as a protest against the classicism of Weimar, with which
+its leaders were in essential sympathy, but against the shallow,
+utilitarian rationalism of Berlin. Ludwig Tieck (1773-1853), a leading
+member of the school, was in reality a belated _Sturmer und Dranger_, who
+in his early years had chafed under the unimaginative tastes of the
+Prussian capital, and sought for a positive faith to put in their place.
+Friedrich Holderlin (1770-1843), one of the most gifted poets of this
+age, demonstrates no less clearly than Tieck the essential affinity
+between _Sturm und Drang_ and Romanticism; he, too, forms a bridge from
+the one individualistic movement to the other. The theoretic basis of
+Romanticism was, however, established by the two brothers, August Wilhelm
+and Friedrich Schlegel (1767-1845 and 1772-1829), who, accepting, in
+great measure, Schiller's aesthetic conclusions, adapted them to the
+needs of their own more subjective attitude towards literature. While
+Schiller, like Lessing before him, insisted on the critic's right to sit
+in judgment according to a definite code of principles, these Romantic
+critics maintained that the first duty of criticism was to understand and
+appreciate; the right of genius to follow its natural bent was sacred.
+The _Herzensergiessungen eines kunstliebenden Klosterbruders_ by Tieck's
+school-friend W.H. Wackenroder (1773-1798) contained the Romantic
+art-theory, while the hymns and fragmentary novels of Friedrich von
+Hardenberg (known as Novalis, 1772-1801), and the dramas and fairy tales
+of Tieck, were the characteristic products of Romantic literature. The
+universal sympathies of the movement were exemplified by the many
+admirable translations--greatest of all, Schlegel's _Shakespeare_
+(1797-1810)--which were produced under its auspices. Romanticism was
+essentially conciliatory in its tendencies, that is to say, it aimed at a
+reconciliation of poetry with other provinces of social and intellectual
+life; the hard and fast boundaries which the older critics had set up as
+to what poetry might and might not do, were put aside, and the domain of
+literature was regarded as co-extensive with life itself; painting and
+music, philosophy and ethics, were all accepted as constituent elements
+of or aids to Romantic poetry. Fichte, and to a much greater extent,
+F.W.J. von Schelling (1775-1854) were the exponents of the Romantic
+doctrine in philosophy, while the theologian F.E.D. Schleiermacher
+(1768-1834) demonstrated how vital the revival of individualism was for
+religious thought.
+
+The Romantic school, whose chief members were the brothers Schlegel,
+Tieck, Wackenroder and Novalis, was virtually founded in 1798, when the
+Schlegels began to publish their journal the _Athenaeum_; but the actual
+existence of the school was of very short duration. Wackenroder and
+Novalis died young, and by the year 1804 the other members were widely
+separated. Two years later, however, another phase of Romanticism became
+associated with the town of Heidelberg. The leaders of this second or
+younger Romantic school were K. Brentano (1778-1842), L.A. von Arnim
+(1781-1831) and J.J. von Gorres (1776-1848), their organ, corresponding
+to the _Athenaeum_, was the _Zeitung fur Einsiedler_, or
+_Trost-Einsamkeit_, and their most characteristic production the
+collection of _Volkslieder_, published under the title _Des Knaben
+Wunderhorn_ (1805-1808). Compared with the earlier school the Heidelberg
+writers were more practical and realistic, more faithful to nature and
+the commonplace life of everyday. They, too, were interested in the
+German past and in the middle ages, but they put aside the idealizing
+glasses of their predecessors and kept to historic truth; they wrote
+historical novels, not stories of an imaginary medieval world as Novalis
+had done, and when they collected _Volkslieder_ and _Volksbucher_, they
+refrained from decking out the simple tradition with musical effects, or
+from heightening the poetic situation by "Romantic irony." Their
+immediate influence on German intellectual life was consequently
+greater; they stimulated and deepened the interest of the German people
+in their own past; and we owe to them the foundations of the study of
+German philology and medieval literature, both the brothers Jakob and
+Wilhelm Grimm (1785-1863 and 1786-1859) having been in touch with this
+circle in their early days. Again, the Heidelberg poets strengthened the
+national and patriotic spirit of their people; they prepared the way
+for the rising against Napoleon, which culminated in the year 1813, and
+produced that outburst of patriotic song, associated with E.M. Arndt
+(1769-1860), K. Th. Korner (1791-1813) and M. von Schenkendorf
+(1783-1817).
+
+The subsequent history of Romanticism stands in close relation to the
+Heidelberg school, and when, about 1809, the latter broke up, and Arnim
+and Brentano settled in Berlin, the Romantic movement followed two
+clearly marked lines of development, one north German, the other
+associated with Wurttemberg. The Prussian capital, hotbed of rationalism
+as it was, had, from the first, been intimately associated with
+Romanticism; the first school had virtually been founded there, and
+north Germans, like Heinrich von Kleist (1777-1811) and Zacharias Werner
+(1768-1823)had done more for the development of the Romantic drama than
+had the members of either Romantic school. These men, and more
+especially Kleist, Prussia's greatest dramatic poet, showed how the
+capricious Romantic ideas could be brought into harmony with the classic
+tradition established by Schiller, how they could be rendered
+serviceable to the national theatre. At the same time, Berlin was not a
+favourable soil for the development of Romantic ideas, and the circle of
+poets which gathered round Arnim and Brentano there, either themselves
+demonstrated the decadence of these ideas, or their work contained
+elements which in subsequent years hastened the downfall of the
+movement. Friedrich de la Motte Fouque (1777-1843), for instance, shows
+how easy it was for the medieval tastes of the Romanticists to
+degenerate into mediocre novels and plays, hardly richer in genuine
+poetry than were the productions of the later _Sturm und Drang_; and
+E.T.A. Hoffmann (1776-1822), powerful genius though he was, cultivated
+with preference in his stories, a morbid super-naturalism, which was
+only a decadent form of the early Romantic delight in the world of
+fairies and spirits. The lyric was less sensitive to baleful influences,
+but even here the north German Romantic circle could only point to one
+lyric poet of the first rank, J. von Eichendorff (1788-1857); while in
+the poetry of A. von Chamisso (1781-1838) the volatile Romantic
+spirituality is too often wanting. Others again, like Friedrich Ruckert
+(1788-1866), sought the inspiration which Romanticism was no longer able
+to give, in the East; still another group, of which Wilhelm Muller
+(1794-1827) is the chief representative, followed Byron's example and
+awakened German sympathy for the oppressed Greeks and Poles.
+
+Apart from Eichendorff, the vital lyric poetry of the third and last
+phase of Romanticism must be looked for in the Swabian school, which
+gathered round Uhland. Ludwig Uhland (1787-1862) was himself a disciple
+of the Heidelberg poets, and, in his lyrics and especially in his
+ballads, he succeeded in grafting the lyricism of the Romantic school on
+to the traditions of German ballad poetry which had been handed down
+from Burger, Schiller and Goethe. But, as was the case with so many
+other disciples of the Heidelberg Romanticists, Uhland's interest in the
+German past was the serious interest of the scholar rather than the
+purely poetic interest of the earlier Romantic poets. The merit of the
+Swabian circle, the chief members of which were J. Kerner (1786-1862),
+G. Schwab (1792-1850), W. Waiblinger (1804-1830), W. Hauff (1802-1827)
+and, most gifted of all, E. Morike (1804-1875) was that these writers
+preserved the Romantic traditions from the disintegrating influences to
+which their north German contemporaries were exposed. They introduced
+few new notes into lyric poetry, but they maintained the best traditions
+intact, and when, a generation later, the anti-Romantic movement of
+"Young Germany" had run its course, it was to Wurttemberg Germany looked
+for a revival of the old Romantic ideas.
+
+Meanwhile, in the background of all these phases of Romantic evolution,
+through which Germany passed between 1798 and 1832, stands the majestic
+and imposing figure of Goethe. Personally he had in the early stages of
+the movement been opposed to that reversion to subjectivity and
+lawlessness which the first Romantic school seemed to him to represent;
+to the end of his life he regarded himself as a "classic," not a
+"romantic" poet. But, on the other hand, he was too liberal-minded a
+thinker and critic to be oblivious to the fruitful influence of the new
+movement. Almost without exception he judged the young poets of the new
+century fairly, and treated them sympathetically and kindly; he was
+keenly alive to the new--and for the most part "unclassical"--development
+of literature in England, France and Italy; and his own published work,
+above all, the first part of _Faust_ (1808), _Die Wahlverwandtschaften_
+(1809), _Dichtung und Wahrheit_ (1811-1814, a final volume in 1833),
+_Westostlicher Divan_ (1819), _Wilhelm Meisters Wanderjahre_ (1821-1829)
+and the second part of _Faust_ (published in 1832 after the poet's
+death), stood in no antagonism to the Romantic ideas of their time. One
+might rather say that Goethe was the bond between the two fundamental
+literary movements of the German classical age; that his work achieved
+that reconciliation of "classic" and "romantic" which, rightly regarded,
+was the supreme aim of the Romantic school itself.
+
+
+VI. GERMAN LITERATURE SINCE GOETHE (1832-1906)
+
+(a) _Young Germany._--With Goethe's death a great age in German poetry
+came to a close. Long before 1832 Romanticism had, as we have seen,
+begun to lose ground, and the July revolution of 1830, the effects of
+which were almost as keenly felt in Germany as in France, gave the
+movement its death-blow. Meanwhile the march of ideas in Germany itself
+had not been favourable to Romanticism. Schelling had given place to G.
+W.F. Hegel (1770-1831), now the dominant force in German philosophy, and
+the Hegelian metaphysics proved as unfruitful an influence on literature
+as that of Fichte and Schelling had been fruitful. The transference of
+Romantic ideas to the domain of practical religion and politics had
+proved reactionary in its effects; Romanticism became the cloak for a
+kind of Neo-catholicism, and Romantic politics, as enunciated by men
+like F. von Gentz (1764-1832) and Adam Muller (1779-1829), served as an
+apology for the Metternich regime in Austria. Only at the
+universities--in Gottingen, Heidelberg and Berlin--did the movement
+continue, in the best sense, to be productive; German philology, German
+historical science and German jurisprudence benefited by Romantic ideas,
+long after Romantic poetry had fallen into decay. The day of Romanticism
+was clearly over; but a return to the classic and humanitarian spirit of
+the 18th century was impossible. The social condition of Europe had been
+profoundly altered by the French Revolution; the rise of industrialism
+had created new economic problems, the march of science had overturned
+old prejudices. And in a still higher degree were the ideas which lay
+behind the social upheaval of the July revolution incompatible with a
+reversion in Germany to the conditions of Weimar classicism. There was,
+moreover, no disguising the fact that Goethe himself did not stand high
+with the younger generation of German writers who came into power after
+his death.
+
+"Young Germany" did not form a school in the sense in which the word was
+used by the early Romanticists; the bond of union was rather the
+consequence of political persecution. In December 1835 the German "Bund"
+issued a decree suppressing the writings of the "literary school" known
+as "Young Germany," and mentioned by name Heinrich Heine, Karl Gutzkow,
+Ludolf Wienbarg, Theodor Mundt and Heinrich Laube. Of these men, Heine
+(1797-1856) was by far the most famous. He had made his reputation in
+1826 and 1827 with _Die Harzreise_ and _Das Buch der Lieder_, both of
+which books show how deeply he was immersed in the Romantic traditions.
+But Heine felt perhaps more acutely than any other man of his time how
+the ground was slipping away from beneath his feet; he repudiated the
+Romantic movement and hailed the July revolution as the first stage in
+the "liberation of humanity"; while ultimately he sought in France the
+freedom and intellectual stimulus which Germany withheld from him. Heine
+suffered from having been born in an age of transition; he was unable to
+realize in a wholehearted way all that was good in the new movement,
+which he had embraced so warmly; his optimism was counteracted by doubts
+as to whether, after all, life had not been better in that old Romantic
+Germany of his childhood for which, to the last, he retained so warm an
+affection. Personal disappointments and unhappiness added to the
+bitterness of Heine's nature, and the supremely gifted lyric poet and
+the hardly less gifted satirist were overshadowed by the cynic from
+whose biting wit nothing was safe.
+
+Heine's contemporary and--although he was not mentioned in the decree
+against the school--fellow-fighter, Ludwig Borne (1786-1837), was a more
+characteristic representative of the "Young German" point of view; for
+he was free from Romantic prejudices. Borne gave vent to his enthusiasm
+for France in eloquent _Briefe aus Paris_ (1830-1833), which form a
+landmark of importance in the development of German prose style. With
+Karl Gutzkow (1811-1878), who was considerably younger than either Heine
+or Borne, the more positive aspects of the "Young German" movement begin
+to be apparent. He, too, had become a man of letters under the influence
+of the July revolution, and with an early novel, _Wally, die Zweiflerin_
+(1835), which was then regarded as atheistic and immoral, he fought in
+the battle for the new ideas. His best literary work, however, was the
+comedies with which he enriched the German stage of the 'forties, and
+novels like _Die Ritter vom Geiste_ (1850-1851), and _Der Zauberer von
+Rom_ (1858-1861), which have to be considered in connexion with the
+later development of German fiction. Heinrich Laube (1806-1884), who, as
+the author of lengthy social novels, and _Reisenovellen_ in the style of
+Heine's _Reisebilder_, was one of the leaders of the new movement, is
+now only remembered as Germany's greatest theatre-director. Laube's
+connexion (1850-1867) with the Burgtheater of Vienna forms one of the
+most brilliant periods in the history of the modern stage. Heine and
+Borne, Gutzkow and Laube--these were the leading spirits of "Young
+Germany"; in their train followed a host of lesser men, who to the
+present generation are hardly even names. In the domain of scholarship
+and learning the "Young German" movement was associated with the
+supremacy of Hegelianism, the leading spirits being D.F. Strauss
+(1808-1874), author of the _Leben Jesu_ (1835), the historians G.G.
+Gervinus (1805-1871) and W. Menzel (1798-1873), and the philosopher L.A.
+Feuerbach (1804-1872), who, although a disciple of Hegel, ultimately
+helped to destroy the latter's influence.
+
+Outside the immediate circle of "Young Germany," other tentative efforts
+were made to provide a substitute for the discredited literature of
+Romanticism. The historical novel, for instance, which Romanticists like
+Arnim had cultivated, fell at an early date under the influence of Sir
+Walter Scott; Wilhelm Hauff, Heinrich Zschokke (1771-1848) and K.
+Spindler (1796-1855) were the most prominent amidst the many imitators
+of the Scottish novelist. The drama, again, which since Kleist and
+Werner had been without definite principles, was, partly under Austrian
+influence, finding its way back to a condition of stability. In Germany
+proper, the men into whose hands it fell were, on the one hand,
+undisciplined geniuses such as C.D. Grabbe (1801-1836), or, on the
+other, poets with too little theatrical blood in their veins like K.L.
+Immermann (1796-1840), or with too much, like E. von Raupach
+(1784-1852), K. von Holtei (1798-1880) and Adolf Mullner
+(1774-1829)--the last named being the chief representative of the
+so-called _Schicksalstragodie_. In those years the Germans were more
+seriously interested in their opera, which, under C.M. Weber, H.A.
+Marschner, A. Lortzing and O. Nicolai, remained faithful to the Romantic
+spirit. In Austria, however, the drama followed lines of its own; here,
+at the very beginning of the century, H.J. von Collin (1771-1811)
+attempted in _Regulus_ and other works to substitute for the lifeless
+pseudo-classic tragedy of Ayrenhoff the classic style of Schiller. His
+attempt is the more interesting, as the long development that had taken
+place in Germany between Gottsched and Schiller was virtually
+unrepresented in Austrian literature. M. von Collin (1779-1824), a
+younger brother of H.J. von Collin, did a similar service for the
+Romantic drama. Franz Grillparzer (1791-1872), Austria's greatest poet,
+began in the school of Mullner with a "fate drama," but soon won an
+independent place for himself; more successfully than any other
+dramatist of the century, he carried out that task which Kleist had
+first seriously faced, the reconciliation of the classicism of Goethe
+and Schiller with the Romantic and modern spirit of the 19th century. It
+is from this point of view that works like _Das goldene Vliess_ (1820),
+_Konig Ottokars Gluck und Ende_ (1825), _Der Traum, ein Leben_ (1834)
+and _Des Meeres und der Liebe Wellen_ (1831) must be regarded. As far as
+the poetic drama was concerned, Grillparzer stood alone, for E.F.J. von
+Munch-Bellinghausen (1806-1871), his most promising contemporary, once
+so popular under the pseudonym of Friedrich Halm, soon fell back into
+the trivial sentimentality of the later Romanticists. In other forms of
+dramatic literature Austria could point to many distinguished writers,
+notably the comedy-writer, E. von Bauernfeld (1802-1890), while a host
+of playwrights, chief of whom were F. Raimund (1790-1836) and J. Nestroy
+(1801-1862), cultivated the popular Viennese farce and fairy-play. Thus,
+in spite of Metternich's censorship of the drama, the Viennese theatre
+was, in the first half of the 19th century, in closer touch with
+literature than that of any other German centre.
+
+The transitional character of the age is best illustrated by two eminent
+writers whom outward circumstances rather than any similarity of
+character and aim have classed together. These were K.L. Immermann, who
+has been already mentioned, and A. von Platen-Hallermund (1796-1835).
+Immermann's dramas were of little practical value to the theatre, but
+one at least, _Merlin_ (1832), is a dramatic poem of great beauty. In
+his novels, however, _Die Epigonen_ (1836) and _Munchhausen_
+(1838-1839), Immermann was the spokesman of his time. He looked
+backwards rather than forwards; he saw himself as the belated follower
+of a great literary age rather than as the pioneer of a new one. The
+bankruptcy of Romanticism and the poetically arid era of "Young Germany"
+left him little confidence in the future. Platen, on the other hand,
+went his own way; he, too, was the antagonist both of Romanticism and
+"Young Germany," and with Immermann himself he came into sharp conflict.
+But in his poetry he showed himself indifferent to the strife of
+contending literary schools. He began as an imitator of the German
+oriental poets--the only Romanticists with whom he had any personal
+sympathy--and with his matchless _Sonette aus Venedig_ (1825) he stands
+out as a master in the art of verse-writing and as the least subjective
+of all German lyric poets. In the imitation of Romance metres he sought
+a refuge from the extravagances and excesses of the Romantic decadence.
+
+Meanwhile the political side of the "Young German" movement, which the
+German Bund aimed at stamping out, gained rapidly in importance under
+the influence of the unsettled political conditions between the
+revolutions of 1830 and 1848. The early 'forties were in German
+literature marked by an extraordinary outburst of political poetry,
+which may be aptly compared with the national and patriotic lyric evoked
+by the year 1813. The principles which triumphed in France at the
+revolution of 1848 were, to a great extent, fought out by the German
+singers of 1841 and 1842. Begun by mediocre talents like N. Becker
+(1809-1845) and R.E. Prutz (1816-1872), the movement found a vigorous
+champion in Georg Herwegh (1817-1875), who in his turn succeeded in
+winning Ferdinand Freiligrath (1810-1876) for the revolutionary cause.
+Others joined in the cry for freedom--F. Dingelstedt (1814-1881), A.H.
+Hoffmann von Fallersleben (1798-1874), and a number of Austrians, who
+had even more reason for rebellion and discontent than the north
+Germans. But the best Austrian political poetry, the _Spaziergange eines
+Wiener Poeten_, 1831, by "Anastasius Grun" (Graf A.A. von Auersperg,
+1806-1876), belonged to a decade earlier. The political lyric culminated
+in and ended with the year 1848; the revolutionists of the 'forties
+were, if not appeased, at least silenced by the revolution which in
+their eyes had effected so little. If Freiligrath be excepted, the chief
+lyric poets of this epoch stood aside from the revolutionary movement;
+even E. Geibel (1815-1884), the representative poet of the succeeding
+age, was only temporarily interested in the political movement, and his
+best work is of a purely lyric character. M. von Strachwitz's
+(1822-1847) promising talent did not flourish in the political
+atmosphere; Annette von Droste-Hulshoff (1797-1848), and the Austrian,
+Nikolaus Lenau (1802-1850), both stand far removed from the world of
+politics; they are imbued with that pessimistic resignation which is,
+more or less, characteristic of all German literature between 1850 and
+1870.
+
+(b) _Mid-Century Literature._--When once the revolution of 1848 was
+over, a spirit of tranquillity came over German letters; but it was due
+rather to the absence of confidence in the future than to any
+hopefulness or real content. The literature of the middle of the century
+was not wanting in achievement, but there was nothing buoyant or
+youthful about it; most significant of all, the generation between 1848
+and 1880 was either oblivious or indifferent to the good work and to the
+new and germinating ideas which it produced. Hegel, who held the earlier
+half of the 19th century in his ban, was still all-powerful in the
+universities, but his power was on the wane in literature and public
+life. The so-called "Hegelian Left" had advanced so far as to have
+become incompatible with the original Hegelianism; the new social and
+economic theories did not fit into the scheme of Hegelian collectivism;
+the interest in natural science--fostered by the popular books of J.
+Moleschott (1822-1893), Karl Vogt (1817-1895) and Ludwig Buchner
+(1824-1899)--created a healthy antidote to the Hegelian metaphysics. In
+literature and art, on which Hegel, as we have seen, had exerted so
+blighting an influence, his place was taken by the chief exponent of
+philosophic pessimism, Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860). Schopenhauer's
+antagonism to Hegelianism was of old standing, for his chief work, _Die
+Welt als Wille und Vorstellung_, had appeared as far back as 1819; but
+the century was more than half over before the movement of ideas had, as
+it were, caught up with him, before pessimism became a dominant force in
+intellectual life.
+
+The literature produced between 1850 and 1870 was preeminently one of
+prose fiction. The beginnings which the "Young German" school had made
+to a type of novel dealing with social problems--the best example is
+Gutzkow's _Ritter vom Geiste_--developed rapidly in this succeeding
+epoch. Friedrich Spielhagen (born 1829) followed immediately in
+Gutzkow's footsteps, and in a series of romances from _Problematische
+Naturen_ (1860) to _Sturmflut_ (1876), discussed in a militant spirit
+that recalls Laube and Gutzkow the social problems which agitated German
+life in these decades. Gustav Freytag (1816-1895), although an older
+man, freed himself more successfully from the "Young German" tradition;
+his romance of German commercialism, _Soll und Haben_ (1855), is the
+masterpiece of mid-century fiction of this class. Less successful was
+Freytag's subsequent attempt to transfer his method to the _milieu_ of
+German academic life in _Die verlorene Handschrift_ (1864). As was
+perhaps only natural in an age of social and political interests, the
+historical novel occupies a subordinate place. The influence of Scott,
+which in the earlier period had been strong, produced only one writer,
+Wilhelm Haring ("Willibald Alexis," 1798-1871), who was more than a mere
+imitator of the Scottish master. In the series of six novels, from _Der
+Roland von Berlin_ to _Dorothe_, which Alexis published between 1840 and
+1856, he gave Germany, and more particularly Prussia, a historical
+fiction which might not unworthily be compared with the _Waverley
+Novels_. But Alexis had no successor, and the historical novel soon made
+way for a type of fiction in which the accurate reproduction of remote
+conditions was held of more account than poetic inspiration or artistic
+power. Such are the "antiquarian" novels of ancient Egyptian life by
+Georg Ebers (1837-1898), and those from primitive German history by
+Felix Dahn (born 1834). The vogue of historical fiction was also
+transferred to some extent, as in English literature, to novels of
+American life and adventure, of which the chief German cultivators were
+K.A. Postl, who wrote under the pseudonym of Charles Sealsfield
+(1793-1864) and Friedrich Gerstacker (1816-1872).
+
+Of greater importance was the fiction which owed its inspiration to the
+Romantic traditions that survived the "Young German" age. To this group
+belongs the novel of peasant and provincial life, of which Immermann had
+given an excellent example in _Der Oberhof_, a story included in the
+arabesque of _Munchhausen_. A Swiss pastor, Albrecht Bitzius, better
+known by his pseudonym "Jeremias Gotthelf" (1797-1854), was, however,
+the real founder of this class of romance; and his simple, unvarnished
+and naively didactic stories of the Swiss peasant were followed not long
+afterwards by the more famous _Schwarzwalder Dorfgeschichten_
+(1843-1854) of Berthold Auerbach (1812-1882). Auerbach is not by any
+means so naive and realistic as Gotthelf, nor is his work free from
+tendencies and ideas which recall "Young German" rationalism rather than
+the unsophisticated life of the Black Forest; but the _Schwarzwalder
+Dorfgeschichten_ exerted a decisive influence; they were the forerunners
+of a large body of peasant literature which described with affectionate
+sympathy and with a liberal admixture of dialect, south German village
+life. With this group of writers may also be associated the German
+Bohemian, A. Stifter (1805-1868), who has called up unforgettable
+pictures and impressions of the life and scenery of his home.
+
+Meanwhile, the Low German peoples also benefited by the revival of an
+interest in dialect and peasant life; it is to the credit of Fritz
+Reuter (1810-1874) that he brought honour to the Plattdeutsch of the
+north, the dialects of which had played a fitful, but by no means
+negligible role in the earlier history of German letters. His
+Mecklenburg novels, especially _Ut de Franzosentid_ (1860), _Ut mine
+Festungstid_ (1863) and _Ut mine Stromtid_ (1862-1864), are a faithful
+reflection of Mecklenburg life and temperament, and hold their place
+beside the best German fiction of the period. What Reuter did for
+Plattdeutsch prose, his contemporary, Klaus Groth (1819-1899), the
+author of _Quickborn_ (1852), did for its verse. We owe, however, the
+best German prose fiction of these years to two writers, whose affinity
+with the older Romanticists was closer. The north German, Theodor Storm
+(1817-1888) is the author of a series of short stories of delicate,
+lyric inspiration, steeped in that elegiac Romanticism which harmonized
+so well with mid-century pessimism in Germany. Gottfried Keller
+(1819-1890), on the other hand, a native of Zurich, was a modern
+Romanticist of a robuster type; his magnificent autobiographical novel,
+_Der grune Heinrich_ (1854-1855), might be described as the last in the
+great line of Romantic fiction that had begun with _Wilhelm Meister_,
+and the short stories, _Die Leute von Seldwyla_ (1856-1874) and
+_Zuricher Novellen_ (1878) are masterpieces of the first rank.
+
+In the dramatic literature of these decades, at least as it was
+reflected in the repertories of the German theatres, there was little
+promise. French influence was, in general, predominant; French
+translations formed the mainstay of the theatre-directors, while
+successful German playwrights, such as R. Benedix (1811-1873) and
+Charlotte Birch-Pfeiffer (1800-1868), have little claim to consideration
+in a literary survey. Gustav Freytag's admirable comedy, _Die
+Journalisten_ (1852), was one of the rare exceptions. But the German
+drama of this epoch is not to be judged solely by the theatres. At the
+middle of the century Germany could point to two writers who, each in
+his way, contributed very materially to the development of the modern
+drama. These were Friedrich Hebbel (1813-1863) and Otto Ludwig
+(1813-1865). Both of these men, as a later generation discovered, were
+the pioneers of that dramatic literature which at the close of the
+century accepted the canons of realism and aimed at superseding outward
+effects by psychological conflicts and problems of social life. Hebbel,
+especially, must be regarded as the most original and revolutionary
+German dramatist of the 19th century. Unlike his contemporary
+Grillparzer, whose aim had been to reconcile the "classic" and the
+"romantic" drama with the help of Spanish models, Hebbel laid the
+foundations of a psychological and social drama, of which the most
+modern interpreter has been Henrik Ibsen. Hebbel's first tragedy,
+_Judith_, appeared in 1840, his masterpieces, _Herodes und Marianne_,
+_Agnes Bernauer_, _Gyges und sein Ring_, and the trilogy of _Die
+Nibelungen_ between 1850 and 1862.
+
+In this period of somewhat confused literary striving, there is,
+however, one body of writers who might be grouped together as a school,
+although the designation must be regarded rather as an outward accident
+of union than as implying conformity of aims. This is the group which
+Maximilian II. of Bavaria gathered round him in Munich between 1852 and
+1860. A leading spirit of the group was Emanuel Geibel, who, as we have
+seen, set a model to the German lyric in this age; F. von Bodenstedt
+(1819-1892), the popular author of _Mirza Schaffy_; and J.V. von
+Scheffel (1826-1886), who, in his verse-romance, _Der Trompeter von
+Sackingen_ (1854), broke a lance for a type of literature which had been
+cultivated somewhat earlier, but with no very conspicuous success, by
+men like O. von Redwitz (1823-1891) and G. Kinkel (1815-1882). The
+romance was, in fact, one of the favourite vehicles of poetic expression
+of the Munich school, its most successful exponents being J. Wolff (b.
+1834) and R. Baumbach (1840-1905); while others, such as H. Lingg
+(1820-1905) and R. Hamerling (1830-1889) devoted themselves to the more
+ambitious epic. The general tone of the literary movement was
+pessimistic, the hopelessness of the spiritual outlook being most deeply
+engrained in the verse of H. Lorm (pseudonym for Heinrich Landesmann,
+1821-1902) and H. Leuthold (1827-1879). On the whole, the most important
+member of the Munich group is Paul Heyse (b. 1830), who, as a writer of
+"Novellen" or short stories, may be classed with Storm and Keller. An
+essentially Latin genius, Heyse excels in stories of Italian life, where
+his lightness of touch and sense of form are shown to best advantage;
+but he has also written several long novels. Of these, _Kinder der Welt_
+(1873) and, in a lesser degree, _Im Paradiese_ (1875), sum up the spirit
+and tendency of their time, just as, in earlier decades, _Die Ritter vom
+Geiste_, _Problematische Naturen_ and _Soll und Haben_ were
+characteristic of the periods which produced them.
+
+(c) _German Literature after 1870._--In the years immediately following
+the Franco-German War, the prevailing conditions were unfavourable to
+literary production in Germany, and the re-establishment of the empire
+left comparatively little trace on the national literature. All minds
+were for a time engrossed by the _Kulturkampf_, by the financial
+difficulties--the so-called _Grundertum_--due to unscrupulous
+speculation, and, finally, by the rapid rise of social democracy as a
+political force. The intellectual basis of the latter movement was laid
+by Ferdinand Lassalle (1825-1864) and Karl Marx (1818-1883), author of
+_Das Kapital_ (vol. i, 1867). But even had such disturbing elements been
+wanting, the general tone of German intellectual life at that time was
+not buoyant enough to inspire a vigorous literary revival. The influence
+of Hegel was still strong, and the "historical" method, as enunciated in
+_Der alte und der neue Glaube_ (1872) by the Hegelian D.F. Strauss, was
+generally accepted at the German universities. To many the compromise
+which H. Lotze (1817-1881) had attempted to establish between science
+and metaphysics, came as a relief from the Hegelian tradition, but in
+literature and art the dominant force was still, as before the war, the
+philosophy of Schopenhauer. In his _Philosophie des Unbewussten_ (1869),
+E. von Hartmann (1842-1906) endeavoured to bring pessimism into harmony
+with idealism. In lyric poetry, the dull monotony was broken by the
+excitement of the war, and the singers of the revolution of 1848 were
+among the first to welcome the triumph and unification of Germany. At
+the same time, men of the older generation, like Herwegh, Freiligrath
+and Geibel could ill conceal a certain disappointment with the new
+regime; the united Germany of 1871 was not what they had dreamed of in
+their youth, when all hopes were set on the Frankfort parliament.
+
+The novel continued to be what it was before 1870, the most vigorous
+form of German literature, but the novelists who were popular in the
+early 'seventies were all older men. Laube, Gutzkow and Auerbach were
+still writing; Fritz Reuter was a universal favourite; while among the
+writers of short stories, Storm, who, between 1877 and 1888, put the
+crown to his work with his _Chroniknovellen_, and Paul Heyse were the
+acknowledged masters. It was not until at least a decade later that the
+genius of Gottfried Keller was generally recognized. The historical
+novel seemed, in those days, beyond hope of revival. Gustav Freytag, it
+is true, had made the attempt in _Die Ahnen_ (1872-1881), a number of
+independent historical romances linked together to form an ambitious
+prose epic; but there was more of the spirit of Ebers and Dahn in
+Freytag's work than of the spacious art of Scott, or of Scott's
+disciple, Willibald Alexis.
+
+The drama of the 'seventies was in an even less hopeful condition than
+during the preceding period. The classical iambic tragedy was cultivated
+by the Munich school, by A. Wilbrandt (b. 1837), A. Lindner (1831-1888),
+H. Kruse (1815-1902), by the Austrian F. Nissel (1831-1893), and A.
+Fitger (b. 1840); but it was characteristic of the time that Halm was
+popular, while Hebbel and Grillparzer were neglected, it might even be
+said ignored. The most gifted German dramatist belonging exclusively to
+the decade between 1870 and 1880 was an Austrian, Ludwig Anzengruber
+(1839-1889), whose _Pfarrer von Kirchfeld_ (1870) recalled the
+controversies of the _Kulturkampf_. This was Anzengruber's first drama,
+and it was followed by a series of powerful plays dealing with the life
+of the Austrian peasant; Anzengruber was, indeed, one of the ablest
+exponents of that village life, which had attracted so many gifted
+writers since the days of Gotthelf and Auerbach. But the really popular
+dramatists of this epoch were either writers who, like Benedix in the
+older generation, cultivated the _bourgeoise_ comedy--A. L'Arronge (b.
+1838), G. von Moser (1825-1903), F. von Schonthan (b. 1849) and O.
+Blumenthal (b. 1852)--or playwrights, of whom P. Lindau (b. 1839) may be
+regarded as representative, who imitated French models. The only sign of
+progress in the dramatic history of this period was the marked
+improvement of the German stage, an improvement due, on the one hand, to
+the artistic reforms introduced by the duke of Meiningen in the Court
+theatre at Meiningen, and, on the other hand, to the ideals of a
+national theatre realized at Bayreuth by Richard Wagner (1813-1883). The
+greatest composer of the later 19th century is also one of Germany's
+leading dramatists; and the first performance of the trilogy _Der Ring
+der Nibelungen_ at Bayreuth in the summer of 1876 may be said to have
+inaugurated the latest epoch in the history of the German drama.
+
+The last fifteen or twenty years of the 19th century were distinguished
+in Germany by a remarkable literary activity. Among the younger
+generation, which was growing up as citizens of the united German
+empire, a more hopeful and optimistic spirit prevailed. The influence of
+Schopenhauer was on the wane, and at the universities Hegelianism had
+lost its former hold. The sponsor of the new philosophic movement was
+Kant, the master of 18th-century "enlightenment," and under the
+influence of the "neo-Kantian" movement, not merely German school
+philosophy, but theology also, was imbued with a healthier spirit. L.
+von Ranke (1795-1886) was still the dominant force in German historical
+science, and between 1881 and 1888 nine volumes appeared of his last
+great work, _Weltgeschichte_. Other historians of the period were H. von
+Sybel (1817-1895) and H. von Treitschke (1834-1896), the latter a
+vigorous and inspiring spokesman of the new political conditions; while
+J. Burckhardt (1818-1897), author of the masterly _Kultur der
+Renaissance in Italien_ (1860) and the friend of Nietzsche, exerted an
+influence on German thought which was not confined to academic circles.
+Literary criticism perhaps benefited most of all by the dethronement of
+Hegel and the more objective attitude towards Schopenhauer; it seemed as
+if in this epoch the Germans first formed definite ideas--and ideas
+which were acceptable and accepted outside Germany--as to the rank and
+merits of their great poets. A marked change came over the nation's
+attitude towards Goethe, a poet to whom, as we have seen, neither the
+era of Hegel nor that of Schopenhauer had been favourable; Schiller was
+regarded with less national prejudice, and--most important of
+all--amends were made by the new generation for the earlier neglect of
+Kleist, Grillparzer, Hebbel and Keller.
+
+The thinker and poet who most completely embodies the spirit of this
+period--who dealt the Hegelian metaphysics its death-blow as far as its
+wider influence was concerned--was Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900).
+Nietzsche had begun as a disciple of Schopenhauer and a friend of
+Wagner, and he ultimately became the champion of an individualistic and
+optimistic philosophy which formed the sharpest possible contrast to
+mid-century pessimism. The individual, not the race, the _Herrenmensch_,
+not the slave, self-assertion, not self-denying renunciation--these are
+some of the ideas round which this new optimistic ethics turns.
+Nietzsche looked forward to the human race emerging from an effete
+culture, burdened and clogged by tradition, and re-establishing itself
+on a basis that is in harmony with man's primitive instincts. Like
+Schopenhauer before him, Nietzsche was a stylist of the first rank, and
+his literary masterpiece, _Also sprach Zarathustra_ (1883-1891), is to
+be regarded as the most important imaginative work of its epoch.
+
+Nietzschean individualism was only one of many factors which contributed
+to the new literary development. The realistic movement, as it had
+manifested itself in France under Flaubert, the Goncourts, Zola and
+Maupassant, in Russia under Dostoievsky and Tolstoi, and in Norway under
+Ibsen and Bjornson, was, for a time, the dominant force in Germany, and
+the younger generation of critics hailed it with undisguised
+satisfaction; most characteristic and significant of all, the centre of
+this revival was Berlin, which, since it had become the imperial
+capital, was rapidly establishing its claim to be also the literary
+metropolis. It was the best testimony to the vitality of the movement
+that it rarely descended to slavish imitation of the realistic
+masterpieces of other literatures; realism in Germany was, in fact, only
+an episode of the 'eighties, a stimulating influence rather than an
+accepted principle or dogma. And its suggestive character is to be seen
+not merely in the writings of the young _Sturmer und Dranger_ of this
+time, but also in those of the older generation who, in temperament,
+were naturally more inclined to the ideals of a past age.
+
+Of the novelists of the latter class, A. Wilbrandt, who has already been
+mentioned as a dramatist, has shown, since about 1890, a remarkable
+power of adapting himself, if not to the style and artistic methods of
+the younger school, at least to the ideas by which it was agitated; F.
+Spielhagen's attitude towards the realistic movement has been invariably
+sympathetic, while a still older writer, Theodor Fontane (1819-1898),
+wrote between 1880 and 1898 a series of works in which the finer
+elements of French realism were grafted on the German novel. To the
+older school belong Wilhelm Jensen (b. 1837), and that fine humorist,
+Wilhelm Raabe (b. 1831), with whom may be associated as other humorists
+of this period, H. Seidel (1842-1906) and W. Busch (1832-1908). Some of
+the most interesting examples of recent German fiction come, however,
+from Austria and Switzerland. The two most eminent Austrian authors,
+Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach (b. 1830), and Ferdinand, von Saar
+(1833-1906), both excel as writers of Novellen or short stories--the
+latter especially being an exponent of that pessimism which is Austria's
+peculiar heritage from the previous generation of her poets. Austrians
+too, are Peter Rosegger (b. 1843), who has won popularity with his
+novels of peasant life, K.E. Franzos (1848-1904) and L. von
+Sacher-Masoch (1835-1895). German prose fiction is, in Switzerland,
+represented by two writers of the first rank: one of these, Gottfried
+Keller, has already been mentioned; the other, Konrad Ferdinand Meyer
+(1825-1898), turned to literature or, at least, made his reputation,
+comparatively late in life. Although, like Keller, a writer of virile,
+original verse, Meyer is best known as a novelist; he, too, was a master
+of the short story. His themes are drawn by preference from the epoch of
+the Renaissance, and his method is characterized by an objectivity of
+standpoint and a purity of style exceptional in German writers.
+
+The realistic novels of the period were written by H. Conradi
+(1862-1890), Max Kretzer (b. 1854), M.G. Conrad (b. 1846), H. Heiberg
+(b. 1840), K. Bleibtreu (b. 1859), K. Alberti (pseudonym for Konrad
+Sittenfeld, b. 1862) and Hermann Sudermann (b. 1857). A want of
+stability was, however, as has been already indicated, characteristic
+of the realistic movement in Germany; the idealistic trend of the German
+mind proved itself ill-adapted to the uncompromising realism of the
+French school, and the German realists, whether in fiction or in drama,
+ultimately sought to escape from the logical consequences of their
+theories. Even Sudermann, whose _Frau Sorge_ (1887), _Der Katzensteg_
+(1889), and the brilliant, if somewhat sensational romance, _Es war_
+(1894), are among the best novels of this period, has never been a
+consistent realist. It is consequently not surprising to find that,
+before long, German fiction returned to psychological and emotional
+problems, to the poetical or symbolical presentation of life, which was
+more in harmony with the German temperament than was the robuster
+realism of Flaubert or Zola. This trend is noticeable in the work of
+Gustav Frenssen (b. 1863), whose novel _Jorn Uhl_ (1901) was
+extraordinarily popular; it is also to be seen in the studies of child
+life and educational problems which have proved so attractive to the
+younger writers of the present day, such as Hermann Hesse (b. 1877),
+Emil Strauss (b. 1866), Rudolf Huch (b. 1862) and Friedrich Huch (b.
+1873). One might say, indeed, that at the beginning of the 20th century
+the traditional form of German fiction, the _Bildungsroman_, had come
+into its ancient rights again. Mention ought also to be made of J.J.
+David (1859-1907), E. von Keyserling (b. 1858), W. Hegeler (b. 1870), G.
+von Ompteda (b. 1863), J. Wassermann (b. 1873), Heinrich Mann (b. 1871)
+and Thomas Mann (b. 1875). _Buddenbrooks_ (1902) by the last mentioned
+is one of the outstanding novels of the period. Some of the best fiction
+of the most recent period is the work of women, the most distinguished
+being Helene Bohlau (b. 1859), Gabriele Reuter (b. 1859), Clara Viebig
+(C. Cohn-Viebig, b. 1860) and Ricarda Huch (b. 1864). Whether the latest
+movement in German poetry and fiction, which, under the catchword
+_Heimatkunst_, has favoured the province rather than the city, the
+dialect in preference to the language of the educated classes, will
+prove a permanent gain, it is still too soon to say, but the movement is
+at least a protest against the decadent tendencies of naturalism.
+
+At no period of German letters were literature and the theatre in closer
+touch than at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th
+centuries; more than at any previous time has the theatre become the
+arena in which the literary battles of the day are fought out. The
+general improvement in the artistic, technical and economic conditions
+of the German stage have already been indicated; but it was not until
+1889 that the effects of these improvements became apparent in dramatic
+literature. Before that date, it is true, Ernst von Wildenbruch
+(1845-1909) had attempted to revive the historical tragedy, but the
+purely literary qualities of his work were handicapped by a too effusive
+patriotism and a Schillerian pathos; nor did the talent of Richard Voss
+(b. 1851) prove strong enough to effect any lasting reform. In October
+1889, however, Gerhart Hauptmann's play, _Vor Sonnenaufgang_, was
+produced on the then recently founded _Freie Buhne_ in Berlin; and a
+month later, _Die Ehre_ by Hermann Sudermann met with a more
+enthusiastic reception in Berlin than had fallen to the lot of any
+German play for more than a generation.
+
+Hauptmann (b. 1862), the most original of contemporary German writers,
+stands, more or less, alone. His early plays, the most powerful of which
+is _Die Weber_ (1892), were written under the influence either of an
+uncompromising realism, or of that modified form of realism introduced
+from Scandinavia; but in _Hanneles Himmelfahrt_ (1893) he combined
+realism with the poetic mysticism of a child's dream, in _Florian Geyer_
+(1895) he adapted the methods of realism to an historical subject, and
+in the year 1896 he, to all appearance, abandoned realism to write an
+allegorical dramatic poem, _Die versunkene Glocke_. Hauptmann's
+subsequent work has oscillated between the extremes marked out by these
+works--from the frank naturalism of _Fuhrmann Henschel_ (1898) and _Rose
+Berndt_ (1903), to the fantastic mysticism of _Der arme Heinrich_ (1902)
+and _Und Pippa tanzt!_ (1906).
+
+The dramatic talent of Hermann Sudermann has developed on more even
+lines; the success of _Die Ehre_ was due in the first instance to the
+ability which Sudermann had shown in adapting the ideas of his time and
+the new methods of dramatic presentation to the traditional German
+_burgerliches Drama_. This is the characteristic of the majority of the
+many plays which followed of which _Heimat_ (1893), _Das Gluck im
+Winkel_ (1896) and _Es lebe das Leben!_ (1902) may be mentioned as
+typical. With less success Sudermann attempted in _Johannes_ (1898) a
+tragedy on lines suggested by Hebbel. A keen observer, a writer of
+brilliant and suggestive ideas, Sudermann is, above all, the practical
+playwright; but it is unfortunate that the theatrical element in his
+work too often overshadows its literary qualities.
+
+Since 1889, the drama has occupied the foreground of interest in
+Germany. The permanent repertory of the German theatre has not, it is
+true, been much enriched, but it is at least to the credit of
+contemporary German playwrights that they are unwilling to rest content
+with their successes and are constantly experimenting with new forms.
+Besides Hauptmann and Sudermann, the most talented dramatists of the day
+are Max Halbe (b. 1865), O.E. Hartleben (1864-1905), G. Hirschfeld (b.
+1873), E. Rosmer (pseudonym for Elsa Bernstein, b. 1866), Ludwig Fulda
+(b. 1862), Max Dreyer (b. 1862), Otto Ernst (pseudonym for O.E. Schmidt,
+b. 1862) and Frank Wedekind (b. 1864). In Austria, notwithstanding the
+preponderant influence of Berlin, the drama has retained its national
+characteristics, and writers like Arthur Schnitzler (b. 1862), Hermann
+Bahr (b. 1863), Hugo von Hofmannsthal (b. 1874) and R. Beer-Hofmann (b.
+1866) have introduced symbolistic elements and peculiarly Austrian
+problems, which are foreign to the theatre of north Germany.
+
+The German lyric of recent years shows a remarkable variety of new tones
+and pregnant poetic ideas; it has, as is natural, been more influenced
+by the optimism of Nietzsche--himself a lyric poet of considerable
+gifts--than has either novel or drama. Detlev von Liliencron (1844-1909)
+was one of the first to break with the traditions of the lyric as handed
+down from the Romantic epoch and cultivated with such facility by the
+Munich poets. An anthology of specifically modern lyrics, _Moderne
+Dichtercharaktere_ (1885) by W. Arent (b. 1864), may be regarded as the
+manifesto of the movement in lyric poetry corresponding to the period of
+realism in fiction and the drama. Representative poets of this movement
+are Richard Dehmel (b. 1863), K. Henckell (b. 1864), J.H. Mackay (b.
+1864 at Greenock), G. Falke (b. 1853), F. Avenarius (b. 1856), F. Evers
+(b. 1871), F. Dormann (b. 1870) and K. Busse (b. 1872). A later
+development of the lyric--a return to mysticism and symbolism--is to be
+seen in the poetry of Hofmannsthal, already mentioned as a dramatist,
+and especially in Stefan George (b. 1868). Epic poetry, although little
+in harmony with the spirit of a realistic age, has not been altogether
+neglected. Heinrich Hart (1855-1906), one of the leading critics of the
+most advanced school, is also the author of an ambitious _Lied der
+Menschheit_ (vols. 1-3, 1888-1896); more conservative, on the other
+hand, is _Robespierre_ (1894), an epic in the style of Hamerling by an
+Austrian, Marie delle Grazie (b. 1864). Attention may also be drawn to
+the popularity which, for a few years, the so-called _Uberbrettl_ or
+cabaret enjoyed, a popularity which has left its mark on the latest
+developments of the lyric. Associated with this movement are O.J.
+Bierbaum (1865-1910), whose lyrics, collected in _Der Irrgarten der
+Liebe_ (1901), have been extraordinarily popular, E. von Wolzogen (b.
+1855) and the dramatist F. Wedekind, who has been already mentioned.
+
+Whether or not the work that has been produced in such rich measure
+since the year 1889--or however much of it--is to be regarded as a
+permanent addition to the storehouse of German national literature,
+there can be no question of the serious artistic earnestness of the
+writers; the conditions for the production of literature in the German
+empire in the early years of the 20th century were eminently healthy,
+and herein lies the best promise for the future.
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY.--(a) _General Histories_, _Anthologies_, &c.: A.
+ Koberstein, _Grundriss der Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur_
+ (1827; 5th ed. by K. Bartsch, 5 vols., 1872-1874; 6th ed., vol. i.,
+ 1884); G.G. Gervinus, _Geschichte der poetischen Nationalliteratur
+ der Deutschen_ (5 vols., 1835-1842; 5th ed. by K. Bartsch, 1871-1874);
+ A.F.C. Vilmar, _Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur_ (1848;
+ 25th ed., 2 vols., 1900, with a continuation by A. Stern); W.
+ Wackernagel, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_ (1851-1855; 2nd ed.
+ by E. Martin, 1879-1894); K. Goedeke, _Grundriss zur Geschichte der
+ deutschen Dichtung_ (3 vols., 1857-1881; 2nd ed. by E. Goetze and
+ others, in 9 vols., 1884 ff.); W. Menzel, _Deutsche Dichtung von der
+ altesten bis auf die neueste Zeit_ (1858-1859); H. Kurz, _Geschichte
+ der deutschen Literatur mit ausgewahlten Stucken_ (3 vols., 1857-1859;
+ 7th ed., 4 vols., 1876-1882); O. Roquette, _Geschichte der deutschen
+ Dichtung_ (2 vols., 1862; 3rd ed., 1878-1879); W. Scherer, _Geschichte
+ der deutschen Literatur_ (1883; 10th ed., 1905). English translation
+ by Mrs F.C. Conybeare (2 vols., 1885; new ed., 1906); Kuno Francke,
+ _German Literature as determined by Social Forces_ (1896; 6th ed.,
+ 1903); F. Vogt and M. Koch, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_
+ (1897; 2nd ed., 2 vols., 1903); J.G. Robertson, _History of German
+ Literature_ (1902); A. Bartels, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_
+ (2 vols., 1901-1902), with the accompanying bibliographical summary,
+ _Handbuch zur Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_ (1906). There are
+ also histories of the literature of separate countries and districts,
+ such as J. Bachtold, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur in der
+ Schweiz_ (1887); R. Krauss, _Schwabische Literaturgeschichte_ (2
+ vols., 1897-1899); J.W. Nagl and J. Zeidler, _Deutsch-Osterreichische
+ Literaturgeschichte_ (2 vols., 1899 ff.). The most comprehensive
+ collection of German literature in selections is J. Kurschner,
+ _Deutsche Nationalliteratur_ (222 vols., 1882-1898). Of general
+ anthologies mention may be made of W. Wackernagel, _Deutsches
+ Lesebuch_ (4 vols., 1835-1872; new ed., 1882 ff.), and F. Max Muller,
+ _The German Classics from the Fourth to the Nineteenth Century_ (1858;
+ ed. by F. Lichtenstein, 2 vols., 1886; new ed., 1906). For
+ illustrations to the history of German literature, see G. Konnecke,
+ _Bilderatlas zur Geschichte der deutschen Nationalliteratur_ (1887;
+ 2nd ed., 1895).
+
+ (b) _Special Periods_: i. _Old High German and Middle High German
+ Periods_: R. Kogel and W. Bruckner, "Geschichte der althochdeutschen
+ Literatur," and F. Vogt, "Geschichte der mittelhochdeutschen
+ Literatur," in H. Paul's _Grundriss der germanischen Philologie_ (2nd
+ ed., vol. ii. pt. i., 1901); F. Khull, _Geschichte der altdeutschen
+ Dichtung_ (1886); J. Kelle, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur_,
+ i.-ii. (1892-1896); R. Kogel, _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur bis
+ zum Ausgang des Mittelalters_, i. (1894-1897); W. Golther, _Geschichte
+ der deutschen Literatur von den ersten Anfangen bis zum Ausgang des
+ Mittelalters_ (in Kurschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur, vol. 163,
+ pt. i., 1892); W. Scherer, _Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung im 11.
+ und 12. Jahrhundert_, and by the same author, _Geistliche Poeten der
+ deutschen Kaiserzeit_ (both works in _Quellen und Forschungen_,
+ 1874-1875); O. Lyon, _Minne- und Meistersang_ (1882). There are
+ numerous series of editions of medieval texts: K. Mullenhoff and W.
+ Scherer, _Denkmaler deutscher Poesie und Prosa aus den 8.-12.
+ Jahrhundert_ (2 vols., 3rd ed., 1892); M. Heyne, _Bibliothek der
+ altesten deutschen Literaturdenkmaler_ (14 vols., begun 1858); F.
+ Pfeiffer, _Deutsche Klassiker des Mittelalters_ (12 vols., begun
+ 1865), with the supplementary _Deutsche Dichtungen des Mittelalters_,
+ edited by K. Bartsch (7 vols., 1872 ff.); K. Goedeke, _Deutsche
+ Dichtung im Mittelalter_ (2nd ed., 1871); J. Zacher, _Germanistische
+ Handbibliothek_ (9 vols., begun 1869); H. Paul, _Altdeutsche
+ Textbibliothek_ (16 vols., begun 1882); _Deutsche Texte des
+ Mittelalters_, ed. by the Berlin Academy (1904 ff.). Convenient
+ editions of the Minnesang are K. Lachmann and M. Haupt, _Des
+ Minnesangs Fruhling_ (4th ed. by F. Vogt, 1888), and K. Bartsch,
+ _Deutsche Liederdichter des 12. bis 14. Jahrh._ (4th ed. by W.
+ Golther, 1903).
+
+ ii. _From 1350-1700._--L. Geiger, _Renaissance und Humanismus in
+ Italien und Deutschland_ (1882; 2nd ed. 1899); K. Borinski,
+ _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur seit dem Ausgang des Mittelalters_
+ (in Kurschner's _Deutsche Nationalliteratur_, vol. 163, ii., 1898); H.
+ Palm, _Beitrage zur Geschichte der deutschen Literatur des 16. und 17.
+ Jahrhunderts_ (1877); C.H. Herford, _Studies in the Literary Relations
+ of England and Germany in the Sixteenth Century_ (1886); C. Lemcke,
+ _Von Opitz bis Klopstock_, i. (1871; 2nd ed. 1882); M. von Waldberg,
+ _Deutsche Renaissance-Lyrik_ (1888), and _Die galante Lyrik_ (1885);
+ F. Bobertag, _Geschichte des Romans in Deutschland_, i. (to 1700)
+ (1877-1884); K. Borinski, _Die Poetik der Renaissance und die Anfange
+ der literarischen Kritik in Deutschland_ (1886). A vast quantity of
+ the literature of these centuries has been republished by the
+ Stuttgarter literarischer Verein (founded in 1839), whose publications
+ now number considerably over two hundred volumes; further, W. Braune,
+ _Neudrucke deutscher Literaturwerke des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts_
+ (begun 1882); K. Goedeke and J. Tittmann, _Deutsche Dichter des 16.
+ Jahrhunderts_ (18 vols., 1867 ff.), and _Deutsche Dichter des 17.
+ Jahrhunderts_ (15 vols., 1869 ff.). A valuable anthology is K.
+ Goedeke's _Elf Bucher deutscher Dichtung von Sebastian Brant bis auf
+ die Gegenwart_ (2 vols., 1849). Since 1890 the _Jahresberichte fur
+ neuere deutsche Literaturgeschichte_ have provided an exhaustive
+ survey of all publications dealing with modern German literature. A
+ useful practical bibliography for English readers, covering this and
+ the succeeding periods, is J.S. Nollen, _A Chronology and Practical
+ Bibliography of Modern German Literature_ (1903).
+
+ iii. _The Eighteenth Century._--J. Schmidt, _Geschichte der deutschen
+ Literatur von Leibniz bis auf unsere Zeit_ (4 vols., 1862-1867; 2nd
+ ed. 1886-1890); J. Hillebrand, _Die deutsche Nationalliteratur im 18.
+ und 19. Jahrhundert_ (3 vols., 1845-1846; 3rd ed. 1875); H. Hettner,
+ _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur im 18. Jahrhundert_ (4 vols.,
+ 1862-1870; 4th ed. by O. Harnack, 1893-1895); J.W. Schafer,
+ _Geschichte der deutschen Literatur des 18. Jahrhunderts_ (1855-1860;
+ 2nd ed. by F. Muncker, 1881); J.K. Morikofer, _Die schweizerische
+ Literatur des 18. Jahrhunderts_ (1861); J.W. Lobell, _Entwickelung der
+ deutschen Poesie von Klopstock bis zu Goethes Tod_ (3 vols.,
+ 1856-1865). There are also innumerable more special treatises, such as
+ A. Eloesser, _Das burgerliche Drama_ (1898); O. Brahm, _Das deutsche
+ Ritterdrama des 18. Jahrhunderts_ (1880), &c. Of collections of the
+ literature of this and the following century, reference need only be
+ made to the _Bibliothek der deutschen Nationalliteratur des 18. und
+ 19. Jahrhunderts_, published by Brockhaus (44 vols., 1868-1891), and
+ _Deutsche Literaturdenkmale des 18. und 19. Jahrhunderts_, edited
+ first by B. Seuffert (1882-1894), and subsequently by A. Sauer.
+
+ iv. _The Nineteenth Century._--Th. Ziegler, _Die geistigen und
+ sozialen Stromungen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts_ (1899; 2nd ed.
+ 1901); R. von Gottschall, _Die deutsche Nationalliteratur des 19.
+ Jahrhunderts_ (1854; 7th ed., 4 vols., 1900-1902); R.M. Meyer, _Die
+ deutsche Literatur des 19. Jahrhunderts_ (1899; 4th ed. 1910); R.M.
+ Meyer, _Grundriss der neueren deutschen Literaturgeschichte_ (1902);
+ C. Busse, _Geschichte der deutschen Dichtung im neunzehnten
+ Jahrhundert_ (1901); R. Haym, _Die romantische Schule_ (1870; 2nd ed.
+ 1906); G. Brandes, "Den romantiske Skole i Tyskland" (1873), and "Det
+ unge Tyskland" (1890), in _Hovedstromninger i det 19de Aarhundredes
+ Litteratur_, vols. ii. and vi. (German translations, 1887 and 1891;
+ several subsequent editions, Danish and German; English translations,
+ ii. 1903, and vi. 1905); R. Huch, _Die Blutezeit der Romantik (2nd ed.
+ 1901), and Ausbreitung und Verfall der Romantik_ (1902); F. Wehl, _Das
+ junge Deutschland_ (1886); J. Proelss, _Das junge Deutschland_ (1892);
+ A. Bartels, _Die deutsche Dichtung der Gegenwart_ (7th ed., 1907); A.
+ von Hanstein, _Das jungste Deutschland_ (2nd ed., 1901); J.F. Coar,
+ _Studies in German Literature in the Nineteenth Century_ (1903); Ch.
+ Petzet, _Die Blutezeit der deutschen politischen Lyrik_ (1903); H.
+ Mielke, _Der deutsche Roman des 19. Jahrhunderts_ (4th ed., 1900); S.
+ Friedmann, _Das deutsche Drama des 19. Jahrhunderts_ (2 vols.,
+ 1900-1903); B. Litzmann, _Das deutsche Drama in den literarischen
+ Bewegungen der Gegenwart_ (4th ed., 1898). (J. G. R.)
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN REED ENTERTAINMENT. The dramatic and musical entertainment which
+for many years was known in London by the title of "German Reed" was a
+form of theatrical enterprise deserving of commemoration in connexion
+with those who made it successful. Mr THOMAS GERMAN REED (born in
+Bristol in 1817, died 1888) married in 1844 Miss PRISCILLA HORTON
+(1818-1895), and in 1855 they started their entertainment at the
+"Gallery of Illustration," in Waterloo Place, London. From 1860 to 1877
+they were assisted by JOHN ORLANDO PARRY (1810-1879), an accomplished
+pianoforte player, mimic, parodist and humorous singer; and the latter
+created a new type of musical and dramatic monologue which became very
+popular. His tradition was carried on after 1870 by MR CORNEY GRAIN
+(1844-1895), who, as a clever, refined, and yet highly humorous society
+entertainer (originally a barrister), was one of the best-known figures
+of his day. After the retirement of the elder German Reeds, their son,
+ALFRED GERMAN REED (1846-1895), himself a capital actor, carried on the
+business in partnership with Corney Grain. The "German Reed
+Entertainment"--which was always patronized by a large class of people,
+many of whom objected on principle to going or taking their children to
+a regular theatre or a music-hall--retained its vogue for forty years at
+Waterloo Place and at the St George's Hall, Regent Street. But the death
+of Mr Corney Grain almost simultaneously with Mr Alfred German Reed, in
+1895, together with the changed public attitude towards the regular
+theatre, ended its career.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN SILVER or NICKEL SILVER, an alloy of copper, nickel and zinc,
+prepared either by melting the copper and nickel together in a crucible,
+and adding piece by piece the previously heated zinc, or by heating the
+finely divided metals under a layer of charcoal. To destroy its
+crystalline structure and so render it fit for working, it is heated to
+dull redness, and then allowed to cool. German silver is harder than
+silver; it resembles that metal in colour, but is of a greyer tinge.
+Exposed to the air it tarnishes slightly yellow, and with vinegar
+affords a crust of verdigris. At a bright red heat it melts, losing its
+zinc by oxidation unless protected from the atmosphere. At a heat above
+dull redness it becomes exceedingly brittle. German silver in various
+modifications of composition is much used in the arts. Alloys, of which
+about 50% is copper and the residue zinc and nickel in about equal
+proportions take a fine polish, and are used as imitation silver for
+knives and forks. With a somewhat higher proportion of copper an alloy
+is formed suitable for rolling and for wire. In Chinese _white silver_
+or _packfong_ (paktong) the amount of copper is smaller, about 40%, with
+about 32% of nickel, 25 of zinc, and 2 or 3 of iron. German silver for
+casting contains 2 or 3% of lead, which like iron increases the
+whiteness of the alloy. German silver, having a high specific resistance
+and a low temperature coefficient, has been used for electrical
+resistance coils, and these qualities are possessed in a still greater
+degree in _manganin_, which contains manganese in place of zinc, its
+composition being 84% of copper, 12 of manganese and 4 of nickel. The
+addition of a trace of tungsten to German silver, as in _platinoid_,
+also largely increases the resistance.
+
+
+
+
+GERMAN SOUTH-WEST AFRICA. This German possession is bounded W. by the
+Atlantic, N. by Angola, S. by the Cape province, E. by Bechuanaland and
+Rhodesia, and is the only German dependency in Africa suited to white
+colonization. It has an area of about 322,450 sq. m., and a population
+of Bantu Negroes and Hottentots estimated in 1903 at 200,000.[1] The
+European inhabitants, in addition to the military, numbered 7110 in
+1907, of whom the majority were German.
+
+ _Area and Boundaries._--The boundary separating the German
+ protectorate from the Portuguese possessions of Angola is the lower
+ Kunene, from its mouth in 17 deg. 18' S., 11 deg. 40' E. to the limit
+ of navigability from the sea, thence in a direct line, corresponding
+ roughly to the lat. of 17 deg. 20' S., to the river Okavango, which it
+ follows eastwards until the stream turns abruptly south (towards Lake
+ Ngami). From this point a strip of German territory 300 m. long and
+ about 50 m. broad, projects eastward until it reaches the Zambezi a
+ little above the Victoria Falls. On the south this narrow strip of
+ land (known as the Caprivi enclave) is separated from southern
+ Rhodesia by the Kwando or Chobe river. On the east the frontier
+ between British and German territory is in its northern half the 21st
+ degree of E. longitude, in its southern half the 20th degree. This
+ frontier is drawn through desert country. The southern frontier is the
+ Orange river from its mouth to the 20 deg. E. The coast-line between
+ the Kunene and Orange rivers is not wholly German. Just north of the
+ tropic of Capricorn is the British enclave of Walfish Bay (q.v.). The
+ northern part of the protectorate is known as Ovampoland, the central
+ portion as Damara (or Herero) land; the southern regions as Great
+ Namaqualand. These names are derived from those of the dominant native
+ races inhabiting the country.
+
+ _Physical Features._--The coast-line is generally low and little
+ broken by bays or promontories. In its entire length of about 800 m.
+ it has no good natural harbour, and its bays--Angra Pequena, otherwise
+ Luderitz Bay, Sierra Bay, Sandwich Harbour--are in danger of being
+ filled with sand by the strong, cold, northerly coast current.
+ Swakopmund is an artificial harbour at the mouth of the river Swakop.
+ The small islands which stud the coast north and south of Angra
+ Pequena belong to Great Britain. The coast-line is bordered by a belt
+ of sand-dunes and desert, which, about 35 m. wide in the south,
+ narrows towards the north. This coast belt is flanked by a mountain
+ range, which attains its highest elevation in Mount Omatako (8972
+ ft.), in about 21 deg. 15' S., 16 deg. 40' E. N. E. of Omatako is the
+ Omboroko range, otherwise known as the Waterberg. South of Omboroko,
+ occupying the centre of the country, the range attains its highest
+ average altitude. The following massifs with their highest points may
+ be distinguished: Gans (7664 ft.), Nu-uibeb (7480 ft.), Onyati (7201
+ ft.), Awas (6988 ft.), Komas (5331 ft.) and Ganab (4002 ft.). In the
+ S.E. are the Karas mountains, which attain an elevation of 6570 ft.
+ The mountains for the main part form the escarpment of the great
+ Kalahari plateau, which, gently rising from the interior towards the
+ west, slopes again towards the south and north from the point of its
+ highest elevation. The Kalahari plateau changes the undulating
+ character it has in the west to a perfect plain in the far east, where
+ the watered and habitable country merges into the sterile Kalahari
+ desert. In the northern half of the country the central plateau
+ contains much rich grass-land, while in the north-eastern region the
+ Omaheke desert has all the characteristics of the Kalahari.
+
+ There are no rivers of importance wholly within German South-West
+ Africa. The Kunene (q.v.) has but a small portion of the southern bank
+ in the colony, and similarly only part of the northern bank of the
+ Orange river (q.v.) is in German territory. Several streams run south
+ into the Orange; of those the chief is the Great Fish river, which has
+ a course of nearly 500 m. Both the Kunene and the Orange carry water
+ all the year round, but are not navigable. Neither is the Great Fish
+ river, which, however, is rarely dry. The Okavango, which comes from
+ the north and runs towards Ngami (q.v.), is perennial, but like the
+ Kunene and Orange, belongs only partly to the hydrographic system of
+ the country. From the inner slopes of the coast chain many streams go
+ N.E. to join the Okavango. They cross the Omaheke waste and are
+ usually dry. Ovampoland has a hydrographic system connected with the
+ Kunene, and, in seasons of great flood, with that of Ngami. Before the
+ Kunene breaks through the outer edge of the plateau, it sends
+ divergent channels south-east to a large marsh or lake called Etosha,
+ which is cut by 17 deg. E. and 19 deg. S. Of these channels the
+ Kwamatuo or Okipoko, which is perennial, enters Etosha at its N.W.
+ corner. The lake when full extends about 80 m. W. to E. and 50 m. N.
+ to S. From its S.E. corner issues the Omuramba, which divides into two
+ branches, known respectively as the Omaheke and the Ovampo. These
+ streams have an easterly direction, their beds, often dry, joining the
+ Okavango. The other rivers of the protectorate have as a rule plenty
+ of water in their upper courses in the rainy season, though some river
+ beds are dry for years together. After a heavy thunderstorm such a
+ river bed will be suddenly filled with a turbid current half a mile
+ wide. The water is, however, before long absorbed by the thirsty land.
+ Only in exceptionally rainy years do the streams which cross the sand
+ belt carry water to the ocean. But in the sand which fills the river
+ beds water may be obtained by digging. Of rivers running direct to the
+ Atlantic the Little Fish river enters the sea at Angra Pequena and the
+ Kuisip in Walfish Bay. The Swakop rises in the hills near the
+ Waterberg, and north of it is the Omaruru, which carries water for the
+ greater part of the year. Hot springs are numerous, and it is
+ remarkable that those of Windhoek flow more copiously during the dry
+ than the rainy season. There are also many cold springs, and wells
+ which contain water all the year.
+
+ _Geology._--Gneiss and schist, with intrusive granites and porphyries,
+ overlain to a great extent by sand and lateritic deposits, occupy the
+ coast belt, coast mountains and the plateau of Damaraland. In the Huib
+ and Han-ami plateaus of Great Namaqualand the crystalline rocks are
+ overlain by sandstones, slates, quartzites and jasper rocks, and these
+ in turn by dolomites. They are probably equivalent to the Transvaal
+ and Pretoria series (see TRANSVAAL: _Geology_). The next oldest rocks
+ are of recent geological date. The Kalahari Kalk, which extends over
+ large areas to the south-east of Ovampoland, may be of Miocene age,
+ but it has not yielded fossils. Extensive tracts of alluvium occur in
+ the basin of the Ovampo, while the dunes and sand-tracts of the
+ Kalahari occupy the eastern regions.
+
+ _Climate._--On the coast the mean temperature is low, and there is
+ little rainfall. Moisture is supplied by dense fogs, which rise almost
+ daily. South-west winds prevail. Inland the climate is temperate
+ rather than tropical, with bracing, clear atmosphere. There are
+ considerable differences of temperature between day and night, and two
+ well-marked seasons, one cold and dry from May to September, the other
+ hot and rainy from October to April. In winter ice frequently forms
+ during the night on open water on the plateau, but it never remains
+ all day. The yearly rainfall is about 20 in. in the Damara Hills;
+ there is more rain in the north than in the south, and in the east
+ than in the west. In the greater part of the colony the climate is
+ favourable for European settlement.
+
+ _Flora and Fauna._--The vegetation corresponds exactly with the
+ climate. In the dry littoral region are plants able to exist with the
+ minimum of moisture they derive from the daily fog--_Amarantaceae_,
+ _Sarcocaula_, _Aloe dichotoma_, _Aristida subacaulis_ and the
+ wonderful _Welwitschia_. Farther inland are plants which spring up and
+ disappear with the rain, and others whose roots reach permanent water.
+ The former are chiefly grasses, the latter exist almost solely in or
+ near river-beds. Amongst the fine trees often seen here, the ana tree
+ (_Acacia albida_) is the most noteworthy, its seeds being favourite
+ fodder for all domestic animals. _Acacia giraffae_, _Ac. horrida_,
+ _Adansonia sterculia_, near the Kunene the _Hyphaene ventricosa_,
+ deserve special notice. The vegetation in the mountain valleys is
+ luxuriant, and towards the north is of a tropical character. The palm
+ zone extends a considerable distance south of the Kunene, and here
+ vegetation spreads over the sand-dunes of the coast plain, which are
+ covered with grasses.
+
+ Large game, formerly abundant, especially pachyderms, is scarce. Of
+ antelopes the following species are plentiful in parts: springbok,
+ steenbok, kudu, rietbok, pallah; of monkeys, the _Cynocephalus
+ porcarius_ is frequent. Various kinds of hyenas and jackals with fine
+ fur (_Canis mesomelas_), also _Felis caracal_, abound. The spring-hare
+ (_Pedestea caffer_) and rock-rabbit (_Hyrax capensis_) may often be
+ observed. Of birds there are 728 species. Crocodiles, turtles and
+ snakes are numerous.
+
+_Inhabitants._--Among the natives of German South-West Africa three
+classes may be distinguished. In the first class are the Namaqua
+(Hottentots) and Bushmen. The Namaqua probably came from the south,
+while the Bushmen may be looked upon as an indigenous race. The
+Hottentots, the purest existing types of that race, are divided into
+numerous tribes, independent of one another, such as the Witbois,
+Swartzbois, Bondelzwarts. The Bushmen are found scattered over the
+eastern parts of the country (see HOTTENTOTS and BUSHMEN). The second
+class consists of the mountain Damara (Hau-Khoin), a race of doubtful
+affinities, probably of Bantu-Negro origin, but speaking the Hottentot
+language. The third class belongs to the Bantu-Negro stock, and came
+from the north-east, expelling and enslaving the mountain Damara, and
+settling in various parts of the country under different names. The most
+prominent are the Herero, thorough nomads and cattle-breeders; while the
+Ovampo (Ovambo or Ambo), in the northern part of the protectorate, are
+agriculturists. The Herero (q.v.) are also known by the Hottentot name
+Damara, and by this name their country is generally called. The
+Bastaards, who live in Namaqualand, are a small tribe originating from a
+mingling of Cape Boers with Hottentots. They are Christians, and able to
+read and write. The other natives are spirit-worshippers, save for the
+comparatively few converts of the Protestant missions established in the
+country. Of white races represented the chief are Germans and Boers. In
+the S.E. Boer settlers form the bulk of the white population. There are
+also numbers of British colonists in this region--emigrants from the
+Cape. The immigration of Germans is encouraged by subsidies and in other
+ways.
+
+ _Towns._--The chief port is Swakopmund, built on the northern bank of
+ the Swakop river (the southern bank belonging to the British territory
+ of Walfish Bay). The harbour is partially protected by a breakwater.
+ There are also settlements at Luderitz Bay (white pop. 1909, over
+ 1000) and at Sandwich Harbour. Swakopmund is connected by a narrow
+ gauge railway with Windhoek, the administrative capital of the colony,
+ situated in a hilly district 180 m. due east of the port, but 237 m.
+ by the railway. Karibib is the only place of consequence on the line.
+ Otyimbingue is a government station 70 m. W.N.W. of Windhoek, and
+ Tsumeb a mining centre 240 m. N.N.E. of the same place. Olukonda is a
+ government post in Ovampoland. In the S.E. corner of the colony, 30 m.
+ N. of the Orange river, is the town of Warmbad. Keetmanshoop, 100 m.
+ N. of Warmbad and 180 m. E. of Luderitz Bay, is the centre of a small
+ mining industry. Gibeon is a government station and missionary
+ settlement about midway between Keetmanshoop and Windhoek. Besides
+ these places there are numbers of small native towns at which live a
+ few white traders and missionaries. The missionaries have given
+ Biblical names to several of their stations, such as Bethany and
+ Beersheba in Namaqualand, and Rehoboth in Damaraland. In the Caprivi
+ enclave are a German residency and the site of the town of Linyante,
+ once the capital of the Makololo dynasty of Barotseland (see BAROTSE).
+
+ _Industries._--Agriculture is followed by the natives in the northern
+ districts, but the chief industry is stock-raising. The scarcity of
+ water in the southern parts is not favourable for agricultural
+ pursuits, while the good grazing lands offer splendid pasturage for
+ cattle, which the Herero raise in numbers amounting to many hundred
+ thousands. Sheep and goats thrive well. Horses have been imported from
+ the Cape. Unfortunately the climate does not suit them everywhere, and
+ they are subject to a virulent distemper. Cattle and sheep also suffer
+ from the diseases which are common in the Cape Colony. Camels have
+ been imported, and are doing well. Wheat, maize and sorghum are the
+ chief crops raised, though not enough is grown to meet even local
+ requirements. Near the coast the natives collect the kernels of the
+ nara, a wild-growing pumpkin which, in the words of an early
+ traveller, C.J. Andersson, "are eaten by oxen, mice, men, ostriches
+ and lions." About half the European settlers are engaged in
+ agriculture. They raise maize, wheat, tobacco, fruit and vegetables.
+ Cotton cultivation and viticulture are carried on in some districts.
+
+ Minerals, especially copper, are plentiful in the country. The chief
+ copper deposits are at Tsumeb, which is 4230 ft. above the sea, in the
+ Otavi district. Diamonds are found on and near the surface of the soil
+ in the Luderitz Bay district, and diamonds have also been found in the
+ neighbourhood of Gibeon. A little pottery is made, and the Hottentot
+ women are clever in making fur cloths. In the north the Ovampo do a
+ little smith-work and grass-plaiting. The external trade of the
+ country was of slow growth. The exports, previous to the opening up of
+ the Otavi mines, consisted chiefly of live stock--sent mainly to Cape
+ Colony--guano, ivory, horns, hides and ostrich feathers. The chief
+ imports are food stuffs, textiles and metals, and hardware. In 1903
+ the value of the exports was L168,560, that of the imports L388,210.
+ The war which followed (see below, _History_) led to a great shrinking
+ of exports, rendering the figures for the period 1904-1907 useless for
+ purposes of comparison. About 85% of the imports are from Germany.
+
+ _Communications._--The economic development of the country is largely
+ dependent on transport facilities. The railway from Swakopmund to
+ Windhoek, mentioned above, was begun in 1897, and was opened for
+ traffic in July 1902. It cost nearly L700,000 to build. Another narrow
+ gauge railway, to serve the Otavi copper mines, was begun in 1904 and
+ completed in 1908. It starts from Swakopmund and is 400 m. long, the
+ terminus being at Grootfontein, 40 m. S.E. of Tsumeb. The highest
+ point on this line is 5213 ft. above the sea. In 1906-1908 a railway,
+ 180 m. long, was built from Luderitz Bay to Keetmanshoop. This line is
+ of the standard South African gauge (3 ft. 6 in.), that gauge being
+ adopted in view of the eventual linking up of the line with the
+ British railway systems at Kimberley. A branch from Seeheim on the
+ Keetmanshoop line runs S.E. to Kalkfontein.
+
+ Besides railways, roads have been made between the chief centres of
+ population. Along these, in the desert districts, wells have been dug.
+ Across the Awas Mountains, separating Windhoek from the central
+ plateau, a wide road has been cut. In 1903 the colony was placed in
+ telegraphic communication with Europe and Cape Colony by the laying of
+ submarine cables having their terminus at Swakopmund. There is a
+ fairly complete inland telegraphic service.
+
+ There is regular steamship communication between Hamburg and
+ Swakopmund, Walfish Bay and Luderitz Bay. Regular communication is
+ also maintained between Cape Town and the ports of the colony.
+
+ _Administration._--At the head of the administration is an imperial
+ governor, responsible to the colonial office in Berlin, who is
+ assisted by a council consisting of chiefs of departments. The country
+ is divided into various administrative districts. In each of these
+ there is a _Bezirksamtmann_, with his staff of officials and police
+ force. In each district is a law court, to whose jurisdiction not
+ alone the whites, but also the Bastaards are subject. As in all German
+ colonies, there is a court of appeal at the residence of the governor.
+ The government maintains schools at the chief towns, but education is
+ principally in the hands of missionaries. The armed force consists of
+ regular troops from Germany and a militia formed of Bastaards. The
+ local revenue for some years before 1903 was about L130,000 per annum,
+ the expenditure about L400,000, the difference between local receipts
+ and expenditure being made good by imperial subsidies. In 1908 local
+ revenue had risen to L250,000, but the imperial authorities incurred
+ an expenditure of over L2,000,000, largely for military purposes. On
+ articles of export, such as feathers and hides, 5% _ad valorem_ duty
+ has to be paid; on cattle and horses an export tax per head. There is
+ a 10% _ad valorem_ duty on all imports, no difference being made
+ between German and foreign goods. The sale of spirituous liquors is
+ subject to a licence.
+
+_History._--The coast of south-west Africa was discovered by Bartholomew
+Diaz in 1487, whilst endeavouring to find his way to the Indies. He
+anchored in a bay which by reason of its smallness he named Angra
+Pequena. Portugal, however, took no steps to acquire possession of this
+inhospitable region, which remained almost unvisited by Europeans until
+the early years of the 19th century. At this time the country was
+devastated by a Hottentot chief known as Afrikander, who had fled
+thither with a band of outlaws after murdering his master, a Boer farmer
+by whom he had been ill-treated, in 1796. In 1805 some missionaries (of
+German nationality) went into Namaqualand in the service of the London
+Missionary Society, which society subsequently transferred its missions
+in this region to the Rhenish mission, which had had agents in the
+country since about 1840. The chief station of the missionaries was at a
+Hottentot settlement renamed Bethany (1820), a place 125 m. E. by Angra
+Pequena. The missionaries had the satisfaction of stopping Afrikander's
+career of bloodshed. He became a convert, a great friend of the mission,
+and took the name of Christian. The proximity of Great Namaqualand to
+Cape Colony led to visits from British and Dutch farmers and hunters, a
+few of whom settled in the country, which thus became in some sense a
+dependency of the Cape.
+
+In 1867 the islands along the coast north and south of Angra Pequena, on
+which were valuable guano deposits, were annexed to Great Britain. At
+this time a small trade between the natives and the outside world was
+developed at Angra Pequena, the merchants engaged in it being British
+and German. The political influence of the Cape spread meantime
+northward to the land of the Herero (Damara). The Herero had been
+subjugated by Jonker Afrikander, a son of Christian Afrikander, who
+followed the early footsteps of his sire and had renounced Christianity,
+but in 1865 they had recovered their independence. The Rhenish
+missionaries appealed (1868) to the British government for protection,
+and asked for the annexation of the country. This request, although
+supported by the Prussian government, was refused. In 1876, however, a
+special commissioner (W. Coates Palgrave) was sent by the Cape
+government "to the tribes north of the Orange river." The commissioner
+concluded treaties with the Namaqua and Damara which fixed the limits of
+the territories of the two races and placed the whole country now
+forming German South-West Africa within the sphere of British influence.
+In the central part of Damaraland an area of some 35,000 sq. m. was
+marked out as a British reservation. The instrument by which this
+arrangement was made was known as the treaty of Okahandya. Neither it
+nor the treaty relating to Great Namaqualand was ratified by the British
+government, but at the request of Sir Bartle Frere, then high
+commissioner for South Africa, Walfish Bay (the best harbour along the
+coast) was in 1878 annexed to Great Britain.
+
+
+ German rule established.
+
+In 1880 fighting between the Namaqua, who were led by Jan Afrikander,
+son of Jonker and grandson of Christian Afrikander, and the Damara broke
+out afresh, and was not ended until the establishment of European rule.
+In 1883 F.A.E. Luderitz (1834-1886), a Bremen merchant, with the
+approval of Prince Bismarck, established a trading station at Angra
+Pequena. This step led to the annexation of the whole country to Germany
+(see AFRICA, S 5) with the exception of Walfish Bay and the islands
+actually British territory. On the establishment of German rule Jonker
+Afrikander's old headquarters were made the seat of administration and
+renamed Windhoek. The Hottentots, under a chieftain named Hendrik
+Witboi, offered a determined opposition to the Germans, but after a
+protracted war peace was concluded in 1894 and Hendrik became the ally
+of the Germans. Thereafter, notwithstanding various local risings, the
+country enjoyed a measure of prosperity, although, largely owing to
+economic conditions, its development was very slow.
+
+
+ Herero war.
+
+In October 1903 the Bondelzwarts, who occupy the district immediately
+north of the Orange river, rose in revolt. This act was the beginning of
+a struggle between the Germans and the natives which lasted over four
+years, and cost Germany the lives of some 5000 soldiers and settlers,
+and entailed an expenditure of L15,000,000. Abuses committed by white
+traders, the brutal methods of certain officials and the occupation of
+tribal lands were among the causes of the war, but impatience of white
+rule was believed to be the chief reason for the revolt of the Herero,
+the most formidable of the opponents of the Germans. The Herero had
+accepted the German protectorate by treaty--without fully comprehending
+that to which they had agreed. To crush the Bondelzwarts, an object
+attained by January 1904, the governor, Colonel Theodor Leutwein, had
+denuded Damaraland of troops, and advantage was taken of this fact by
+the Herero to begin a long-planned and well-prepared revolt. On the 12th
+of January 1904 most of the German farmers in Damaraland were attacked,
+and settlers and their families murdered and the farms devastated.
+Reinforcements were sent from Germany, and in June General von Trotha
+arrived and took command of the troops. On the 11th of August von Trotha
+attacked the Herero in their stronghold, the Waterberg, about 200 m. N.
+of Windhoek, and inflicted upon them a severe defeat. The main body of
+the enemy escaped, however, from the encircling columns of the Germans,
+and thereafter the Herero, who were under the leadership of Samuel
+Maherero, maintained a guerrilla warfare, rendering the whole
+countryside unsafe. The Germans found pursuit almost hopeless, being
+crippled by the lack of water and the absence of means of transport. To
+add to their troubles a Herero bastard named Morenga, with a following
+of Hottentots, had, in July, recommenced hostilities in the south. On
+the 2nd of October 1904 von Trotha, exasperated at his want of success
+in crushing the enemy, issued a proclamation in which he said: "Within
+the German frontier every Herero with or without a rifle, with or
+without cattle, will be shot. I will not take over any more women and
+children. But I will either drive them back to your people or have them
+fired on." In a later order von Trotha instructed his soldiers not to
+fire into, but to fire over the heads of the women and children, and
+Prince Bulow ordered the general to repeal the whole proclamation.
+Whenever they had the chance, however, the Germans hunted down the
+Herero, and thousands perished in the Omaheke desert, across which
+numbers succeeded in passing to British territory near Ngami.
+
+On the day following the issue of von Trotha's proclamation to the
+Herero, i.e. on the 3rd of October 1904, Hendrik Witboi sent a formal
+declaration of war to the Germans. Hendrik had helped to suppress the
+Bondelzwarts rising, and had received a German decoration for his
+services, and his hostility is said to have been kindled by the
+supersession of Colonel Leutwein, for whom he entertained a great
+admiration. The Witbois were joined by other Hottentot tribes, and their
+first act was to murder some sixty German settlers in the Gibeon
+district. Both British and Boer farmers were spared--the Hottentots in
+this matter following the example of the Herero. In November,
+considerable reinforcements having come from Germany, the Witbois were
+attacked, and Hendrik's headquarters, Reitmont, captured. Another defeat
+was inflicted on Hendrik in January 1905, but, lacking ammunition and
+water, the Germans could not follow up their victory. As in Damaraland,
+the warfare in Namaqualand now assumed a guerrilla character, and the
+Germans found it almost impossible to meet their elusive enemy, while
+small detachments were often surprised and sometimes annihilated. In May
+1905 von Trotha tried the effect on the Hottentots of another of his
+proclamations. He invited them to surrender, adding that in the contrary
+event all rebels would be exterminated. A price was at the same time put
+on the heads of Hendrik Witboi and other chiefs. This proclamation was
+unheeded by the Hottentots, who were in fact continuing the war with
+rifles and ammunition seized from the Germans, and replenishing their
+stock with cattle taken from the same source. In the north, however,
+Samuel Maherero had fled to British territory, and the resistance of the
+Herero was beginning to collapse. Concentration camps were established
+in which some thousands of Herero women and children were cared for.
+Meanwhile, the administration of von Trotha, who had assumed the
+governorship as well as the command of the troops, was severely
+criticized by the civilian population, and the non-success of the
+operations against the Hottentots provoked strong military criticism. In
+August 1905 Colonel (afterwards General) Leutwein, who had returned to
+Germany, formally resigned the governorship of the protectorate, and
+Herr von Lindequist, late German consul-general at Cape Town, was
+nominated as his successor. Von Trotha, who had publicly criticized
+Prince Bulow's order to repeal the Herero proclamation, was superseded.
+He had in the summer of 1905 instituted a series of "drives" against the
+Witbois, with no particular results. Hendrik always evaded the columns
+and frequently attacked them in the rear.
+
+In November 1905 von Lindequist arrived at Windhoek. The new governor
+issued a general amnesty to the Herero, and set aside two large reserves
+for those who surrendered. His conciliatory policy was in the end
+successful, and the Ovampo, who threatened to give trouble, were kept in
+hand. The task of pacifying Damaraland was continued throughout 1906,
+and by the close of that year about 16,000 Herero had been established
+in the reserves. Some 3000 had sought refuge in British territory, while
+the number who had perished may be estimated at between 20,000 and
+30,000.
+
+
+ The Hottentots subdued.
+
+In Namaqualand von Lindequist found an enemy still unbroken. On the 3rd
+of November, however, Hendrik Witboi died, aged seventy-five, and his
+son and successor Samuel Isaac Witboi shortly afterwards surrendered,
+and the hostility of the tribe ceased. Morenga now became the chief of
+the rebel Hottentots, and "drives" against him were organized. Early in
+May 1906 an encounter between Morenga and a German column was fought
+close to the British frontier of the Bechuanaland protectorate. Morenga
+fled, was pursued across the frontier, and wounded, but escaped. On the
+16th of May he was found hiding by British patrols and interned. Other
+Hottentot chiefs continued the conflict, greatly aided by the immense
+difficulty the Germans had in transporting supplies; to remedy which
+defect the building of a railway from Luderitz Bay to Kubub was begun
+early in 1906. A camel transport corps was also organized, and Boer
+auxiliaries engaged. Throughout the later half of 1906 the Hottentots
+maintained the struggle, the Karas mountains forming a stronghold from
+which their dislodgment was extremely difficult. Many of their leaders
+and numbers of the tribesmen had a considerable strain of white (chiefly
+Dutch) blood and were fairly educated men, with a knowledge not only of
+native, but European ways; facts which helped to make them formidable
+opponents. Gradually the resistance of the Hottentots was overcome, and
+in December 1906 the Bondelzwarts again surrendered. Other tribes
+continued the fight for months longer, but by March 1907 it was found
+possible to reduce the troops in the protectorate to about 5000 men. At
+the height of the campaign the Germans had 19,000 men in the field.
+
+In August 1907 renewed alarm was created by the escape of Morenga from
+British territory. The Cape government, regarding the chief as a
+political refugee, had refused to extradite him and he had been assigned
+a residence near Upington. This place he left early in August and,
+eluding the frontier guards, re-entered German territory. In September,
+however, he was again on the British side of the border. Meantime a
+force of the Cape Mounted Police under Major F.A.H. Eliott had been
+organized to effect his arrest. Summoned to surrender, Morenga fled into
+the Kalahari Desert. Eliott's force of sixty men pursued him through a
+waterless country, covering 80 m. in 24 hours. When overtaken (September
+21st), Morenga, with ten followers, was holding a kopje and fired on the
+advancing troops. After a sharp engagement the chief and five of his men
+were killed, the British casualties being one killed and one wounded.
+The death of Morenga removed a serious obstacle to the complete
+pacification of the protectorate. Military operations continued,
+however, during 1908. Herr von Lindequist, being recalled to Berlin to
+become under-secretary in the colonial office, was succeeded as governor
+(May 1907) by Herr von Schuckmann. In 1908 steps were taken to establish
+German authority in the Caprivi enclave, which up to that time had been
+neglected by the colonial authorities.
+
+
+ Discovery of diamonds.
+
+The discovery of diamonds in the Luderitz Bay district in July 1908
+caused a rush of treasure-seekers. The diamonds were found mostly on the
+surface in a sandy soil and were of small size. The stones resemble
+Brazilian diamonds. By the end of the year the total yield was over
+39,000 carats. One of the difficulties encountered in developing the
+field was the great scarcity of fresh water. During 1909 various
+companies were formed to exploit the diamondiferous area. The first
+considerable packet of diamonds from the colony reached Germany in April
+1909. The output for the year was valued at over L1,000,000.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--Karl Dove, _Deutsch-Sudwestafrika_ (Berlin, 1903); W.
+ Kulz, _Deutsch-Sudafrika_ ... (Berlin, 1909); T. Leutwein, _Elf Jahre
+ Gouverneur in Deutsch-Sudwestafrika_ (Berlin, 1908), an authoritative
+ work, largely historical; P. Rohrbach, _Deutsche Kolonialwirtschaft_,
+ Band 1: _Sudwestafrika_ (Berlin, 1907), a comprehensive economic
+ study; I. Irle, _Die Herero, ein Beitrag zur Landes-, Volks- und
+ Missionskunde_ (Gutersloh, 1906), a valuable summary of information
+ concerning Damaraland; Major K. Schwabe, _Im deutschen Diamantenlande_
+ (Berlin, 1909); T. Rehbock, _Deutsch-Sudwestafrika, seine
+ wirtschaftliche Erschliessung unter besonderer Berucksichtigung der
+ Nutzbarmachung des Wassers_ (Berlin, 1898); C. von Francois,
+ _Deutsch-Sudwestafrika: Geschichte der Kolonisation bis zum Ausbruch
+ des Krieges mit Witbooi_, April 1893 (Berlin, 1899), a history of the
+ protectorate up to 1893; H. Schintz, _Deutsch-Sudwestafrika,
+ Forschungsreisen durch die deutschen Schutzgebiete Gross-Nama und
+ Hereroland, nach dem Kunene, &c., 1884-1887_ (Oldenburg, N.D. [1891]);
+ H. von Francois, _Nama und Damara_ (Magdeburg, N.D. [1896]). See also
+ for Ethnology, "Die Eingeborenen Deutsch-Sudwestafrikas nach
+ Geschichte, Charakter, Sitten, Gebrauchen und Sprachen," in
+ _Mitteilungen des Seminars fur orientalische Sprachen_ (Berlin and
+ Stuttgart) for 1899 and 1900; and G.W. Stow, _The Native Races of
+ South Africa_ (London, 1905); ch. xvii. contains an account of the
+ Afrikander family. For geology consult A. Schenk, "Die geologische
+ Entwicklung Sudafrikas (mit Karte)," _Peterm. Mitt._ (1888); Stromer
+ von Reichenbach, _Die Geologie der deutschen Schutzgebiete in Afrika_
+ (Munich and Leipzig, 1896). Of early books of travel the most valuable
+ are: F. Galton, _Tropical South Africa_ (1853; new ed. 1889); Charles
+ J. Andersson, _Lake Ngami_ (1856), _The Okavango River_ (1861) and
+ _Notes of Travel_ (1875). See also Sir J.E. Alexander, _An Expedition
+ of Discovery into the Interior of Africa_ (London, 1838). Reports on
+ the German colonies are published by the British foreign office. The
+ _Kriegskarte von Deutsch-Sudwestafrika_ (Berlin, 1904), in nine sheets
+ on a scale of 1 : 800,000, will be found useful. (F. R. C.)
+
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+ [1] As the result of wars with the natives, the population greatly
+ decreased. The number of adult (native) males in the colony at the
+ beginning of 1908 was officially estimated at 19,900, a figure
+ indicating a total population of little more than 100,000.
+
+
+
+
+GERMANTOWN, a residential district and former suburb, now the
+Twenty-second Ward, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., on
+Wissahickon Creek, in the N. part of the city. It is served by the
+Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia & Reading railways. There are many old
+colonial houses and handsome modern residences along Main Street (the
+old Germantown Road or Avenue). Prominent among the historic houses is
+Cliveden, or the "Chew House," built about 1761 by Benjamin Chew
+(1722-1810), who was chief-justice of Pennsylvania in 1774-1777 and was
+imprisoned as a Loyalist in 1777, and whose home during the battle of
+Germantown (see below) was occupied by British troops. The
+well-preserved Morris House (1772) was the headquarters of General Howe
+at the close of the battle, and in 1793, when Germantown, owing to the
+yellow fever in Philadelphia, was the temporary capital of the United
+States, it was occupied by President Washington. Three doors above stood
+until 1904 the Ashmead House, used for a time by Count Nicholas Lewis
+Zinzendorf and his daughters for their Moravian school, which was
+removed to Bethlehem. In the same street, opposite Indian Queen Lane, is
+the old Wister Mansion, built as a country-seat in 1744 and occupied by
+British officers during the War of Independence. In another old house
+(now Nos. 5275-5277), John Fanning Watson (1779-1860), the annalist of
+Philadelphia, did most of his literary work. Just outside the ward
+limits, in what has since become a part of Fairmont Park, is the house
+in which David Rittenhouse, the astronomer, was born; it stands on
+Monoshore Creek or Paper Mill Run, in what was long called Roxborough
+(now the 21st ward of Philadelphia). In this vicinity the first paper
+mill in America was erected in 1690 by a company of which William
+Rittenhouse, David's great-grandfather, was the leading member. The King
+of Prussia Inn, built about 1740, and the Mermaid Hotel, as old or
+older, are interesting survivals of the inns and taverns of old
+Germantown. The Germantown Academy was built in 1760, and after the
+battle of Germantown was used by the British as a hospital. In
+Germantown are also a Friends' (orthodox) school, a Friends' free
+library, and the Germantown branch of the Philadelphia public library.
+The first school in Germantown was established about 1701, and for the
+first eighteen years was under the mastership of Francis Daniel
+Pastorius (1651-1719), the leader in founding the town, who lived in a
+house that stood on the site of the present First Methodist Episcopal
+church, High Street and Main Street. He compiled a primer which was the
+first school book produced in the state; with three others he drafted
+and signed in 1688 what seems to have been the first public protest made
+in America against slavery; and he is celebrated in Whittier's
+_Pennsylvania Pilgrim_. Later the same school passed to Christopher Dock
+(d. 1771), who in 1770 published an essay on teaching (written in 1750),
+which is said to have been the first book on pedagogy published in
+America. The first Bible printed in America in any European language was
+published in Germantown in 1743 by Christopher Sauer (d. 1758), a
+preacher of the German Baptist Brethren, who in 1739 established
+Germantown's first newspaper, _The High German Pennsylvania Historian,
+or Collection of Important News from the Kingdom of Nature and of the
+Church_. His grandsons are said to have cast about 1772 the first
+American printing type. The Friends were the first sect to erect a
+meeting-house of their own (about 1693). The Mennonites built a log
+meeting-house in 1709, and their present stone church was built in 1770.
+The town hall of Germantown was used as a hospital during the last three
+years of the Civil War. In Market Square a soldiers' monument was
+erected in 1883. The Site and Relic Society of Germantown maintains a
+museum of relics. Many of the early settlers were linen weavers, and
+Germantown still manufactures textiles, knit goods and yarns.
+
+Germantown was founded in October 1683 by thirteen families from
+Crefeld, Germany, under the leadership of Francis Daniel Pastorius. The
+township, as originally laid out, contained four distinct villages known
+as Germantown, Cresheim, Sommerhousen and Crefield. Cresheim was later
+known as Mount Airy, and Sommerhousen and Crefield became known as
+Chestnut Hill. The borough of Germantown was incorporated in 1689. For
+many years it was a straggling village extending about 2 m. along Main
+Street. Its growth was more rapid from the middle of the 18th century.
+In 1789 a motion for the permanent location of the national capital at
+Germantown was carried in the Senate, and the same measure passed the
+House, amended only with respect to the temporary government of the
+ceded district; but the Senate killed the bill by voting to postpone
+further consideration of it until the next session. Germantown was
+annexed to Philadelphia in 1854.
+
+_Battle of Germantown._--This famous encounter in the American War of
+Independence was fought on the 4th of October 1777. After the battle of
+Brandywine (q.v.) and the occupation of Philadelphia, the British force
+commanded by Sir W. Howe encamped at Germantown, where Washington
+determined to attack them. The Americans advanced by two roads, General
+Sullivan leading the column on the right and General Greene that on the
+left. Washington himself accompanied Sullivan, with whom were Stirling
+(an officer who claimed to be earl of that name) and Anthony Wayne. The
+right at first met with success, driving the British advanced troops
+back on the main body near the Chew House. Colonel Musgrave, of the 40th
+Foot, threw a portion of his regiment into this house, and General Agnew
+came up with his command. The Americans under Stirling attempted to
+dislodge Musgrave, thus losing time and alarming part of Sullivan's
+advance who had pushed farther forward in the fog. General Greene on the
+left was even less fortunate. Meeting with unexpected opposition at the
+first point of attack his troops were thrown into confusion and
+compelled to retreat. One of his brigades extended itself to the right
+wing, and by opening fire on the Chew House caused Wayne to retreat, and
+presently both of the American columns retired rapidly in the direction
+of their camp. The surprise had failed, with the loss to Washington's
+army of 673 men as against 500 on the side of the British. The British
+General Agnew and the American General Nash were both mortally wounded.
+In December Washington went into winter quarters at Valley Forge, 40 m.
+west of Philadelphia. The British wintered in and around the city.
+
+ See N.H. Keyser, "Old Historic Germantown," in the _Proceedings and
+ Addresses of the Pennsylvania-German Society_ (Lancaster, 1906); S.W.
+ Pennypacker, _The Settlement of Germantown, Pennsylvania, and the
+ Beginning of German Emigration to North America_ (Philadelphia, 1899),
+ and S.F. Hotchkin, _Ancient and Modern Germantown, Mount Airy and
+ Chestnut Hill_ (Philadelphia, 1889).
+
+
+
+
+GERMANY (Ger. _Deutschland_), or, more properly, THE GERMAN EMPIRE
+(_Deutsches Reich_), a country of central Europe. The territories
+occupied by peoples of distinctively Teutonic race and language are
+commonly designated as German, and in this sense may be taken to
+include, besides Germany proper (the subject of the present article),
+the German-speaking sections of Austria, Switzerland and Holland. But
+Germany, or the German empire, as it is now understood, was formed in
+1871 by virtue of treaties between the North German Confederation and
+the South German states, and by the acquisition, in the peace of
+Frankfort (May 10, 1871), of Alsace-Lorraine, and embraces all the
+countries of the former German Confederation, with the exception of
+Austria, Luxemburg, Limburg and Liechtenstein. The sole addition to the
+empire proper since that date is the island of Heligoland, ceded by
+Great Britain in 1890, but Germany has acquired extensive colonies in
+Africa and the Pacific (see below, _Colonies_).
+
+The German empire extends from 47 deg. 16' to 55 deg. 53' N., and from 5
+deg. 52' to 22 deg. 52' E. The eastern provinces project so far that the
+extent of German territory is much greater from south-west to north-east
+than in any other direction. Tilsit is 815 m. from Metz, whereas
+Hadersleben, in Schleswig, is only 540 m. from the Lake of Constance.
+The actual difference in time between the eastern and western points is
+1 hour and 8 minutes, but the empire observes but one time--1 hour E.
+of Greenwich. The empire is bounded on the S.E. and S. by Austria and
+Switzerland (for 1659 m.), on the S.W. by France (242 m.), on the W. by
+Luxemburg, Belgium and Holland (together 558 m.). The length of German
+coast on the North Sea or German Ocean is 293 m., and on the Baltic 927
+m., the intervening land boundary on the north of Schleswig being only
+47 m. The eastern boundary is with Russia 843 m. The total length of the
+frontiers is thus 4569 m. The area, including rivers and lakes but not
+the _haffs_ or lagoons on the Baltic coast, is 208,830 sq. m., and the
+population (1905) 60,641,278. In respect of its area, the German empire
+occupied in 1909 the third place among European countries, and in point
+of population the second, coming in point of area immediately after
+Russia and Austria-Hungary, and in population next to Russia.
+
+_Political Divisions._--The empire is composed of the following
+twenty-six states and divisions: the kingdoms of Prussia, Bavaria,
+Saxony and Wurttemberg; the grand-duchies of Baden, Hesse,
+Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Oldenburg and Saxe-Weimar;
+the duchies of Anhalt, Brunswick, Saxe-Altenburg, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and
+Saxe-Meiningen; the principalities of Lippe-Detmold, Reuss-Greiz,
+Reuss-Schleiz, Schaumburg-Lippe, Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt,
+Schwarzburg-Sondershausen and Waldeck-Pyrmont; the free towns of Bremen,
+Hamburg and Lubeck, and the imperial territory of Alsace-Lorraine.
+
+Besides these political divisions there are certain parts of Germany
+which, not conterminous with political boundaries, retain appellations
+derived either from former tribal settlements or from divisions of the
+old Holy Roman Empire. These are Franconia (Franken), which embraces the
+districts of Bamberg, Schweinfurt and Wurzburg on the upper Main; Swabia
+(Schwaben), in which is included Wurttemberg, parts of Bavaria and Baden
+and Hohenzollern; the Palatinate (Pfalz), embracing Bavaria west of the
+Rhine and the contiguous portion of Baden; Rhineland, applied to Rhenish
+Prussia, Nassau, Hesse-Darmstadt and parts of Bavaria and Baden;
+Vogtland,[1] the mountainous country lying in the south-west corner of
+the kingdom of Saxony; Lusatia (Lausitz), the eastern portion of the
+kingdom of Saxony and the adjacent portion of Prussia watered by the
+upper Spree; Thuringia (Thuringen), the country lying south of the Harz
+Mountains and including the Saxon duchies; East Friesland (Ost
+Friesland), the country lying between the lower course of the Weser and
+the Ems, and Westphalia (Westfalen), the fertile plain lying north and
+west of the Harz Mountains and extending to the North Sea and the Dutch
+frontier.
+
+_Coast and Islands._--The length of the coast-line is considerably less
+than the third part of the whole frontier. The coasts are shallow, and
+deficient in natural ports, except on the east of Schleswig-Holstein,
+where wide bays encroach upon the land, giving access to the largest
+vessels, so that the great naval harbour could be constructed at Kiel.
+With the exception of those on the east coast of Schleswig-Holstein, all
+the important trading ports of Germany are river ports, such as Emden,
+Bremen, Hamburg, Lubeck, Stettin, Danzig, Konigsberg, Memel. A great
+difference, however, is to be remarked between the coasts of the North
+Sea and those of the Baltic. On the former, where the sea has broken up
+the ranges of dunes formed in bygone times, and divided them into
+separate islands, the mainland has to be protected by massive dikes,
+while the Frisian Islands are being gradually washed away by the waters.
+On the coast of East Friesland there are now only seven of these
+islands, of which Norderney is best known, while of the North Frisian
+Islands, on the western coast of Schleswig, Sylt is the most
+considerable. Besides the ordinary waste of the shores, there have been
+extensive inundations by the sea within the historic period, the gulf of
+the Dollart having been so caused in the year 1276. Sands surround the
+whole coast of the North Sea to such an extent that the entrance to the
+ports is not practicable without the aid of pilots. Heligoland is a
+rocky island, but it also has been considerably reduced by the sea. The
+tides rise to the height of 12 or 13 ft. in the Jade Bay and at
+Bremerhaven, and 6 or 7 ft. at Hamburg. The coast of the Baltic, on the
+other hand, possesses few islands, the chief being Alsen and Fehmarn off
+the coast of Schleswig-Holstein, and Rugen off Pomerania. It has no
+extensive sands, though on the whole very flat. The Baltic has no
+perceptible tides; and a great part of its coast-line is in winter
+covered with ice, which also so blocks up the harbours that navigation
+is interrupted for several months every year. Its _haffs_ fronting the
+mouths of the large rivers must be regarded as lagoons or extensions of
+the river beds, not as bays. The Pommersche or Oder Haff is separated
+from the sea by two islands, so that the river flows out by three
+mouths, the middle one (Swine) being the most considerable. The Frische
+Haff is formed by the Nogat, a branch of the Vistula, and by the Pregel,
+and communicates with the sea by means of the Pillauer Tief. The
+Kurische Haff receives the Memel, called Niemen in Russia, and has its
+outlet in the extreme north at Memel. Long narrow alluvial strips called
+_Nehrungen_, lie between the last two haffs and the Baltic. The Baltic
+coast is further marked by large indentations, the Gulf of Lubeck, that
+of Pomerania, east of Rugen, and the semicircular Bay of Danzig between
+the promontories of Rixhoft and Brusterort. The German coasts are well
+provided with lighthouses.
+
+ _Surface._--In respect of physical structure Germany is divided into
+ two entirely distinct portions, which bear to one another a ratio of
+ about 3 to 4. The northern and larger part may be described as a
+ uniform plain. South and central Germany, on the other hand, is very
+ much diversified in scenery. It possesses large plateaus, such as that
+ of Bavaria, which stretches away from the foot of the Alps, fertile
+ low plains like that intersected by the Rhine, mountain chains and
+ isolated groups of mountains, comparatively low in height, and so
+ situated as not seriously to interfere with communication either by
+ road or by railway.
+
+
+ Mountains and plateaus.
+
+ Bavaria is the only division of the country that includes within it
+ any part of the Alps, the Austro-Bavarian frontier running along the
+ ridge of the Northern Tirolese or Bavarian Alps. The loftiest peak of
+ this group, the Zugspitze (57 m. S. of Munich), is 9738 ft. in height,
+ being the highest summit in the empire. The upper German plain sloping
+ northwards from the Bavarian Alps is watered by the Lech, the Isar and
+ the Inn, tributaries of the Danube, all three rising beyond the limits
+ of German territory. This plain is separated on the west from the
+ Swiss plain by the Lake of Constance (Bodensee, 1306 ft. above
+ sea-level), and on the east from the undulating grounds of Austria by
+ the Inn. The average height of the plain may be estimated at about
+ 1800 ft., the valley of the Danube on its north border being from 1540
+ ft. (at Ulm) to 920 ft. (at Passau). The plain is not very fertile. In
+ the upper part of the plain, towards the Alps, there are several
+ lakes, the largest being the Ammersee, the Wurmsee or Starnberger See
+ and the Chiemsee. Many portions of the plain are covered by moors and
+ swamps of large extent, called _Moose_. The left or northern bank of
+ the Danube from Regensburg downwards presents a series of granitic
+ rocks called the Bavarian Forest (Bayrischer Wald), which must be
+ regarded as a branch of the Bohemian Forest (Bohmer Wald). The latter
+ is a range of wooded heights on the frontier of Bavaria and Bohemia,
+ occupying the least known and least frequented regions of Germany. The
+ summits of the Bayrischer Wald rise to the height of about 4000 ft.,
+ and those of the Bohmer Wald to 4800 ft., Arber being 4872 ft. The
+ valley of the Danube above Regensburg is flanked by plateaus sloping
+ gently to the Danube, but precipitous towards the valley of the
+ Neckar. The centre of this elevated tract is the Rauhe Alb, so named
+ on account of the harshness of the climate. The plateau continuing to
+ the north-east and then to the north, under the name of the Franconian
+ Jura, is crossed by the valley of the winding Altmuhl, and extends to
+ the Main. To the west extensive undulating grounds or low plateaus
+ occupy the area between the Main and the Neckar.
+
+ The south-western corner of the empire contains a series of better
+ defined hill-ranges. Beginning with the Black Forest (Schwarzwald), we
+ find its southern heights decline to the valley of the Rhine, above
+ Basel, and to the Jura. The summits are rounded and covered with wood,
+ the highest being the Feldberg (10 m. S.E. of Freiburg, 4898 ft.).
+ Northwards the Black Forest passes into the plateau of the
+ Neckarbergland (average height, 1000 ft.). The heights between the
+ lower Neckar and the Main form the Odenwald (about 1700 ft.); and the
+ Spessart, which is watered by the Main on three sides, is nothing but
+ a continuation of the Odenwald. West of this range of hills lies the
+ valley of the upper Rhine, extending about 180 m. from south to north,
+ and with a width of only 20 to 25 m. In the upper parts the Rhine is
+ rapid, and therefore navigable with difficulty; this explains why the
+ towns there are not along the banks of the river, but some 5 to 10 m.
+ off. But from Spires (Speyer) town succeeds town as far down as
+ Dusseldorf. The western boundary of this valley is formed in the first
+ instance by the Vosges, where granite summits rise from under the
+ surrounding red Triassic rocks (Sulzer Belchen, 4669 ft.). To the
+ south the range is not continuous with the Swiss Jura, the valley of
+ the Rhine being connected here with the Rhone system by low ground
+ known as the Gate of Mulhausen. The crest of the Vosges is pretty high
+ and unbroken, the first convenient pass being near Zabern, which is
+ followed by the railway from Strassburg to Paris. On the northern side
+ the Vosges are connected with the Hardt sandstone plateau (Kalmit,
+ 2241 ft.), which rises abruptly from the plain of the Rhine. The
+ mountains south of Mainz, which are mostly covered by vineyards, are
+ lower, the Donnersberg, however, raising its head to 2254 ft. These
+ hills are bordered on the west by the high plain of Lorraine and the
+ coal-fields of Saarbrucken, the former being traversed by the river
+ Mosel. The larger part of Lorraine belongs to France, but the German
+ part possesses great mineral wealth in its rich layers of ironstone
+ (siderite) and in the coal-fields of the Saar. The tract of the
+ Hunsruck, Taunus and Eifel is an extended plateau, divided into
+ separate sections by the river valleys. Among these the Rhine valley
+ from Bingen to Bonn, and that of the Mosel from Trier to Coblenz, are
+ winding gorges excavated by the rivers. The Eifel presents a sterile,
+ thinly-peopled plateau, covered by extensive moors in several places.
+ It passes westwards imperceptibly into the Ardennes. The hills on the
+ right bank of the Rhine also are in part of a like barren character,
+ without wood; the Westerwald (about 2000 ft.), which separates the
+ valleys of the Sieg and Lahn, is particularly so. The northern and
+ southern limits of the Niederrheinische Gebirge present a striking
+ contrast to the central region. In the south the declivities of the
+ Taunus (2890 ft.) are marked by the occurrence of mineral springs, as
+ at Ems on the Lahn, Nauheim, Homburg, Soden, Wiesbaden, &c., and by
+ the vineyards which produce the best Rhine wines. To the north of this
+ system, on the other hand, lies the great coal basin of Westphalia,
+ the largest in Germany. In the south of the hilly duchy of Hesse rise
+ the isolated mountain groups of the Vogelsberg (2530 ft.) and the Rhon
+ (3117 ft.), separated by the valley of the Fulda, which uniting
+ farther north with the Werra forms the Weser. To the east of Hesse
+ lies Thuringia, a province consisting of the far-stretching wooded
+ ridge of the Thuringian Forest (Thuringerwald; with three peaks
+ upwards of 3000 ft. high), and an extensive elevated plain to the
+ north. Its rivers are the Saale and Unstrut. The plateau is bounded on
+ the north by the Harz, an isolated group of mountains, rich in
+ minerals, with its highest elevation in the bare summit of the Brocken
+ (3747 ft.). To the west of the Harz a series of hilly tracts is
+ comprised under the name of the Weser Mountains, out of which above
+ Minden the river Weser bursts by the Porta Westphalica. A narrow
+ ridge, the Teutoburger Wald (1300 ft.), extends between the Weser and
+ the Ems as far as the neighbourhood of Osnabruck.
+
+ To the east the Thuringian Forest is connected by the plateau of the
+ Frankenwald with the Fichtelgebirge. This group of mountains,
+ occupying what may be regarded as ethnologically the centre of
+ Germany, forms a hydrographical centre, whence the Naab flows
+ southward to the Danube, the Main westward to the Rhine, the Eger
+ eastward to the Elbe, and the Saale northward, also into the Elbe. In
+ the north-east the Fichtelgebirge connects itself directly with the
+ Erzgebirge, which forms the northern boundary of Bohemia. The southern
+ sides of this range are comparatively steep; on the north it slopes
+ gently down to the plains of Leipzig, but is intersected by the deep
+ valleys of the Elster and Mulde. Although by no means fertile, the
+ Erzgebirge is very thickly peopled, as various branches of industry
+ have taken root there in numerous small places. Around Zwickau there
+ are productive coal-fields, and mining for metals is carried on near
+ Freiberg. In the east a tableland of sandstone, called Saxon
+ Switzerland, from the picturesque outlines into which it has been
+ eroded, adjoins the Erzgebirge; one of its most notable features is
+ the deep ravine by which the Elbe escapes from it. Numerous quarries,
+ which supply the North German cities with stone for buildings and
+ monuments, have been opened along the valley. The sandstone range of
+ the Elbe unites in the east with the low Lusatian group, along the
+ east of which runs the best road from northern Germany to Bohemia.
+ Then comes a range of lesser hills clustering together to form the
+ frontier between Silesia and Bohemia. The most western group is the
+ Isergebirge, and the next the Riesengebirge, a narrow ridge of about
+ 20 miles' length, with bare summits. Excluding the Alps, the
+ Schneekoppe (5266 ft.) is the highest peak in Germany; and the
+ southern declivities of this range contain the sources of the Elbe.
+ The hills north and north-east of it are termed the Silesian
+ Mountains. Here one of the minor coal-fields gives employment to a
+ population grouped round a number of comparatively small centres. One
+ of the main roads into Bohemia (the pass of Landshut) runs along the
+ eastern base of the Riesengebirge. Still farther to the east the
+ mountains are grouped around the hollow of Glatz, whence the Neisse
+ forces its way towards the north. This hollow is shut in on the east
+ by the Sudetic group, in which the Altvater rises to almost 4900 ft.
+ The eastern portion of the group, called the Gesenke, slopes gently
+ away to the valley of the Oder, which affords an open route for the
+ international traffic, like that through the Mulhausen Gate in Alsace.
+ Geographers style this the Moravian Gate.
+
+ The North German plain presents little variety, yet is not absolutely
+ uniform. A row of low hills runs generally parallel to the mountain
+ ranges already noticed, at a distance of 20 to 30 m. to the north. To
+ these belongs the upper Silesian coal-basin, which occupies a
+ considerable area in south-eastern Silesia. North of the middle
+ districts of the Elbe country the heights are called the Flaming
+ hills. Westward lies as the last link of this series the Luneburger
+ Heide or Heath, between the Weser and Elbe, north of Hanover. A second
+ tract, of moderate elevation, sweeps round the Baltic, without,
+ however, approaching its shores. This plateau contains a considerable
+ number of lakes, and is divided into three portions by the Vistula and
+ the Oder. The most eastward is the so-called Prussian Seenplatte.
+ Spirdingsee (430 ft. above sea-level and 46 sq. m. in area) and
+ Mauersee are the largest lakes; they are situated in the centre of the
+ plateau, and give rise to the Pregel. Some peaks near the Russian
+ frontier attain to 1000 ft. The Pomeranian Seenplatte, between the
+ Vistula and the Oder, extends from S.W. to N.E., its greatest
+ elevation being in the neighbourhood of Danzig (Turmberg, 1086 ft.).
+ The Seenplatte of Mecklenburg, on the other hand, stretches from S.E.
+ to N.W., and most of its lakes, of which the Muritz is the largest,
+ send their waters towards the Elbe. The finely wooded heights which
+ surround the bays of the east coast of Holstein and Schleswig may be
+ regarded as a continuation of these Baltic elevations. The lowest
+ parts, therefore, of the North German plain, excluding the sea-coasts,
+ are the central districts from about 52 deg. to 53 deg. N. lat., where
+ the Vistula, Netze, Warthe, Oder, Spree and Havel form vast swampy
+ lowlands (in German called _Bruche_), which have been considerably
+ reduced by the construction of canals and by cultivation, improvements
+ due in large measure to Frederick the Great. The Spreewald, to the
+ S.E. of Berlin, is one of the most remarkable districts of Germany. As
+ the Spree divides itself there into innumerable branches, enclosing
+ thickly wooded islands, boats form the only means of communication.
+ West of Berlin the Havel widens into what are called the Havel lakes,
+ to which the environs of Potsdam owe their charms. In general the soil
+ of the North German plain cannot be termed fertile, the cultivation
+ nearly everywhere requiring severe and constant labour. Long stretches
+ of ground are covered by moors, and there turf-cutting forms the
+ principal occupation of the inhabitants. The greatest extent of
+ moorland is found in the westernmost parts of the plain, in Oldenburg
+ and East Frisia. The plain contains, however, a few districts of the
+ utmost fertility, particularly the tracts on the central Elbe, and the
+ marsh lands on the west coast of Holstein and the north coast of
+ Hanover, Oldenburg and East Frisia, which, within the last two
+ centuries, the inhabitants have reclaimed from the sea by means of
+ immense dikes.
+
+ _Rivers._--Nine independent river-systems may be distinguished: those
+ of the Memel, Pregel, Vistula (Weichsel), Oder, Elbe, Weser, Ems,
+ Rhine and Danube. Of these the Pregel, Weser and Ems belong entirely,
+ and the Oder mostly, to the German empire. The Danube has its sources
+ on German soil; but only a fifth part of its course is German. Its
+ total length is 1750 m., and the Bavarian frontier at Passau, where
+ the Inn joins it, is only 350 m. distant from its sources. It is
+ navigable as far as Ulm, 220 m. above Passau; and its tributaries the
+ Lech, Isar, Inn and Altmuhl are also navigable. The Rhine is the most
+ important river of Germany, although neither its sources nor its
+ mouths are within the limits of the empire. From the Lake of Constance
+ to Basel (122 m.) the Rhine forms the boundary between the German
+ empire and Switzerland; the canton of Schaffhausen, however, is
+ situated on the northern bank of the river. From Basel to below
+ Emmerich the Rhine belongs to the German empire--about 470 m. or
+ four-sevenths of its whole course. It is navigable all this distance
+ as are also the Neckar from Esslingen, the Main from Bamberg, the
+ Lahn, the Lippe, the Ruhr, the Mosel from Metz, with its affluents the
+ Saar and Sauer. Sea-going vessels sail up the Ems as far as Halte, and
+ river craft as far as Greven, and the river is connected with a widely
+ branching system of canals, as the Ems-Jade and Dortmund-Ems canals.
+ The Fulda, navigable for 63 m., and the Werra, 38 m., above the point
+ where they unite, form by their junction the Weser, which has a course
+ of 271 m., and receives as navigable tributaries the Aller, the Leine
+ from Hanover, and some smaller streams. Ocean-going steamers, however,
+ cannot get as far as Bremen, and unload at Bremerhaven. The Elbe,
+ after a course of 250 m., enters German territory near Bodenbach, 490
+ m. from its mouth. It is navigable above this point through its
+ tributary, the Moldau, to Prague. Hamburg may be reached by vessels of
+ 17 ft. draught. The navigable tributaries of the Elbe are the Saale
+ (below Naumburg), the Havel, Spree, Elde, Sude and some others. The
+ Oder begins to be navigable almost on the frontier at Ratibor, 480 m.
+ from its mouth, receiving as navigable tributaries the Glatz Neisse
+ and the Warthe. Only the lower course of the Vistula belongs to the
+ German empire, within which it is a broad, navigable stream of
+ considerable volume. On the Pregel ships of 3000 tons reach
+ Konigsberg, and river barges reach Insterburg; the Alle, its
+ tributary, may also be navigated. The Memel is navigable in its course
+ of 113 m. from the Russian frontier. Germany is thus a country
+ abounding in natural waterways, the total length of them being
+ estimated at 7000 m. But it is only the Rhine, in its middle course,
+ that has at all times sufficient volume of water to meet the
+ requirements of a good navigable river.
+
+ _Lakes._--The regions which abound in lakes have already been pointed
+ out. The Lake of Constance or Bodensee (204-3/4 sq. m.) is on the
+ frontier of the empire, portions of the northern banks belonging
+ severally to Bavaria, Wurttemberg and Baden. In the south the largest
+ lakes are the Chiemsee (33 sq. m.); the Ammersee and the Wurmsee. A
+ good many smaller lakes are to be found in the Bavarian Alps. The
+ North German plain is dotted with upwards of 500 lakes, covering an
+ area of about 2500 sq. m. The largest of these are the three
+ Haffs--the Oder Haff covering 370 sq. m., the Frische Haff, 332, and
+ the Kurische Haff, 626. The lakes in the Prussian and Pomeranian
+ provinces, in Mecklenburg and in Holstein, and those of the Havel,
+ have already been mentioned. In the west the only lakes of importance
+ are the Steinhuder Meer, 14 m. north-west of Hanover, and the
+ Dummersee on the southern frontier of Oldenburg. (P. A. A.)
+
+ _Geology._--Germany consists of a floor of folded Palaeozoic rocks
+ upon which rest unconformably the comparatively little disturbed beds
+ of the Mesozoic system, while in the North German plain a covering of
+ modern deposits conceals the whole of the older strata from view,
+ excepting some scattered and isolated outcrops of Cretaceous and
+ Tertiary beds. The rocks which compose the ancient floor are thrown
+ into folds which run approximately from W.S.W. to E.N.E. They are
+ exposed on the one hand in the neighbourhood of the Rhine and on the
+ other hand in the Bohemian _massif_. With the latter must be included
+ the Frankenwald, the Thuringerwald, and even the Harz. The oldest
+ rocks, belonging to the Archaean system, occur in the south, forming
+ the Vosges and the Black Forest in the west, and the greater part of
+ the Bohemian _massif_, including the Erzgebirge, in the east. They
+ consist chiefly of gneiss and schist, with granite and other eruptive
+ rocks. Farther north, in the Hunsruck, the Taunus, the Eifel and
+ Westerwald, the Harz and the Frankenwald, the ancient floor is
+ composed mainly of Devonian beds. Other Palaeozoic systems are,
+ however, included in the folds. The Cambrian, for example, is exposed
+ at Leimitz near Hof in the Frankenwald, and the important coal-field
+ of the Saar lies on the southern side of the Hunsruck, while
+ Ordovician and Silurian beds have been found in several localities.
+ Along the northern border of the folded belt lies the coal basin of
+ the Ruhr in Westphalia, which is the continuation of the Belgian
+ coal-field, and bears much the same relation to the Rhenish Devonian
+ area that the coal basin of Liege bears to the Ardennes. Carboniferous
+ and Devonian beds are also found south-east of the Bohemian _massif_,
+ where lies the extensive coal-field of Silesia. The Permian, as in
+ England, is not involved in the folds which have affected the older
+ beds, and in general lies unconformably upon them. It occurs chiefly
+ around the masses of ancient rock, and one of the largest areas is
+ that of the Saar.
+
+ Between the old rocks of the Rhine on the west and the ancient
+ _massif_ of Bohemia on the east a vast area of Triassic beds extends
+ from Hanover to Basel and from Metz to Bayreuth. Over the greater part
+ of this region the Triassic beds are free from folding and are nearly
+ horizontal, but faulting is by no means absent, especially along the
+ margins of the Bohemian and Rhenish hills. The Triassic beds must
+ indeed have covered a large part of these old rock masses, but they
+ have been preserved only where they were faulted down to a lower
+ level. Along the southern margin of the Triassic area there is a long
+ band of Jurassic beds dipping towards the Danube; and at its eastern
+ extremity this band is continuous with a synclinal of Jurassic beds,
+ running parallel to the western border of the Bohemian _massif_, but
+ separated from it by a narrow strip of Triassic beds. Towards the
+ north, in Hanover and Westphalia, the Triassic beds are followed by
+ Jurassic and Cretaceous deposits, the latter being here the more
+ important. As in the south of England, the lower beds of the
+ Cretaceous are of estuarine origin and the Upper Cretaceous overlaps
+ the Lower, lying in the valley of the Ruhr directly upon the
+ Palaeozoic rocks. In Saxony also the upper Cretaceous beds rest
+ directly upon the Palaeozoic or Archaean rocks. Still more to the
+ east, in the province of Silesia, both Jurassic and Cretaceous beds
+ are again met with, but they are to a large extent concealed by the
+ recent accumulations of the great plain. The Eocene system is unknown
+ in Germany except in the foothills of the Alps; but the Oligocene and
+ Miocene are widely spread, especially in the great plain and in the
+ depression of the Danube. The Oligocene is generally marine. Marine
+ Miocene occurs in N.W. Germany and the Miocene of the Danube valley is
+ also in part marine, but in central Germany it is of fluviatile or
+ lacustrine origin. The lignites of Hesse, Cassel, &c., are
+ interstratified with basaltic lava-flows which form the greater part
+ of the Vogelsberg and other hills. The trachytes of the Siebengebirge
+ are probably of slightly earlier date. The precise age of the
+ volcanoes of the Eifel, many of which are in a very perfect state of
+ preservation, is not clear, but they are certainly Tertiary or
+ Post-tertiary. Leucite and nepheline lavas are here abundant. In the
+ Siebengebirge the little crater of Roderberg, with its lavas and
+ scoriae of leucite-basalt, is posterior to some of the Pleistocene
+ river deposits.
+
+ A glance at a geological map of Germany will show that the greater
+ part of Prussia and of German Poland is covered by Quaternary
+ deposits. These are in part of glacial origin, and contain
+ Scandinavian boulders; but fluviatile and aeolian deposits also occur.
+ Quaternary beds also cover the floor of the broad depression through
+ which the Rhine meanders from Basel to Mainz, and occupy a large part
+ of the plain of the Danube. The depression of the Rhine is a trough
+ lying between two faults or system of faults. The very much broader
+ depression of the Danube is associated with the formation of the Alps,
+ and was flooded by the sea during a part of the Miocene period.
+ (P. La.)
+
+ [Illustration: Goelogic Map.]
+
+ _Climate._--The climate of Germany is to be regarded as intermediate
+ between the oceanic and continental climates of western and eastern
+ Europe respectively. It has nothing in common with the Mediterranean
+ climate of southern Europe, Germany being separated from that region
+ by the lofty barrier of the Alps. Although there are very considerable
+ differences in the range of temperature and the amount of rainfall
+ throughout Germany, these are not so great as they would be were it
+ not that the elevated plateaus and mountain chains are in the south,
+ while the north is occupied by low-lying plains. In the west no chain
+ of hills intercepts the warmer and moister winds which blow from the
+ Atlantic, and these accordingly influence at times even the eastern
+ regions of Germany. The mean annual temperature of south-western
+ Germany, or the Rhine and Danube basins, is about 52 deg. to 54 deg.
+ F., that of central Germany 48 deg. to 50 deg., and that of the
+ northern plain 46 deg. to 48 deg. In Pomerania and West Prussia it is
+ only 44 deg. to 45 deg., and in East Prussia 42 deg. to 44 deg. The
+ mean January temperature varies between 22 deg. and 34 deg. (in
+ Masuren and Cologne respectively); the mean July temperature, between
+ 61 deg. in north Schleswig and 68 deg. at Cologne. The extremes of
+ cold and heat are, as recorded in the ten years 1895-1905, 7 deg. in
+ Konigsberg and 93 deg. in Heidelberg (the hottest place in Germany).
+ The difference in the mean annual temperature between the south-west
+ and north-west of Germany amounts to about 3 deg. The contrasts of
+ heat and cold are furnished by the valley of the Rhine above Mainz,
+ which has the greatest mean heat, the mildest winter and the highest
+ summer temperature, and the lake plateau of East Prussia, where Arys
+ on the Spirdingsee has a like winter temperature to the Brocken at
+ 3200 ft. The Baltic has the lowest spring temperature, and the autumn
+ there is also not characterized by an appreciably higher degree of
+ warmth. In central Germany the high plateaus of the Erz and
+ Fichtelgebirge are the coldest regions. In south Germany the upper
+ Bavarian plain experiences an inclement winter and a cold summer. In
+ Alsace-Lorraine the Vosges and the plateau of Lorraine are also
+ remarkable for low temperatures. The warmest districts of the German
+ empire are the northern parts of the Rhine plain, from Karlsruhe
+ downwards, especially the Rheintal; these are scarcely 300 ft. above
+ the sea-level, and are protected by mountainous tracts of land. The
+ same holds true of the valleys of the Neckar, Main and Mosel. Hence
+ the vine is everywhere cultivated in these districts. The mean summer
+ temperature there is 66 deg. and upwards, while the average
+ temperature of January does not descend to the freezing point (32
+ deg.). The climate of north-western Germany (west of the Elbe) shows a
+ predominating oceanic character, the summers not being too hot (mean
+ summer temperature 60 deg. to 62 deg.), and snow in winter remaining
+ but a short time on the ground. West of the Weser the average
+ temperature of January exceeds 32 deg.; to the east it sinks to 30
+ deg., and therefore the Elbe is generally covered with ice for some
+ months of the year, as are also its tributaries. The farther one
+ proceeds to the east the greater are the contrasts of summer and
+ winter. While the average summer warmth of Germany is 60 deg. to 62
+ deg., the January temperature falls as low as 26 deg. to 28 deg. in
+ West Prussia, Posen and Silesia, and 22 deg. to 26 deg. in East
+ Prussia and upper Silesia. The navigation of the rivers is regularly
+ interrupted by frost. Similarly the upper basin of the Danube, or the
+ Bavarian plain, has a rather inclement climate in winter, the average
+ for January being 25 deg. to 26 deg.
+
+ As regards rainfall, Germany belongs to those regions where
+ precipitation takes place at all seasons, but chiefly in the form of
+ summer rains. In respect to the quantity of rain the empire takes a
+ middle position between the humidity of north-western Europe and the
+ aridity of the east. There are considerable differences between
+ particular places. The rainfall is greatest in the Bavarian tableland
+ and the hilly regions of western Germany. For the Eifel, Sauerland,
+ Harz, Thuringian Forest, Rhon, Vogelsberg, Spessart, the Black Forest,
+ the Vosges, &c., the annual average may be stated at 34 in. or more,
+ while in the lower terraces of south-western Germany, as in the
+ Erzgebirge and the Sudetic range, it is estimated at 30 to 32 in.
+ only. The same average obtains also on the humid north-west coast of
+ Germany as far as Bremen and Hamburg. In the remaining parts of
+ western Germany, on the shores of farther Pomerania, and in East
+ Prussia, it amounts to upwards of 24 in. In western Germany there is a
+ district famous for the scarcity of rain and for producing the best
+ kind of wine: in the valley of the Rhine below Strassburg, in the
+ Palatinate, and also in the valley of the Main, no more than from 16
+ to 20 in. fall. Mecklenburg, Brandenburg and Lusatia, Saxony and the
+ plateau of Thuringia, West Prussia, Posen and lower Silesia are also
+ to be classed among the more arid regions of Germany, the annual
+ rainfall being 16 to 20 in. Thunderstorms are most frequent in July,
+ and vary between fifteen and twenty-five in the central districts,
+ descending in the eastern provinces of Prussia to ten annually.
+
+ _Flora._--The flora of Germany comprises 3413 species of phanerogamic
+ and 4306 cryptogamic plants. The country forms a section of the
+ central European zone, and its flora is largely under the influence of
+ the Baltic and Alpine elements, which to a great degree here coalesce.
+ All plants peculiar to the temperate zone abound. Wheat, rye, barley
+ and oats are cultivated everywhere, but spelt only in the south and
+ buckwheat in the north and north-west. Maize only ripens in the south.
+ Potatoes grow in every part of the country, those of the sandy plains
+ in the north being of excellent quality. All the commoner sorts of
+ fruit--apples, pears, cherries, &c.--grow everywhere, but the more
+ delicate kinds, such as figs, apricots and peaches, are confined to
+ the warmer districts. The vine flourishes as far as the 51 deg. N.,
+ but only yields good wine in the districts of the Rhine and Danube.
+ Flax is grown in the north, and hemp more particularly in the central
+ districts. Rape can be produced everywhere when the soil permits.
+ Tobacco is cultivated on the upper Rhine and in the valley of the
+ Oder. The northern plain, especially in the province of Saxony,
+ produces beet (for sugar), and hops are largely grown in Bavaria,
+ Wurttemberg, Alsace, Baden and the Prussian province of Posen.
+
+
+ Forests.
+
+ Speaking generally, northern Germany is not nearly so well wooded as
+ central and southern Germany, where indeed most of the lower mountains
+ are covered with timber, as is indicated by the frequent use of the
+ termination _wald_ affixed to the names of the mountain ranges (as
+ Schwarzwald, Thuringerwald, &c.). The "Seenplatten" are less wooded
+ than the hill country, but the eastern portion of the northern
+ lowlands is well provided with timber. A narrow strip along the shores
+ of the Baltic is covered with oaks and beeches; farther inland, and
+ especially east of the Elbe, coniferous trees are the most prevalent,
+ particularly the Scotch fir; birches are also abundant. The mountain
+ forests consist chiefly of firs, pines and larches, but contain also
+ silver firs, beeches and oaks. Chestnuts and walnuts appear on the
+ terraces of the Rhine valley and in Swabia and Franconia. The whole
+ north-west of Germany is destitute of wood, but to compensate for
+ this the people have ample supplies of fuel in the extensive stretches
+ of turf.
+
+ _Fauna._--The number of wild animals in Germany is not very great.
+ Foxes, martens, weasels, badgers and otters are to be found
+ everywhere; bears are found in the Alps, wolves are rare, but they
+ find their way sometimes from French territory to the western
+ provinces, or from Poland to Prussia and Posen. Among the rodents the
+ hamster and the field-mouse are a scourge to agriculture. Of game
+ there are the roe, stag, boar and hare; the fallow deer and the wild
+ rabbit are less common. The elk is to be found in the forests of East
+ Prussia. The feathered tribes are everywhere abundant in the fields,
+ woods and marshes. Wild geese and ducks, grouse, partridges, snipe,
+ woodcock, quails, widgeons and teal are plentiful all over the
+ country, and in recent years preserves have been largely stocked with
+ pheasants. The length of time that birds of passage remain in Germany
+ differs considerably with the different species. The stork is seen for
+ about 170 days, the house-swallow 160, the snow-goose 260, the snipe
+ 220. In northern Germany these birds arrive from twenty to thirty days
+ later than in the south.
+
+ The waters of Germany abound with fish; but the genera and species are
+ few. The carp and salmon tribes are the most abundant; after them rank
+ the pike, the eel, the shad, the roach, the perch and the lamprey. The
+ Oder and some of the tributaries of the Elbe abound in crayfish, and
+ in the stagnant lakes of East Prussia leeches are bred. In addition to
+ frogs, Germany has few varieties of Amphibia. Of serpents there are
+ only two poisonous kinds, the common viper and the adder
+ (_Kreuzotter_).
+
+_Population._--Until comparatively recent times no estimate of the
+population of Germany was precise enough to be of any value. At the
+beginning of the 19th century the country was divided into some hundred
+states, but there was no central agency for instituting an exact census
+on a uniform plan. The formation of the German Confederation in 1815
+effected but little change in this respect, and it was left to the
+different states to arrange in what manner the census should be taken.
+On the foundation, however, of the German customs union, or
+_Zollverein_, between certain German states, the necessity for accurate
+statistics became apparent and care was taken to compile trustworthy
+tables. Researches show the population of the German empire, as at
+present constituted, to have been: (1816) 24,833,396; (1855) 36,113,644;
+and (1871) 41,058,792. The following table shows the population and area
+of each of the states included in the empire for the years 1871, 1875,
+1900 and 1905:--
+
+ _Area and Population of the German States._
+
+ +-----------------------------+--------+-----------------------------------------------+-------+
+ | | Area | Population. |Density|
+ | States of the Empire. |English +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+ per |
+ | | Sq. m. | 1871. | 1875. | 1900. | 1905. | Sq. m.|
+ +-----------------------------+--------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-------+
+ | Kingdoms-- | | | | | | |
+ | Prussia |134,616 |24,691,433 |25,742,404 |34,472,509 |37,293,324 | 277.3 |
+ | Bavaria | 29,292 | 4,863,450 | 5,022,390 | 6,176,057 | 6,524,372 | 222.7 |
+ | Saxony | 5,789 | 2,556,244 | 2,760,586 | 4,202,216 | 4,508,601 | 778.8 |
+ | Wurttemberg | 7,534 | 1,818,539 | 1,881,505 | 2,169,480 | 2,302,179 | 305.5 |
+ | Grand-Duchies-- | | | | | | |
+ | Baden | 5,823 | 1,461,562 | 1,507,179 | 1,867,944 | 2,010,728 | 345.3 |
+ | Hesse | 2,966 | 852,894 | 884,218 | 1,119,893 | 1,209,175 | 407.6 |
+ | Mecklenburg-Schwerin | 5,068 | 557,897 | 553,785 | 607,770 | 625,045 | 123.3 |
+ | Saxe-Weimar | 1,397 | 286,183 | 292,933 | 362,873 | 388,095 | 277.8 |
+ | Mecklenburg-Strelitz | 1,131 | 96,982 | 95,673 | 102,602 | 103,451 | 91.5 |
+ | Oldenburg | 2,482 | 314,459 | 319,314 | 399,180 | 438,856 | 176.8 |
+ | Duchies-- | | | | | | |
+ | Brunswick | 1,418 | 311,764 | 327,493 | 464,333 | 485,958 | 342.5 |
+ | Saxe-Meiningen | 953 | 187,957 | 194,494 | 250,731 | 268,916 | 282.2 |
+ | Saxe-Altenburg | 511 | 142,122 | 145,844 | 194,914 | 206,508 | 404.1 |
+ | Saxe-Coburg-Gotha | 764 | 174,339 | 182,599 | 229,550 | 242,432 | 317.3 |
+ | Anhalt | 888 | 203,437 | 213,565 | 316,085 | 328,029 | 369.4 |
+ | Principalities-- | | | | | | |
+ | Schwartzburg-Sondershausen| 333 | 75,523 | 76,676 | 80,898 | 85,152 | 255.7 |
+ | Schwartzburg-Rudolstadt | 363 | 67,191 | 67,480 | 93,059 | 96,835 | 266.7 |
+ | Waldeck | 433 | 56,224 | 54,743 | 57,918 | 59,127 | 136.5 |
+ | Reuss-Greiz | 122 | 45,094 | 46,985 | 68,396 | 70,603 | 578.7 |
+ | Reuss-Schleiz | 319 | 89,032 | 92,375 | 139,210 | 144,584 | 453.2 |
+ | Schaumburg-Lippe | 131 | 32,059 | 33,133 | 43,132 | 44,992 | 343.4 |
+ | Lippe | 469 | 111,135 | 112,452 | 138,952 | 145,577 | 310.4 |
+ | Free Towns-- | | | | | | |
+ | Lubeck | 115 | 52,158 | 56,912 | 96,775 | 105,857 | 920.5 |
+ | Bremen | 99 | 122,402 | 142,200 | 224,882 | 263,440 |2661.0 |
+ | Hamburg | 160 | 338,974 | 388,618 | 768,349 | 874,878 |5467.9 |
+ | Imperial Territory-- | | | | | | |
+ | Alsace-Lorraine | 5,604 | 1,549,738 | 1,531,804 | 1,719,470 | 1,814,564 | 323.8 |
+ | +--------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-------+
+ | German Empire |208,780 |41,058,792 |42,727,360 |56,367,178 |60,641,278 | 290.4 |
+ +-----------------------------+--------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-------+
+
+ [Illustration: German Empire.]
+
+ The population of the empire has thus increased, since 1871, by
+ 19,582,486 or 47.6%. The increase of population during 1895-1900 was
+ greatest in Hamburg, Bremen, Lubeck, Saxony, Prussia and Baden, and
+ least in Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Waldeck. Of the total population in
+ 1900, 54.3% was urban (i.e. living in towns of 2000 inhabitants and
+ above), leaving 45.7% to be classified as rural. On the 1st of
+ December 1905, of the total population 29,884,681 were males and
+ 30,756,597 females; and it is noticeable that the male population
+ shows of late years a larger relative increase than the female, the
+ male population having in five years increased by 2,147,434 and the
+ female by only 2,126,666. The greater increase in the male population
+ is attributable to diminished emigration and to the large increase in
+ immigrants, who are mostly males. In 1905, 485,906 marriages were
+ contracted in Germany, being at the rate of 8.0 per thousand
+ inhabitants. In the same year the total number of births was
+ 2,048,453. Of these, 61,300 were stillborn and 174,494 illegitimate,
+ being at the rate, respectively, of 3% and 8.5% of the total.
+ Illegitimacy is highest in Bavaria (about 15%), Berlin (14%), and over
+ 12% in Saxony, Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Saxe-Meiningen. It is lowest
+ in the Rhine Province and Westphalia (3.9 and 2.6 respectively).
+ Divorce is steadily on the increase, being in 1904, 11.1 per 10,000
+ marriages, as against 8.1, 8.1, 9.3 and 10.1 for the four preceding
+ years. The average deaths for the years 1901-1905 amounted to
+ 1,227,903; the rate was thus 20.2 per thousand inhabitants, but the
+ death-rate has materially decreased, the total number of deaths in
+ 1907 standing at 1,178,349; the births for the same year were
+ 2,060,974. In connexion with suicides, it is interesting to observe
+ that the highest rates prevail in some of the smaller and more
+ prosperous states of the empire--for example, in Saxe-Weimar,
+ Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and Saxe-Altenburg (on a three years' average of
+ figures), while the Roman Catholic country Bavaria, and the
+ impoverished Prussian province of Posen show the most favourable
+ statistics. For Prussia the rate is 20, and for Saxony it is as high
+ as 31 per 100,000 inhabitants. The large cities, notably Berlin,
+ Hamburg, Breslau and Dresden, show, however, relatively the largest
+ proportion.
+
+ In 1900 the German-speaking population of the empire amounted to
+ 51,883,131. Of the inhabitants speaking other languages there were:
+ Polish, 3,086,489; French (mostly in Lorraine), 211,679; Masurian,
+ 142,049; Danish, 141,061; Lithuanian, 106,305; Cassubian, 100,213;
+ Wendish, 93,032; Dutch, 80,361; Italian, 65,961; Moravian, 64,382;
+ Czech, 43,016; Frisian, 20,677; English, 20,217; Walloon, 11,841. In
+ 1905 there were resident within the empire 1,028,560 subjects of
+ foreign states, as compared with 778,698 in 1900. Of these 17,293 were
+ subjects of Great Britain and Ireland, 17,184 of the United States of
+ America and 20,584 of France. The bulk of the other foreigners
+ residing in the country belonged to countries lying contiguous, such
+ as Austria, which claimed nearly the half, Russia and Italy.
+
+ _Languages._--The German-speaking nations in their various branches
+ and dialects, if we include the Dutch and the Walloons, extend in a
+ compact mass along the shores of the Baltic and of the North Sea, from
+ Memel in the east to a point between Gravelines and Calais near the
+ Straits of Dover. On this northern line the Germans come in contact
+ with the Danes who inhabit the northern parts of Schleswig within the
+ limits of the German empire. A line from Flensburg south-westward to
+ Joldelund and thence northwestward to Hoyer will nearly give the
+ boundary between the two idioms.[2] The German-French frontier
+ traverses Belgium from west to east, touching the towns of St Omer,
+ Courtrai and Maastricht. Near Eupen, south of Aix-la-Chapelle, it
+ turns southward, and near Arlon south-east as far as the crest of the
+ Vosges mountains, which it follows up to Belfort, traversing there the
+ watershed of the Rhine and the Doubs. In the Swiss territory the line
+ of demarcation passes through Bienne, Fribourg, Saanen, Leuk and Monte
+ Rosa. In the south the Germans come into contact with Rhaeto-Romans
+ and Italians, the former inhabiting the valley of the Vorder-Rhein and
+ the Engadine, while the latter have settled on the southern slopes of
+ the Alps, and are continually advancing up the valley of the Adige.
+ Carinthia and Styria are inhabited by German people, except the valley
+ of the Drave towards Klagenfurt. Their eastern neighbours there are
+ first the Magyars, then the northern Slavs and the Poles. The whole
+ eastern frontier is very much broken, and cannot be described in a few
+ words. Besides detached German colonies in Hungary proper, there is a
+ considerable and compact German (Saxon) population in Transylvania.
+ The river March is the frontier north of the Danube from Pressburg as
+ far as Brunn, to the north of which the German regions begin near
+ Olmutz, the interior of Bohemia and Moravia being occupied by Czechs
+ and Moravians. In these countries the Slav language has been steadily
+ superseding the German. In the Prussian provinces of Silesia and Posen
+ the eastern parts are mixed territories, the German language
+ progressing very slowly among the Poles. In Bromberg and Thorn, in the
+ valley of the Vistula, German is prevalent. In West Prussia some parts
+ of the interior, and in East Prussia a small region along the Russian
+ frontier, are occupied by Poles (Cassubians in West Prussia, Masurians
+ in East Prussia). The total number of German-speaking people, within
+ the boundaries wherein they constitute the compact mass of the
+ population, may be estimated, if the Dutch and Walloons be included,
+ at 65 millions.
+
+ The geographical limits of the German language thus do not quite
+ coincide with the German frontiers. The empire contains about 3-1/3
+ millions of persons who do not make use of German in everyday life,
+ not counting the resident foreigners.
+
+ Apart from the foreigners above mentioned, German subjects speaking a
+ tongue other than German are found only in Prussia, Saxony and
+ Alsace-Lorraine. The following table shows roughly the distribution of
+ German-speaking people in the world outside the German empire:--
+
+ Austria-Hungary 12,000,000 | Other European
+ Netherlands (Dutch) 5,200,000 | Countries 2,300,000
+ Belgium (Walloon) 4,000,000 | America 13,000,000
+ Luxemburg 200,000 | Asia 100,000
+ Switzerland 2,300,000 | Africa 600,000
+ France 500,000 | Australia 150,000
+
+ According to the census of the 1st of December 1900 there were
+ 51,634,757 persons speaking commonly one language and 248,374 speaking
+ two languages. In the kingdom of Saxony, according to the census of
+ 1900, there were 48,000 Wends, mostly in Lusatia. With respect to
+ Alsace-Lorraine, detailed estimates (but no census) gave the number of
+ French in the territory of Lorraine at about 170,000, and in that of
+ Alsace at about 46,000.
+
+ The Poles have increased very much, owing to a greater surplus of
+ births than in the case of the German people in the eastern provinces
+ of Prussia, to immigration from Russia, and to the Polonization of
+ many Germans through clerical and other influences (see _History_).
+ The Poles are in the majority in upper Silesia (Government district of
+ Oppeln; 55%) and the province of Posen (60%). They are numerous in
+ West Prussia (34%) and East Prussia (14%).
+
+ The Wends are decreasing in number, as are also the Lithuanians on the
+ eastern border of East Prussia, Czechs are only found in Silesia on
+ the confines of Bohemia.
+
+ Russians flocked to Germany in thousands after the Russo-Japanese War
+ and the insurrections in Russia, and the figures given for 1900 had
+ been doubled in 1907. Males preponderate among the various
+ nationalities, with the exception of the British, the larger
+ proportion of whom are females either in domestic service or engaged
+ in tuition.
+
+ _Chief Towns._--According to the results of the census of the 1st of
+ December 1905 there were within the empire 41 towns with populations
+ exceeding 100,000, viz.:--
+
+ +--------------------+----------------+-----------+
+ | | State. |Population.|
+ +--------------------+----------------+-----------+
+ | Berlin | Prussia |2,040,148 |
+ | Hamburg | Hamburg | 802,793 |
+ | Munich | Bavaria | 538,393 |
+ | Dresden | Saxony | 516,996 |
+ | Leipzig | " | 502,570 |
+ | Breslau | Prussia | 470,751 |
+ | Cologne | " | 428,503 |
+ | Frankfort-on-Main | " | 334,951 |
+ | Nuremberg | Bavaria | 294,344 |
+ | Dusseldorf | Prussia | 253,099 |
+ | Hanover | " | 250,032 |
+ | Stuttgart | Wurttemberg | 249,443 |
+ | Chemnitz | Saxony | 244,405 |
+ | Magdeburg | Prussia | 240,661 |
+ | Charlottenburg | " | 239,512 |
+ | Essen | " | 231,396 |
+ | Stettin | " | 224,078 |
+ | Konigsberg | " | 219,862 |
+ | Bremen | Bremen | 214,953 |
+ | Duisburg | Prussia | 192,227 |
+ | Dortmund | " | 175,575 |
+ | Halle | " | 169,899 |
+ | Altona | " | 168,301 |
+ | Strassburg | Alsace-Lorraine| 167,342 |
+ | Kiel | Prussia | 163,710 |
+ | Elberfeld | " | 162,682 |
+ | Mannheim | Baden | 162,607 |
+ | Danzig | Prussia | 159,685 |
+ | Barmen | " | 156,148 |
+ | Rixdorf | " | 153,650 |
+ | Gelsenkirchen | " | 147,037 |
+ | Aix-la-Chapelle | " | 143,906 |
+ | Schoneberg | " | 140,992 |
+ | Brunswick | Brunswick | 136,423 |
+ | Posen | Prussia | 137,067 |
+ | Cassel | " | 120,446 |
+ | Bochum | " | 118,455 |
+ | Karlsruhe | Baden | 111,200 |
+ | Crefeld | Prussia | 110,347 |
+ | Plauen | Saxony | 105,182 |
+ | Wiesbaden | Prussia | 100,953 |
+ +--------------------+----------------+-----------+
+
+ _Density of Population._--In respect of density of population,
+ Germany with (1900) 269.9 and (1905) 290.4 inhabitants to the
+ square mile is exceeded in Europe only by Belgium, Holland and
+ England. Apart from the free cities, Hamburg, Bremen and
+ Lubeck, the kingdom of Saxony is the most, and Mecklenburg-Strelitz
+ the least, closely peopled state of the empire. The most
+ thinly populated districts are found, not as might be expected in
+ the mountain regions, but in some parts of the plains. Leaving out
+ of account the small centres, Germany may be roughly divided into
+ two thinly and two densely populated parts. In the former division
+ has to be classed all the North German plain. There it is only in the
+ valleys of the larger navigable rivers and on the southern border
+ of the plain that the density exceeds 200 inhabitants per square mile.
+ In some places, indeed, it is far greater, e.g. at the mouths of the
+ Elbe and the Weser, in East Holstein, in the delta of the Memel and
+ the environs of Hamburg. This region is bordered on the south by
+ a densely peopled district, the northern boundary of which may be
+ defined by a line from Coburg via Cassel to Munster, for in this part
+ there are not only very fertile districts, such as the _Goldene Aue_ in
+ Thuringia, but also centres of industry. The population is thickest
+ in upper Silesia around Beuthen (coal-fields), around Ratibor, Neisse
+ and Waldenburg (coal-fields), around Zittau (kingdom of Saxony),
+ in the Elbe valley around Dresden, in the districts of Zwickau and
+ Leipzig as far as the Saale, on the northern slopes of the Harz and
+ around Bielefeld in Westphalia. In all these the density exceeds
+ 400 inhabitants to the square mile, and in the case of Saxony rises
+ to 750. The third division of Germany comprises the basin of the
+ Danube and Franconia, where around Nuremberg, Bamberg and
+ Wurzburg the population is thickly clustered. The fourth division
+ embraces the valleys of the upper Rhine and Neckar and the district
+ of Dusseldorf on the lower Rhine. In this last the proportion exceeds
+ 1200 inhabitants to the square mile.
+
+ _Emigration._--There have been great oscillations in the actual
+ emigration by sea. It first exceeded 100,000 soon after the Franco-German
+ War (1872, 126,000), and this occurred again in the years
+ 1880 to 1892. Germany lost during these thirteen years more than
+ 1,700,000 inhabitants by emigration. The total number of those
+ who sailed for the United States from 1820 to 1900 may be estimated
+ at more than 4,500,000. The number of German emigrants to
+ Brazil between 1870 and 1900 was about 52,000. The greater
+ number of the more recent emigrants was from the agricultural
+ provinces of northern Germany--West Prussia, Posen, Pomerania,
+ Mecklenburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Hanover, and sometimes the
+ emigration reached 1% of the total population of these provinces.
+ In subsequent years the emigration of native Germans greatly
+ decreased and, in 1905, amounted only to 28,075. But to this
+ number must be added 284,787 foreigners who in that year were
+ shipped from German ports (notably Hamburg and Bremen) to
+ distant parts. Of the above given numbers of purely German
+ emigrants 26,007 sailed for the United States of America; 243 to
+ Canada; 333 to Brazil; 674 to the Argentine Republic; 7 to other
+ parts of America; 57 to Africa; and 84 to Australia.
+
+_Agriculture._--Despite the enormous development of industries and
+commerce, agriculture and cattle-rearing still represent in Germany a
+considerable portion of its economic wealth. Almost two-thirds of the
+soil is occupied by arable land, pastures and meadows, and of the whole
+area, in 1900, 91% was classed as productive. Of the total area 47.67%
+was occupied by land under tillage, 0.89% by gardens, 11.02% by
+meadow-land, 5.01% by pastures, and 0.25% by vineyards. The largest
+estates are found in the Prussian provinces of Pomerania, Posen and
+Saxony, and in East and West Prussia, while in the Prussian Rhine
+province, in Baden and Wurttemberg small farms are the rule.
+
+ The same kinds of cereal crops are cultivated in all parts of the
+ empire, but in the south and west wheat is predominant, and in the
+ north and east rye, oats and barley. To these in some districts are
+ added spelt, buckwheat, millet, rice-wheat, lesser spelt and maize.
+ In general the soil is remarkably well cultivated. The three years'
+ rotation formerly in use, where autumn and spring-sown grain and
+ fallow succeeded each other, has now been abandoned, except in
+ some districts, where the system has been modified and improved.
+ In south Germany the so-called _Fruchtwechsel_ is practised, the fields
+ being sown with grain crops every second year, and with pease or
+ beans, grasses, potatoes, turnips, &c., in the intermediate years.
+ In north Germany the mixed _Koppelwirthschaft_ is the rule, by which
+ system, after several years of grain crops, the ground is for two or
+ three seasons in pasture.
+
+ Taking the average of the six years 1900-1905, the crop of wheat
+ amounted to 3,550,033 tons (metric), rye to 9,296,616 tons, barley to
+ 3,102,883 tons, and oats to 7,160,883 tons. But, in spite of this
+ considerable yield in cereals, Germany cannot cover her home
+ consumption, and imported on the average of the six years 1900-1905
+ about 4-1/2 million tons of cereals to supply the deficiency. The
+ potato is largely cultivated, not merely for food, but for
+ distillation into spirits. This manufacture is prosecuted especially
+ in eastern Germany. The number of distilleries throughout the German
+ empire was, in 1905-1906, 68,405. The common beet (_Beta vulgaris_)
+ is largely grown in some districts for the production of sugar, which
+ has greatly increased of recent years. There are two centres of the
+ beet sugar production: Magdeburg for the districts Prussian Saxony,
+ Hanover, Brunswick, Anhalt and Thuringia, and Frankfort-on-Oder at the
+ centre of the group Silesia, Brandenburg and Pomerania. Flax and hemp
+ are cultivated, though not so much as formerly, for manufacture into
+ linen and canvas, and also rape seed for the production of oil. The
+ home supply of the former no longer suffices for the native demand.
+ The cultivation of hops is in a very thriving condition in the
+ southern states of Germany. The soil occupied by hops was estimated in
+ 1905 at 98,000 acres--a larger area than in Great Britain, which had
+ in the same year about 48,000 acres. The total production of hops was
+ 29,000 tons in 1905, and of this over 25,000 were grown in Bavaria,
+ Wurttemberg, Baden and Alsace-Lorraine. Almost the whole yield in hops
+ is consumed in the country by the great breweries.
+
+ Tobacco forms a most productive and profitable object of culture in
+ many districts. The total extent under this crop in 1905 was about
+ 35,000 acres, of which 45% was in Baden, 12% in Bavaria, 30% in
+ Prussia, and the rest in Alsace and Hesse-Darmstadt. In the north the
+ plant is cultivated principally in Pomerania, Brandenburg and East and
+ West Prussia. Of late years the production has somewhat diminished,
+ owing to the extensive tobacco manufacturing industries of Bremen and
+ Hamburg, which import almost exclusively foreign leaves.
+
+ Ulm, Nuremberg, Quedlinburg, Erfurt, Strassburg and Guben are famed
+ for their vegetables and garden seeds. Berlin is noted for its flower
+ nurseries, the Rhine valley, Wurttemberg and the Elbe valley below
+ Dresden for fruit, and Frankfort-on-main for cider.
+
+
+ Vine.
+
+ The culture of the vine is almost confined to southern and western
+ Germany, and especially to the Rhine district. The northern limits of
+ its growth extend from Bonn in a north-easterly direction through
+ Cassel to the southern foot of the Harz, crossing 52 deg. N. on the
+ Elbe, running then east some miles to the north of that parallel, and
+ finally turning sharply towards the south-west on the Warthe. In the
+ valley of the Saale and Elbe (near Dresden), and in lower Silesia
+ (between Guben and Grunberg), the number of vineyards is small, and
+ the wines of inferior quality; but along the Rhine from Basel to
+ Coblenz, in Alsace, Baden, the Palatinate and Hesse, and above all in
+ the province of Nassau, the lower slopes of the hills are literally
+ covered with vines. Here are produced the celebrated Rudesheimer,
+ Hochheimer and Johannisberger. The vines of the lower Main,
+ particularly those of Wurzburg, are the best kinds; those of the upper
+ Main and the valley of the Neckar are rather inferior. The Moselle
+ wines are lighter and more acid than those of the Rhine. The total
+ amount produced in Germany is estimated at 1000 million gallons, of a
+ value of L4,000,000; Alsace-Lorraine turning out 400 millions; Baden,
+ 175; Bavaria, Wurttemberg and Hesse together, 300; while the
+ remainder, which though small in quantity is in quality the best, is
+ produced by Prussia.
+
+
+ Live stock.
+
+ The cultivation of grazing lands in Germany has been greatly improved
+ in recent times and is in a highly prosperous condition. The provinces
+ of Schleswig-Holstein, Pomerania, Hanover (especially the marsh-lands
+ near the sea) and the grand-duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin are
+ particularly remarkable in this respect. The best meadow-lands of
+ Bavaria are in the province of Franconia and in the outer range of the
+ Alps, and those of Saxony in the Erzgebirge. Wurttemberg, Hesse and
+ Thuringia also yield cattle of excellent quality. These large
+ cattle-rearing centres not only supply the home markets but export
+ live stock in considerable quantities to England and France. Butter is
+ also largely exported to England from the North Sea districts and from
+ Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg. The breeding of horses has
+ attained a great perfection. The main centre is in East and West
+ Prussia, then follow the marsh districts on the Elbe and Weser, some
+ parts of Westphalia, Oldenburg, Lippe, Saxony and upper Silesia, lower
+ Bavaria and Alsace-Lorraine. Of the stud farms Trakehnen in East
+ Prussia and Graditz in the Prussian province of Saxony enjoy a
+ European reputation. The aggregate number of sheep has shown a
+ considerable falling off, and the rearing of them is mostly carried on
+ only on large estates, the number showing only 9,692,501 in 1900, and
+ 7,907,200 in 1904, as against 28,000,000 in 1860. As a rule,
+ sheep-farming is resorted to where the soil is of inferior quality and
+ unsuitable for tillage and the breeding of cattle. Far more attention
+ is accordingly given to sheep-farming in northern and north-eastern
+ Germany than in Schleswig-Holstein, Westphalia, the Rhineland and
+ south Germany. The native demand for wool is not covered by the home
+ production, and in this article the export from the United Kingdom to
+ Germany is steadily rising, having amounted in 1905 to a value of
+ L1,691,035, as against L742,632 in 1900. The largest stock of pigs is
+ in central Germany and Saxony, in Westphalia, on the lower Rhine, in
+ Lorraine and Hesse. Central Germany (especially Gotha and Brunswick)
+ exports sausages and hams largely, as well as Westphalia, but here
+ again considerable importation takes place from other countries. Goats
+ are found everywhere, but especially in the hilly districts. Poultry
+ farming is a considerable industry, the geese of Pomerania and the
+ fowls of Thuringia and Lorraine being in especial favour. Bee-keeping
+ is of considerable importance, particularly in north Germany and
+ Silesia.
+
+ On the whole, despite the prosperous condition of the German
+ live-stock farming, the consumption of meat exceeds the amount
+ rendered available by home production, and prices can only be kept
+ down by a steady increase in the imports from abroad.
+
+ _Fisheries._--The German fisheries, long of little importance, have
+ been carefully fostered within recent years. The deep-sea fishing in
+ the North Sea, thanks to the exertions of the German fishing league
+ (_Deutscher Fischereiverein_) and to government support, is extremely
+ active. Trawlers are extensively employed, and steamers bring the
+ catches directly to the large fish markets at Geestemunde and Altona,
+ whence facilities are afforded by the railways for the rapid transport
+ of fish to Berlin and other centres. The fish mostly caught are cod,
+ haddock and herrings, while Heligoland yields lobsters, and the
+ islands of Fohr, Amrum and Sylt oysters of good quality. The German
+ North Sea fishing fleet numbered in 1905 618 boats, with an aggregate
+ crew of 5441 hands. Equally well developed are the Baltic fisheries,
+ the chief ports engaged in which are Danzig, Eckernforde, Kolberg and
+ Travemunde. The principal catch is haddock and herrings. The catch of
+ the North Sea and Baltic fisheries in 1906 was valued at over
+ L700,000, exclusive of herrings for salting. The fisheries do not,
+ however, supply the demand for fish, and fresh, salt and dried fish is
+ imported largely in excess of the home yield.
+
+ _Mines and Minerals._--Germany abounds in minerals, and the
+ extraordinary industrial development of the country since 1870 is
+ largely due to its mineral wealth. Having left France much behind in
+ this respect, it now rivals Great Britain and the United States.
+
+ Germany produces more silver than any other European state, and the
+ quantity is annually increasing. It is extracted from the ores in the
+ mines of Freiburg (Saxony), the Harz Mountains, upper Silesia,
+ Merseburg, Aix-la-Chapelle, Wiesbaden and Arnsberg. Gold is found in
+ the sand of the rivers Isar, Inn and Rhine, and also, to a limited
+ extent, on the Harz. The quantity yielded in 1905 was, of silver,
+ about 400 tons of a value of L1,600,000, and gold, about 4 tons,
+ valued at about L548,000.
+
+ Lead is produced in considerable quantities in upper Silesia, the Harz
+ Mountains, in the Prussian province of Nassau, in the Saxon Erzgebirge
+ and in the Sauerland. The yield in 1905 amounted to about 153,000
+ tons; of which 20,000 tons were exported.
+
+ Copper is found principally in the Mansfeld district of the Prussian
+ province of Saxony and near Arnsberg in the Sauerland, the ore
+ yielding 31,713 tons in 1905, of which 5000 tons were exported.
+
+ About 90% of the zinc produced in Europe is yielded by Belgium and
+ Germany. It is mostly found in upper Silesia, around Beuthen, and in
+ the districts of Wiesbaden and Aix-la-Chapelle. In 1905 no less than
+ 198,000 tons of block zinc were produced, of which 16,500 tons were
+ exported.
+
+ Of other minerals (with the exceptions of coal, iron and salt treated
+ below) nickel and antimony are found in the upper Harz; cobalt in the
+ hilly districts of Hesse and the Saxon Erzgebirge; arsenic in the
+ Riesengebirge; quicksilver in the Sauerland and in the spurs of the
+ Saarbrucken coal hills; graphite in Bavaria; porcelain clay in Saxony
+ and Silesia; amber along the whole Baltic coast; and lime and gypsum
+ in almost all parts.
+
+
+ Coal.
+
+ Coal-mining appears to have been first practised in the 14th century
+ at Zwickau (Saxony) and on the Ruhr. There are six large coal-fields,
+ occupying an area of about 3600 sq. m., of which the most important
+ occupies the basin of the Ruhr, its extent being estimated at 2800 sq.
+ m. Here there are more than 60 beds, of a total thickness of 150 to
+ 200 ft. of coal; and the amount in the pits has been estimated at
+ 45,000 millions of tons. Smaller fields are found near Osnabruck,
+ Ibbenburen and Minden, and a larger one near Aix-la-Chapelle. The Saar
+ coal-field, within the area enclosed by the rivers Saar, Nahe and
+ Blies (460 sq. m.), is of great importance. The thickness of 80 beds
+ amounts to 250 ft., and the total mass of coal is estimated at 45,400
+ million tons. The greater part of the basin belongs to Prussia, the
+ rest to Lorraine. A still larger field exists in the upper Silesian
+ basin, on the borderland between Austria and Poland, containing about
+ 50,000 million tons. Beuthen is the chief centre. The Silesian
+ coal-fields have a second centre in Waldenburg, east of the
+ Riesengebirge. The Saxon coal-fields stretch eastwards for some miles
+ from Zwickau. Deposits of less consequence are found in upper Bavaria,
+ upper Franconia, Baden, the Harz and elsewhere.
+
+ The following table shows the rapidly increasing development of the
+ coal production. That of lignite is added, the provinces of Saxony and
+ Brandenburg being rich in this product:--
+
+ _Production of Coal and Lignite._
+
+ +------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------+
+ | | Coal. | Lignite. |
+ | Year.+-----------+----------+---------+-----------+----------+--------+
+ | |Quantities.| Value. | Hands. |Quantities.| Value. | Hands. |
+ +------+-----------+----------+---------+-----------+----------+--------+
+ | |Mill. Tons.|Mill. Mks.| |Mill. Tons.|Mill. Mks.| |
+ | 1871 | 29.4 | 218.4 | .. | 8.5 | 26.2 | |
+ | 1881 | 48.7 | 252.3 | 180,000 | 12.8 | 38.1 | 25,600 |
+ | 1891 | 73.7 | 589.5 | 283,000 | 20.5 | 54.2 | 35,700 |
+ | 1899 | 101.6 | 789.6 | 379,000 | 34.2 | 78.4 | 44,700 |
+ | 1900 | 109.3 | 966.1 | 414,000 | 40.5 | 98.5 | 50,900 |
+ | 1905 | 121.2 | 1049.9 | 490,000 | 52.5 | 122.2 | 52,800 |
+ +------+-----------+----------+---------+-----------+----------+--------+
+
+ This production permits a considerable export of coal to the west and
+ south of the empire, but the distance from the coal-fields to the
+ German coast is such that the import of British coal cannot yet be
+ dispensed with (1905, over 7,000,000 tons). Besides this, from
+ 7,000,000 to 8,000,000 tons of lignite come annually from Bohemia. In
+ north Germany peat is also of importance as a fuel; the area of the
+ peat moors in Prussia is estimated at 8000 sq. m., of which 2000 are
+ in the north of Hanover.
+
+ The iron-fields of Germany fall into three main groups: those of the
+ lower Rhine and Westphalia, of which Dortmund and Dusseldorf are the
+ centres; those of Lorraine and the Saar; and those of upper Silesia.
+ The output of the ore has enormously increased of recent years, and
+ the production of pig iron, as given for 1905, amounted to 10,875,000
+ tons of a value of L28,900,000.
+
+ Germany possesses abundant salt deposits. The actual production not
+ only covers the home consumption, but also allows a yearly increasing
+ exportation, especially to Russia, Austria and Scandinavia. The
+ provinces of Saxony and Hanover, with Thuringia and Anhalt, produce
+ half the whole amount. A large salt-work is found at Strzalkowo
+ (Posen), and smaller ones near Dortmund, Lippstadt and Minden
+ (Westphalia). In south Germany salt abounds most in Wurttemberg (Hall,
+ Heilbronn, Rottweil); the principal Bavarian works are at the foot of
+ the Alps near Freilassing and Rosenheim. Hesse and Baden, Lorraine and
+ the upper Palatinate have also salt-works. The total yield of mined
+ salt amounted in 1905 to 6,209,000 tons, including 1,165,000 tons of
+ rock salt. The production has made great advance, having in 1850 been
+ only 5 million cwts.
+
+_Manufactures._--In no other country of the world has the manufacturing
+industry made such rapid strides within recent years as in Germany. This
+extraordinary development of industrial energy embraces practically all
+classes of manufactured articles. In a general way the chief
+manufactures may be geographically distributed as follows. Prussia,
+Alsace-Lorraine, Bavaria and Saxony are the chief seats of the iron
+manufacture. Steel is produced in Rhenish Prussia. Saxony is predominant
+in the production of textiles, though Silesia and Westphalia manufacture
+linen. Cotton goods are largely produced in Baden, Bavaria,
+Alsace-Lorraine and Wurttemberg, woollens and worsteds in Saxony and the
+Rhine province, silk in Rhenish Prussia (Elberfeld), Alsace and Baden.
+Glass and porcelain are largely produced in Bavaria; lace in Saxony;
+tobacco in Bremen and Hamburg; chemicals in the Prussian province of
+Saxony; watches in Saxony (Glashutte) and Nuremberg; toys in Bavaria;
+gold and silver filagree in Berlin and Aschaffenburg; and beer in
+Bavaria and Prussia.
+
+
+ Iron industry.
+
+ It is perhaps more in respect of its iron industry than of its other
+ manufactures that Germany has attained a leading position in the
+ markets of the world. Its chief centres are in Westphalia and the
+ Rhine province (_auf roter Erde_), in upper Silesia, in
+ Alsace-Lorraine and in Saxony. Of the total production of pig iron in
+ 1905 amounting to over 10,000,000 tons, more than the half was
+ produced in the Rhineland and Westphalia. Huge blast furnaces are in
+ constant activity, and the output of rolled iron and steel is
+ constantly increasing. In the latter the greatest advance has been
+ made. The greater part of it is produced at or around Essen, where are
+ the famous Krupp works, and Bochum. Many states have been for a
+ considerable time supplied by Krupp with steel guns and battleship
+ plates. The export of steel (railway) rails and bridges from this part
+ is steadily on the increase.
+
+ Hardware also, the production of which is centred in Solingen,
+ Heilbronn, Esslingen, &c., is largely exported. Germany stands second
+ to Great Britain in the manufacture of machines and engines. There are
+ in many large cities of north Germany extensive establishments for
+ this purpose, but the industry is not limited to the large cities. In
+ agricultural machinery Germany is a serious competitor with England.
+ The locomotives and wagons for the German railways are almost
+ exclusively built in Germany; and Russia, as well as Austria, receives
+ large supplies of railway plant from German works. In shipbuilding,
+ likewise, Germany is practically independent, yards having been
+ established for the construction of the largest vessels.
+
+
+ Cotton and textiles.
+
+ Before 1871 the production of cotton fabrics in France exceeded that
+ in Germany, but as the cotton manufacture is pursued largely in
+ Alsace, the balance is now against the former country. In 1905 there
+ were about 9,000,000 spindles in Germany. The export of the goods
+ manufactured amounted in this year to an estimated value of
+ L19,600,000. Cotton spinning and weaving are not confined to one
+ district, but are prosecuted in upper Alsace (Mulhausen, Gebweiler,
+ Colmar), in Saxony (Zwickau, Chemnitz, Annaberg), in Silesia (Breslau,
+ Liegnitz), in the Rhine province (Dusseldorf, Munster, Cologne), in
+ Erfurt and Hanover, in Wurttemberg (Reutlingen, Cannstatt), in Baden,
+ Bavaria (Augsburg, Bamberg, Bayreuth) and in the Palatinate.
+
+ Although Germany produces wool, flax and hemp, the home production of
+ these materials is not sufficient to meet the demand of manufactures,
+ and large quantities of them have to be imported. In 1895 almost a
+ million persons (half of them women) were employed in this branch of
+ industry, and in 1897 the value of the cloth, buckskin and flannel
+ manufacture was estimated at L18,000,000. The chief seats of this
+ manufacture are the Rhenish districts of Aix-la-Chapelle, Duren, Eupen
+ and Lennep, Brandenburg, Saxony, Silesia and lower Lusatia, the chief
+ centres in this group being Berlin, Cottbus, Spremberg, Sagan and
+ Sommerfeld.
+
+ The manufacture of woollen and half-woollen dress materials centres
+ mainly in Saxony, Silesia, the Rhine province and in Alsace. Furniture
+ covers, table covers and plush are made in Elberfeld and Chemnitz, in
+ Westphalia and the Rhine province (notably in Elberfeld and Barmen);
+ shawls in Berlin and the Bavarian Vogtland; carpets in Berlin, Barmen
+ and Silesia. In the town of Schmiedeberg in the last district, as also
+ in Cottbus (Lusatia), oriental patterns are successfully imitated. The
+ chief seats of the stocking manufacture are Chemnitz and Zwickau in
+ Saxony, and Apolda in Thuringia. The export of woollen goods from
+ Germany in 1905 amounted to a value of L13,000,000.
+
+ Although linen was formerly one of her most important articles of
+ manufacture, Germany is now left far behind in this industry by Great
+ Britain, France and Austria-Hungary. This branch of textile
+ manufacture has its principal centres in Silesia, Westphalia, Saxony
+ and Wurttemberg, while Hirschberg in Silesia, Bielefeld in Westphalia
+ and Zittau in Saxony are noted for the excellence of their
+ productions. The goods manufactured, now no longer, as formerly,
+ coarse in texture, vie with the finer and more delicate fabrics of
+ Belfast. In the textile industry for flax and hemp there were, in
+ 1905, 276,000 fine spindles, 22,300 hand-looms and 17,600 power-looms
+ in operation, and, in 1905, linen and jute materials were exported of
+ an estimated value of over L2,000,000. The jute manufacture, the
+ principal centres of which are Berlin, Bonn, Brunswick and Hamburg,
+ has of late attained considerable dimensions.
+
+ Raw silk can scarcely be reckoned among the products of the empire,
+ and the annual demand has thus to be provided for by importation. The
+ main centre of the silk industry is Crefeld and its neighbourhood;
+ then come Elberfeld and Barmen, Aix-la-Chapelle, as well as Berlin,
+ Bielefeld, Chemnitz, Stuttgart and the district around Mulhausen in
+ Alsace.
+
+
+ Paper.
+
+ The manufacture of paper is prosecuted almost everywhere in the
+ empire. There were 1020 mills in operation in 1895, and the exports in
+ 1905 amounted to more than L3,700,000 sterling, as against imports of
+ a value of over L700,000. The manufacture is carried on to the largest
+ extent in the Rhine province, in Saxony and in Silesia. Wall papers
+ are produced chiefly in Rhenish Prussia, Berlin and Hamburg; the finer
+ sorts of letter-paper in Berlin, Leipzig and Nuremberg; and
+ printing-paper (especially for books) in Leipzig, Berlin and
+ Frankfort-on-Main.
+
+
+ Leather.
+
+ The chief seat of the leather industry is Hesse-Darmstadt, in which
+ Mainz and Worms produce excellent material. In Prussia large factories
+ are in operation in the Rhine province, in Westphalia and Silesia
+ (Brieg). Boot and shoe manufactures are carried on everywhere; but the
+ best goods are produced by Mainz and Pirmasens. Gloves for export are
+ extensively made in Wurttemberg, and Offenbach and Aschaffenburg are
+ renowned for fancy leather wares, such as purses, satchels and the
+ like.
+
+ Berlin and Mainz are celebrated for the manufacture of furniture;
+ Bavaria for toys; the Black Forest for clocks; Nuremberg for pencils;
+ Berlin and Frankfort-on-Main for various perfumes; and Cologne for the
+ famous eau-de-Cologne.
+
+
+ Sugar.
+
+ The beetroot sugar manufacture is very considerable. It centres mainly
+ in the Prussian province of Saxony, where Magdeburg is the chief
+ market for the whole of Germany, in Anhalt, Brunswick and Silesia. The
+ number of factories was, in 1905, 376, and the amount of raw sugar and
+ molasses produced amounted to 2,643,531 metric tons, and of refined
+ sugar 1,711,063 tons.
+
+
+ Beer.
+
+ Beer is produced throughout the whole of Germany. The production is
+ relatively greatest in Bavaria. The _Brausteuergebiet_ (beer excise
+ district) embraces all the states forming the Zollverein, with the
+ exception of Bavaria, Wurttemberg, Baden and Alsace-Lorraine, in which
+ countries the excise duties are separately collected. The total number
+ of breweries in the beer excise district was, in 1905-1906, 5995,
+ which produced 1017 million gallons; in Bavaria nearly 6000 breweries
+ with 392 million gallons; in Baden over 700 breweries with 68 million
+ gallons; in Wurttemberg over 5000 breweries with 87 million gallons;
+ and in Alsace-Lorraine 95 breweries with about 29 million gallons. The
+ amount brewed per head of the population amounted, in 1905, roughly to
+ 160 imperial pints in the excise district; to 450 in Bavaria; 280 in
+ Wurttemberg; 260 in Baden; and 122 in Alsace-Lorraine. It may be
+ remarked that the beer brewed in Bavaria is generally of darker colour
+ than that produced in other states, and extra strong brews are
+ exported largely into the beer excise district and abroad.
+
+_Commerce._--The rapid development of German trade dates from the
+_Zollverein_ (customs union), under the special rules and regulations of
+which it is administered. The Zollverein emanates from a convention
+originally entered into, in 1828, between Prussia and Hesse, which,
+subsequently joined by the Bavarian customs-league, by the kingdom of
+Saxony and the Thuringian states, came into operation, as regards the
+countries concerned, on the 1st of January 1834. With progressive
+territorial extensions during the ensuing fifty years, and embracing the
+grand-duchy of Luxemburg, it had in 1871, when the German empire was
+founded, an area of about 209,281 sq. m., with a population of
+40,678,000. The last important addition was in October 1888, when
+Hamburg and Bremen were incorporated. Included within it, besides the
+grand-duchy of Luxemburg, are the Austrian communes of Jungholz and
+Mittelberg; while, outside, lie the little free-port territories of
+Hamburg, Cuxhaven, Bremerhaven and Geestemunde, Heligoland, and small
+portions of the districts of Constance and Waldshut, lying on the Baden
+Swiss frontier. Down to 1879 Germany was, in general, a free-trade
+country. In this year, however, a rigid protective system was introduced
+by the _Zolltarifgesetz_, since modified by the commercial treaties
+between Germany and Austria-Hungary, Italy, Switzerland and Belgium, of
+the 1st of February 1892, and by a customs tariff law of the 25th of
+December 1902. The foreign commercial relations of Germany were again
+altered by the general and conventional customs tariff, which came into
+force on the 1st of March 1906. The Zolltarifgesetz of the 15th of July
+1879, while restricting the former free import, imposed considerable
+duties. Exempt from duty were now only refuse, raw products, scientific
+instruments, ships and literary and artistic objects; forty-four
+articles--notably beer, vinegar, sugar, herrings, cocoa, salt, fish
+oils, ether, alum and soda--were unaffected by the change, while duties
+were henceforth levied upon a large number of articles which had
+previously been admitted duty free, such as pig iron, machines and
+locomotives, grain, building timber, tallow, horses, cattle and sheep;
+and, again, the tariff law further increased the duties leviable upon
+numerous other articles. Export duties were abolished in 1865 and
+transit dues in 1861. The law under which Great Britain enjoyed the
+"most favoured nation treatment" expired on the 31st of December 1905,
+but its provisions were continued by the _Bundesrat_ until further
+notice. The average value of each article is fixed annually in Germany
+under the direction of the Imperial Statistical Office, by a commission
+of experts, who receive information from chambers of commerce and other
+sources. There are separate valuations for imports and exports. The
+price fixed is that of the goods at the moment of crossing the frontier.
+For imports the price does not include customs duties, cost of
+transport, insurance, warehousing, &c., incurred after the frontier is
+passed. For exports, the price includes all charges within the
+territory, but drawbacks and bounties are not taken into account. The
+quantities are determined according to obligatory declarations, and, for
+imports, the fiscal authorities may actually weigh the goods. For
+packages an official tax is deducted. The countries whence goods are
+imported and the ultimate destination of exports are registered. The
+import dues amounted in the year 1906, the first year of the revised
+tariff, to about L31,639,000, or about 10s. 5d. per head of population.
+
+ Statistics relating to the foreign trade of the Empire are necessarily
+ confined to comparatively recent times. The quantities of such
+ imported articles as are liable to duty have, indeed, been known for
+ many years; and in 1872 official tables were compiled showing the
+ value both of imports and of exports. But when the results of these
+ tables proved the importation to be very much greater than the
+ exportation, the conviction arose that the valuation of the exports
+ was erroneous and below the reality. In 1872 the value of the imports
+ was placed at L173,400,000 and that of the exports at L124,700,000. In
+ 1905 the figures were--imports, L371,000,000, and exports,
+ L292,000,000, including precious metals.
+
+Table A following shows the classification of goods adopted before the
+tariff revision of 1906. From 1907 a new classification has been
+adopted, and the change thus introduced is so great that it is
+impossible to make any comparisons between the statistics of years
+subsequent to and preceding the year 1906. Table B shows imports and
+exports for 1907 and 1908 according to the new classification adopted.
+
+ TABLE A.--_Classes of Imports and Exports, 1905._
+
+ +-------------------------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | | Import. | Export. |
+ +-------------------------------------+-------------+-------------+
+ | Refuse. | L6,866,250 | L1,170,200 |
+ | Cotton and cottons. | 23,488,750 | 22,949,600 |
+ | Lead and by-products. | 996,300 | 979,400 |
+ | Brush and sieve makers' goods. | 102,400 | 515,450 |
+ | Drugs, chemists' and oilmen's | | |
+ | colours. | 15,896,900 | 23,196,250 |
+ | Iron and iron goods. | 3,156,500 | 33,126,400 |
+ | Ores, precious metals, asbestos, &c.| 28,834,050 | 9,899,450 |
+ | Flax and other vegetable spinning | | |
+ | materials except cotton. | 6,794,100 | 1,235,700 |
+ | Grain and agricultural produce. | 59,136,200 | 7,496,500 |
+ | Glass. | 538,050 | 2,743,900 |
+ | Hair, feathers, bristles. | 3,218,600 | 1,848,150 |
+ | Skins. | 18,965,500 | 9,548,450 |
+ | Wood and wooden wares. | 16,940,850 | 6,056,150 |
+ | Hops. | 913,150 | 2,135,600 |
+ | Instruments, machines, &c. | 4,351,500 | 17,898,250 |
+ | Calendars. | 34,300 | 74,700 |
+ | Caoutchouc, &c. | 7,379,600 | 4,616,400 |
+ | Clothes, body linen, millinery. | 739,900 | 7,321,050 |
+ | Copper and copper goods. | 8,273,400 | 10,307,050 |
+ | Hardware, &c. | 2,042,400 | 12,610,550 |
+ | Leather and leather goods. | 3,567,950 | 9,665,300 |
+ | Linens. | 1,750,100 | 1,904,950 |
+ | Candles. | 11,150 | 42,350 |
+ | Literary and works of art. | 3,066,050 | 9,025,500 |
+ | Groceries and confectionery. | 41,446,400 | 17,585,000 |
+ | Fats and oils. | 12,510,600 | 2,631,600 |
+ | Paper goods. | 1,086,800 | 7,158,800 |
+ | Furs. | 265,700 | 720,200 |
+ | Petroleum. | 5,036,600 | 132,300 |
+ | Silks and silk goods. | 9,523,300 | 8,889,000 |
+ | Soap and perfumes. | 151,600 | 768,200 |
+ | Playing cards. | 400 | 18,950 |
+ | Stone goods. | 2,822,000 | 2,110,550 |
+ | Coal, lignite, coke and peat. | 10,136,800 | 15,096,450 |
+ | Straw and hemp goods. | 561,650 | 262,100 |
+ | Tar, pitch, resin. | 2,504,400 | 834,100 |
+ | Animals, and animal products. | 9,926,200 | 590,700 |
+ | Earthenware goods. | 391,650 | 5,076,350 |
+ | Cattle. | 11,366,200 | 725,100 |
+ | Oilcloth. | 43,150 | 177,300 |
+ | Wools and woollen textiles. | 25,290,200 | 21,562,900 |
+ | Zinc and zinc goods. | 682,250 | 2,413,600 |
+ | Tin and japanned goods. | 1,770,550 | 744,100 |
+ | Goods insufficiently declared. | . . | 806,300 |
+ | +-------------+-------------+
+ | Total. |L352,317,250 |L284,626,900 |
+ +-------------------------------------+-------------+-------------+
+
+ TABLE B.--_Classes of Imports and Exports, 1907 and 1908._
+
+ +-----------------------------+-----------------+-----------------+
+ | | Imports. | Exports. |
+ | +-----------------+-----------------+
+ | Groups of Articles. | Value in L1000. | Value in L1000. |
+ | +--------+--------+--------+--------+
+ | | 1907. | 1908.* | 1907. | 1908.* |
+ +-----------------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
+ |Agricultural and forest | | | | |
+ | produce** |215,532 |205,512 | 45,796 | 50,324 |
+ | Agricultural produce*** | 93,253 |102,954 | 10,369 | 15,168 |
+ | Colonial produce and | | | | |
+ | substitutes for the same | 12,151 | 12,328 | 84 | 108 |
+ | Southern fruit and fruit | | | | |
+ | peel | 3,214 | 3,262 | 20 | 23 |
+ | Forest produce | 28,166 | 26,299 | 4,066 | 3,967 |
+ | Resins | 8,216 | 8,209 | 2,500 | 2,325 |
+ | Animals and animal | | | | |
+ | products** | 63,283 | 61,794 | 9,607 | 9,676 |
+ | Hides and skins | 16,920 | 17,699 | 5,383 | 5,453 |
+ | Meat, oil, sugar, beverages| 21,523 | 20,404 | 20,284 | 20,048 |
+ |Mineral and fossil raw | | | | |
+ | materials, mineral oils | 47,575 | 45,540 | 26,166 | 26,208 |
+ | Earths and stones | 6,541 | 7,542 | 3,250 | 3,006 |
+ | Ores, slag, cinders | 16,465 | 15,451 | 1,407 | 1,206 |
+ | Mineral fuel | 16,895 | 14,910 | 19,445 | 20,020 |
+ | Mineral oils and other | | | | |
+ | fossil raw materials | 7,168 | 7,209 | 558 | 491 |
+ | Coal-tar, coal-tar oils | 506 | 428 | 1,506 | 1,485 |
+ |Chemical and pharmaceutical | | | | |
+ | products, colours | 14,784 | 14,850 | 28,116 | 26,845 |
+ | Chemical primary materials,| | | | |
+ | acids, salts | 9,226 | 9,550 | 9,661 | 9,832 |
+ | Colours and dyeing | | | | |
+ | materials | 951 | 879 | 11,630 | 10,518 |
+ | Varnish, lacquer | 189 | 158 | 206 | 221 |
+ | Ether, alcohol not included| | | | |
+ | elsewhere, essential | | | | |
+ | oils, perfumery and | | | | |
+ | cosmetics | 1,979 | 1,918 | 1,118 | 1,004 |
+ | Artificial manures | 992 | 1,001 | 1,303 | 1,236 |
+ | Explosives of all kinds | 86 | 74 | 1,612 | 1,269 |
+ | Other chemical and | | | | |
+ | pharmaceutical products | 1,361 | 1,270 | 2,586 | 2,765 |
+ |Animal and vegetable textile | | | | |
+ | materials and wares | | | | |
+ | thereof | 98,540 | 92,105 | 78,086 | 70,343 |
+ | Silk and silk goods | 13,533 | 13,704 | 13,324 | 11,364 |
+ | Wool | 33,260 | 31,195 | 27,114 | 24,918 |
+ | Unworked wool | 19,975 | 19,309 | 2,647 | 2,561 |
+ | Worked wool | 4,625 | 4,961 | 3,799 | 3,393 |
+ | Wares of spun wool | 8,660 | 6,925 | 20,668 | 18,964 |
+ | Cotton | 38,543 | 34,456 | 29,004 | 26,201 |
+ | Unworked cotton | 27,705 | 26,167 | 3,264 | 2,987 |
+ | Worked cotton | 980 | 950 | 912 | 891 |
+ | Cotton wares | 9,858 | 7,338 | 24,828 | 22,324 |
+ | Other vegetable textile | | | | |
+ | materials | 10,783 | 10,411 | 3,777 | 3,471 |
+ | Unworked | 7,923 | 7,819 | 1,125 | 1,211 |
+ | Worked | 166 | 168 | 122 | 137 |
+ | Wares thereof | 2,685 | 2,423 | 2,531 | 2,124 |
+ |Leather and leather wares, | | | | |
+ | furriers' wares | 6,695 | 6,657 | 16,778 | 17,835 |
+ | Leather | 2,658 | 2,804 | 7,503 | 8,328 |
+ | Leather wares | 1,332 | 1,176 | 4,016 | 3,867 |
+ | Furriers' wares | 2,698 | 2,672 | 5,237 | 5,616 |
+ |Caoutchouc wares | 694 | 754 | 2,328 | 2,325 |
+ | Wares of soft caoutchouc | 670 | 735 | 1,694 | 1,723 |
+ | Hardened caoutchouc and | | | | |
+ | wares thereof | 24 | 19 | 634 | 602 |
+ |Wares of animal or vegetable | | | | |
+ | material for carving or | | | | |
+ | moulding | 2,448 | 2,068 | 4,260 | 4,131 |
+ |Wooden wares | 859 | 769 | 1,707 | 1,666 |
+ |Paper, cardboard and wares | | | | |
+ | thereof | 1,349 | 1,205 | 9,342 | 9,111 |
+ |Books, pictures, paintings | 1,992 | 2,036 | 4,667 | 4,765 |
+ |Earthenware | 467 | 377 | 5,224 | 4,612 |
+ |Glass and glassware | 747 | 728 | 5,671 | 5,149 |
+ |Precious metals and wares | | | | |
+ | thereof | 13,281 | 21,243 | 18,629 | 6,858 |
+ | Gold | 11,616 | 19,295 | 15,898 | 6,151 |
+ | Gold | 11,184 | 18,873 | 11,071 | 2,897 |
+ | Gold wares | 432 | 422 | 4,827 | 3,254 |
+ | Silver | 1,665 | 1,948 | 2,731 | 2,707 |
+ | Silver | 1,434 | 1,716 | 1,206 | 1,418 |
+ | Silver wares | 231 | 232 | 1,525 | 1,289 |
+ |Base metals and wares | | | | |
+ | thereof | 26,035 | 26,398 | 57,146 | 58,895 |
+ | Iron and iron wares | 5,903 | 4,472 | 38,899 | 40,162 |
+ | Pig iron (including | | | | |
+ | non-malleable alloys) | 1,601 | 912 | 966 | 905 |
+ | Iron wares | 4,302 | 3,560 | 37,933 | 39,257 |
+ | Aluminium and aluminium | | | | |
+ | wares | 546 | 453 | 368 | 273 |
+ | Raw aluminium | 529 | 433 | 152 | 77 |
+ | Aluminium wares | 17 | 20 | 216 | 196 |
+ | Lead and lead wares | 1,438 | 1,484 | 945 | 985 |
+ | Raw lead (including | | | | |
+ | waste) | 1,427 | 1,470 | 525 | 568 |
+ | Lead wares | 11 | 14 | 420 | 417 |
+ | Zinc and zinc wares | 727 | 847 | 2,433 | 2,489 |
+ | Raw zinc (including | | | | |
+ | waste) | 706 | 825 | 1,631 | 1,784 |
+ | Zinc wares | 21 | 22 | 802 | 705 |
+ | Tin and tin wares | 2,405 | 2,629 | 1,380 | 1,236 |
+ | Raw tin (including | | | | |
+ | waste) | 2,357 | 2,581 | 787 | 688 |
+ | Tin wares | 48 | 48 | 593 | 548 |
+ | Nickel and nickel wares | 400 | 540 | 246 | 298 |
+ | Raw nickel | 375 | 527 | 160 | 233 |
+ | Nickel wares | 25 | 13 | 86 | 65 |
+ | Copper and copper wares | 13,803 | 15,088 | 7,998 | 8,470 |
+ | Raw copper (including | | | | |
+ | copper coin, brass, | | | | |
+ | tombac, &c.) | 12,995 | 14,192 | 2,204 | 2,014 |
+ | Copper wares | 808 | 896 | 5,794 | 6,456 |
+ | Instruments of precision | 813 | 885 | 4,877 | 4,982 |
+ |Machinery, vehicles | 7,093 | 5,489 | 33,117 | 34,653 |
+ | Machinery | 4,090 | 3,451 | 19,041 | 20,684 |
+ | Electro-technical products | 411 | 451 | 8,227 | 9,107 |
+ | Vehicles and vessels | 2,562 | 1,587 | 5,849 | 4,862 |
+ |Firearms, clocks, musical | | | | |
+ | instruments, toys | 1,732 | 1,424 | 8,704 | 7,505 |
+ | Clocks and watches | 1,382 | 1,134 | 1,296 | 1,210 |
+ | Musical instruments | 223 | 170 | 3,176 | 2,780 |
+ | Toys | 39 | 35 | 3,949 | 3,273 |
+ | +--------+--------+--------+--------+
+ | Total |442,663 |429,636 |349,114 |336,347 |
+ +-----------------------------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
+
+ * Provisional figures only.
+ ** Excluding vegetable and animal textile materials.
+ *** Excluding vegetable textile materials.
+
+
+ The following table shows the commercial intercourse in imports and
+ exports, exclusive of bullion and coin, between Germany and the chief
+ countries of the world in 1905, 1906 and 1907.
+
+ _Imports._
+
+ +---------------------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
+ | | 1905. | 1906. | 1907. |
+ | +--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+ | Country. | Value | of | Value | of | Value | of |
+ | | in | Germany's| in | Germany's| in | Germany's|
+ | | L1000. | Total | L1000. | Total | L1000. | Total |
+ | | | Imports.| | Imports.| | Imports.|
+ +---------------------+--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+ | Belgium | 13,439 | 3.8 | 14,315 | 3.6 | 14,586 | 3.4 |
+ | Denmark | 5,986 | 1.7 | 6,302 | 1.6 | 6,050 | 1.4 |
+ | France | 19,772 | 5.6 | 21,306 | 5.4 | 22,302 | 5.2 |
+ | United Kingdom | 35,320 | 10.1 | 40,531 | 10.3 | 48,014 | 11.2 |
+ | Italy | 10,350 | 3 | 11,851 | 3 | 14,030 | 3.3 |
+ | Netherlands | 12,077 | 3 | 11,864 | 3 | 11,187 | 2.6 |
+ | Austria-Hungary | 36,974 | 10.6 | 39,814 | 10.1 | 39,939 | 9.3 |
+ | Rumania | 4,568 | 1.3 | 5,774 | 1.5 | 7,365 | 1.7 |
+ | Russia | 47,816 | 13.6 | 52,528 | 13.4 | 54,447 | 12.7 |
+ | Sweden | 5,887 | 1.7 | 7,359 | 1.9 | 8,457 | 2 |
+ | Switzerland | 8,980 | 2.6 | 10,659 | 2.9 | 10,366 | 2.4 |
+ | Spain | 5,742 | 1.6 | 7,410 | 1.9 | 6,878 | 1.6 |
+ | British South Africa| 1,769 | 0.5 | 1,766 | 0.4 | 2,258 | 0.5 |
+ | Dominion of Canada | 481 | 0.1 | 463 | 0.1 | 483 | 0.1 |
+ | New Zealand | 75 | .. | 87 | .. | 94 | .. |
+ | British West Africa | 2,562 | 0.7 | 2,731 | 0.7 | 3,601 | 0.8 |
+ | British India | 13,657 | 3.9 | 15,842 | 4 | 20,016 | 4.7 |
+ | Dutch Indies | 5,848 | 1.7 | 7,002 | 1.8 | 9,199 | 2.1 |
+ | Argentine Republic | 18,150 | 5.2 | 18,302 | 4.7 | 21,756 | 5.1 |
+ | Brazil | 8,454 | 2.4 | 9,246 | 2.4 | 9,636 | 2.2 |
+ | Chile | 6,536 | 1.9 | 7,131 | 1.8 | 7,074 | 1.6 |
+ | United States | 48,770 | 13.9 | 60,787 | 15.4 | 64,864 | 15.1 |
+ | Commonwealth of | | | | | | |
+ | Australia | 7,690 | 2.2 | 8,619 | 2.2 | 11,209 | 2.6 |
+ +---------------------+--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+
+ _Exports._
+
+ +---------------------+-------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
+ | | 1905. | 1906. | 1907. |
+ | +--------+----------+--------+----------+--------=----------+
+ | Country. | Value | of | Value | of | Value | of |
+ | | in | Germany's| in | Germany's| in | Germany's|
+ | | L1000. | Total | L1000. | Total | L1000. | Total |
+ | | | Exports.| | Exports.| | Exports.|
+ +---------------------+--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+ | Belgium | 15,364 | 5.5 | 17,509 | 5.6 | 16,861 | 5 |
+ | Denmark | 8,668 | 3.1 | 9,699 | 3.1 | 10,182 | 3 |
+ | France | 14,420 | 5.1 | 18,815 | 6 | 22,080 | 6.6 |
+ | United Kingdom | 51,253 | 18.2 | 52,473 | 16.8 | 52,135 | 15.5 |
+ | Italy | 8,045 | 2.9 | 11,354 | 3.6 | 14,893 | 4.4 |
+ | Netherlands | 21,295 | 7.6 | 21,799 | 7 | 22,232 | 6.6 |
+ | Norway | 3,447 | 1.2 | 3,573 | 1.2 | 4,211 | 1.3 |
+ | Austria-Hungary | 28,526 | 10.1 | 31,926 | 10.2 | 35,231 | 10.5 |
+ | Rumania | 2,144 | 0.8 | 3,140 | 1 | 3,372 | 1 |
+ | Russia | 17,027 | 6 | 19,962 | 6.4 | 21,531 | 6.4 |
+ | Sweden | 7,653 | 2.7 | 8,675 | 2.8 | 9,177 | 2.7 |
+ | Switzerland | 17,649 | 6.3 | 18,367 | 5.9 | 21,948 | 6.5 |
+ | Spain | 2,609 | 0.9 | 2,838 | 0.9 | 3,228 | 1 |
+ | British South Africa| 1,687 | 0.6 | 1,607 | 0.5 | 1,422 | 0.4 |
+ | Dominion of Canada | 1,071 | 0.4 | 1,203 | 0.4 | 1,456 | 0.4 |
+ | New Zealand | 227 | 0.1 | 244 | 0.1 | 263 | 0.1 |
+ | Turkey | 3,484 | 1.3 | 3,357 | 1.1 | 4,011 | 1.2 |
+ | British India | 4,226 | 1.5 | 5,011 | 1.6 | 4,868 | 1.4 |
+ | China | 3,727 | 1.3 | 3,331 | 1.1 | 3,105 | 0.9 |
+ | Japan | 4,158 | 1.5 | 4,328 | 1.4 | 5,036 | 1.5 |
+ | Argentine Republic | 6,463 | 2.3 | 8,367 | 2.7 | 8,810 | 2.6 |
+ | Brazil | 3,525 | 1.3 | 4,364 | 1.4 | 5,118 | 1.5 |
+ | United States | 26,660 | 9.5 | 31,281 | 10 | 32,070 | 9.5 |
+ | Commonwealth of | | | | | | |
+ | Australia | 2,264 | 0.8 | 2,863 | 0.9 | 3,004 | 0.9 |
+ +---------------------+--------+----------+--------+----------+--------+----------+
+
+ The commerce of Germany shows an upward tendency, which progresses
+ _pari passu_ with its greatly increased production. The export of
+ ships from the United Kingdom to the empire decreased during two
+ years, 1903 (L305,682) and 1904 (L365,062), almost to a vanishing
+ point, German yards being able to cope with the demands made upon them
+ for the supply of vessels of all classes, including mercantile vessels
+ and ships of war. In 1905 and subsequent years, however, the degree of
+ employment in German yards increased to such an extent, principally
+ owing to the placing of the Admiralty contracts with private builders,
+ that the more urgent orders for mercantile vessels were placed abroad.
+
+ The following tables give the value of trade between the United
+ Kingdom and Germany in 1900 and 1905:--
+
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+ | Staple Imports into the United | | |
+ | Kingdom from Germany. | 1900. | 1905. |
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+ | | L | L |
+ | Sugar | 9,164,573 |10,488,085 |
+ | Glass and manufactures | 1,078,648 | 1,108,117 |
+ | Eggs | 1,017,119 | 764,966 |
+ | Cottons and yarn | 992,244 | 1,476,385 |
+ | Woollens and yarn | 1,312,671 | 1,984,475 |
+ | Iron and steel and manufactures| 1,012,376 | 379,479 |
+ | Machinery | 411,178 | 735,536 |
+ | Paper | 523,544 | 528,946 |
+ | Musical instruments | 660,777 | 676,391 |
+ | Toys | 644,690 | 714,628 |
+ | Zinc and manufactures | 461,023 | 673,602 |
+ | Wood and manufactures | 1,470,839 | 1,109,584 |
+ | Chemicals | 513,200 | 735,830 |
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+ | Principal Articles exported by | | |
+ | Great Britain to Germany. | 1900. | 1905. |
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+ | | L | L |
+ | Cottons and yarn | 3,843,917 | 4,941,917 |
+ | Woollens and yarn | 3,743,842 | 3,795,591 |
+ | Alpaca, &c., yarn | 1,022,259 | 1,325,519 |
+ | Wool | 742,632 | 1,691,035 |
+ | Ironwork | 2,937,055 | 1,500,414 |
+ | Herrings | 1,651,441 | 2,042,483 |
+ | Machinery | 2,040,797 | 2,102,835 |
+ | Coals, cinders | 4,267,172 | 3,406,535 |
+ | New ships | 1,592,865 | 1,377,081 |
+ +--------------------------------+-----------+-----------+
+
+_Navigation._--The seamen of Frisia are among the best in the world, and
+the shipping of Bremen and Hamburg had won a respected name long before
+a German mercantile marine, properly so called, was heard of. Many
+Hamburg vessels sailed under charter of English and other houses in
+foreign, especially Chinese, waters. Since 1868 all German ships have
+carried a common flag--black, white, red; but formerly Oldenburg,
+Hanover, Bremen, Hamburg, Lubeck, Mecklenburg and Prussia had each its
+own flag, and Schleswig-Holstein vessels sailed under the Danish flag.
+The German mercantile fleet occupies, in respect of the number of
+vessels, the fourth place--after Great Britain, the United States of
+America and Norway; but in respect of tonnage it stands third--after
+Great Britain and the United States only.
+
+The following table shows its distribution on the 1st of January of the
+two years 1905 and 1908:--
+
+ +-----------------+-----------------+------------------+------------------+
+ | | Baltic Ports. | North Sea Ports. | Total Shipping. |
+ | +-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ | |Number.| Tonnage.|Number.| Tonnage. |Number.| Tonnage. |
+ |-----------------+-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ |1905-- | | | | | | |
+ | Sailing vessels| 386 | 19,067 | 2181 | 559,436 | 2567 | 578,503 |
+ | Steamers | 486 | 236,509 | 1171 |1,537,563 | 1657 |1,774,072 |
+ |-----------------+-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ | Totals | 872 | 255,576 | 3352 |2,096,999 | 4224 |2,352,575 |
+ | +-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ |1908-- | | | | | | |
+ | Sailing vessels| 394 | 17,472 | 2255 | 516,180 | 2649 | 533,652 |
+ | Steamers | 521 | 274,952 | 140l |1,981,831 | 1922 |2,256,783 |
+ | +-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+ | Totals | 915 | 292,424 | 3656 |2,498,011 | 4571 |2,790,435 |
+ +-----------------+-------+---------+-------+----------+-------+----------+
+
+In 1905, 2136 vessels of 283,171 tons, and in 1908, 2218 vessels of
+284,081 tons, belonged to Prussian ports, and the number of sailors of
+the mercantile marine was 60,616 in 1905 and 71,853 in 1908.
+
+The chief ports are Hamburg, Stettin, Bremen, Kiel, Lubeck, Flensburg,
+Bremerhaven, Danzig (Neufahrwasser), Geestemunde and Emden; and the
+number and tonnage of vessels of foreign nationality entering and
+clearing the ports of the empire, as compared with national shipping,
+were in 1906:--
+
+ +---------------+---------+----------+---------+----------+
+ | | Number | | Number | |
+ | Foreign Ships.| entered | Tonnage. | cleared | Tonnage. |
+ | |in Cargo.| |in Cargo.| |
+ +---------------+---------+----------+---------+----------+
+ | Danish | 5917 |1,589,346 | 5059 |1,219,388 |
+ | British | 5327 |5,129,017 | 3211 |2,552,268 |
+ | Swedish | 4891 |1,164,431 | 3317 | 747,656 |
+ | Dutch | 2181 | 458,401 | 1973 | 316,562 |
+ | Norwegian | 1565 | 817,483 | 720 | 347,811 |
+ | Russian | 720 | 250,564 | 439 | 143,983 |
+ +---------------+---------+----------+---------+----------+
+
+The ports of Hamburg and Bremen, which are the chief outlets for
+emigration to the United States of America, carry on a vast commercial
+trade with all the chief countries of the world, and are the main gates
+of maritime intercourse between the United Kingdom and Germany.
+
+The inland navigation is served by nearly 25,000 river, canal and
+coasting vessels, of a tonnage of about 4,000,000.
+
+_Railways._--The period of railway construction was inaugurated in
+Germany by the opening of the line (4 m. in length) from Nuremberg to
+Furth in 1835, followed by the main line (71 m.) between Leipzig and
+Dresden, opened throughout in 1839. The development of the railway
+system was slow and was not conceived on any uniform plan. The want of a
+central government operated injuriously, for it often happened that
+intricate negotiations and solemn treaties between several sovereign
+states were required before a line could be constructed; and, moreover,
+the course it was to take was often determined less by the general
+exigencies of commerce than by many trifling interests or desires of
+neighbouring states. The state which was most self-seeking in its
+railway politics was Hanover, which separated the eastern and western
+parts of the kingdom of Prussia. The difficulties arising to Prussia
+from this source were experienced in a still greater degree by the
+seaports of Bremen and Hamburg, which were severely hampered by the
+particularism displayed by Hanover.
+
+The making of railways was from the outset regarded by some German
+states as exclusively a function of the government. The South German
+states, for example, have only possessed state railways. In Prussia
+numerous private companies, in the first instance, constructed their
+systems, and the state contented itself for the most part with laying
+lines in such districts only as were not likely to attract private
+capital.
+
+The development of the German railway system falls conveniently into
+four periods. The first, down in 1840, embraces the beginnings of
+railway enterprise. The next, down to 1848, shows the linking-up of
+various existing lines and the establishment of inter-connexion between
+the chief towns. The third, down to 1881, shows the gradual
+establishment of state control in Prussia, and the formation of direct
+trunk lines. The fourth begins from 1881 with the purchase of
+practically all the railways in Prussia by the government, and the
+introduction of a uniform system of interworking between the various
+state systems. The purchase of the railways by the Prussian government
+was on the whole equably carried out, but there were several hard cases
+in the expropriation of some of the smaller private lines.
+
+The majority of the German railways are now owned by the state
+governments. Out of 34,470 m. of railway completed and open for traffic
+in 1906, only 2579 m. were the property of private undertakings, and of
+these about 150 were worked by the state. The bulk of the railways are
+of the normal 4 ft. 8-1/2 in. gauge. Narrow-gauge (2-1/2 ft.) lines--or
+light railways--extended over 1218 m. in 1903, and of these 537 m. were
+worked by the state.
+
+The board responsible for the imperial control over the whole railway
+system in Germany is the _Reichseisenbahnamt_ in Berlin, the
+administration of the various state systems residing, in Prussia, in the
+ministry of public works; in Bavaria in the ministry of the royal house
+and of the exterior; in Wurttemberg in the ministry of the exterior; in
+Saxony in the ministry of the interior; in Baden and Hesse-Darmstadt in
+commissions of the ministry of finance; and in Alsace-Lorraine in the
+imperial ministry of railways.
+
+ The management of the Prussian railway system is committed to the
+ charge of twenty "directions," into which the whole network of lines
+ is divided, being those of Altona, Berlin, Breslau, Bromberg, Danzig,
+ Elberfeld, Erfurt, Essen a.d. Ruhr, Frankfort-on-Main, Halle a.d.
+ Saale, Hanover, Cassel, Kattowitz, Cologne, Konigsberg, Magdeburg,
+ Munster, Posen, Saarbrucken and Stettin. The entire length of the
+ system was in 1906 20,835 m., giving an average of about 950 m. to
+ each "direction." The smallest mileage controlled by a "direction" is
+ Berlin, with 380 m., and the greatest, Konigsberg, with 1200 m.
+
+ The Bavarian system embraces 4642 m., and is controlled and managed,
+ apart from the "general direction" in Munich, by ten traffic boards,
+ in Augsburg, Bamberg, Ingolstadt, Kempten, Munich, Nuremberg,
+ Regensburg, Rosenheim, Weiden and Wurzburg.
+
+ The system of the kingdom of Saxony has a length of 1616 m., and is
+ controlled by the general direction in Dresden.
+
+ The length of the Wurttemberg system is 1141 m., and is managed by a
+ general direction in Stuttgart.
+
+ Baden (state) controls 1233, Oldenburg (state) 382,
+ Mecklenburg-Schwerin 726 and Saxe-Weimar 257 m. respectively. Railways
+ lying within the other smaller states are mostly worked by Prussia.
+
+ Alsace-Lorraine has a separate system of 1085 m., which is worked by
+ the imperial general direction in Strassburg.
+
+ By the linking-up of the various state systems several grand trunk
+ line routes have been developed--notably the lines
+ Berlin-Vienna-Budapest; Berlin-Cologne-Brussels and Paris;
+ Berlin-Halle-Frankfort-on-Main-Basel; Hamburg-Cassel-Munich and
+ Verona; and Breslau-Dresden-Bamberg-Geneva. Until 1907 no uniform
+ system of passenger rates had been adopted, each state retaining its
+ own fares--a condition that led to much confusion. From the 1st of May
+ 1907 the following tariff came into force. For ordinary trains the
+ rate for first class was fixed at 1-1/4d. a mile; for second class at
+ .7d.; for third class at 1/2d., and for fourth class at 1/4d. a mile.
+ For express trains an extra charge is made of 2s. for distances
+ exceeding 93 m. (150 kils.) in the two superior classes, and 1s. for a
+ lesser distance, and of 1s. and 6d. respectively in the case of third
+ class tickets. Fourth class passengers are not conveyed by express
+ trains. The above rates include government duty; but the privilege of
+ free luggage (as up to 56 lb.) has been withdrawn, and all luggage
+ other than hand baggage taken into the carriages is charged for. In
+ 1903 371,084,000 metric tons of goods, including animals, were
+ conveyed by the German railways, yielding L68,085,000 sterling, and
+ the number of passengers carried was 957,684,000, yielding
+ L29,300,000.
+
+ The passenger ports of Germany affording oversea communications to
+ distant lands are mainly those of Bremen (Bremerhaven) and Hamburg
+ (Cuxhaven) both of which are situate on the North Sea. From them great
+ steamship lines, notably the North German Lloyd, the Hamburg-American,
+ the Hamburg South American and the German East African steamship
+ companies, maintain express mail and other services with North and
+ South America, Australia, the Cape of Good Hope and the Far East.
+ London and other English ports, French, Italian and Levant coast towns
+ are also served by passenger steamboat sailings from the two great
+ North Sea ports. The Baltic ports, such as Lubeck, Stettin, Danzig
+ (Neufahrwasser) and Konigsberg, principally provide communication with
+ the coast towns of the adjacent countries, Russia and Sweden.
+
+_Waterways._--In Germany the waterways are almost solely in the
+possession of the state. Of ship canals the chief is the Kaiser Wilhelm
+canal (1887-1895), 61 m. long, connecting the North Sea and the Baltic;
+it was made with a breadth at bottom of 72 ft. and at the surface of 213
+ft., and with a depth of 29 ft. 6 in., but in 1908 work was begun for
+doubling the bottom width and increasing the depth to 36 ft. In respect
+of internal navigation, the principal of the greater undertakings are
+the Dortmund-Ems and the Elbe-Trave canals. The former, constructed in
+1892-1899, has a length of 150 m. and a mean depth of 8 ft. The latter,
+constructed 1895-1900, has a length of 43 m. and a mean depth of about
+7-1/2 ft. A project was sanctioned in 1905 for a canal, adapted for
+vessels up to 600 tons, from the Rhine to the Weser at Hanover,
+utilizing a portion of the Dortmund-Ems canal; for a channel
+accommodating vessels of similar size between Berlin and Stettin; for
+improving the waterway between the Oder and the Vistula, so as to render
+it capable of accommodating vessels of 400 tons; and for the
+canalization of the upper Oder.
+
+ On the whole, Germany cannot be said to be rich in canals. In South
+ Germany the Ludwigs canal was, until the annexation of
+ Alsace-Lorraine, the only one of importance. It was constructed by
+ King Louis I. of Bavaria in order to unite the German Ocean and the
+ Black Sea, and extends from the Main at Bamberg to Kelheim on the
+ Danube. Alsace-Lorraine had canals for connecting the Rhine with the
+ Rhone and the Marne, a branch serving the collieries of the Saar
+ valley. The North German plain has, in the east, a canal by which
+ Russian grain is conveyed to Konigsberg, joining the Pregel to the
+ Memel, and the upper Silesian coalfield is in communication with the
+ Oder by means of the Klodnitz canal. The greatest number of canals is
+ found around Berlin; they serve to join the Spree to the Oder and
+ Elbe, and include the Teltow canal opened in 1906. The canals in
+ Germany (including ship canals through lakes) have a total length of
+ about 2600 m. Navigable and canalized rivers, to which belong the
+ great water-systems of the Rhine, Elbe and Oder, have a total length
+ of about 6000 m.
+
+_Roads._--The construction of good highways has been well attended to in
+Germany only since the Napoleonic wars. The separation of the empire
+into small states was favourable to road-making, inasmuch as it was
+principally the smaller governments that expended large sums for their
+network of roads. Hanover and Thuringia have long been distinguished for
+the excellence of their roads, but some districts suffer even still from
+the want of good highways. The introduction of railways for a time
+diverted attention from road-making, but this neglect has of late been
+to some extent remedied. In Prussia the districts (_Kreise_) have
+undertaken the charge of the construction of the roads; but they receive
+a subsidy from the public funds of the several provinces. Turnpikes were
+abolished in Prussia in 1874 and in Saxony in 1885. The total length of
+the public roads is estimated at 80,000 m.
+
+_Posts and Telegraphs._--With the exception of Bavaria and Wurttemberg,
+which have administrations of their own, all the German states belong to
+the imperial postal district (_Reichspostgebiet_). Since 1874 the postal
+and telegraphic departments have been combined. Both branches of
+administration have undergone a surprising development, especially since
+the reduction of the postal rates. Germany, including Bavaria and
+Wurttemberg, constitutes with Austria-Hungary a special postal union
+(Deutsch-Osterreichischer Postverband), besides forming part of the
+international postal union. There are no statistics of posts and
+telegraphs before 1867, for it was only when the North German union was
+formed that the lesser states resigned their right of carrying mails in
+favour of the central authority. Formerly the prince of Thurn-and-Taxis
+was postmaster-general of Germany, but only some of the central states
+belonged to his postal territory. The seat of management was
+Frankfort-on-Main.
+
+ The following table shows the growth in the number of post offices for
+ the whole empire:--
+
+ +------+-------------+-------------+
+ | Year.|Post Offices.|Men employed.|
+ +------+-------------+-------------+
+ | 1872 | 7,518 | .. |
+ | 1880 | 9,460 | .. |
+ | 1890 | 24,952 | 128,687 |
+ | 1899 | 36,388 | 206,945 |
+ | 1904 | 38,658 | 261,985 |
+ | 1907 | 40,083 | 319,026 |
+ +------+-------------+-------------+
+
+ In 1872 there were 2359 telegraph offices; in 1880, 9980; in 1890,
+ 17,200; and in 1907, 37,309. There were 188 places provided with
+ telephone service in 1888, and 13,175 in 1899. The postal receipts
+ amounted for the whole empire in 1907 to L33,789,460, and the
+ expenditure to L31,096,944, thus showing a surplus of L2,692,516.
+
+_Constitution._--The constitution of the German empire is, in all
+essentials, that of the North German Confederation, which came into
+force on the 7th of June 1867. Under this the presidency (_Praesidium_)
+of the confederation was vested in the king of Prussia and his heirs. As
+a result of the Franco-German war of 1870 the South German states joined
+the confederation; on the 9th of December 1870 the diet of the
+confederation accepted the treaties and gave to the new confederation
+the name of German Empire (_Deutsche Reich_), and on the 18th of January
+1871 the king of Prussia was proclaimed German emperor (_Deutscher
+Kaiser_) at Versailles. This was a change of style, not of functions and
+powers. The title is "German emperor," not "emperor of Germany," being
+intended to show that the Kaiser is but _primus inter pares_ in a
+confederation of territorial sovereigns; his authority as territorial
+sovereign (_Landesherr_) extends over Prussia, not over Germany.
+
+The imperial dignity is hereditary in the line of Hohenzollern, and
+follows the law of primogeniture. The emperor exercises the imperial
+power in the name of the confederated states. In his office he is
+assisted by a federal council (_Bundesrat_), which represents the
+governments of the individual states of Germany. The members of this
+council, 58 in number, are appointed for each session by the governments
+of the individual states. The legislative functions of the empire are
+vested in the emperor, the Bundesrat, and the Reichstag or imperial
+Diet. The members of the latter, 397 in number, are elected for a space
+of five years by universal suffrage. Vote is by ballot, and one member
+is elected by (approximately) every 150,000 inhabitants.
+
+As regards its legislative functions, the empire has supreme and
+independent control in matters relating to military affairs and the
+navy, to the imperial finances, to German commerce, to posts and
+telegraphs, and also to railways, in so far as these affect the common
+defence of the country. Bavaria and Wurttemberg, however, have preserved
+their own postal and telegraphic administration. The legislative power
+of the empire also takes precedence of that of the separate states in
+the regulation of matters affecting freedom of migration
+(_Freizugigkeit_), domicile, settlement and the rights of German
+subjects generally, as well as in all that relates to banking, patents,
+protection of intellectual property, navigation of rivers and canals,
+civil and criminal legislation, judicial procedure, sanitary police, and
+control of the press and of associations.
+
+The executive power is in the emperor's hands. He represents the empire
+internationally, and can declare war if defensive, and make peace as
+well as enter into treaties with other nations; he also appoints and
+receives ambassadors. For declaring offensive war the consent of the
+federal council must be obtained. The separate states have the privilege
+of sending ambassadors to the other courts; but all consuls abroad are
+officials of the empire and are named by the emperor.
+
+Both the Bundesrat and the Reichstag meet in annual sessions convoked by
+the emperor who has the right of proroguing and dissolving the Diet; but
+the prorogation must not exceed 60 days, and in case of dissolution new
+elections must be ordered within 60 days, and the new session opened
+within 90 days. All laws for the regulation of the empire must, in order
+to pass, receive the votes of an absolute majority of the federal
+council and the Reichstag.
+
+ Alsace-Lorraine is represented in the Bundesrat by four commissioners
+ (_Kommissare_), without votes, who are nominated by the Statthalter
+ (imperial lieutenant).
+
+ The fifty-eight members of the Bundesrat are nominated by the
+ governments of the individual states for each session; while the
+ members of the Reichstag are elected by universal suffrage and ballot
+ for the term of five years. Every German who has completed his
+ twenty-fifth year is prima facie entitled to the suffrage in the state
+ within which he has resided for one year. Soldiers and those in the
+ navy are not thus entitled, so long as they are serving under the
+ colours. Excluded, further, are persons under tutelage, bankrupts and
+ paupers, as also such persons who have been deprived of civil rights,
+ during the time of such deprivation. Every German citizen who has
+ completed his twenty-fifth year and has resided for a year in one of
+ the federal states is eligible for election in any part of the empire,
+ provided he has not been, as in the cases above, excluded from the
+ right of suffrage. The secrecy of the ballot is ensured by special
+ regulations passed on the 28th of April 1903. The voting-paper,
+ furnished with an official stamp, must be placed in an envelope by the
+ elector in a compartment set apart for the purpose in the polling
+ room, and, thus enclosed, be handed by him to the presiding officer.
+ An absolute majority of votes decides the election. If (as in the case
+ of several candidates) an absolute majority over all the others has
+ not been declared, a test election (_Stichwahl_) takes place between
+ the two candidates who have received the greatest number of votes. In
+ case of an equal number of votes being cast for both candidates, the
+ decision is by lot.
+
+ The subjoined table gives the names of the various states composing
+ the empire and the number of votes which the separate states have in
+ the federal council. Each state may appoint as many members to the
+ federal council as it has votes. The table also gives the number of
+ the deputies in the Reichstag.
+
+ +-----------------------------------------+----------+----------+
+ | | No. of | No. of |
+ | States of the Empire. |Members in|Members in|
+ | |Bundesrat.|Reichstag.|
+ +-----------------------------------------+----------+----------+
+ |Kingdom of Prussia | 17 | 236 |
+ | " Bavaria | 6 | 48 |
+ | " Saxony | 4 | 23 |
+ | " Wurttemberg | 4 | 17 |
+ |Grand duchy of Baden | 3 | 14 |
+ | " Hesse | 3 | 9 |
+ | " Mecklenburg-Schwerin | 2 | 6 |
+ | " Saxe-Weimar | 1 | 3 |
+ | " Mecklenburg-Strelitz | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Oldenburg | 1 | 3 |
+ |Duchy of Brunswick | 2 | 3 |
+ | " Saxe-Meiningen | 1 | 2 |
+ | " Saxe-Altenburg | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Saxe-Coburg-Gotha | 1 | 2 |
+ | " Anhalt | 1 | 2 |
+ |Principality of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen| 1 | 1 |
+ | " Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Waldeck | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Reuss-Greiz | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Reuss-Schleiz | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Schaumburg-Lippe | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Lippe | 1 | 1 |
+ |Free town of Lubeck | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Bremen | 1 | 1 |
+ | " Hamburg | 1 | 3 |
+ |Imperial territory of Alsace-Lorraine | .. | 15 |
+ | +----------+----------+
+ | Total | 58 | 397 |
+ +-----------------------------------------+----------+----------+
+
+ The Reichstag must meet at least once in each year. Since November
+ 1906 its members have been paid (see PAYMENT OF MEMBERS).
+
+ The following table shows its composition after the elections of 1903
+ and 1907:--
+
+ +--------------------------------------------+-----+-----+
+ | Parties. |1903.|1907.|
+ +--------------------------------------------+-----+-----+
+ | Centre | 100 | 108 |
+ | Social Democrats | 81 | 43 |
+ | Conservatives | 51 | 60 |
+ | National Liberals | 49 | 57 |
+ | Freisinnige Volkspartei | 27 | 33 |
+ | Reichspartei | 19 | 22 |
+ | Alsatians, Guelphs and Danes | 18 | 5 |
+ | Poles | 16 | 20 |
+ | Wirtschaftliche Vereinigung (Reform Partei)| 12 | 21 |
+ | Freisinnige Vereinigung | 9 | 16 |
+ | Wilde (no party) | 9 | 5 |
+ | Bund der Landwirte | 3 | 6 |
+ | Bauernbund | 3 | 1 |
+ +--------------------------------------------+-----+-----+
+
+All the German states have separate representative assemblies, except
+Alsace-Lorraine and the two grand-duchies of Mecklenburg. The six larger
+states have adopted the two-chamber system, but in the composition of
+the houses great differences are found. The lesser states also have
+chambers of representatives numbering from 12 members (in Reuss-Greiz)
+to 48 members (in Brunswick), and in most states the different classes,
+as well as the cities and the rural districts, are separately
+represented. The free towns have legislative assemblies, numbering from
+120 to 200 members.
+
+Imperial measures, after passing the Bundesrat and the Reichstag, must
+obtain the sanction of the emperor in order to become law, and must be
+countersigned, when promulgated, by the chancellor of the empire
+(_Reichskanzler_). All members of the federal council are entitled to be
+present at the deliberations of the Reichstag. The Bundesrat, acting
+under the direction of the chancellor of the empire, is also a supreme
+administrative and consultative board, and as such it has nine standing
+committees, viz.: for army and fortresses; for naval purposes; for
+tariffs, excise and taxes; for trade and commerce; for railways, posts
+and telegraphs; for civil and criminal law; for financial accounts; for
+foreign affairs; and for Alsace-Lorraine. Each committee includes
+representatives of at least four states of the empire.
+
+For the several branches of administration a considerable number of
+imperial offices have been gradually created. All of them, however,
+either are under the immediate authority of the chancellor of the
+empire, or are separately managed under his responsibility. The most
+important are the chancery office, the foreign office and the general
+post and telegraph office. But the heads of these do not form a cabinet.
+
+ _The Chancellor of the Empire (Reichskanzler)._--The Prussian
+ plenipotentiary to the Bundesrat is the president of that assembly; he
+ is appointed by the emperor, and bears the title Reichskanzler. This
+ head official can be represented by any other member of the Bundesrat
+ named in a document of substitution. The Reichskanzler is the sole
+ responsible official, and conducts all the affairs of the empire, with
+ the exception of such as are of a purely military character, and is
+ the intermediary between the emperor, the Bundesrat and the Reichstag.
+ All imperial rescripts require the counter-signature of the chancellor
+ before attaining validity. All measures passed by the Reichstag
+ require the sanction of the majority of the Bundesrat, and only become
+ binding on being proclaimed on behalf of the empire by the chancellor,
+ which publication takes place through the _Reichsgesetzblatt_ (the
+ official organ of the chancellor).
+
+ _Government Offices._--The following imperial offices are directly
+ responsible to the chancellor and stand under his control:--
+
+ 1. The foreign office, which is divided into three departments: (i.)
+ the political and diplomatic; (ii.) the political and commercial;
+ (iii.) the legal. The chief of the foreign office is a secretary of
+ state, taking his instructions immediately from the chancellor.
+
+ 2. The colonial office (under the direction of a secretary of state)
+ is divided into (i.) a civil department; (ii.) a military department;
+ (iii.) a disciplinary court.
+
+ 3. The ministry of the interior or home office (under the conduct of a
+ secretary of state). This office is divided into four departments,
+ dealing with (i.) the business of the Bundesrat, the Reichstag, the
+ elections, citizenship, passports, the press, and military and naval
+ matters, so far as the last concern the civil authorities; (ii.)
+ purely social matters, such as old age pensions, accident insurance,
+ migration, settlement, poor law administration, &c.; (iii.) sanitary
+ matters, patents, canals, steamship lines, weights and measures; and
+ (iv.) commercial and economic relations--such as agriculture,
+ industry, commercial treaties and statistics.
+
+ 4. The imperial admiralty (_Reichsmarineamt_), which is the chief
+ board for the administration of the imperial navy, its maintenance and
+ development.
+
+ 5. The imperial ministry of justice (_Reichsjustizamt_), presided over
+ by a secretary of state. This office, not to be confused with the
+ _Reichsgericht_ (supreme legal tribunal of the empire) in Leipzig,
+ deals principally with the drafting of legal measures to be submitted
+ to the Reichstag.
+
+ 6. The imperial treasury (_Reichsschatzamt_), or exchequer, is the
+ head financial office of the empire. Presided over by a secretary of
+ state, its functions are principally those appertaining to the control
+ of the national debt and its administration, together with such as in
+ the United Kingdom are delegated to the board of inland revenue.
+
+ 7. The imperial railway board (_Reichseisenbahnamt_), the chief
+ official of which has the title of "president," deals exclusively with
+ the management of the railways throughout the empire, in so far as
+ they fall under the control of the imperial authorities in respect of
+ laws passed for their harmonious interworking, their tariffs and the
+ safety of passengers conveyed.
+
+ 8. The imperial post office (_Reichspostamt_), under a secretary of
+ state, controls the post and telegraph administration of the empire
+ (with the exception of Bavaria and Wurttemberg), as also those in the
+ colonies and dependencies.
+
+ 9. The imperial office for the administration of the imperial railways
+ in Alsace-Lorraine, the chief of which is the Prussian minister of
+ public works.
+
+ 10. The office of the accountant-general of the empire
+ (_Rechnungshof_), which controls and supervises the expenditure of the
+ sums voted by the legislative bodies, and revises the accounts of the
+ imperial bank (_Reichsbank_).
+
+ 11. The administration of the imperial invalid fund, i.e. of the fund
+ set apart in 1871 for the benefit of soldiers invalided in the war of
+ 1870-71; and
+
+ 12. The imperial bank (_Reichsbank_), supervised by a committee of
+ four under the presidency of the imperial chancellor, who is a fifth
+ and permanent member of such committee.
+
+ The heads of the various departments of state do not form, as in
+ England, the nucleus of a cabinet. In so far as they are secretaries
+ of state, they are directly responsible to the chancellor, who
+ represents all the offices in his person, and, as has been said, is
+ the medium of communication between the emperor and the Bundesrat and
+ Reichstag.
+
+ _Colonies._--The following table gives some particulars of the
+ dependencies of the empire:--
+
+ +------------------------------------+------------+-----------+------------+
+ | | | Area | |
+ | Name. | Date of |(estimated)| Pop. |
+ | |Acquisition.| sq. m. |(estimated).|
+ +------------------------------------+------------+-----------+------------+
+ |In Africa-- | | | |
+ | Togoland | 1884 | 33,700 | 1,000,000 |
+ | Cameroon | 1884 | 190,000 | 3,500,000 |
+ | S.W. Africa | 1884 | 322,450 | 200,000 |
+ | East Africa | 1885 | 364,000 | 7,000,000 |
+ | +------------+-----------+------------+
+ | Total in Africa | | 910,150 | 11,700,000 |
+ |In the Pacific-- | | | |
+ | German New Guinea | 1884 | 70,000 | 110,000(?)|
+ | Bismarck Archipelago | 1884 | 20,000 | 188,000 |
+ | Caroline, Pelew and Mariana Islands| 1899 | 800 | 41,600 |
+ | Solomon Islands | 1886 | 4,200 | 45,000 |
+ | Marshall Islands | 1885 | 160 | 15,000 |
+ | Samoan Islands | 1899 | 985 | 33,000 |
+ | | +-----------+------------+
+ | Total in Pacific | | 96,145 | 432,600 |
+ |In Asia-- | | | |
+ | Kiao-chow | 1897 | 117 | 60,000 |
+ | | +-----------+------------+
+ | Total dependencies | 1884-1899 |1,006,412 | 12,192,600 |
+ +------------------------------------+------------+-----------+------------+
+
+ Except Kiao-chow, which is controlled by the admiralty, the
+ dependencies of the empire are under the direction of the colonial
+ office. This office, created in 1907, replaced the colonial department
+ of the foreign office which previously had had charge of colonial
+ affairs. The value of the trade of the colonies with Germany in 1906
+ was: imports into Germany, L1,028,000; exports from Germany,
+ L2,236,000. For 1907 the total revenue from the colonies was L849,000;
+ the expenditure of the empire on the colonies in the same year being
+ L4,362,000. (See the articles on the various colonies.)
+
+_Local Government._--In the details of its organization local
+self-government differs considerably in the various states of the German
+empire. The general principle on which it is based, however, is that
+which has received its most complete expression in the Prussian system:
+government by experts, checked by lay criticism and the power of the
+purse, and effective control by the central authorities. In Prussia at
+least the medieval system of local self-government had succumbed
+completely to the centralizing policy of the monarchy, and when it was
+revived it was at the will and for the purposes of the central
+authorities, as subsidiary to the bureaucratic system. This fact
+determined its general characteristics. In England the powers of the
+local authorities are defined by act of parliament, and within the
+limits of these powers they have a free hand. In Germany general powers
+are granted by law, subject to the approval of the central authorities,
+with the result that it is the government departments that determine
+what the local elected authorities may do, and that the latter regard
+themselves as commissioned to carry out, not so much the will of the
+locality by which they are elected, as that of the central government.
+This attitude is, indeed, inevitable from the double relation in which
+they stand. A _Burgermeister_, once elected, becomes a member of the
+bureaucracy and is responsible to the central administration; even the
+headman of a village commune is, within the narrow limits of his
+functions, a government official. Moreover, under the careful
+classification of affairs into local and central, many things which in
+England are regarded as local (e.g. education, sanitary administration,
+police) are regarded as falling under the sphere of the central
+government, which either administers them directly or by means of
+territorial delegations consisting either of individuals or of groups of
+individuals. These may be purely official (e.g. the Prussian
+_Regierung_), a mixture of officials and of elected non-official members
+approved by the government (e.g. the _Bezirksausschuss_), or may consist
+wholly of authorities elected for another purpose, but made to act as
+the agents of the central departments (e.g. the _Kreisausschuss_). That
+this system works without friction is due to the German habit of
+discipline; that it is, on the whole, singularly effective is a result
+of the peculiarly enlightened and progressive views of the German
+bureaucracy.[3]
+
+The unit of the German system of local government is the commune
+(_Gemeinde_, or more strictly _Ortsgemeinde_). These are divided into
+rural communes (_Landgemeinden_) and urban communes (_Stadtgemeinden_),
+the powers and functions of which, though differing widely, are based
+upon the same general principle of representative local self-government.
+The higher organs of local government, so far as these are
+representative, are based on the principle of a group or union of
+communes (_Gemeindeverband_). Thus, in Prussia, the representative
+assembly of the Circle (_Kreistag_) is composed of delegates of the
+rural communes, as well as of the large landowners and the towns, while
+the members of the provincial diet (_Provinziallandtag_) are chosen by
+the _Kreistage_ and by such towns as form separate _Kreise_.
+
+In Prussia the classes of administrative areas are as follows: (1) the
+province, (2) the government district (_Regierungsbezirk_), (3) the
+rural circle (_Landkreis_) and urban circle (_Stadtkreis_), (4) the
+official district (_Amtsbezirk_), (5) the town commune (_Stadtgemeinde_)
+and rural commune (_Landgemeinde_). Of these areas the provinces,
+circles and communes are for the purposes both of the central
+administration and of local self-government, and the bodies by which
+they are governed are corporations. The _Regierungsbezirke_ and
+_Amtsbezirke_, on the other hand, are for the purposes of the central
+administration only and are not incorporated. The Prussian system is
+explained in greater detail in the article PRUSSIA (q.v.). Here it must
+suffice to indicate briefly the general features of local government in
+the other German states, as compared with that in Prussia. The province,
+which usually covers the area of a formerly independent state (e.g.
+Hanover) is peculiar to Prussia. The _Regierungsbezirk_, however, is
+common to the larger states under various names, _Regierungsbezirk_ in
+Bavaria, _Kreishauptmannschaft_ in Saxony, _Kreis_ in Wurttemberg.
+Common to all is the president (_Regierungsprasident_, _Kreishauptmann_
+in Saxony), an official who, with a committee of advisers, is
+responsible for the oversight of the administration of the circles and
+communes within his jurisdiction. Whereas in Prussia, however, the
+_Regierung_ is purely official, with no representative element, the
+_Regierungsbezirk_ in Bavaria has a representative body, the _Landrat_,
+consisting of delegates of the district assemblies, the towns, large
+landowners, clergy and--in certain cases--the universities; the
+president is assisted by a committee (_Landratsausschuss_) of six
+members elected by the _Landrat_. In Saxony the _Kreishauptmann_ is
+assisted by a committee (_Kreisausschuss_).
+
+Below the _Regierungsbezirk_ is the _Kreis_, or Circle, in Prussia,
+Baden and Hesse, which corresponds to the _Distrikt_ in Bavaria, the
+_Oberamt_ in Wurttemberg[4] and the _Amtshauptmannschaft_ in Saxony. The
+representative assembly of the Circle (_Kreistag_, _Distriktsrat_ in
+Bavaria, _Amtsversammlung_ in Wurttemberg, _Bezirksversammlung_ in
+Saxony) is elected by the communes, and is presided over by an official,
+either elected or, as in the case of the Prussian _Landrat_, nominated
+from a list submitted by the assembly. So far as their administrative
+and legislative functions are concerned the German _Kreistage_ have been
+compared to the English county councils or the Hungarian _comitatus_.
+Their decisions, however, are subject to the approval of their official
+chiefs. To assist the executive a small committee (_Kreisausschuss_,
+_Distriktsausschuss_, &c.) is elected subject to official approval. The
+official district (_Amtsbezirk_), a subdivision of the circle for
+certain administrative purposes (notably police), is peculiar to
+Prussia.
+
+ _Rural Communes._--As stated above, the lowest administrative area is
+ the commune, whether urban or rural. The laws as to the constitution
+ and powers of the rural communes vary much in the different states. In
+ general the commune is a body corporate, its assembly consisting
+ either (in small villages) of the whole body of the qualified
+ inhabitants (_Gemeindeversammlung_), or of a representative assembly
+ (_Gemeindevertretung_) elected by them (in communes where there are
+ more than forty qualified inhabitants). At its head is an elected
+ headman (_Schulze_, _Dorfvorsteher_, &c.), with a small body of
+ assistants (_Schoffen_, &c.). He is a government official responsible,
+ _inter alia_, for the policing of the commune. Where there are large
+ estates these sometimes constitute communes of themselves. For common
+ purposes several communes may combine, such combinations being termed
+ in Wurttemberg _Burgermeistereien_, in the Rhine province
+ _Amtsverbande_. In general the communes are of slight importance.
+ Where the land is held by small peasant proprietors, they display a
+ certain activity; where there are large ground landlords, these
+ usually control them absolutely.
+
+ _Towns._--The constitution of the towns (_Stadteverfassung_) varies
+ more greatly in the several states than that of the rural communes.
+ According to the so-called _Stein'sche Stadteverfassung_ (the system
+ introduced in Prussia by Stein in 1808), which, to differentiate
+ between it and other systems, is called the _Magistratsverfassung_ (or
+ magisterial constitution), the municipal communes enjoy a greater
+ degree of self-government than do the rural. In the magisterial
+ constitution of larger towns and cities, the members of the
+ _Magistrat_, i.e. the executive council (also called _Stadtrat_,
+ _Gemeinderat_), are elected by the representative assembly of the
+ citizens (_Stadtverordnetenversammlung_) out of their own body.
+
+ In those parts of Germany which come under the influence of French
+ legislation, the constitution of the towns and that of the rural
+ communes (the so-called _Burgermeistereiverfassung_) is identical, in
+ that the members of the communal executive body are, in the same way
+ as those of the communal assembly, elected to office immediately by
+ the whole body of municipal electors.
+
+ The government of the towns is regulated in the main by municipal
+ codes (_Stadteordnungen_), largely based upon Stein's reform of 1808.
+ This, superseding the autonomy severally enjoyed by the towns and
+ cities since the middle ages (see COMMUNE), aimed at welding the
+ citizens, who had hitherto been divided into classes and gilds, into
+ one corporate whole, and giving them all an active share in the
+ administration of public affairs, while reserving to the central
+ authorities the power of effective control.
+
+ The system which obtains in all the old Prussian provinces (with the
+ exception of Rugen and Vorpommern or Hither Pomerania) and in
+ Westphalia is that of Stein, modified by subsequent laws--notably
+ those of 1853 and 1856--which gave the state a greater influence,
+ while extending the powers of the _Magistrat_. In Vorpommern and
+ Rugen, and thus in the towns of Greifswald, Stralsund and Bergen,
+ among others, the old civic constitutions remain unchanged. In the new
+ Prussian provinces, Frankfort-on-Main received a special municipal
+ constitution in 1867 and the towns of Schleswig-Holstein in 1869. The
+ province of Hanover retains its system as emended in 1858, and
+ Hesse-Nassau, with the exception of Frankfort-on-Main, received a
+ special corporate system in 1897. The municipal systems of Bavaria,
+ Wurttemberg and Saxony are more or less based on that of Stein, but
+ with a wider sphere of self-government. In Mecklenburg there is no
+ uniform system. In Saxe-Coburg, the towns of Coburg and Neustadt have
+ separate and peculiar municipal constitutions. In almost all the other
+ states the system is uniform. The free cities of Lubeck, Hamburg and
+ Bremen, as sovereign states, form a separate class. Their
+ constitutions are described in the articles on them.
+
+ Where the "magisterial" constitution prevails, the members of the
+ _Magistrat_, i.e. the executive council (also called variously
+ _Stadtrat_, _Gemeindevorstand_, &c.), are as a rule elected by the
+ representative assembly of the burgesses
+ (_Stadtverordnetenversammlung_; also _Gemeinderat_, _stadtischer
+ Ausschuss_, _Kollegium der Burgervorsteher_, _Stadtaltesten_, &c.).
+ The _Magistrat_ consists of the chief burgomaster (_Erster
+ Burgermeister_ or _Stadtschultheiss_, and in the large cities
+ Oberburgermeister), a second burgomaster or assessor, and in large
+ towns of a number of paid and unpaid town councillors (_Ratsherren_,
+ _Senatoren_, _Schoffen_, _Ratsmanner_, _Magistratsrate_), together
+ with certain salaried members selected for specific purposes (e.g.
+ _Baurat_, for building). Over this executive body the
+ _Stadtverordneten_, who are elected by the whole body of citizens and
+ unpaid, exercise a general control, their assent being necessary to
+ any measures of importance, especially those involving any
+ considerable outlay. They are elected for from three to six years; the
+ members of the _Magistrat_ are chosen for six, nine or twelve years,
+ sometimes even for life. In the large towns the burgomasters must be
+ jurists, and are paid. The police are under the control of the
+ _Magistrat_, except in certain large cities, where they are under a
+ separate state department.
+
+ The second system mentioned above (_Burgermeistereiverfassung_)
+ prevails in the Rhine province, the Bavarian Palatinate, Hesse,
+ Saxe-Weimar, Anhalt, Waldeck and the principalities of Reuss and
+ Schwarzburg. In Wurttemberg, Baden and Hesse-Nassau the system is a
+ compromise between the two; both the town and rural communes have a
+ mayor (_Burgermeister_ or _Schultheiss_, as the case may be) and a
+ _Gemeinderat_ for administrative purposes, the citizens exercising
+ control through a representative _Gemeindeausschuss_ (communal
+ committee).
+
+_Justice._--By the Judicature Act--_Gerichtsverfassungsgesetz_--of 1879,
+the so-called "regular litigious" jurisdiction of the courts of law was
+rendered uniform throughout the empire, and the courts are now
+everywhere alike in character and composition; and with the exception of
+the _Reichsgericht_ (supreme court of the empire), immediately subject
+to the government of the state in which they exercise jurisdiction, and
+not to the imperial government. The courts, from the lowest to the
+highest, are _Amtsgericht_, _Landgericht_, _Oberlandesgericht_ and
+_Reichsgericht_. There are, further, _Verwaltungsgerichte_
+(administrative courts) for the adjustment of disputes between the
+various organs of local government, and other special courts, such as
+military, consular and arbitration courts (_Schiedsgericht_). In
+addition to litigious business the courts also deal with non-litigious
+matters, such as the registration of titles to land, guardianship and
+the drawing up and custody of testamentary dispositions, all which are
+almost entirely within the province of the _Amtsgerichte_. There are
+uniform codes of criminal law (_Strafgesetzbuch_), commercial law and
+civil law (_Burgerliches Gesetzbuch_), the last of which came into force
+on the 1st of January 1900. The criminal code, based on that of Prussia
+anterior to 1870, was gradually adopted by all the other states and was
+generally in force by 1872. It has, however, been frequently emended and
+supplemented.
+
+ The lowest courts of first instance are the _Amtsgerichte_, each
+ presided over by a single judge, and with jurisdiction in petty
+ criminal and civil cases, up to 300 marks (L15). They are also
+ competent to deal with all disputes as to wages, and letting and
+ hiring, without regard to the value of the object in dispute. Petty
+ criminal cases are heard by the judge (_Amtsrichter_) sitting with two
+ _Schoffen_--assessors--selected by lot from the jury lists, who are
+ competent to try prisoners for offences punishable with a fine, not
+ exceeding 600 marks (L30) or corresponding confinement, or with
+ imprisonment not exceeding three months. The _Landgerichte_ revise the
+ decisions of the _Amtsgerichte_, and have also an original
+ jurisdiction in criminal and civil cases and in divorce proceedings.
+ The criminal chamber of the _Landgericht_ is composed of five judges,
+ and a majority of four is required for a conviction. These courts are
+ competent to try cases of felony punishable with a term of
+ imprisonment not exceeding five years. The preliminary examination is
+ conducted by a judge, who does not sit on the bench at the trial. Jury
+ courts (_Schwurgerichte_) are not permanent institutions, but are
+ periodically held. They are formed of three judges of the
+ _Landgericht_ and a jury of twelve; and a two-thirds majority is
+ necessary to convict. There are 173 _Landgerichte_ in the empire,
+ being one court for every 325,822 inhabitants. The first court of
+ second instance is the _Oberlandesgericht_, which has an original
+ jurisdiction in grave offences and is composed of seven judges. There
+ are twenty-eight such courts in the empire. Bavaria alone has an
+ _Oberstes Landesgericht_, which exercises a revising jurisdiction over
+ the _Oberlandesgerichte_ in the state. The supreme court of the German
+ empire is the _Reichsgericht_, having its seat at Leipzig. The judges,
+ numbering ninety-two, are appointed by the emperor on the advice of
+ the federal council (_Bundesrat_). This court exercises an appellate
+ jurisdiction in civil cases remitted, for the decision of questions of
+ law, by the inferior courts and also in all criminal cases referred to
+ it. It sits in four criminal and six civil senates, each consisting of
+ seven judges, one of whom is the president. The judges are styled
+ _Reichsgerichtsrate_ (counsellors of the imperial court).
+
+ In the _Amtsgericht_ a private litigant may conduct his own case; but
+ where the object of the litigation exceeds 300 marks (L15), and in
+ appeals from the _Amtsgericht_ to the _Landgericht_, the plaintiff
+ (and also the defendant) must be represented by an
+ advocate--_Rechtsanwalt_.
+
+ A _Rechtsanwalt_, having studied law at a university for four years
+ and having passed two state examinations, if desiring to practise must
+ be admitted as "defending counsel" by the _Amtsgericht_ or
+ _Landgericht_, or by both. These advocates are not state officials,
+ but are sworn to the due execution of their duties. In case a client
+ has suffered damage owing to the negligence of the advocate, the
+ latter can be made responsible. In every district of the
+ _Oberlandesgericht_, the _Rechtsanwalte_ are formed into an
+ _Anwaltkammer_ (chamber of advocates), and the council of each
+ chamber, sitting as a court of honour, deals with and determines
+ matters affecting the honour of the profession. An appeal lies from
+ this to a second court of honour, consisting of the president, three
+ judges of the _Reichsgericht_ and of three lawyers admitted to
+ practice before that court.
+
+ Criminal prosecutions are conducted in the name of the crown by the
+ _Staatsanwalte_ (state attorneys), who form a separate branch of the
+ judicial system, and initiate public prosecutions or reject evidence
+ as being insufficient to procure conviction. The proceedings in the
+ courts are, as a rule, public. Only in exceptional circumstances are
+ cases heard _in camera_.
+
+ Military offences come before the military court and serious offences
+ before the _Kriegsgericht_. The court-martial is, in every case,
+ composed of the commander of the district as president, and four
+ officers, assisted by a judge-advocate (_Kriegsgerichtsrat_), who
+ conducts the case and swears the judges and witnesses. In the most
+ serious class of cases, three officers and two judge-advocates are the
+ judges. The prisoner is defended by an officer, whom he may himself
+ appoint, and can be acquitted by a simple majority, but only be
+ condemned by a two-thirds majority. There are also _Kaufmanns-_ and
+ _Gewerbegerichte_ (commercial and industrial courts), composed of
+ persons belonging to the classes of employers and employees, under the
+ presidency of a judge of the court. Their aim is the effecting of a
+ reconciliation between the parties. From the decision of these courts
+ an appeal lies to the _Landgericht_ where the amount of the object in
+ dispute exceeds 100 marks (L5).
+
+ The following table shows the number of criminal cases tried before
+ the courts of first instance, with the number and sex of convicted
+ persons, and the number of the latter per 10,000 of the civil
+ population over twelve years of age:--
+
+ +------+-------------------------+-------------------+---------+------------+
+ | | Cases tried. | Persons convicted.| |Convictions |
+ | Year.|-------------------------+-------------------| Total. | per 10,000 |
+ | |Amtsgericht.|Landgericht.| Males. |Females. | |Inhabitants.|
+ +------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+------------+
+ | 1900 | 1,143,687 | 94,241 | 396,975 | 72,844 | 469,819 | 119.5 |
+ | 1901 | 1,205,558 | 101,471 | 419,592 | 77,718 | 497,310 | 125.6 |
+ | 1902 | 1,221,080 | 104,434 | 431,257 | 81,072 | 512,329 | 127.3 |
+ | 1903 | 1,251,662 | 105,241 | 424,813 | 80,540 | 505,353 | 123.4 |
+ | 1904 | 1,287,686 | 105,457 | 435,191 | 81,785 | 516,976 | 124.2 |
+ +------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+------------+
+
+ Of those convicted in 1904, 225,326 had been previously convicted.
+
+_Poor Law._--A law passed by the North German Confederation of the 6th
+of June 1870, and subsequently amended by an imperial law of the 12th of
+March 1894, laid down rules for the relief of the destitute in all the
+states composing the empire, with the exception of Bavaria and
+Alsace-Lorraine. According to the system adopted, the public relief of
+the poor is committed to the care of local unions (_Ortsarmenverbande_)
+and provincial unions (_Landarmenverbande_), the former corresponding,
+generally, to the commune, and the latter to a far wider area, a circle
+or a province. Any person of eighteen years, who has continuously
+resided with a local union for the space of two years, there acquires
+his domicile. But any destitute German subject must be relieved by the
+local union in which he happens to be at the time, the cost of the
+relief being defrayed by the local or provincial union in which he has
+his domicile. The wife and children have also their domicile in the
+place where the husband or father has his.[5]
+
+ Relief of the poor is one of the chief duties of the organs of local
+ self-government. The moneys for the purpose are mainly derived from
+ general taxation (poor rates per se being but rarely directly levied),
+ special funds and voluntary contributions. In some German states and
+ communes certain dues (such as the dog tax in Saxony), death duties
+ and particularly dues payable in respect of public entertainments and
+ police court fines, are assigned to the poor-relief chest. In some
+ large towns the Elberfeld system of unpaid district visitors and the
+ interworking of public and private charity is in force. The imperial
+ laws which introduced the compulsory insurance of all the humbler
+ workers within the empire, and gave them, when incapacitated by
+ sickness, accident and old age, an absolute right to pecuniary
+ assistance, have greatly reduced pauperism and crime.
+
+_Workmen's Insurance._--On June 15, 1883, the Reichstag, as the result
+of the policy announced by the emperor William I. in his speech from the
+throne in 1881, passed an act making insurance against sickness,
+accident, and incapacity compulsory on all workers in industrial
+pursuits. By further laws, in 1885 and 1892, this obligation was
+extended to certain other classes of workers, and the system was further
+modified by acts passed in 1900 and 1903. Under this system every person
+insured has a right to assistance in case of sickness, accident, or
+incapacity, while in case of death his widow and children receive an
+annuity.
+
+ 1. Insurance against sickness is provided for under these laws partly
+ by the machinery already existing, i.e. the sick benefit societies,
+ partly by new machinery devised to meet the new obligation imposed.
+ The sick-funds (_Krankenkassen_) are thus of seven kinds: (1) free
+ assistance funds (_Freie Hilfskassen_), either registered under the
+ law of 1876, as modified in 1884 (_Eingeschriebene Hilfskassen_), or
+ established under the law of the separate states (_landesrechtliche
+ Hilfskassen_); (2) _Betriebs-_ or _Fabrikkrankenkassen_, funds
+ established by individual factory-owners; (3) _Baukrankenkasse_, a
+ fund established for workmen engaged on the construction (_Bau_) of
+ particular engineering works (canal-digging, &c.), by individual
+ contractors; (4) gild sick funds (_Innungskrankenkassen_), established
+ by the gilds for the workmen and apprentices of their members; (5)
+ miners' sick fund (_Knappschaftskasse_); (6) local sick fund
+ (_Ortskrankenkasse_), established by the commune for particular crafts
+ or classes of workmen; (7) _Gemeindekrankenversicherung_, i.e.
+ insurance of members of the commune as such, in the event of their not
+ subscribing to any of the other funds. Of these, 2, 3, 6 and 7 were
+ created under the above-mentioned laws.
+
+ The number of such funds amounted in 1903 to 23,271, and included
+ 10,224,297 workmen. The _Ortskrankenkassen_, with 4,975,322 members,
+ had the greatest, and the _Baukrankenkassen_, with 16,459, the
+ smallest number of members. The _Ortskrankenkassen_, which endeavour
+ to include workmen of a like trade, have to a great extent, especially
+ in Saxony, fallen under the control of the Social Democrats. The
+ appointment of permanent doctors (_Kassenarzte_) at a fixed salary has
+ given rise to much difference between the medical profession and this
+ local sick fund; and the insistence on "freedom of choice" in doctors,
+ which has been made by the members and threatens to militate against
+ the interest of the profession, has been met on the part of the
+ medical body by the appointment of a commission to investigate cases
+ of undue influence in the selection.
+
+ According to the statistics furnished in the _Vierteljahreshefte zur
+ Statistik des deutschen Reiches_ for 1905, the receipts amounted to
+ upwards of L10,000,000 for 1903, and the expenditure to somewhat less
+ than this sum. Administrative changes were credited with nearly
+ L600,000, and the invested funds totalled L9,000,000. The workmen
+ contribute at the rate of two-thirds and the employers at the rate of
+ one-third; the sum payable in respect of each worker varying from
+ 1(1/2)-3% of the earnings in the "communal sick fund" to at most
+ l(1/2)-4% in the others.
+
+ 2. Insurance against old age and invalidity comprehends all persons
+ who have entered upon their 17th year, and who belong to one of the
+ following classes of wage-earners: artisans, apprentices, domestic
+ servants, dressmakers, charwomen, laundresses, seamstresses,
+ housekeepers, foremen, engineers, journeymen, clerks and apprentices
+ in shops (excepting assistants and apprentices in chemists' shops),
+ schoolmasters, schoolmistresses, teachers and governesses, provided
+ the earnings do not exceed L100 per annum. The insured are arranged in
+ five classes, according to the amount of their yearly earnings: viz.
+ L17, 10s.; L27, 10s.; L47, 10s.; L57, 10s.; and L100. The
+ contributions, affixed to a "pension book" in stamps, are payable each
+ week, and amount, in English money, to 1.45d., 2.34d., 2.82d., 3.30d.
+ and 4.23d. Of the contribution one half is paid by the employer and
+ the other by the employee, whose duty it is to see that the amount has
+ been properly entered in the pension book. The pensions, in case of
+ invalidity, amount (including a state subsidy of L2, 10s. for each)
+ respectively to L8, 8s.; L11, 5s.; L13, 10s.; L15, 15s.; and L18. The
+ old-age pensions (beginning at 70 years) amount to L5, 10s.; L7; L8,
+ 10s.; L10; and L11, 10s. The old-age and invalid insurance is carried
+ out by thirty-one large territorial offices, to which must be added
+ nine special unions. The income of the forty establishments was, in
+ 1903, L8,500,000 (including L1,700,000 imperial subsidy). The capital
+ collected was upwards of L50,000,000.
+
+ It may be added that employees in mercantile and trading houses, who
+ have not exceeded the age of 40 years and whose income is below L150,
+ are allowed voluntarily to share in the benefits of this insurance.
+
+ 3. _Accident Insurance (Unfallversicherung)._--The insurance of
+ workmen and the lesser officials against the risks of accident is
+ effected not through the state or the commune, but through
+ associations formed _ad hoc_. These associations are composed of
+ members following the same or allied occupations (e.g. foresters,
+ seamen, smiths, &c.), and hence are called "professional associations"
+ (_Berufsgenossenschaften_). They are empowered, subject to the limits
+ set by the law, to regulate their own business by means of a general
+ meeting and of elected committees. The greater number of these
+ associations cover a very wide field, generally the whole empire; in
+ such cases they are empowered to divide their spheres into sections,
+ and to establish agents in different centres to inquire into cases of
+ accident, and to see to the carrying out of the rules prescribed by
+ the association for the avoidance of accidents. Those associations, of
+ which the area of operations extends beyond any single state, are
+ subordinate to the control of the imperial insurance bureau
+ (_Reichsversicherungsamt_) at Berlin; those that are confined to a
+ single state (as generally in the case of foresters and husbandmen)
+ are under the control of the state insurance bureau
+ (_Landesversicherungsamt_).
+
+ So far as their earnings do not exceed L150 per annum, the following
+ classes are under the legal obligation to insure: labourers in mines,
+ quarries, dockyards, wharves, manufactories and breweries;
+ bricklayers and navvies; post-office, railway, and naval and military
+ servants and officials; carters, raftsmen and canal hands; cellarmen,
+ warehousemen; stevedores; and agricultural labourers. Each of these
+ groups forms an association, which within a certain district embraces
+ all the industries with which it is connected. The funds for covering
+ the compensation payable in respect of accidents are raised by
+ payments based, in agriculture, on the taxable capital, and in other
+ trades and industries on the earnings of the insured. Compensation in
+ respect of injury or death is not paid if the accident was brought
+ about through the culpable negligence or other delict of the insured.
+ In case of injury, involving incapacity for more than thirteen weeks
+ (for the earlier period the _Krankenkassen_ provide), the weekly sum
+ payable during complete or permanent incapacity is fixed at the ratio
+ of two-thirds of the earnings during the year preceding the accident,
+ and in case of partial disablement, at such a proportion of the
+ earnings as corresponds to the loss through disablement. In certain
+ circumstances (e.g. need for paid nursing) the sum may be increased to
+ the full rate of the previous earnings. In case of death, as a
+ consequence of injury, the following payments are made: (1) a sum of
+ at least L2, 10s. to defray the expenses of interment; (2) a monthly
+ allowance of one-fifth of the annual earnings as above to the widow
+ and each child up to the age of 15.
+
+ _Life Insurance._--There were forty-six companies in 1900 for the
+ insurance of life. The number of persons insured was 1,446,249 at the
+ end of that year, the insurances amounting to roughly L320,000,000.
+ Besides these are sixty-one companies--of which forty-six are
+ comprised in the above life insurance companies--paying subsidies in
+ case of death or of military service, endowments, &c. Some of these
+ companies are industrial. The transactions of all these companies
+ included in 1900 over 4,179,000 persons, and the amount of insurances
+ effected was L80,000,000.
+
+_Religion._--So far as the empire as a whole is concerned there is no
+state religion, each state being left free to maintain its own
+establishment. Thus while the emperor, as king of Prussia, is _summus
+episcopus_ of the Prussian Evangelical Church, as emperor he enjoys no
+such ecclesiastical headship. In the several states the relations of
+church and state differ fundamentally according as these states are
+Protestant or Catholic. In the latter these relations are regulated
+either by concordats between the governments and the Holy See, or by
+bulls of circumscription issued by the pope after negotiation. The
+effects of concordats and bulls alike are tempered by the exercise by
+the civil power of certain traditional reserved rights, e.g. the
+_placetum regium_, _recursus ab abusu_, _nominatio regia_, and that of
+vetoing the nomination of _personae minus gratae_. In the Protestant
+states the ecclesiastical authority remains purely territorial, and the
+sovereign remains effective head of the established church. During the
+19th century, however, a large measure of ecclesiastical self-government
+(by means of general synods, &c.) was introduced, _pari passu_ with the
+growth of constitutional government in the state; and in effect, though
+the theoretical supremacy of the sovereign survives in the church as in
+the state, he cannot exercise it save through the general synod, which
+is the state parliament for ecclesiastical purposes. Where a sovereign
+rules over a state containing a large proportion of both Catholics and
+Protestants, which is usually the case, both systems coexist. Thus in
+Prussia the relations of the Roman Catholic community to the Protestant
+state are regulated by arrangement between the Prussian government and
+Rome; while in Bavaria the king, though a Catholic, is legally _summus
+episcopus_ of the Evangelical Church.
+
+ According to the religious census of 1900 there were in the German
+ empire 35,231,104 Evangelical Protestants, 20,327,913 Roman Catholics,
+ 6472 Greek Orthodox, 203,678 Christians belonging to other
+ confessions, 586,948 Jews, 11,597 members of other sects and 5938
+ unclassified. The Christians belonging to other confessions include
+ Moravian Brethren, Mennonites, Baptists, Methodists and Quakers,
+ German Catholics, Old Catholics, &c. The table on following page shows
+ the distribution of the population according to religious beliefs as
+ furnished by the census of 1900.
+
+ Almost two-thirds of the population belong to the Evangelical Church,
+ and rather more than a third to the Church of Rome; the actual figures
+ (based on the census of 1900) being (%) Evangelical Protestants, 62.5;
+ Roman Catholics, 36.1; Dissenters and others, .043, and Jews, 1.0. The
+ Protestants have not increased proportionately in number since 1890,
+ while the Roman Catholics show a small relative increase. Three states
+ in Germany have a decidedly predominant Roman Catholic population,
+ viz. Alsace-Lorraine, Bavaria and Baden; and in four states the
+ Protestant element prevails, but with from 24 to 34% of Roman
+ Catholics; viz. Prussia, Wurttemberg, Hesse and Oldenburg. In Saxony
+ and the eighteen minor states the number of Roman Catholics is only
+ from 0.3 to 3.3% of the population.
+
+ +--------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+--------+
+ | States. |Evangelicals.| Catholics.| Other | Jews. |
+ | | | |Christians.| |
+ +--------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+--------+
+ | Prussia | 21,817,577 |12,113,670 | 139,127 |392,322 |
+ | Bavaria | 1,749,206 | 4,363,178 | 7,607 | 54,928 |
+ | Saxony | 3,972,063 | 198,265 | 19,103 | 12,416 |
+ | Wurttemberg | 1,497,299 | 650,392 | 9,426 | 11,916 |
+ | Baden | 704,058 | 1,131,639 | 5,563 | 26,132 |
+ | Hesse | 746,201 | 341,570 | 7,368 | 24,486 |
+ | Mecklenburg-Schwerin | 597,268 | 8,182 | 487 | 1,763 |
+ | Saxe-Weimar | 347,144 | 14,158 | 361 | 1,188 |
+ | Mecklenburg-Strelitz | 100,568 | 1,612 | 62 | 331 |
+ | Oldenburg | 309,510 | 86,920 | 1,334 | 1,359 |
+ | Brunswick | 436,976 | 24,175 | 1,271 | 1,824 |
+ | Saxe-Meiningen | 244,810 | 4,170 | 395 | 1,351 |
+ | Saxe-Altenburg | 189,885 | 4,723 | 206 | 99 |
+ | Saxe-Coburg-Gotha | 225,074 | 3,330 | 515 | 608 |
+ | Anhalt | 301,953 | 11,699 | 794 | 1,605 |
+ | Schwarzburg-Sondershausen| 79,593 | 1,110 | 27 | 166 |
+ | Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt | 92,298 | 676 | 37 | 48 |
+ | Waldeck | 55,285 | 1,831 | 164 | 637 |
+ | Reuss-Greiz | 66,860 | 1,043 | 444 | 48 |
+ | Reuss-Schleiz | 135,958 | 2,579 | 466 | 178 |
+ | Schaumburg-Lippe | 41,908 | 785 | 177 | 257 |
+ | Lippe | 132,708 | 5,157 | 205 | 879 |
+ | Lubeck | 93,671 | 2,190 | 213 | 670 |
+ | Bremen | 208,815 | 13,506 | 876 | 1,409 |
+ | Hamburg | 712,338 | 30,903 | 3,149 | 17,949 |
+ | Alsace-Lorraine | 372,078 | 1,310,450 | 4,301 | 32,379 |
+ +--------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+--------+
+ | Total | 35,231,104 |20,327,913 | 203,678 |586,948 |
+ +--------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------+--------+
+
+ From the above table little can be inferred as to the geographical
+ distribution of the two chief confessions. On this point it must be
+ borne in mind that the population of the larger towns, on account of
+ the greater mobility of the population since the introduction of
+ railways and the abolition of restrictions upon free settlement, has
+ become more mixed--Berlin, Leipzig, Hamburg, &c., showing
+ proportionally more Roman Catholics, and Cologne, Frankfort-on-Main,
+ Munich more Protestants than formerly. Otherwise the geographical
+ limits of the confessions have been but little altered since the
+ Thirty Years' War. In the mixed territories those places which
+ formerly belonged to Roman Catholic princes are Roman Catholic still,
+ and _vice versa_. Hence a religious map of South Germany looks like an
+ historical map of the 17th century. The number of localities where the
+ two confessions exist side by side is small. Generally speaking, South
+ Germany is predominantly Roman Catholic. Some districts along the
+ Danube (province of Bavaria, Upper Palatinate, Swabia), southern
+ Wurttemberg and Baden, and in Alsace-Lorraine are entirely so. These
+ territories are bordered by a broad stretch of country on the north,
+ where Protestantism has maintained its hold since the time of the
+ Reformation, including Bayreuth or eastern upper Franconia, middle
+ Franconia, the northern half of Wurttemberg and Baden, with Hesse and
+ the Palatinate. Here the average proportion of Protestants to Roman
+ Catholics is two to one. The basin of the Main is again Roman Catholic
+ from Bamberg to Aschaffenburg (western upper Franconia and lower
+ Franconia). In Prussia the western and south-eastern provinces are
+ mostly Roman Catholic, especially the Rhine province, together with
+ the government districts of Munster and Arnsberg. The territories of
+ the former principality of Cleves and of the countship of Mark
+ (comprising very nearly the basin of the Ruhr), which went to
+ Brandenburg in 1609, must, however, be excepted. North of Munster,
+ Roman Catholicism is still prevalent in the territory of the former
+ bishopric of Osnabruck. In the east, East Prussia (Ermeland excepted)
+ is purely Protestant. Roman Catholicism was predominant a hundred
+ years ago in all the frontier provinces acquired by Prussia in the
+ days of Frederick the Great, but since then the German immigrants have
+ widely propagated the Protestant faith in these districts. A
+ prevailingly Roman Catholic population is still found in the district
+ of Oppeln and the countship of Glatz, in the province of Posen, in the
+ Polish-speaking _Kreise_ of West Prussia, and in Ermeland (East
+ Prussia). In all the remaining territory the Roman Catholic creed is
+ professed only in the Eichsfeld on the southern border of the province
+ of Hanover and around Hildesheim.
+
+
+ Protestant Church.
+
+ The adherents of Protestantism are divided by their confessions into
+ Reformed and Lutheran. To unite these the "church union" has been
+ introduced in several Protestant states, as for example in Prussia and
+ Nassau in 1817, in the Palatinate in 1818 and in Baden in 1822. Since
+ 1817 the distinction has accordingly been ignored in Prussia, and
+ Christians are there enumerated only as Evangelical or Roman Catholic.
+ The union, however, has not remained wholly unopposed--a section of
+ the more rigid Lutherans who separated themselves from the state
+ church being now known as Old Lutherans. In 1866 Prussia annexed
+ Hanover and Schleswig-Holstein, where the Protestants were Lutherans,
+ and Hesse, where the Reformed Church had the preponderance. The
+ inhabitants of these countries opposed the introduction of the union,
+ but could not prevent their being subordinated to the Prussian
+ _Oberkirchenrat_ (high church-council), the supreme court of the state
+ church. A synodal constitution for the Evangelical State Church was
+ introduced in Prussia in 1875. The _Oberkirchenrat_ retains the right
+ of supreme management. The ecclesiastical affairs of the separate
+ provinces are directed by consistorial boards. The parishes
+ (_Pfarreien_) are grouped into dioceses (_Sprengel_), presided over by
+ superintendents, who are subordinate to the superintendent-general of
+ the province. Prussia has sixteen superintendents-general. The
+ ecclesiastical administration is similarly regulated in the other
+ countries of the Protestant creed. Regarding the number of churches
+ and chapels Germany has no exact statistics.
+
+
+ Roman Catholic Church.
+
+ There are five archbishoprics within the German empire: Gnesen-Posen,
+ Cologne, Freiburg (Baden), Munich-Freising and Bamberg. The twenty
+ bishoprics are: Breslau (where the bishop has the title of
+ "prince-bishop"), Ermeland (seat at Frauenburg, East Prussia), Kulm
+ (seat at Pelplin, West Prussia), Fulda, Hildesheim, Osnabruck,
+ Paderborn, Munster, Limburg, Trier, Metz, Strassburg, Spires,
+ Wurzburg, Regensburg, Passau, Eichstatt, Augsburg, Rottenburg
+ (Wurttemberg) and Mainz. Apostolic vicariates exist in Dresden (for
+ Saxony), and others for Anhalt and the northern missions.
+
+ The Old Catholics (q.v.), who seceded from the Roman Church in
+ consequence of the definition of the dogma of papal infallibility,
+ number roughly 50,000, with 54 clergy.
+
+
+ Jews.
+
+ It is in the towns that the Jewish element is chiefly to be found.
+ They belong principally to the mercantile class, and are to a very
+ large extent dealers in money. Their wealth has grown to an
+ extraordinary degree. They are increasingly numerous in Hamburg,
+ Berlin, Frankfort-on-Main, Breslau, Konigsberg, Posen, Cologne,
+ Nuremberg and Furth. As a rule their numbers are proportionately
+ greater in Prussia than elsewhere within the empire. But, since 1871,
+ the Jewish population of Germany shows a far smaller increase than
+ that of the Christian confessions, and even in the parts of the
+ country where the Jewish population is densest it has shown a tendency
+ to diminish. It is relatively greatest in the province of Posen, where
+ the numbers have fallen from 61,982 (39.1 per thousand) in 1871 to
+ 35,327 (18.7 per thousand) in 1900. The explanation is twofold--the
+ extraordinary increase (1) in their numbers in Berlin and the province
+ of Brandenburg, and (2) in the number of conversions to the Christian
+ faith. In this last regard it may be remarked that the impulse is less
+ from religious conviction than from a desire to associate on more
+ equal terms with their neighbours. Though still, in fact at least, if
+ not by law, excluded from many public offices, especially from
+ commands in the army, they nevertheless are very powerful in Germany,
+ the press being for the most part in their hands, and they furnish in
+ many cities fully one-half of the lawyers and the members of the
+ corporation. It should be mentioned, as a curious fact, that the
+ numbers of the Jewish persuasion in the kingdom of Saxony increased
+ from 3358 (1.3 per thousand) in 1871 to 12,416 (3 per thousand) in
+ 1900.
+
+_Education._--In point of educational culture Germany ranks high among
+all the civilized great nations of the world (see EDUCATION:
+_Germany_). Education is general and compulsory throughout the empire,
+and all the states composing it have, with minor modifications, adopted
+the Prussian system providing for the establishment of elementary
+schools--_Volksschulen_--in every town and village. The school age is
+from six to fourteen, and parents can be compelled to send their
+children to a _Volksschule_, unless, to the satisfaction of the
+authorities, they are receiving adequate instruction in some other
+recognized school or institution.
+
+ The total number of primary schools was 60,584 in 1906-1907; teachers,
+ 166,597; pupils, 9,737,262--an average of about one _Volksschule_ to
+ every 900 inhabitants. The annual expenditure was over L26,000,000, of
+ which sum L7,500,000 was provided by state subvention. There were also
+ in Germany in the same year 643 private schools, giving instruction
+ similar to that of the elementary schools, with 41,000 pupils. A good
+ criterion of the progress of education is obtained from the
+ diminishing number of illiterate army recruits, as shown by the
+ following:
+
+ +-----------+---------+------------------------+
+ | | |Unable to Read or Write.|
+ | |Number of+--------+---------------+
+ | Years. |Recruits.| Total. | Per 1000 |
+ | | | | Recruits. |
+ +-----------+---------+--------+---------------+
+ | 1875-1876 | 139,855 | 3331 | 23.7 |
+ | 1880-1881 | 151,180 | 2406 | 15.9 |
+ | 1885-1886 | 152,933 | 1657 | 10.8 |
+ | 1890-1891 | 193,318 | 1035 | 5.4 |
+ | 1895-1896 | 250,287 | 374 | 1.5 |
+ | 1898-1899 | 252,382 | 173 | 0.7 |
+ | 1900-1901 | 253,000 | 131 | 0.45 |
+ +-----------+---------+--------+---------------+
+
+ Of the above 131 illiterates in 1900-1901, 114 were in East and West
+ Prussia, Posen and Silesia.
+
+_Universities and Higher Technical Schools._--Germany owes its large
+number of universities, and its widely diffused higher education to its
+former subdivision into many separate states. Only a few of the
+universities date their existence from the 19th century; the majority of
+them are very much older. Each of the larger provinces, except Posen,
+has at least one university, the entire number being 21. All have four
+faculties except Munster, which has no faculty of medicine. As regards
+theology, Bonn, Breslau and Tubingen have both a Protestant and a
+Catholic faculty; Freiburg, Munich, Munster and Wurzburg are exclusively
+Catholic; and all the rest are Protestant.
+
+ The following table gives the names of the 21 universities, the dates
+ of their respective foundations, the number of their professors and
+ other teachers for the winter half-year 1908-1909, and of the students
+ attending their lectures during the winter half-year of 1907-1908:
+
+ +------------+-----------+----------+--------------------------------------+-------+
+ | | Date of |Professors| Students. | |
+ | |Foundation.| and +---------+------+---------+-----------+ Total.|
+ | | | Teachers.|Theology.| Law. |Medicine.|Philosophy.| |
+ +------------+-----------+----------+---------+------+---------+-----------+-------+
+ | Berlin | 1809 | 493 | 326 | 2747 | 1153 | 3934 | 8220 |
+ | Bonn | 1818 | 190 | 395 | 833 | 282 | 1699 | 3209 |
+ | Breslau | 1811 | 189 | 330 | 617 | 284 | 840 | 2071 |
+ | Erlangen | 1743 | 77 | 155 | 323 | 355 | 225 | 1058 |
+ | Freiburg | 1457 | 150 | 219 | 373 | 580 | 642 | 1814 |
+ | Giessen | 1607 | 100 | 63 | 204 | 331 | 546 | 1144 |
+ | Gottingen | 1737 | 161 | 102 | 441 | 188 | 1126 | 1857 |
+ | Greifswald | 1456 | 105 | 68 | 188 | 186 | 361 | 803 |
+ | Halle | 1694 | 174 | 331 | 450 | 217 | 1239 | 2237 |
+ | Heidelberg | 1385 | 177 | 55 | 357 | 385 | 879 | 1676 |
+ | Jena | 1558 | 116 | 48 | 267 | 265 | 795 | 1375 |
+ | Kiel | 1665 | 121 | 35 | 271 | 239 | 480 | 1025 |
+ | Konigsberg | 1544 | 152 | 68 | 317 | 218 | 502 | 1105 |
+ | Leipzig | 1409 | 234 | 303 | 1013 | 606 | 2419 | 4341 |
+ | Marburg | 1527 | 117 | 133 | 400 | 261 | 876 | 1670 |
+ | Munich | 1826 | 239 | 169 | 1892 | 1903 | 1979 | 5943 |
+ | Munster | 1902 | 95 | 278 | 458 | .. | 870 | 1606 |
+ | Rostock | 1418 | 65 | 48 | 67 | 211 | 322 | 648 |
+ | Strassburg | 1872 | 167 | 241 | 369 | 255 | 844 | 1709 |
+ | Tubingen | 1477 | 111 | 464 | 467 | 263 | 384 | 1578 |
+ | Wurzburg | 1582 | 102 | 106 | 331 | 625 | 320 | 1382 |
+ +------------+-----------+----------+---------+------+---------+-----------+-------+
+
+ Not included in the above list is the little academy--Lyceum
+ Hosianum--at Braunsberg in Prussia, having faculties of theology
+ (Roman Catholic) and philosophy, with 13 teachers and 150 students. In
+ all the universities the number of matriculated students in 1907-1908
+ was 46,471, including 320 women, 2 of whom studied theology, 14 law,
+ 150 philosophy and 154 medicine. There were also, within the same
+ period, 5653 non-matriculated _Horer_ (hearers), including 2486 women.
+
+ Ten schools, technical high schools, or _Polytechnica_, rank with the
+ universities, and have the power of granting certain degrees. They
+ have departments of architecture, building, civil engineering,
+ chemistry, metallurgy and, in some cases, anatomy. These schools are
+ as follows: Berlin (Charlottenburg), Munich, Darmstadt, Karlsruhe,
+ Hanover, Dresden, Stuttgart, Aix-la-Chapelle, Brunswick and Danzig; in
+ 1908 they were attended by 14,149 students (2531 foreigners), and had
+ a teaching staff of 753. Among the remaining higher technical schools
+ may be mentioned the three mining academies of Berlin, Clausthal, in
+ the Harz, and Freiberg in Saxony. For instruction in agriculture there
+ are agricultural schools attached to several universities--notably
+ Berlin, Halle, Gottingen, Konigsberg, Jena, Poppelsdorf near Bonn,
+ Munich and Leipzig. Noted academies of forestry are those of Tharandt
+ (in Saxony), Eberswalde, Munden on the Weser, Hohenheim near
+ Stuttgart, Brunswick, Eisenach, Giessen and Karlsruhe. Other technical
+ schools are again the five veterinary academies of Berlin, Hanover,
+ Munich, Dresden and Stuttgart, the commercial colleges
+ (_Handelshochschulen_) of Leipzig, Aix-la-Chapelle, Hanover,
+ Frankfort-on-Main and Cologne, in addition to 424 commercial schools
+ of a lesser degree, 100 schools for textile manufactures and numerous
+ schools for special metal industries, wood-working, ceramic
+ industries, naval architecture and engineering and navigation. For
+ military science there are the academies of war (_Kriegsakademien_) in
+ Berlin and Munich, a naval academy in Kiel, and various cadet and
+ non-commissioned officers' schools.
+
+ _Libraries._--Mental culture and a general diffusion of knowledge are
+ extensively promoted by means of numerous public libraries established
+ in the capital, the university towns and other places. The most
+ celebrated public libraries are those of Berlin (1,000,000 volumes and
+ 30,000 MSS.); Munich (1,000,000 volumes, 40,000 MSS.); Heidelberg
+ (563,000 volumes, 8000 MSS.); Gottingen (503,000 volumes, 6000 MSS.);
+ Strassburg (760,000 volumes); Dresden (500,000 volumes, 6000 MSS.);
+ Hamburg (municipal library, 600,000 volumes, 5000 MSS.); Stuttgart
+ (400,000 volumes, 3500 MSS.); Leipzig (university library, 500,000
+ volumes, 5000 MSS.); Wurzburg (350,000 volumes); Tubingen (340,000
+ volumes); Rostock (318,000 volumes); Breslau (university library,
+ 300,000 volumes, 7000 MSS.); Freiburg-im-Breisgau (250,000 volumes);
+ Bonn (265,000 volumes); and Konigsberg (230,000 volumes, 1100 MSS.).
+ There are also famous libraries at Gotha, Wolfenbuttel and Celle.
+
+ _Learned Societies._--There are numerous societies and unions, some of
+ an exclusively scientific character and others designed for the
+ popular diffusion of useful knowledge. Foremost among German academies
+ is the Academy of Sciences (_Akademie der Wissenschaften_) in Berlin,
+ founded in 1700 on Leibnitz's great plan and opened in 1711. After
+ undergoing various vicissitudes, it was reorganized by Frederick the
+ Great on the French model and received its present constitution in
+ 1812. It has four sections: physical, mathematical, philosophical and
+ historical. The members are (1) ordinary (50 in number, each receiving
+ a yearly dotation of L30), and (2) extraordinary, consisting of
+ honorary and corresponding (foreign) members. It has published since
+ 1811 a selection of treatises furnished by its most eminent men, among
+ whom must be reckoned Schleiermacher, the brothers Humboldt, Grimm,
+ Savigny, Bockh, Ritter and Lachmann, and has promoted philological and
+ historical research by helping the production of such works as _Corpus
+ inscriptionum Graecarum_; _Corpus inscriptionum Latinarum_; _Monumenta
+ Germaniae historica_, the works of Aristotle, Frederick the Great's
+ works and Kant's collected works. Next in order come (1) the Academy
+ of Sciences at Munich, founded in 1759, divided into three classes,
+ philosophical, historical and physical, and especially famous for its
+ historical research; (2) the Society of Sciences (_Gesellschaft der
+ Wissenschaften_) in Gottingen, founded in 1742; (3) that of Erfurt,
+ founded 1758; (4) Gorlitz (1779) and (5) the "Royal Saxon Society of
+ Sciences" (_Konigliche sachsische Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften_),
+ founded in Leipzig in 1846. Ample provision is made for scientific
+ collections of all kinds in almost all places of any importance,
+ either at the public expense or through private munificence.
+
+ _Observatories._--These have in recent years been considerably
+ augmented. There are 19 leading observatories in the empire, viz. at
+ Bamberg, Berlin (2), Bonn, Bothkamp in Schleswig, Breslau, Dusseldorf,
+ Gotha, Gottingen, Hamburg, Heidelberg, Jena, Kiel, Konigsberg,
+ Leipzig, Munich, Potsdam, Strassburg and Wilhelmshaven.
+
+ _Book Trade._--This branch of industry, from the important position it
+ has gradually acquired since the time of the Reformation, is to be
+ regarded as at once a cause and a result of the mental culture of
+ Germany. Leipzig, Berlin and Stuttgart are the chief centres of the
+ trade. The number of booksellers in Germany was not less than 10,000
+ in 1907, among whom were approximately 6000 publishers. The following
+ figures will show the recent progress of German literary production,
+ in so far as published works are concerned:
+
+ Year 1570 1600 1618 1650 1700 1750 1800 1840 1884 1902
+ Books 229 791 1293 725 951 1219 3335 6904 15,607 26,902
+
+ _Newspapers._--While in England a few important newspapers have an
+ immense circulation, the newspapers of Germany are much more numerous,
+ but on the whole command a more limited sale. Some large cities,
+ notably Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg, Dresden, Leipzig and Munich, have,
+ however, newspapers with a daily circulation of over 100,000 copies,
+ and in the case of some papers in Berlin a million copies is reached.
+ Most readers receive their newspapers through the post office or at
+ their clubs, which may help to explain the smaller number of copies
+ sold.
+
+ _Fine Arts._--Perhaps the chief advantage which Germany has derived
+ from the survival of separate territorial sovereignties within the
+ empire has been the decentralization of culture. Patronage of art is
+ among the cherished traditions of the German princes; and even
+ where--as for instance at Cassel--there is no longer a court, the
+ artistic impetus given by the former sovereigns has survived their
+ fall. The result has been that there is in Germany no such
+ concentration of the institutions for the encouragement and study of
+ the fine arts as there is in France or England. Berlin has no
+ practical monopoly, such as is possessed by London or Paris, of the
+ celebrated museums and galleries of the country. The picture galleries
+ of Dresden, Munich and Cassel still rival that at Berlin, though the
+ latter is rapidly becoming one of the richest in the world in works of
+ the great masters, largely at the cost of the private collections of
+ England. For the same reason the country is very well provided with
+ excellent schools of painting and music. Of the art schools the most
+ famous are those of Munich, Dusseldorf, Dresden and Berlin, but there
+ are others, e.g. at Karlsruhe, Weimar and Konigsberg. These schools
+ are in close touch with the sovereigns and the governments, and the
+ more promising pupils are thus from the first assured of a career,
+ especially in connexion with the decoration of public buildings and
+ monuments. To this fact is largely due the excellence of the Germans
+ in grandiose decorative painting and sculpture, a talent for the
+ exercise of which plenty of scope has been given them by the numerous
+ public buildings and memorials raised since the war of 1870. Perhaps
+ for this very reason, however, the German art schools have had no such
+ cosmopolitan influence as that exercised by the schools of Paris, the
+ number of foreign students attending them being comparatively small.
+ It is otherwise with the schools of music, which exercise a profound
+ influence far beyond the borders of Germany. Of these the most
+ important are the conservatoires of Leipzig, Dresden, Berlin, Munich
+ and Frankfort-on-Main. The fame of Weimar as a seat of musical
+ education, though it possesses an excellent conservatoire, is based
+ mainly on the tradition of the abbe Liszt, who gathered about him here
+ a number of distinguished pupils, some of whom have continued to make
+ it their centre. Music in Germany also receives a great stimulus from
+ the existence, in almost every important town, of opera-houses partly
+ supported by the sovereigns or by the civic authorities. Good music
+ being thus brought within the reach of all, appreciation of it is very
+ wide-spread in all classes of the population. The imperial government
+ maintains institutes at Rome and Athens which have done much for the
+ advancement of archaeology. (P. A. A.)
+
+_Army._--The system of the "nation in arms" owes its existence to the
+reforms in the Prussian army that followed Jena. The "nation in arms"
+itself was the product of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars,
+but it was in Prussia that was seen the systematization and the
+economical and effective application of the immense forces of which the
+revolutionary period had demonstrated the existence (see also ARMY;
+CONSCRIPTION; FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS, &c.). It was with an army and a
+military system that fully represented the idea of the "nation in arms"
+that Prussia created the powerful Germany of later days, and the same
+system was extended by degrees over all the other states of the new
+empire. But these very successes contained in themselves the germ of new
+troubles. Increased prosperity, a still greater increase in population
+and the social and economic disturbances incidental to the conversion of
+an agricultural into a manufacturing community, led to the practical
+abandonment of the principle of _universal_ service. More men came
+before the recruiting officer than there was money to train; and in 1895
+the period of service with the colours was reduced from three to two
+years--a step since followed by other military powers, the idea being
+that with the same peace effective and financial grants half as many men
+again could be passed through the ranks as before.
+
+In 1907 the recruiting statistics were as follows:
+
+ Number of young men attaining service age (including
+ those who had voluntarily enlisted before their time) 556,772
+ Men belonging to previous years who had been put back
+ for re-examination, &., still borne on the lists 657,753
+ ---------
+ 1,214,525
+
+ _Deduct_--Physically unfit, &c. 35,802
+ Struck off 860
+
+ Voluntarily enlisted in the army and navy,
+ on or before attaining service age 57,739
+ Assigned as recruits to the navy 10,374
+ Put back, &c. 684,193
+ -------
+ 788,968
+ -------
+ Available as army recruits, fit 425,557
+ -------
+ Of these, (a) Assigned to the active army for two or three
+ years' service with the colours _ _ 212,661
+ (b) Assigned to the Ersatz-Reserve of the | |
+ army and navy |_untrained_| 89,877
+ (c) Assigned to the 1st levy of Landsturm |_ _| 123,019
+ -------
+ 425,557
+
+Thus only half the men on whom the government has an effective hold go
+to the colours in the end. Moreover few of the men "put back, &c.," who
+figure on both sides of the account for any one year, and seem to
+average 660,000, are really "put back." They are in the main those who
+have failed or fail to present themselves, and whose names are retained
+on the liability lists against the day of their return. Many of these
+have emigrated.
+
+By the constitution of the 16th of April 1871 every German is liable to
+service and no substitution is allowed. Liability begins at the age of
+seventeen, and actual service, as a rule, from the age of twenty. The
+men serve in the active army and army reserve for seven years, of which
+two years (three in the case of cavalry and horse artillery recruits)
+are spent with the colours. During his four or five years in the
+reserve, the soldier is called out for training with his corps twice,
+for a maximum of eight weeks (in practice usually for six). After
+quitting the reserve the soldier is drafted into the first ban of the
+_Landwehr_ for five years more, in which (except in the cavalry, which
+is not called out in peace time) he undergoes two trainings of from
+eight to fourteen days. Thence he passes into the second ban and remains
+in it until he has completed his thirty-ninth year--i.e. from six to
+seven years more, the whole period of army and Landwehr service being
+thus nineteen years. Finally, all soldiers are passed into the
+_Landsturm_, in the first ban of which they remain until the completion
+of their forty-fifth year. The second ban consists of untrained men
+between the ages of thirty-nine and forty-five. Young men who reach a
+certain standard of education, however, are only obliged to serve for
+one year in the active army. They are called One-Year Volunteers
+(_Einjahrig-Freiwilligen_), defray their own expenses and are the chief
+source of supply of reserve and Landwehr officers. That proportion of
+the annual contingents which is dismissed untrained goes either to the
+Ersatz-Reserve or to the 1st ban of the Landsturm (the Landwehr, it will
+be observed, contains only men who have served with the colours). The
+Ersatz consists exclusively of young men, who would in war time be
+drafted to the regimental depots and thence sent, with what training
+circumstances had in the meantime allowed, to the front. Some men of the
+Ersatz receive a short preliminary training in peace time.
+
+In 1907 the average height of the private soldiers was 5 ft. 6 in., that
+of the non-commissioned officers 5 ft. 6-1/2 in., and that of the
+one-year volunteers 5 ft. 9-1/2 in. A much greater proportion of the
+country recruits were accepted as "fit" than of those coming from the
+towns. Voluntary enlistments of men who desired to become
+non-commissioned officers were most frequent in the provinces of the old
+Prussian monarchy, but in Berlin itself and in Westphalia the
+enlistments fell far short of the number of non-commissioned officers
+required for the territorial regiments of the respective districts.
+Above all, in Alsace-Lorraine one-eighth only of the required numbers
+were obtained.
+
+ _Peace and War Strengths._--German military policy is revised every
+ five years; thus a law of April 1905 fixes the strength and
+ establishments to be attained on March 31, 1910, the necessary
+ augmentations, &c., being carried out gradually in the intervening
+ years. The peace strength for the latter date was fixed at 505,839 men
+ (not including officers, non-commissioned officers and one-year
+ volunteers), forming--
+
+ 633 battalions infantry.
+ 510 squadrons cavalry.
+ 574 batteries field and horse artillery.
+ 40 battalions foot artillery.
+ 29 battalions pioneers.
+ 12 battalions communication troops.
+ 23 train battalions, &c.
+
+ The addition of about 25,000 officers and 85,000 non-commissioned
+ officers, one-year men, &c., brings the peace footing of the German
+ army in 1910 to a total of about 615,000 of all ranks.
+
+ As for war, the total fighting strength of the German nation
+ (including the navy) has been placed at as high a figure as
+ 11,000,000. Of these 7,000,000 have received little or no training,
+ owing to medical unfitness, residence abroad, failure to appear,
+ surplus of annual contingents, &c., as already explained, and not more
+ than 3,000,000 of these would be available in war. The real military
+ resources of Germany, untrained and trained, are thus about 7,000,000,
+ of whom 4,000,000 have at one time or another done a continuous period
+ of service with the colours.[6] This is of course for a war of defence
+ _a outrance_. For an offensive war, only the active army, the reserve,
+ the Ersatz and the 1st levy of the Landwehr would be really available.
+
+ A rough calculation of the number of these who go to form or to
+ reinforce the field armies and the mobilized garrisons may be given:
+
+ Cadres of officers and non-commissioned officers 100,000
+ From 7 annual contingents of recruits (i.e.
+ active army and reserve) 1,200,000
+ From 5 contingents of Landwehr (1st ban) 600,000
+ From 7 classes of Ersatz reserve called to the
+ depots, able-bodied men 400,000
+ One-year volunteers recalled to the colours or
+ serving as reserve and Landwehr officers 100,000
+ ---------
+ 2,400,000
+
+ These again would divide into a first line army of 1,350,000 and a
+ second of 1,050,000. It is calculated that the field army would
+ consist, in the third week of a great war, of 633 battalions, 410
+ squadrons and 574 batteries, with technical, departmental and medical
+ troops (say 630,000 bayonets, 60,000 sabres and 3444 guns, or 750,000
+ men), and that these could be reinforced in three or four weeks by 350
+ fresh battalions. Behind these forces there would shortly become
+ available for secondary operations about 460 battalions of the 1st ban
+ Landwehr, and 200 squadrons and about 220 batteries of the reserve and
+ Landwehr. In addition, each would leave behind depot troops to form
+ the nucleus on which the 2nd ban Landwehr and the Landsturm would
+ eventually be built up. The total number of units of the three arms in
+ all branches may be stated approximately at 2200 battalions, 780
+ squadrons and 950 batteries.
+
+ _Command and Organization._--By the articles of the constitution the
+ whole of the land forces of the empire form a united army in war and
+ peace under the orders of the emperor. The sovereigns of the chief
+ states are entitled to nominate the lower grades of officers, and the
+ king of Bavaria has reserved to himself the special privilege of
+ superintending the general administration of the three Bavarian army
+ corps; but all appointments are made subject to the emperor's
+ approval. The emperor is empowered to erect fortresses in any part of
+ the empire. It is the almost invariable practice of the kings of
+ Prussia to command their forces in person, and the army commands, too,
+ are generally held by leaders of royal or princely rank. The natural
+ corollary to this is the assignment of special advisory duties to a
+ responsible chief of staff. The officers are recruited either from the
+ Cadet Corps at Berlin or from amongst those men, of sufficient social
+ standing, who join the ranks as "avantageurs" with a view to obtaining
+ commissions. Reserve and Landwehr officers are drawn from among
+ officers and selected non-commissioned officers retired from the
+ active army, and one-year volunteers who have passed a special
+ examination. All candidates, from whatever source they come, are
+ subject to approval or rejection by their brother officers before
+ being definitively commissioned. Promotion in the German army is
+ excessively slow, the senior subalterns having eighteen to twenty
+ years' commissioned service and the senior captains sometimes thirty.
+ The number of officers on the active list is about 25,000. The
+ under-officers number about 84,000.
+
+ The German army is organized in twenty-three army corps, stationed and
+ recruited in the various provinces and states as follows: Guard,
+ Berlin (general recruiting); I. Konigsberg (East Prussia); II. Stettin
+ (Pomerania); III. Berlin (Brandenburg); IV. Magdeburg (Prussian
+ Saxony); V. Posen (Poland and part of Silesia); VI. Breslau (Silesia);
+ VII. Munster (Westphalia); VIII. Coblenz (Rhineland); IX. Altona
+ (Hanse Towns and Schleswig-Holstein); X. Hanover (Hanover); XI. Cassel
+ (Hesse-Cassel); XII. Dresden (Saxony); XIII. Stuttgart (Wurttemberg);
+ XIV. Karlsruhe (Baden); XV. Strassburg (Alsace); XVI. Metz (Lorraine);
+ XVII. Danzig (West Prussia); XVIII. Frankfurt-am-Main (Hesse
+ Darmstadt, Main country); XIX. Leipzig (Saxony); I. Bavarian Corps,
+ Munich; II. Bavarian Corps, Wurzburg; III. Bavarian Corps, Nuremberg.
+ The formation of a XX. army corps out of the extra division of the
+ XIV. corps at Colmar in Alsace, with the addition of two regiments
+ from Westphalia and drafts of the XV. and XVI. corps, was announced in
+ 1908 as the final step of the programme for the period 1906-1910. The
+ normal composition of an army corps on war is (a) staff, (b) 2
+ infantry divisions, each of 2 brigades (4 regiments or 12
+ battalions), 2 regiments of field artillery (comprising 9 batteries of
+ field-guns and 3 of field howitzers, 72 pieces in all), 3 squadrons of
+ cavalry, 1 or 2 companies of pioneers, a bridge train and 1 or 2
+ bearer companies; (c) corps troops, 1 battalion rifles, telegraph
+ troops, bridge train, ammunition columns, train (supply) battalion,
+ field bakeries, bearer companies and field hospitals, &c., with, as a
+ rule, one or two batteries of heavy field howitzers or mortars and a
+ machine-gun group. The remainder of the cavalry and horse artillery
+ attached to the army corps in peace goes in war to form the cavalry
+ divisions. Certain corps have an increased effective; thus the Guard
+ has a whole cavalry division, and the I. corps (Konigsberg) has three
+ divisions. Several corps possess an extra infantry brigade of two
+ 2-battalion regiments, but these, unless stationed on the frontiers,
+ are gradually absorbed into new divisions and army corps. In war
+ several army corps, cavalry divisions and reserve divisions are
+ grouped in two or more "armies," and in peace the army corps are
+ divided for purposes of superior control amongst several "army
+ inspections."
+
+ The cavalry is organized in regiments of cuirassiers, dragoons,
+ lancers, hussars and mounted rifles,[7] the regiments having four
+ service and one depot squadrons. Troopers are armed with lance, sword
+ and carbine (for which in 1908 the substitution of a short rifle with
+ bayonet was suggested). In peace time the highest permanent
+ organization is the brigade of two regiments or eight squadrons, but
+ in war and at manoeuvres divisions of three brigades, with horse
+ artillery attached, are formed.
+
+ The infantry consists of 216 regiments, mostly of three battalions
+ each. These are numbered, apart from the eight Guard regiments and the
+ Bavarians, serially throughout the army. Certain regiments are styled
+ grenadiers and fusiliers. In addition there are eighteen chasseur or
+ rifle battalions (_Jager_). The battalion has always four companies,
+ each, at war strength, 250 strong. The armament of the infantry is the
+ model 1898 magazine rifle and bayonet (see RIFLE).
+
+ The field (including horse) artillery consists in peace of 94
+ regiments subdivided into two or three groups (_Abteilungen_), each of
+ two or three 6-gun batteries. The field gun in use is the quick-firing
+ gun 96/N.A. (see ORDNANCE: _Field Equipments_).
+
+ The foot artillery is intended for siege and fortress warfare, and to
+ furnish the heavy artillery of the field army. It consists of forty
+ battalions. Machine gun detachments, resembling 4-gun batteries and
+ horsed as artillery, were formed to the number of sixteen in
+ 1904-1906. These are intended to work with the cavalry divisions.
+ Afterwards it was decided to form additional small groups of two guns
+ each, less fully horsed, to assist the infantry, and a certain number
+ of these were created in 1906-1908.
+
+ The engineers are a technical body, not concerned with field warfare
+ or with the command of troops. On the other hand, the pioneers (29
+ battalions) are assigned to the field army, with duties corresponding
+ roughly to those of field companies R.E. in the British service. Other
+ branches represented in Great Britain by the Royal Engineers are known
+ in Germany by the title "communication troops," and comprise railway,
+ telegraph and airship and balloon battalions. The Train is charged
+ with the duties of supply and transport. There is one battalion to
+ each army corps.
+
+ _Remounts._--The peace establishment in horses is approximately
+ 100,000. Horses serve eight to nine years in the artillery and nine to
+ ten in the cavalry, after which, in the autumn of each year, they are
+ sold, and their places taken by remounts. The latter are bought at
+ horse-fairs and private sales, unbroken, and sent to the 25 remount
+ depots, whence, when fit for the service, they are sent to the various
+ units, as a rule in the early summer. Most of the cavalry and
+ artillery riding horses come from Prussia proper. The Polish districts
+ produce swift Hussar horses of a semi-eastern type. Hanover is second
+ only to East Prussia in output of horses. Bavaria, Saxony and
+ Wurttemberg do not produce enough horses for their own armies and have
+ to draw on Prussia. Thirteen thousand four hundred and forty-five
+ young horses were bought by the army authorities during 1907. The
+ average price was about L51 for field artillery draught horses, L65
+ for heavy draught horses, and L46 for riding horses.
+
+ The military expenditure of Germany, according to a comparative table
+ furnished to the House of Commons by the British war office in 1907,
+ varied between L36,000,000 and L44,000,000 per annum in the period
+ 1899-1902, and between L42,000,000 and L51,000,000 per annum in that
+ of 1905-1909.
+
+ _Colonial Troops._--In 1906 these, irrespective of the brigade of
+ occupation then maintained in north China and of special
+ reinforcements sent to S.W. Africa during the Herrero war, consisted
+ of the _German East Africa_ troops, 220 Europeans and 1470 natives;
+ the _Cameroon_ troops, 145 European and 1170 natives; _S.W. African
+ troops_, entirely European and normally consisting of 606 officers
+ and men active and a reserve of ex-soldier settlers; the Kiao-Chau
+ garrison (chiefly marines), numbering 2687 officers and men; and
+ various small police forces in Togo, New Guinea, Samoa, &c.
+
+ _Fortresses._--The fixed defences maintained by the German empire
+ (apart from naval ports and coast defences) belong to two distinct
+ epochs in the military policy of the state. In the first period
+ (roughly 1871-1899), which is characterized by the development of the
+ offensive spirit, the fortresses, except on the French and Russian
+ frontiers, were reduced to a minimum. In the interior only Spandau,
+ Custrin, Magdeburg, Ingolstadt and Ulm were maintained as defensive
+ supporting points, and similarly on the Rhine, which was formerly
+ studded with fortresses from Basel to Emmerich, the defences were
+ limited to New Breisach, Germersheim, Mainz, Coblenz, Cologne and
+ Wesel, all of a "barrier" character and not organized specially as
+ centres of activity for field armies. The French frontier, and to a
+ less extent the Russian, were organized offensively. Metz, already
+ surrounded by the French with a girdle of forts, was extended and
+ completed (see FORTIFICATION AND SIEGECRAFT) as a great entrenched
+ camp, and Strassburg, which in 1870 possessed no outlying works, was
+ similarly expanded, though the latter was regarded an instrument of
+ defence more than of attack. On the Russian frontier Konigsberg,
+ Danzig, Thorn, Posen, Glogau (and on a smaller scale Boyen in East
+ Prussia and Graudenz on the Vistula) were modernized and improved.
+
+ From 1899, however, Germany began to pay more attention to her fixed
+ defences, and in the next years a long line of fortifications came
+ into existence on the French frontier, the positions and strength of
+ which were regulated with special regard to a new strategic
+ disposition of the field armies and to the number and sites of the
+ "strategic railway stations" which were constructed about the same
+ time. Thus, the creation of a new series of forts extending from
+ Thionville (Diedenhofen) to Metz and thence south-eastward was coupled
+ with the construction of twelve strategic railway stations between
+ Cologne and the Belgian frontier, and later--the so-called
+ "fundamental plan" of operations against France having apparently
+ undergone modification in consequence of changes in the foreign
+ relations of the German government--an immense strategic railway
+ station was undertaken at Saarburg, on the right rear of Thionville
+ and well away from the French frontier, and many important new works
+ both of fortification and of railway construction were begun in Upper
+ Alsace, between Colmar and Basel.
+
+ The coast defences include, besides the great naval ports of
+ Wilhelmshaven on the North Sea and Kiel on the Baltic, Danzig, Pillau,
+ Memel, Friedrichsort, Cuxhaven, Geestemunde and Swinemunde.
+ (C. F. A.)
+
+_Navy._--The German navy is of recent origin. In 1848 the German people
+urged the construction of a fleet. Money was collected, and a few
+men-of-war were fitted out; but these were subsequently sold, the German
+_Bundestag_ (federal council) not being in sympathy with the aspirations
+of the nation. Prussia however, began laying the foundations of a small
+navy. To meet the difficulty arising from the want of good harbours in
+the Baltic, a small extent of territory near Jade Bay was bought from
+Oldenburg in 1854, for the purpose of establishing a war-port there. Its
+construction was completed at enormous expense, and it was opened for
+ships by the emperor in June 1869 under the name of Wilhelmshaven. In
+1864 Prussia, in annexing Holstein, obtained possession of the excellent
+port of Kiel, which has since been strongly fortified. From the time of
+the formation of the North German Confederation the navy has belonged to
+the common federal interest. Since 1st October 1867 all its ships have
+carried the same flag, of the national colours--black, white, red, with
+the Prussian eagle and the iron cross.
+
+From 1848 to 1868 the increase of the navy was slow. In 1851 it
+consisted of 51 vessels, including 36 small gunboats of 2 guns each. In
+1868 it consisted of 45 steamers (including 2 ironclads) and 44 sailing
+vessels, but during the various wars of the period 1848-1871, only a few
+minor actions were fought at sea, and for many years after the French
+War the development of the navy did not keep pace with that of the
+empire's commercial interests beyond the seas, or compete seriously with
+the naval power of possible rivals. But towards the end of the 19th
+century Germany started on a new naval policy, by which her fleet was
+largely and rapidly increased. Details of this development will be found
+in the article NAVY (see also _History_ below, _ad fin._). It will be
+sufficient here to give the statistics relating to the beginning of the
+year 1909, reference being made only to ships effective at that date and
+to ships authorized in the construction programme of 1907:
+
+ Modern battleships 20 effective, 4 approaching completion.
+ Old battleships and coast
+ defence ships 11 effective (4 non-effective).
+ Armoured cruisers 9 effective, 1 approaching completion.
+ Protected cruisers 31 effective, 2 approaching completion.
+ Torpedo craft of modern
+ types 130 effective, 3 approaching completion.
+
+ _Administration._--In 1889 the administration was transferred from the
+ ministry of war to the imperial admiralty (_Reichsmarineamt_), at the
+ head of which is the naval secretary of state. The chief command was
+ at the same time separated from the administration and vested in a
+ naval officer, who controls the movements of the fleet, its personnel
+ and training, while the maintenance of the arsenals and dockyards,
+ victualling and clothing and all matters immediately affecting the
+ _materiel_, fall within the province of the secretary of state. The
+ navy is divided between the Baltic (Kiel) and North Sea
+ (Wilhelmshaven) stations, which are strategically linked by the Kaiser
+ Wilhelm Canal (opened in 1895), across the Schleswig-Holstein
+ peninsula. Danzig, Cuxhaven and Sonderburg have also been made naval
+ bases.
+
+ _Personnel._--The German navy is manned by the obligatory service of
+ the essentially maritime population--such as sailors, fishermen and
+ others, as well as by volunteers, who elect for naval service in
+ preference to that in the army. It is estimated that the total
+ seafaring population of Germany amounts to 80,000. The active naval
+ personnel was, in 1906, 2631 officers (including engineers, marines,
+ medical, &c.) and 51,138 under-officers and men, total 53,769. In
+ addition, there is a reserve of more than 100,000 officers and men.
+ (P. A. A.)
+
+_Finance._--The imperial budget is voted every year by the Reichstag.
+The "extraordinary funds," from which considerable sums appear annually
+in the budget, were created after the Franco-German War. Part of the
+indemnity was invested for definite purposes. The largest of these
+investments served for paying the pensions of the invalided, and
+amounted originally to L28,000,000. Every year, not only the interest,
+but part of the capital is expended in paying these pensions, and the
+capital sum was thus reduced in 1903 to L15,100,000, and in 1904 to
+L13,200,000. Another fund, of about L5,200,000, serves for the
+construction and armament of fortresses; while L6,000,000, known as the
+_Reichskriegsschatz_--or "war treasure fund"--is not laid out at
+interest, but is stored in coined gold and bullion in the Juliusturm at
+Spandau. In addition to these, the railways in Alsace-Lorraine, which
+France bought of the Eastern Railway Company for L13,000,000, in order
+to transfer them to the control of Germany, are also the property of the
+empire.
+
+During the years 1908 and 1909 considerable public discussion and
+political activity were devoted to the reorganization of German imperial
+finance, and it is only possible here to deal historically with the
+position up to that time, since further developments of an important
+nature were already foreshadowed.
+
+In 1871 the system accepted was that the imperial budget should be
+financed substantially by its reliance on the revenue from what were the
+obvious imperial resources--customs and excise duties, stamp duties,
+post and telegraph receipts, and among minor sources the receipts from
+the Alsace-Lorraine railways. But it was also provided that, for the
+purpose of deficits, the states should, in addition, if required by the
+imperial minister of finance, contribute their quotas according to
+population--_Matrikular Beitrage_. It was not expected that these would
+become chronic, but in a few years, and emphatically by the early
+'eighties, they were found to be an essential part of the financial
+system, owing to regular deficits. It had been intended that, in return
+for the _Matrikular Beitrage_, regular assignments (_Uberweisungen_)
+should be returned to the states, in relief of their own taxation, which
+would practically wipe out the contribution; but instead of these the
+_Uberweisungen_ were considerably less. Certain reorganizations were
+made in 1887 and 1902, but the excess of the _Matrikular Beitrage_ over
+the _Uberweisungen_ continued; the figures in 1905 and 1908 being as
+follows (in millions of marks):--
+
+ +------+-------------+---------------+---------+
+ | | Matrikular- | Uberweisungen.| Excess. |
+ | | Beitrage. | | |
+ +------+-------------+---------------+---------+
+ | 1905 | 213 | 189 | 24 |
+ | 1908 | 346 | 195 | 150 |
+ +------+-------------+---------------+---------+
+
+These figures show how natural it was to desire to relieve the states by
+increasing the direct imperial revenue.
+
+Meanwhile, in spite of the "matricular contributions," the calls on
+imperial finance had steadily increased, and up to 1908 were continually
+met to a large extent by loans, involving a continual growth of the
+imperial debt, which in 1907 amounted to 3643 millions of marks. The
+imperial budget, like that of most European nations, is divided into two
+portions, the ordinary and the extraordinary; and the increase under
+both heads (especially for army and navy) became a recurrent factor. A
+typical situation is represented by the main figures for 1905 and 1906
+(in millions of marks):
+
+ +------+-----------------------+----------+-----------+
+ | | Expenditure. | | |
+ | +-----------+-----------+ Revenue. | Raised by |
+ | | Ordinary. | Extra- | | Loan. |
+ | | | ordinary. | | |
+ +------+-----------+-----------+----------+-----------+
+ | 1905 | 2002 | 193 | 2053 | 341 |
+ | 1906 | 2157 | 235 | 2118 | 258 |
+ +------+-----------+-----------+----------+-----------+
+
+The same process went on in 1907 and 1908, and it was necessarily
+recognized that the method of balancing the imperial budget by a regular
+increase of debt could not be satisfactory in a country where the
+general increase of wealth and taxable capacity had meanwhile been
+conspicuous. And though the main proposals made by the government for
+new taxation, including new direct taxes, resulted in a parliamentary
+deadlock in 1909, and led to Prince von Bulow's resignation as
+chancellor, it was already evident that some important reorganization of
+the imperial financial system was inevitable.
+
+ _Currency._--The German empire adopted a gold currency by the law of
+ the 4th of December 1871. Subsequently the old local coinages
+ (_Landesmunzen_) began to be called in and replaced by new gold and
+ silver coins. The old gold coins, amounting to L4,550,000, had been
+ called in as early as 1873; and the old silver coins have since been
+ successively put out of circulation, so that none actually remains as
+ legal tender but the thaler (3s.). The currency reform was at first
+ facilitated by the French indemnity, a great part of which was paid in
+ gold. But later on that metal became scarcer; the London gold prices
+ ran higher and higher, while silver prices declined. The average rate
+ per ounce of standard silver in 1866-1870 was 60-5/8d., in January
+ 1875 only 57-1/2d., in July 1876 as low as 49d. It rose in January
+ 1877 to 57-1/2d., but again declined, and in September 1878 it was
+ 50-5/8d. While the proportion of like weights of fine gold and fine
+ silver in 1866-1870 averaged 1 to 15.55, it was 1 to 17.79 in 1876, 1
+ to 17.18 in 1877, and, in 1902, in consequence of the heavy fall in
+ silver, the ratio became as much as 1 to 39. By the currency law of
+ the 9th of July 1873, the present coinage system was established and
+ remains, with certain minor modifications, now in force as then
+ introduced. The unit is the mark (1 shilling)--the tenth part of the
+ imperial _gold coin_ (Krone = crown), of which last 139-1/2 are struck
+ from a pound of pure gold. Besides these ten-mark pieces, there are
+ Doppelkronen (double crowns), about equivalent in value to an English
+ sovereign (the average rate of exchange being 20 marks 40 pfennige per
+ L1 sterling), and, formerly, half-crowns (halbe Kronen = 5 marks) in
+ gold were also issued, but they have been withdrawn from circulation.
+ Silver coins are 5, 2 and 1 mark pieces, equivalent to 5, 2 and 1
+ shillings respectively, and 50 pfennige pieces = 6d. Nickel coins are
+ 10 and 5 pfennige pieces, and there are bronze coins of 2 and 1
+ pfennige. The system is decimal; thus 100 pfennige = 1 mark, 1000
+ pfennige = the gold krone (or crown), and 1d. English amounts roughly
+ to 8 pfennige.
+
+ _Banking._--A new banking law was promulgated for the whole empire on
+ the 14th of March 1875. Before that date there existed thirty-two
+ banks with the privilege of issuing notes, and on the 31st of December
+ 1872, L67,100,000 in all was in circulation, L25,100,000 of that sum
+ being uncovered. The banking law was designed to reduce this
+ circulation of notes; L19,250,000 was fixed as an aggregate maximum of
+ uncovered notes of the banks. The private banks were at the same time
+ obliged to erect branch offices in Berlin or Frankfort-on-Main for the
+ payment of their notes. In consequence of this regulation numerous
+ banks resigned the privilege of issuing notes, and at present there
+ are in Germany but the following private note banks, issuing private
+ notes, viz. the Bavarian, the Saxon, the Wurttemberg, the Baden and
+ the Brunswick, in addition to the Imperial Bank. The Imperial Bank
+ (Reichsbank) ranks far above the others in importance. It took the
+ place of the Prussian Bank in 1876, and is under the superintendence
+ and management of the empire, which shares in the profits. Its head
+ office is in Berlin, and it is entitled to erect branch offices in any
+ part of the empire. It has a capital of L9,000,000 divided into 40,000
+ shares of L150 each, and 60,000 shares of L50 each. The Imperial Bank
+ is privileged to issue bank-notes, which must be covered to the extent
+ of 1s. 3d. in coined money, bullion or bank-notes, the remainder in
+ bills at short sight. Of the net profits, a dividend of 3-1/2% is
+ first payable to the shareholders, 20% of the remainder is transferred
+ to the reserve until this has reached a total of L3,000,000, and of
+ the remainder again a quarter is apportioned to the shareholders and
+ three-quarters falls to the imperial exchequer. If the net profits do
+ not reach 3-1/2%, the balance must be made good from the reserve.
+ Private note banks are not empowered to do business outside the state
+ which has conceded them the privilege to issue notes, except under
+ certain limitations. One of these is that they agree that their
+ privilege to issue private notes may be withdrawn at one year's notice
+ without compensation. But this condition has not been enforced in the
+ case of such banks as have agreed to accept as binding the official
+ rate of discount of the Reichsbank after this has reached or when it
+ exceeds 4%. At other times they are not to discount at more than 1/4%
+ below the official rate of the Reichsbank, or in case the Reichsbank
+ itself discounts at a lower rate than the official rate, at more than
+ 1/8% below that rate.
+
+ The following table shows the financial condition of the note-issuing
+ banks, in thousands of marks, over a term of years:
+
+ _Liabilities._
+
+ +------+-------+----------+---------------+------------+------------------+
+ | Year.| Banks.| Capital. | Reserve. | Notes in | Total, including |
+ | | | | |Circulation.|other Liabilities.|
+ +------+-------+----------+---------------+------------+------------------+
+ | 1900 | 8 | 219,672 | 48,329 | 1,313,855 | 2,237,017 |
+ | 1901 | 7 | 231,672 | 54,901 | 1,345,436 | 2,360,453 |
+ | 1902 | 6 | 216,000 | 56,684 | 1,373,482 | 2,353,951 |
+ | 1903 | 6 | 216,000 | 60,131 | 1,394,336 | 2,365,256 |
+ | 1904 | 6 | 216,000 | 64,385 | 1,433,421 | 2,378,845 |
+ +------+-------+----------+---------------+------------+------------------+
+
+ _Assets._
+
+ +------+-------+----------+----------------+-----------+------------------+
+ | Year.| Banks.| Coin and | Notes of State | Bills. | Total. |
+ | | | Bullion. |and other Banks.| | |
+ +------+-------+----------+----------------+-----------+------------------+
+ | 1900 | 8 | 899,630 | 51,931 | 1,036,961 | 2,239,564 |
+ | 1901 | 7 | 990,262 | 60,770 | 990,950 | 2,360,355 |
+ | 1902 | 6 |1,052,391 | 54,389 | 901,408 | 2,354,253 |
+ | 1903 | 6 | 973,953 | 54,231 | 984,604 | 2,356,511 |
+ | 1904 | 6 | 996,601 | 66,372 | 947,358 | 2,379,234 |
+ +------+-------+----------+----------------+-----------+------------------+
+
+ The total turnover of the Imperial Bank was, in the first year of its
+ foundation, 1-3/4 milliards pounds sterling; and, in 1899, 90
+ milliards. Eighty-five per cent of its bank-notes have been, on the
+ average, covered by metal reserve.
+
+ The total value of silver coins is not to exceed 10 marks, and that of
+ copper and nickel 2-1/2 marks per head of the population. While the
+ coinage of silver, nickel and copper is reserved to the state, the
+ coinage of gold pieces can be undertaken by the state for the account
+ of private individuals on payment of a fixed charge. The coinage takes
+ place in the six mints belonging to the various states--thus Berlin
+ (Prussia), Munich (Bavaria), Dresden (in the Muldenerhutte near
+ Freiberg, Saxony), Stuttgart (Wurttemberg), Karlsruhe (Baden) and
+ Hamburg (for the state of Hamburg). Of the thalers, the Vereinsthaler,
+ coined until 1867 in Austria, was by ordinance of the Bundesrat
+ declared illegal tender since the 1st of January 1903. No one can be
+ compelled to accept more than 20 marks in silver or more than 1 mark
+ in nickel and copper coin; but, on the other hand, the Imperial Bank
+ accepts imperial silver coin in payment to any amount.
+
+ The total value of thalers, which, with the exception of the
+ Vereinsthaler, are legal tender, was estimated in 1894 at about
+ L20,000,000.
+
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY.--Cotta, _Deutschlands Boden_ (2 vols., 1853); H.A.
+ Daniel, _Deutschland_ (1896); J. Kutzen, _Das deutsche Land_ (Breslau,
+ 1900); Von Kloden, _Geographisches Handbuch_, vol. ii. (1875); G.
+ Neumann, _Das deutsche Reich_ (2 vols., 1874); O. Brunckow, _Die
+ Wohnplatze des deutschen Reiches--auf Grund der amtlichen Materialien
+ bearbeitet_ (new ed., Berlin, 1897); _Handbuch der Wirtschaftskunde
+ Deutschlands_ (4 vols., Leipzig, 1901-1905); _Gothaischer
+ genealogischer Hofkalender auf das Jahr 1907_ (Gotha); A. von W. Keil,
+ _Neumanns Ortslexikon des deutschen Reiches_ (3rd ed., Leipzig, 1894);
+ Meyer, _Konversations-Lexikon_ (1902 seqq.); Brockhaus,
+ _Konversations-Lexikon_ (1900 seqq.); J. Kurschner, _Staats- Hof- und
+ Kommunal-handbuch des Reiches und der Einzelstaaten_ (Leipzig, 1900);
+ P. Hage, _Grundriss der deutschen Staats- und Rechtskunde_ (Stuttgart,
+ 1906), and for Statistical matter chiefly the following: _Centralblatt
+ fur das deutsche Reich. Herausgegeben im Reichsamt der Innern_
+ (Berlin, 1900); _Die deutsche Armee und die kaiserliche Marine_
+ (Berlin, 1889); _Gewerbe und Handel im deutschen Reich nach der
+ gewerblichen Betriebszahlung, vom 14. Juni 1895_ (Berlin, 1899);
+ _Handbuch fur das deutsche Reich auf das Jahr 1900, bearbeitet im
+ Reichsamt der Innern_ (Berlin); _Handbuch fur die deutsche
+ Handelsmarine auf das Jahr 1900; Statistik des deutschen Reichs_,
+ published by the _Kaiserliches Statistisches Amt_ (including trade,
+ navigation, criminal statistics, sick insurance, &c.); _Statistisches
+ Jahrbuch fur das deutsche Reich_ (Berlin, 1906) and _Vierteljahrshefte
+ fur Statistik des deutschen Reichs_ (including census returns,
+ commerce and railways). See also among English publications on
+ geographical and statistical matter: _Annual Statement of the Trade of
+ the United Kingdom with Foreign Countries and British Possessions for
+ the Year 1899_ (London, 1900); and G.G. Chisholm, _Europe_, being
+ vols. i. and ii. of Stanford's _Compendium of Geography and Travel_
+ (London, 1899 and 1900). The fullest general account of the geology of
+ Germany will be found in R. Lepsius, _Geologie von Deutschland und den
+ angrenzenden Gebieten_ (Stuttgart, first volume completed in 1892).
+ Shorter descriptions will be found in E. Kayser, _Lehrbuch der
+ geologischen Formationskunde_ (Stuttgart, English edition under the
+ title _Text-book of Comparative Geology_), and H. Credner, _Elemente
+ der Geologie_ (Leipzig).
+
+
+ARCHAEOLOGY
+
+From an archaeological point of view Germany is very far from being a
+homogeneous whole. Not only has the development of the south differed
+from that of the north, and the west been subjected to other influences
+than those affecting the east, but even where the same influences have
+been at work the period of their operation has often varied widely in
+the different districts, so that in a general sketch of the whole
+country the chronology can only be a very rough approximation. In this
+article the dates assigned to the various periods in south Germany are
+those given by Sophus Muller, on the lines first laid down by Montelius.
+As regards north Germany, Muller puts the Northern Bronze age 500 years
+later than the Southern, but a recent find in Sweden bears out
+Montelius's view that southern influence made itself rapidly felt in the
+North. The conclusions of Montelius and Muller are disputed by W.
+Ridgeway, who maintains that the Iron age originated in central Europe,
+and that iron must consequently have been worked in those regions as far
+back as c. 2000 B.C.
+
+_Older Palaeolithic Period._--The earliest traces of man's handiwork are
+found either at the end of the pre-Glacial epoch, or in an inter-Glacial
+period, but it is a disputed point whether the latter is the first of a
+series of such periods. A typical German find is at Taubach, near
+Weimar, where almond-shaped stone wedges, small flint knives, and
+roughly-hacked pieces of porphyry and quartz are found, together with
+the remains of elephants. There are also bone implements, which are not
+found in the earliest periods in France.
+
+_Palaeolithic Transition Period_ (_Solutre_).--More highly developed
+forms are found when the mammoth has succeeded the elephant. Implements
+of chipped stone for the purposes of boring and scraping suggest that
+man worked hides for clothing. Ornaments of perforated teeth and shells
+are found.
+
+_Later Palaeolithic Period_ (_La Madeleine_).--The next period is marked
+by the presence of reindeer. In the Hohlefels in the Swabian Achthal
+there is still no trace of earthenware, and we find the skull of a
+reindeer skilfully turned into a drinking-vessel. Saws, needles, awls
+and bone harpoons are found. It is to be noticed that none of the German
+finds (mostly in the south and west) show any traces of the highly
+developed artistic sense so characteristic of the dwellers in France at
+this period.
+
+The gap in our knowledge of the development of Palaeolithic into
+Neolithic civilization has recently been partially filled in by
+discoveries in north Germany and France of objects showing rather more
+developed forms than those of the former period, but still unaccompanied
+by earthenware. It is a disputed point whether the introduction of
+Neolithic civilization is due to a new ethnological element.
+
+_Neolithic Age_ (in south Germany till c. 2000 B.C.).--Neolithic man
+lived under the same climatic conditions as prevail to-day, but amidst
+forests of fir. He shows advance in every direction, and by the end of
+the later Neolithic period he is master of the arts of pottery and
+spinning, is engaged in agricultural pursuits, owns domestic animals,
+and makes weapons and tools of fine shape, either ground and polished or
+beautifully chipped. Traces of Neolithic settlements have been found
+chiefly in the neighbourhood of Worms, in the Main district and in
+Thuringia. These dwellings are usually holes in the ground, and
+presumably had thatched roofs. Our knowledge of the later Neolithic age,
+as of the succeeding periods, is largely gained from the remains of
+lake-dwellings, represented in Germany chiefly by Bavarian finds. The
+lake-dwellings in Mecklenburg, Pomerania and East Prussia are of a
+different type, and it is not certain that they date back to the Stone
+age. Typical Neolithic cemeteries are found at Hinkelstein, Alzey and
+other places in the neighbourhood of Worms. In these graves the
+skeletons lie flat, while in other cemeteries, as at Flomborn in
+Rhine-Hessen, and near Heilbronn, they are in a huddled position (hence
+the name _Hockergraber_). Necklaces and bracelets of Mediterranean
+shells point to a considerable amount of commerce. Other objects found
+in the graves are small flint knives, stone axes, flint and lumps of
+pyrites for obtaining fire, and, in the women's graves, hand-mills for
+grinding corn. The earthenware vessels usually have rounded bottoms. The
+earliest ornamentation consists of finger-imprints. Later we find two
+periods of zigzag designs in south Germany with an intermediate stage of
+spirals and wavy lines, while in north and east Germany the so-called
+string-ornamentation predominates. Towards the end of the period the
+inhabitants of north Germany erect megalithic graves, and in Hanover
+especially the passage-graves.
+
+_Bronze Age_ (in south Germany from c. 2000-1000 B.C.).--In the later
+Stone age we note the occasional use of copper, and then the gradual
+appearance of bronze. The bronze civilization of the Aegean seems to
+have had direct influence along the basins of the Danube and Elbe, while
+the culture of the western parts of central Germany was transmitted
+through Italy and France. No doubt the pre-eminence of the north, and
+especially of Denmark, at this period, was due to the amber trade,
+causing southern influence to penetrate up the basin of the Elbe to
+Jutland. The earlier period is characterized by the practice of
+inhumation in barrows made of clays, stones or sand, according to the
+district. Bronze is cast, whereas at a later time it shows signs of the
+hammer. From the finds in Bavarian graves it appears that the chief
+weapons were the dagger and the long pointed _Palstab_ (palstave), while
+a short dagger fixed like an axe on a long shaft is characteristic of
+the North. The women wore two bronze pins, a bracelet on each arm, amber
+ornaments and a necklace of bronze tubes in spirals. One or two vases
+are found in each barrow, ornamented with finger-imprints, "string"
+decoration, &c. The later period is characterized by the practice of
+cremation, though the remains are still placed in barrows. Swords make
+their appearance. The women wear more and more massive ornaments. The
+vases are highly polished and of elegant form, with zigzag decoration.
+
+_Hallstatt Period_ (in Germany 8th-5th century B.C.).--The Hallstatt
+stage of culture, named after the famous cemetery in upper Austria, is
+marked by the introduction of iron (see HALLSTATT). In Germany its
+centre is Bavaria, Baden and Wurttemberg, with the Thuringian forest as
+the northern boundary. In Brandenburg, Lusatia, Silesia, Posen and
+Saxony, where there was no strong Bronze age tradition, Hallstatt
+influence is very noticeable. In west Prussia the urns with human faces
+deserve notice. The dead are either buried in barrows or cremated, the
+latter especially in north and east Germany. In Bavaria both practices
+are resorted to, as at Hallstatt. The pottery develops beautiful form
+and colour. Fibulae, often of the "kettle-drum" form, take the place of
+the Bronze age pin.
+
+_La Tene Period_ (4th-1st century B.C.).--Down to this time there is
+very little evidence concerning the racial affinities of the population.
+When our records first begin the western and southern portions of
+Germany seem to have been inhabited by Celtic peoples (see below
+"Ethnography"). La Tene, in Switzerland, has given its name to the
+period, of which the earlier part corresponds to the time of Celtic
+supremacy. It is interesting to note how the Celts absorb Roman and
+still more Greek culture, even imitating foreign coins, and pass on
+their new arts to their Teutonic neighbours; but in spite of the strong
+foreign influence the Celtic civilization can in some sort be termed
+national. Later it has a less rich development, betraying the political
+decay of the race. Its centres in Germany are the southern districts as
+far as Thuringia, and the valleys of the Main and Saar. The
+ornamentation is of the conventionalized plant type: gold is freely
+used, and enamel, of a kind different from the Roman enamel used later
+in Germany, is applied to weapons and ornaments. Chariots are used in
+war, and fortified towns are built, though we must still suppose the
+houses to have consisted of a wooden framework coated with clay. In
+these districts La Tene influence is contemporary with the use of
+tumuli, but in the (non-Celtic) coast districts it must be sought in
+urn-cemeteries.
+
+_Roman Period_ (from the 1st century A.D.).--The period succeeding to La
+Tene ought rather to be called Romano-Germanic, the relation of the
+Teutonic races to the Roman civilization being much the same as that of
+the Celts to classical culture in the preceding period. The Rhine lands
+were of course the centre of Roman civilization, with Roman roads,
+fortresses, stone and tiled houses and marble temples. By this time the
+Teutonic peoples had probably acquired the art of writing, though the
+origin of their national (Runic) alphabet is still disputed. The graves
+of the period contain urns of earthenware or glass, cremation being the
+prevalent practice, and the objects found include one or more coins in
+accordance with Roman usage.
+
+_Period of National Migrations_ (A.D. 300-500).--The grave-finds do not
+bear out the picture of a period of ceaseless war painted by the Roman
+historians. On the contrary, weapons are seldom found, at any rate in
+graves, the objects in which bear witness to a life of extraordinary
+luxury. Magnificent drinking-vessels, beautifully ornamented dice and
+draughtsmen, masses of gay beads, are among the commonest grave-finds. A
+peculiarity of the period is the development of decoration inspired by
+animal forms, but becoming more and more tortuous and fantastic. Only
+those eastern parts of Germany which were now occupied by Slavonic
+peoples remained uninfluenced by this rich civilization.
+
+_The Merovingian Period_ (A.D. 500-800) sees the completion of the work
+of converting the German tribes to Christianity. _Reihengraber_,
+containing objects of value, but otherwise like modern cemeteries, with
+the dead buried in rows (_Reihen_), are found over all the Teutonic part
+of Germany, but some tribes, notably the Alamanni, seem still to have
+buried their dead in barrows. Among the Franks and Burgundians we find
+monolithic sarcophagi in imitation of the Romans, and in other districts
+sarcophagi were constructed out of several blocks of stone--the
+so-called _Plattengraber_. The weapons are the _spatha_, or
+double-bladed German sword, the _sax_ (a short sword, or long knife,
+_semispathium_), the knife, shield, and the favourite German axe, though
+this latter is not found in Bavaria. The ornaments are beads, earrings,
+brooches, rings, bracelets, &c., thickly studded with precious stones.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--S. Muller, _Urgeschichte Europas_ (1905), and
+ _Tierornamentik_ (1881); O. Montelius, "Chronologie der Bronzezeit in
+ N. Deutschland und Skandinavien," in _Archiv fur Anthropologie_, vols.
+ xxv. and xxvi.; M. Hoernes, _Urgeschichte des Menschen_ (1892), and
+ _Der diluviale Mensch in Europa_ (1903); M. Much, _Kupferzeit in
+ Europa_ (1893); R. Munro, _Lake-dwellings of Europe_ (1890); J. Naue,
+ _Bronzezeit in Ober-Bayern_ (1894); O. Tischler, _Ostpreussische
+ Altertumer_ (1902); R. Virchow, _Uber Hunengraber und Pfahlbauten_
+ (1866); J. Mestorf, _Urnenfriedhofe in Schleswig-Holstein_ (1886); A.
+ Lissauer, _Prahistorische Denkmaler Preussens_ (1887); I. Undset,
+ _Erstes Auftreten des Eisens in N. Europa_ (1882); L. Lindenschmit,
+ _Handbuch der deutschen Altertumskunde_, i. (1880-1889); and W.
+ Ridgeway, _Early Age of Greece_, i. (1901). Also articles by the above
+ and others, chiefly in _Zeitschrift fur Ethnologie_ (Berlin); _Archiv
+ fur Anthropologie_ (Brunswick); _Globus_ (Brunswick); _Westdeutsche
+ Zeitschrift_ (Trier); _Schriften der physikalisch-okonomischen
+ Gesellschaft_ (Konigsberg); _Nachrichten uber deutsche Altertumskunde_
+ (Berlin); _Verhandlungen der Berliner Gesellschaft fur Anthropologie_,
+ &c.; _Beitrage zur Anthropologie Bayerns_ (Munich); and _Zeitschrift
+ fur deutsches Altertum_ (Berlin). (B. S. P.)
+
+
+ETHNOGRAPHY AND EARLY HISTORY
+
+ Julius Caesar in Germany.
+
+Our direct knowledge of Germany begins with the appointment of Julius
+Caesar as governor of Gaul in 59 B.C. Long before that time there is
+evidence of German communication with southern civilization, as the
+antiquities prove, and occasional travellers from the Mediterranean had
+made their way into those regions (e.g. Pytheas, towards the end of the
+4th century), but hardly any records of their journeys survive. The
+first Teutonic peoples whom the Romans are said to have encountered are
+the Cimbri and Teutoni, probably from Denmark, who invaded Illyria, Gaul
+and Italy towards the end of the 2nd century B.C. When Caesar arrived in
+Gaul the westernmost part of what is now Germany was in the possession
+of Gaulish tribes. The Rhine practically formed the boundary between
+Gauls and Germans, though one Gaulish tribe, the Menapii, is said to
+have been living beyond the Rhine at its mouth, and shortly before the
+arrival of Caesar an invading force of Germans had seized and settled
+down in what is now Alsace, 72 B.C. At this time the Gauls were being
+pressed by the Germans along the whole frontier, and several of Caesar's
+campaigns were occupied with operations, either against the Germans, or
+against Gaulish tribes set in motion by the Germans. Among these we may
+mention the campaign of his first year of office, 58 B.C., against the
+German king Ariovistus, who led the movement in Alsace, and that of 55
+B.C. in which he expelled the Usipetes and Tencteri who had crossed the
+lower Rhine. During the period of Caesar's government he succeeded in
+annexing the whole of Gaul as far as the Rhine. (For the campaigns see
+CAESAR, JULIUS.)
+
+
+ The campaign of other Roman leaders.
+
+After peace had been established in Italy by Augustus, attempts were
+made to extend the Roman frontier beyond the Rhine. The Roman prince
+Nero Claudius Drusus (q.v.) in the year 12 B.C. annexed what is now the
+kingdom of the Netherlands, and constructed a canal (Fossa Drusiana)
+between the Rhine and the lake Flevo (Lacus Flevus), which partly
+corresponded to the Zuyder Zee, though the topography of the district
+has greatly altered. He also penetrated into regions beyond and crossed
+the Weser, receiving the submission of the Bructeri, Chatti and
+Cherusci. After Drusus' death in 9 B.C., while on his return from an
+expedition which reached the Elbe, the German command was twice
+undertaken by Tiberius, who in A.D. 5 received the submission of all the
+tribes in this quarter, including the Chauci and the Langobardi. A Roman
+garrison was left in the conquered districts between the Rhine and the
+Elbe, but the reduction was not thoroughly completed. About the same
+time the Roman fleet voyaged along the northern coast apparently as far
+as the north of Jutland, and received the nominal submission of several
+tribes in that region, including the Cimbri and the Charudes. In A.D. 9
+Quintilius Varus, the successor of Tiberius, was surprised in the
+_Saltus Teutobergensis_ between the Lippe and the Weser by a force
+raised by Arminius, a chief of the Cherusci, and his army consisting of
+three legions was annihilated. Germanicus Caesar, during his tenure of
+the command of the Roman armies on the Rhine, made repeated attempts to
+recover the Roman position in northern Germany and exact vengeance for
+the death of Varus, but without real success, and after his recall the
+Rhine formed for the greater part of its course the boundary of the
+Empire. A standing army was kept up on the Rhine, divided into two
+commands, upper and lower Germany, the headquarters of the former being
+at Mainz, those of the latter at Vetera, near Xanten. A number of
+important towns grew up, among which we may mention Trier (Augusta
+Trevirorum), Cologne (Colonia Agrippinensis), Bonn (Bonna), Worms
+(Borbetomagus), Spires (Noviomagus), Strassburg (Argentoratum) and
+Augsburg (Augusta Vindelicorum).
+
+At a later date, however, probably under the Flavian emperors, the
+frontier of upper Germany was advanced somewhat beyond the Rhine, and a
+fortification, the _Pfahlgraben_, constructed to protect it. It led from
+Honningen on the Rhine, about half-way between Bonn and Coblenz, to
+Mittenberg above Aschaffenburg on the Main, thence southwards to Lorch
+in Wurttemberg, whence it turned east to the junction of the Altmuhl
+with the Danube at Kelheim.
+
+During the wars of Drusus, Tiberius and Germanicus the Romans had ample
+opportunity of getting to know the tribal geography of Germany,
+especially the western part, and though most of our authorities lived at
+a somewhat later period, it is probable that they derived their
+information very largely from records of that time. It will be
+convenient, therefore, to give an account of the tribal geography of
+Germany in the time of Augustus, as our knowledge of the subject is much
+more complete for his reign than for several centuries later.
+
+
+ The German tribes.
+
+Of the Gaulish tribes west of the Rhine, the most important was the
+Treveri, inhabiting the basin of the Moselle, from whom the city of
+Trier (Treves) derives its name. The Rauraci probably occupied the south
+of Alsace. To the south of the Treveri lay the Mediomatrici, and to the
+west of them lay the important tribe of the Sequani, who had called in
+Ariovistus. The Treveri claimed to be of German origin, and the same
+claim was made by a number of tribes in Belgium, the most powerful of
+which were the Nervii. The meaning of this claim is not quite clear, as
+there is some obscurity concerning the origin of the name Germani. It
+appears to be a Gaulish term, and there is no evidence that it was ever
+used by the Germans themselves. According to Tacitus it was first
+applied to the Tungri, whereas Caesar records that four Belgic tribes,
+namely, the Condrusi, Eburones, Caeraesi and Paemani, were collectively
+known as Germani. There is no doubt that these tribes were all
+linguistically Celtic, and it is now the prevailing opinion that they
+were not of German origin ethnologically, but that the ground for their
+claim was that they had come from over the Rhine (cf. Caesar, _De Bello
+Gallico_ ii. 4). It would therefore seem that the name Germani
+originally denoted certain Celtic tribes to the east of the Rhine, and
+that it was then transferred to the Teutonic tribes which subsequently
+occupied the same territory.
+
+
+ Their movements.
+
+There is little doubt that during the last century before the Christian
+era the Celtic peoples had been pushed considerably farther west by the
+Teutonic peoples, a process which was still going on in Caesar's time,
+when we hear of the overthrow of the Menapii, the last Gaulish tribe
+beyond the Rhine. In the south the same process can be observed. The
+Boii were expelled from their territories in Bohemia by the Marcomanni
+in the time of Augustus, and the Helvetii are also recorded to have
+occupied formerly lands east of the Rhine, in what is now Baden and
+Wurttemberg. Caesar also mentions a Gaulish tribe named Volcae
+Tectosages as living in Germany in his time. The Volcae Arecomici in the
+south of France and the Tectosages of Galatia were in all probability
+offshoots of this people. The name of the tribe was adopted in the
+Teutonic languages as a generic term for all Celtic and Italian peoples
+(O.H.G. _Walha_, A.S. _Wealas_), from which it is probably to be
+inferred that they were the Celtic people with whom the Teutonic races
+had the closest association in early times. It has been thought that
+they inhabited the basin of the Weser, and a number of place-names in
+this district are supposed to be of Celtic origin. Farther to the south
+and west Ptolemy mentions a number of place-names which are certainly
+Celtic, e.g. Mediolanion, Aregelia, Lougidounon, Lokoriton, Segodounon.
+There is therefore great probability that a large part of western
+Germany east of the Rhine had formerly been occupied by Celtic peoples.
+In the east a Gaulish people named Cotini are mentioned, apparently in
+the upper basin of the Oder, and Tacitus speaks of a tribe in the same
+neighbourhood, the Osi, who he says spoke the Pannonian language. It is
+probable, therefore, that in other directions also the Germans had
+considerably advanced their frontier southwards at a comparatively
+recent period.
+
+
+ Tribes in the west and north.
+
+Coming now to the Germans proper, the basin of the Rhine between
+Strassburg and Mainz was inhabited by the Tribocci, Nemetes and
+Vangiones, farther down by the Mattiaci about Wiesbaden, and the Ubii in
+the neighbourhood of Cologne; beyond them were the Sugambri, and in the
+Rhine delta the Batavi and other smaller tribes. All these tribes
+remained in subjection to the Romans. Beyond them were the Tencteri,
+probably about the basin of the Lahn, and the Usipetes about the basin
+of the Ruhr. The basin of the Lippe and the upper basin of the Ems were
+inhabited by the Bructeri, and in the same neighbourhood were the
+Ampsivarii, who derive their name from the latter river. East of them
+lay the Chasuarii, presumably in the basin of the Hase. The upper basin
+of the Weser was inhabited by the Chatti, whose capital was Mattium,
+supposed to be Maden on the Eder. To the north-west of them were
+situated the Marsi, apparently between the Diemel and the Lippe, while
+the central part of the basin of the Weser was inhabited by the
+Cherusci, who seem to have extended considerably eastward. The lower
+part of the river-basin was inhabited by the Angrivarii. The coastlands
+north of the mouth of the Rhine were occupied by the Canninefates,
+beyond them by the Frisii as far as the mouth of the Ems, thence onward
+to the mouth of the Elbe by the Chauci. As to the affinities of all
+these various tribes we have little definite information, but it is
+worth noting that the Batavi in Holland are said to have been a branch
+of the Chatti, from whom they had separated owing to a _seditio
+domestica_. The basin of the Elbe was inhabited by Suebic tribes, the
+chief of which were the Marcomanni, who seem to have been settled on the
+Saale during the latter part of the 1st century B.C., but moved into
+Bohemia before the beginning of the Christian era, where they at once
+became a formidable power under their king Maroboduus. The Quadi were
+settled somewhat farther east about the source of the Elbe. The
+Hermunduri in the basin of the Saale were in alliance with the Romans
+and occupied northern Bavaria with their consent. The Semnones
+apparently dwelt below the junction of the Saale and Elbe. The
+Langobardi (see LOMBARDS) possessed the land between the territory of
+the Semnones and the mouth of the river. Their name is supposed to be
+preserved in Bardengau, south of Hamburg. From later evidence it is
+likely that another division of the Suebi inhabited western Holstein.
+The province of Schleswig (perhaps only the west coast) and the islands
+adjacent were inhabited by the Saxons, while the east coast, at least in
+later times, was occupied by the Angli. The coast of Mecklenburg was
+probably inhabited by the Varini (the later Warni). The eastern part of
+Germany was much less known to the Romans, information being
+particularly deficient as to the populations of the coast districts,
+though it seems probable that the Rugii inhabited the eastern part of
+Pomerania, where a trace of them is preserved in the name Rugenwalde.
+The lower part of the basin of the Oder was probably occupied by the
+Burgundiones, and the upper part by a number of tribes collectively
+known as Lugii, who seem to correspond to the Vandals of later times,
+though the early Roman writers apparently used the word Vandilii in a
+wider sense, embracing all the tribes of eastern Germany. Among the
+Lugii we may probably include the Silingae, who afterwards appear among
+the Vandals in Spain, and whose name is preserved in Slavonic form in
+that of the province Silesia. The Goths (Gotones) apparently inhabited
+the basin of the Vistula about the middle of its course, but the lower
+part of the basin was inhabited by non-Teutonic peoples, among whom we
+may mention the Galindi, probably Prussians, and the Aestii, either
+Prussian or Esthonian, in the coastlands at the mouth of the river, who
+are known especially in connexion with the amber trade. To the east of
+the Vistula were the Slavonic tribes (Veneti), and amongst them, perhaps
+rather to the north, a Finnish population (Fenni), which disappeared in
+later times.
+
+
+ Domestic wars of the Germans.
+
+In the time of Augustus by far the most powerful ruler in Germany was
+Maroboduus, king of the Marcomanni. His supremacy extended over all the
+Suebic tribes (except perhaps the Hermunduri), and most of the peoples
+of eastern Germany, including apparently the Lugii and Goths. But in the
+year A.D. 17 he became involved in an unsuccessful campaign against
+Arminius, prince of the Cherusci, in which the Semnones and Langobardi
+revolted against him, and two years later he was deprived of his throne
+by a certain Catualda. The latter, however, was soon expelled by
+Vibilius, king of the Hermunduri, and his power was transferred to
+Vannius, who belonged to the Quadi. About the same time Arminius met his
+death while trying to make himself king of the Cherusci. In the year 28
+the Frisians revolted from the Romans, and though they submitted again
+in the year 47, Claudius immediately afterwards recalled the Roman
+troops to the left bank of the Rhine. In the year 50 Vannius, king of
+the Suebi, was driven from the throne by Vibilius, king of the
+Hermunduri, and his nephews Vangio and Sido obtained his kingdom. In the
+year 58 the Chatti suffered a serious disaster in a campaign against the
+Hermunduri. They seem, however, to have recovered very soon, and at the
+end of the 1st century had apparently extended their power at the
+expense of the Cherusci. During the latter part of the 1st century the
+Chauci seem to have been enlarging their territories: as early as the
+year 47 we find them raiding the Roman lands on the lower Rhine, and in
+58 they expelled the Ampsivarii, who after several vain attempts to
+acquire new possessions were annihilated by the neighbouring tribes.
+During the last years of the 1st century the Angrivarii are found moving
+westwards, probably under pressure from the Chauci, and the power of the
+Bructeri was almost destroyed by their attack. In 69 the Roman territory
+on the lower Rhine was disturbed by the serious revolt of Claudius
+Civilis, a prince of the Batavi who had served in the Roman army. He was
+joined by the Bructeri and other neighbouring tribes, but being defeated
+by Petilius Cerealis (afterwards consular legate in Britain) at Vetera
+and in other engagements gave up the struggle and arranged a
+capitulation in A.D. 70. By the end of the 1st century the Chauci and
+Chatti seem to have become by far the most powerful tribes in western
+Germany, though the former are seldom mentioned after this time.
+
+After the time of Tacitus our information regarding German affairs
+becomes extremely meagre. The next important conflict with the Romans
+was the Marcomannic War (166-180), in which all the Suebic tribes
+together with the Vandals (apparently the ancient Lugii) and the
+Sarmatian Iazyges seem to have taken part. Peace was made by the emperor
+Commodus in A.D. 180 on payment of large sums of money.
+
+
+ The Alamanni, the Goths and the Franks.
+
+About the beginning of the 3rd century we find a forward movement in
+south-west Germany among a group of tribes known collectively as
+Alamanni (q.v.) who came in conflict with the emperor Caracalla in the
+year 213. About the same time the Goths also made their first appearance
+in the south-east and soon became the most formidable antagonists of
+Rome. In the year 251 they defeated and slew the emperor Decius, and in
+the reign of Gallienus their fleets setting out from the north of the
+Black Sea worked great havoc on the coast of the Aegean (see GOTHS). It
+is not to be supposed, however, that they had quitted their own lands on
+the Vistula by this time. In this connexion we hear also of the Heruli
+(q.v.), who some twenty years later, about 289, make their appearance in
+the western seas. In 286 we hear for the first time of maritime raids by
+the Saxons in the same quarter. About the middle of the 3rd century the
+name Franks (q.v.) makes its first appearance, apparently a new
+collective term for the tribes of north-west Germany from the Chatti to
+the mouth of the Rhine.
+
+
+ Arrival of the Huns.
+
+In the 4th century the chief powers in western Germany were the Franks
+and the Alamanni, both of whom were in constant conflict with the
+Romans. The former were pressed in their rear by the Saxons, who at some
+time before the middle of the 4th century appear to have invaded and
+conquered a considerable part of north-west Germany. About the same time
+great national movements seem to have been taking place farther east.
+The Burgundians made their appearance in the west shortly before the end
+of the 3rd century, settling in the basin of the Main, and it is
+probable that some portions of the north Suebic peoples, perhaps the
+ancient Semnones, had already moved westward. By the middle of the 4th
+century the Goths had become the dominant power in eastern Germany, and
+their King Hermanaric held a supremacy which seems to have stretched
+from the Black Sea to Holstein. At his death, however, the supremacy of
+eastern Germany passed to the Huns, an invading people from the east,
+whose arrival seems to have produced a complete displacement of
+population in this region. With regard to the course of events in
+eastern Germany we have no knowledge, but during the 5th century several
+of the peoples previously settled there appear to have made their way
+into the lands south of the Carpathians and Riesengebirge, amongst whom
+(besides the Goths) may be especially mentioned the Rugii and the
+Gepides, the latter perhaps originally a branch of the Goths. According
+to tradition the Vandals had been driven into Pannonia by the Goths in
+the time of Constantine. We do not know how far northward the Hunnish
+power reached in the time of Attila, but the invasion of this nation was
+soon followed by a great westward movement of the Slavs.
+
+
+ The Burgundians and other tribes.
+
+In the west the Alamanni and the descendants of the Marcomanni, now
+called Baiouarii (Bavarians), had broken through the frontiers of the
+Roman provinces of Vindelicia and Noricum at the beginning of the 5th
+century, while the Vandals together with some of the Suebi and the
+non-Teutonic Alani from the east crossed the Rhine and invaded Gaul in
+406. About 435-440 the Burgundians were overthrown by Attila, and their
+king Gunthacarius (Gundahar) killed. The remains of the nation shortly
+afterwards settled in Gaul. About the same time the Franks overran and
+occupied the modern Belgium, and in the course of the next half-century
+their dominions were enormously extended towards the south (see FRANKS).
+After the death of Attila in 453 the power of the Huns soon collapsed,
+but the political divisions of Germany in the ensuing period are far
+from clear.
+
+
+ The Franks and others in the 6th century.
+
+In the 6th century the predominant peoples are the Franks, Frisians,
+Saxons, Alamanni, Bavarians, Langobardi, Heruli and Warni. By the
+beginning of this century the Saxons seem to have penetrated almost, if
+not quite, to the Rhine in the Netherlands. Farther south, however, the
+old land of the Chatti was included in the kingdom of Clovis. Northern
+Bavaria was occupied by the Franks, whose king Clovis subdued the
+Alamanni in 495. To the east of the Franks between the Harz, the Elbe
+and the Saale lay the kingdom of the Thuringi, the origin of whom is not
+clear. The Heruli also had a powerful kingdom, probably in the basin of
+the Elbe, and to the east of them were the Langobardi. The Warni
+apparently now dwelt in the regions about the mouth of the Elbe, while
+the whole coast from the mouth of the Weser to the west Scheldt was in
+the hands of the Frisians. By this time all the country east of the
+lower Elbe seems to have been Slavonic. In the north, perhaps in the
+province of Schleswig, we hear now for the first time of the Danes.
+Theodoric, king of the Ostrogoths, endeavoured to form a confederacy
+with the Thuringi, Heruli and Warni against Clovis in order to protect
+the Visigoths in the early years of the 6th century, but very shortly
+afterwards the king of the Heruli was slain by the Langobardi and their
+existence as an independent power came to an end. In 531 the Thuringian
+kingdom was destroyed by the Frankish king Theodoric, son of Clovis,
+with whom the Saxons were in alliance.
+
+
+ The Saxons and the Franks.
+
+During the 6th and 7th centuries the Saxons were intermittently under
+Frankish supremacy, but their conquest was not complete until the time
+of Charlemagne. Shortly after the middle of the 6th century the Franks
+were threatened with a new invasion by the Avars. In 567-568 the
+Langobardi, who by this time had moved into the Danube basin, invaded
+Italy and were followed by those of the Saxons who had settled in
+Thuringia. Their lands were given by the Frankish king Sigeberht to the
+north Suebi and other tribes who had come either from the Elbe basin or
+possibly from the Netherlands. About the same time Sigeberht was
+defeated by the Avars, and though the latter soon withdrew from the
+Frankish frontiers, their course was followed by a movement of the
+Slavs, who occupied the basin of the Elster and penetrated to that of
+the Main.
+
+By the end of the 6th century the whole basin of the Elbe except the
+Saxon territory near the mouth had probably become Slavonic. To the east
+of the Saale were the Sorbs (Sorabi), and beyond them the Daleminci and
+Siusli. To the east of the Saxons were the Polabs (Polabi) in the basin
+of the Elbe, and beyond them the Hevelli about the Havel. Farther north
+in Mecklenburg were the Warnabi, and in eastern Holstein the Obotriti
+and the Wagri. To the east of the Warnabi were the Liutici as far as the
+Oder, and beyond that river the Pomerani. To the south of the Oder were
+the Milcieni and the Lusici, and farther east the Poloni with their
+centre in the basin of the Vistula. The lower part of the Vistula basin,
+however, was in possession of Prussian tribes, the Prussi and Lithuani.
+
+The Warni now disappear from history, and from this time the Teutonic
+peoples of the north as far as the Danish boundary about the Eider are
+called Saxons. The conquest of the Frisians by the Franks was begun by
+Pippin (Pepin) of Heristal in 689 and practically completed by Charles
+Martel, though they were not entirely brought into subjection until the
+time of Charlemagne. The great overthrow of the Saxons took place about
+772-773 and by the end of the century Charlemagne had extended his
+conquests to the border of the Danes. By this time the whole of the
+Teutonic part of Germany had been finally brought under his government.
+
+ AUTHORITIES.--Caesar, _De bello Gallico_, especially i. 31 ff., iv.
+ 1-19, vi. 21 ff.; Velleius Paterculus, especially ii. 105 ff.; Strabo,
+ especially pp. 193 ff., 290 ff.; Pliny, _Natural History_, iv. SS 99
+ ff., 106; Tacitus, Annales, i. 38 ff., ii. 5 ff., 44 ff., 62 f., 88;
+ _Germania_, passim; _Histories_, iv.; Ptolemy ii. 9, SS 2 ff., 11,
+ iii. 5, SS 19 ff.; Dio Cassius, passim; Julius Capitolinus; Claudius
+ Mamertinus; Ammianus Marcellinus, passim; Zosimus; Jordanes, _De
+ origine Getarum_; Procopius, _De bello Gothico_; K. Zeuss, _Die
+ Deutschen und die Nachbarstamme_; O. Bremer in Paul's _Grundriss d.
+ germ. Philologie_ (2nd ed.), vol. iii. pp. 735 ff. (F. G. M. B.)
+
+
+MEDIEVAL AND MODERN HISTORY
+
+ Divisions of Germany.
+
+When Clovis, or Chlodovech, became king of a tribe of the Salian Franks
+in 481, five years after the fall of the Western empire, the region
+afterwards called Germany was divided into five main districts, and its
+history for the succeeding three centuries is mainly the history of the
+tribes inhabiting these districts. In the north-east, dwelling between
+the Rhine and the Elbe, were the Saxons (q.v.), to the east and south of
+whom stretched the extensive kingdom of Thuringia (q.v.). In the
+south-west the Alamanni occupied the territory afterwards called Swabia
+(q.v.), and extended along the middle Rhine until they met the Ripuarian
+Franks, then living in the northern part of the district which at a
+later period was called after them, Franconia (q.v.); and in the
+south-east were the Bavarians, although it was some time before their
+country came to be known as Bavaria (q.v.).
+
+
+ The wars of Clovis.
+
+Clovis was descended from Chlogio, or Clodion, who had ruled over a
+branch of the Salian Franks from 427 to 447, and whose successors,
+following his example, had secured an influential position for their
+tribe. Having obtained possession of that part of Gaul which lay between
+the Seine and the Loire, Clovis turned his attention to his eastern
+neighbours, and was soon engaged in a struggle with the Alamanni which
+probably arose out of a quarrel between them and the Ripuarian Franks
+for the possession of the middle Rhine. When in 496, or soon afterwards,
+the Alamanni were defeated, they were confined to what was afterwards
+known as Swabia, and the northern part of their territory was
+incorporated with the kingdom of the Franks. Clovis had united the
+Salian Franks under his rule, and he persuaded, or compelled, the
+Ripuarian Franks also to accept him as their king; but on his death in
+511 his kingdom was divided, and the Ripuarian, or Rhenish, Franks as
+they are sometimes called, together with some of the Alamanni, came
+under the rule of his eldest son Theuderich or Theodoric I. This was the
+first of the many partitions which effectually divided the kingdom of
+the Franks into an eastern and a western portion, that is to say, into
+divisions which eventually became Germany and France respectively, and
+the district ruled by Theuderich was almost identical with that which
+afterwards bore the name of Austrasia. In 531 Theuderich killed
+Hermannfried, king of the Thuringians, a former ally, with whom he had
+quarrelled, conquered his kingdom, and added its southern portion to his
+own possessions. His son and successor, Theudebert I., exercised a
+certain supremacy over the Alamanni and the Bavarians, and even claimed
+authority over various Saxon tribes between whom and the Franks there
+had been some fighting. After his death in 548, however, the Frankish
+power in Germany sank to very minute proportions, a result due partly to
+the spirit of tribal independence which lingered among the German races,
+but principally to the paralysing effect of the unceasing rivalry
+between Austrasia and Neustria. From 548 the Alamanni were ruled by a
+succession of dukes who soon made themselves independent; and in 555 a
+duke of the Bavarians, who exercised his authority without regard for
+the Frankish supremacy, is first mentioned. In Thuringia, which now only
+consisted of the central part of the former kingdom, King Dagobert I.
+set up in 634 a duke named Radulf who soon asserted his independence of
+Dagobert and of his successor, Sigebert III. The Saxons for their part
+did not own even a nominal allegiance to the Frankish kings, whose
+authority on the right bank of the Rhine was confined to the district
+actually occupied by men of their own name, which at a later date became
+the duchy of Franconia. During these years the eastern border of Germany
+was constantly ravaged by various Slavonic tribes. King Dagobert sent
+troops to repel these marauders from time to time, but the main burden
+of defence fell upon the Saxons, Bavarians and Thuringians. The virtual
+independence of these German tribes lasted until the union of Austrasia
+and Neustria in 687, an achievement mainly due to the efforts of Pippin
+of Heristal, who soon became the actual, though not the nominal, ruler
+of the Frankish realm. Pippin and his son Charles Martel, who was mayor
+of the palace from 717 to 741, renewed the struggle with the Germans and
+were soon successful in re-establishing the central power which the
+Merovingian kings had allowed to slip from their grasp. The ducal office
+was abolished in Thuringia, a series of wars reduced the Alamanni to
+strict dependence, and both countries were governed by Frankish
+officials. Bavaria was brought into subjection about the same time; the
+Bavarian law, committed to writing between 739 and 748, strongly
+emphasizes the supremacy of the Frankish king, whose authority it
+recognizes as including the right to appoint and even to depose the duke
+of Bavaria. The Saxons, on the other hand, succeeded in retaining their
+independence as a race, although their country was ravaged in various
+campaigns and some tribes were compelled from time to time to pay
+tribute. The rule of Pippin the Short, both before and after his
+coronation as king, was troubled by constant risings on the part of his
+East Frankish or German subjects, but aided by his brother Carloman, who
+for a time administered this part of the Frankish kingdom, Pippin was
+generally able to deal with the rebels.
+
+
+ The Saxons remain independent.
+
+After all, however, even these powerful Frankish conquerors had but
+imperfect success in Germany. When they were present with their
+formidable armies, they could command obedience; when engaged, as they
+often were, in distant parts of the vast Frankish territory, they could
+not trust to the fulfilment of the fair promises they had exacted. One
+of the chief causes of their ill-success was the continued independence
+of the Saxons. Ever since they had acquired the northern half of
+Thuringia, this warlike race had been extending its power. They were
+still heathens, cherishing bitter hatred towards the Franks, whom they
+regarded as the enemies both of their liberties and of their religion;
+and their hatred found expression, not only in expeditions into Frankish
+territory, but in help willingly rendered to every German confederation
+which wished to throw off the Frankish yoke. Hardly any rebellion
+against the dukes of the Franks, or against King Pippin, took place in
+Germany without the Saxons coming forward to aid the rebels. This was
+perfectly understood by the Frankish rulers, who tried again and again
+to put an end to the evil by subduing the Saxons. They could not,
+however, attain their object. An occasional victory was gained, and some
+border tribes were from time to time compelled to pay tribute; but the
+mass of the Saxons remained unconquered. This was partly due to the fact
+that the Saxons had not, like the other German confederations, a duke
+who, when beaten, could be held responsible for the engagements forced
+upon him as the representative of his subjects. A Saxon chief who made
+peace with the Franks could undertake nothing for the whole people. As a
+conquering race, they were firmly compact; conquered, they were in the
+hands of the victor a rope of sand.
+
+
+ Christianity in Germany.
+
+It was during the time of Pippin of Heristal and his son and grandson
+that the conversion of the Germans to Christianity was mainly effected.
+Some traces of Roman Christianity still lingered in the Rhine valley and
+in southern Germany, but the bulk of the people were heathen, in spite
+of the efforts of Frank and Irish missionaries and the command of King
+Dagobert I. that all his subjects should be baptized. Rupert, bishop of
+Worms, had already made some progress in the work of converting the
+Bavarians and Alamanni, as had Willibrord among the Thuringians when St
+Boniface appeared in Germany in 717. Appointed bishop of the Germans by
+Pope Gregory II., and supported by Charles Martel, he preached with much
+success in Bavaria and Thuringia, notwithstanding some hostility from
+the clergy who disliked the influence of Rome. He founded or restored
+bishoprics in Bavaria, Thuringia and elsewhere, and in 742 presided over
+the first German council. When he was martyred in 755 Christianity was
+professed by all the German races except the Saxons, and the church,
+organized and wealthy, had been to a large extent brought under the
+control of the papacy. The old pagan faith was not yet entirely
+destroyed, and traces of its influence may still be detected in popular
+beliefs and customs. But still Christianity was dominant, and soon
+became an important factor in the process of civilization, while the
+close alliance of the German church with the papacy was followed by
+results of the utmost consequence for Germany.
+
+
+ The work of Charlemagne.
+
+The reign of Charlemagne is a period of great importance in the history
+of Germany. Under his rule the first signs of national unity and a
+serious advance in the progress of order and civilization may be seen.
+The long struggle, which ended in 804 with the submission of the Saxons
+to the emperor, together with the extension of a real Frankish authority
+over the Bavarians, brought the German races for the first time under a
+single ruler; while war and government, law and religion, alike tended
+to weld them into one people. The armies of Charlemagne contained
+warriors from all parts of Germany; and although tribal law was
+respected and codified, legislation common to the whole empire was also
+introduced. The general establishment of the Frankish system of
+government and the presence of Frankish officials helped to break down
+the barriers of race, and the influence of Christianity was in the same
+direction. With the conversion of the Saxons the whole German race
+became nominally Christian; and their ruler was lavish in granting lands
+and privileges to prelates, and untiring in founding bishoprics,
+monasteries and schools. Measures were also taken for the security and
+good government of the country. Campaigns against the Slavonic tribes,
+if sometimes failing in their immediate object, taught those peoples to
+respect the power of the Frankish monarch; and the establishment of a
+series of marches along the eastern frontier gave a sense of safety to
+the neighbouring districts. The tribal dukes had all disappeared, and
+their duchies were split up into districts ruled by counts (q.v.), whose
+tendencies to independence the emperor tried to check by the visits of
+the _missi dominici_ (q.v.). Some of the results of the government of
+Charlemagne were, however, less beneficial. His coronation as Roman
+emperor in 800, although it did not produce at the time so powerful an
+impression in Germany as in France, was fraught with consequences not
+always favourable for the former country. The tendencies of the tribe to
+independence were crushed as their ancient popular assemblies were
+discouraged; and the liberty of the freemen was curtailed owing to the
+exigencies of military service, while the power of the church was rarely
+directed to the highest ends.
+
+
+ Louis I. and his sons.
+
+The reign of the emperor Louis I. was marked by a number of abortive
+schemes for the partition of his dominions among his sons, which
+provoked a state of strife that was largely responsible for the
+increasing weakness of the Empire. The mild nature of his rule,
+however, made Louis popular with his German subjects, to whose support
+mainly he owed his restoration to power on two occasions. When in 825
+his son Louis, afterwards called "the German," was entrusted with the
+government of Bavaria and from this centre gradually extended his
+authority over the Carolingian dominions east of the Rhine, a step was
+taken in the process by which East Francia, or Germany, was becoming a
+unit distinguishable from other portions of the Empire; a process which
+was carried further by the treaty of Verdun in August 843, when, after a
+struggle between Louis the German and his brothers for their father's
+inheritance, an arrangement was made by which Louis obtained the bulk of
+the lands east of the Rhine together with the districts around Mainz,
+Worms and Spires on the left bank. Although not yet a single people, the
+German tribes had now for the first time a ruler whose authority was
+confined to their own lands, and from this time the beginnings of
+national life may be traced. For fifty years the main efforts of Louis
+were directed to defending his kingdom from the inroads of his Slavonic
+neighbours, and his detachment from the rest of the Empire necessitated
+by these constant engagements towards the east, gradually gave both him
+and his subjects a distinctive character, which was displayed and
+emphasized when, in ratifying an alliance with his half-brother, the
+West-Frankish king, Charles the Bald, the oath was sworn in different
+tongues. The East and West Franks were unable to understand each other's
+speech, so Charles took the oath in a Romance, and Louis in a German
+dialect.
+
+
+ Louis the German and his successors.
+
+Important as is the treaty of Verdun in German history, that of Mersen,
+by which Louis and Charles the Bald settled in 870 their dispute over
+the kingdom of Lothair, second son of the emperor Lothair I., is still
+more important. The additional territory which Louis then obtained gave
+to his dominions almost the proportions which Germany maintained
+throughout the middle ages. They were bounded on the east by the Elbe
+and the Bohemian mountains, and on the west beyond the Rhine they
+included the districts known afterwards as Alsace and Lorraine. His
+jurisdiction embraced the territories occupied by the five ancient
+German tribes, and included the five archbishoprics of Mainz, Treves
+(Trier), Cologne, Salzburg and Bremen. When Louis died in 876 his
+kingdom was divided among his three sons, but as the two elder of these
+soon died without heirs, Germany was again united in 882 under his
+remaining son Charles, called "the Fat," who soon became ruler of almost
+the whole of the extensive domains of Charlemagne. There was, however,
+no cohesion in the restored empire, the disintegration of which,
+moreover, was hastened by the ravages of the Northmen, who plundered the
+cities in the valley of the Rhine. Charles attempted to buy off these
+redoubtable invaders, a policy which aroused the anger of his German
+subjects, whose resentment was accentuated by the king's indifference to
+their condition, and found expression in 887 when Arnulf, an
+illegitimate son of Carloman, the eldest son of Louis the German, led an
+army of Bavarians against him. Arnulf himself was recognized as German
+or East-Frankish king, although his actual authority was confined to
+Bavaria and its neighbourhood. He was successful in freeing his kingdom
+for a time from the ravages of the Northmen, but was not equally
+fortunate in his contests with the Moravians. After his death in 899 his
+kingdom came under the nominal rule of his young son Louis "the Child,"
+and in the absence of firm rule and a central authority became the prey
+of the Magyars and other hordes of invaders.
+
+
+ Feudalism in Germany.
+
+During these wars feudalism made rapid advance in Germany. The different
+peoples compelled to attend to their own defence appointed dukes for
+special military services (see DUKE); and these dukes, chosen often from
+members of the old ducal families, succeeded without much difficulty in
+securing a more permanent position for themselves and their descendants.
+In Saxony, for example, we hear of Duke Otto the Illustrious, who also
+ruled over Thuringia; and during the early years of the 10th century
+dukes appear in Franconia, Bavaria, Swabia and Lorraine. These dukes
+acquired large tracts of land of which they gave grants on conditions of
+military service to persons on whom they could rely; while many
+independent landowners sought their protection on terms of vassalage.
+The same process took place in the case of great numbers of freemen of a
+lower class, who put themselves at the service of their more powerful
+neighbours in return for protection. In this manner the feudal tenure of
+land began to prevail in almost all parts of Germany, and the elaborate
+social system which became known as feudalism was gradually built up.
+The dukes became virtually independent, and when Louis the Child died in
+911, the royal authority existed in name only.
+
+
+ Conrad I.
+
+While Louis the Child lived the German dukes were virtually kings in
+their duchies, and their natural tendency was to make themselves
+absolute rulers. But, threatened as they were by the Magyars, with the
+Slavs and Northmen always ready to take advantage of their weakness,
+they could not afford to do without a central government. Accordingly
+the nobles assembled at Forchheim, and by the advice of Otto the
+Illustrious, duke of Saxony, Conrad of Franconia was chosen German king.
+The dukes of Bavaria, Swabia and Lorraine were displeased at this
+election, probably because Conrad was likely to prove considerably more
+powerful than they wished. Rather than acknowledge him, the duke of
+Lotharingia, or Lorraine, transferred his allegiance to Charles the
+Simple of France; and it was in vain that Conrad protested and
+despatched armies into Lorraine. With the help of the French king the
+duke maintained his ground, and for the time his country was lost to
+Germany. Bavaria and Swabia yielded, but, mainly through the fault of
+the king himself, their submission was of brief duration. The rise of
+the dukes had been watched with extreme jealousy by the leading
+prelates. They saw that the independence they had hitherto enjoyed would
+be much more imperilled by powerful local governors than by a sovereign
+who necessarily regarded it as part of his duty to protect the church.
+Hence they had done everything they could to prevent the dukes from
+extending their authority, and as the government was carried on during
+the reign of Louis the Child mainly by Hatto I., archbishop of Mainz,
+they had been able to throw considerable obstacles in the way of their
+rivals. They had now induced Conrad to quarrel with both Swabia and
+Bavaria, and also with Henry, duke of Saxony, son of the duke to whom he
+chiefly owed his crown. In these contests the German king met with
+indifferent success, but the struggle with Saxony was not very serious,
+and when dying in December 919 Conrad recommended the Franconian nobles
+to offer the crown to Henry, the only man who could cope with the
+anarchy by which he had himself been baffled.
+
+
+ Henry the Fowler.
+
+The nobles of Franconia acted upon the advice of their king, and the
+Saxons were very willing that their duke should rise to still higher
+honours. Henry I., called "the Fowler," who was chosen German king in
+May 919, was one of the best of German kings, and was a born statesman
+and warrior. His ambition was of the noblest order, for he sank his
+personal interests in the cause of his country, and he knew exactly when
+to attain his objects by force, and when by concession and moderation.
+Almost immediately he overcame the opposition of the dukes of Swabia and
+Bavaria; some time later, taking advantage of the troubled state of
+France, he accepted the homage of the duke of Lorraine, which for many
+centuries afterwards remained a part of the German kingdom.
+
+
+ Henry and the Magyars.
+
+Having established internal order, Henry was able to turn to matters of
+more pressing moment. In the first year of his reign the Magyars, who
+had continued to scourge Germany during the reign of Conrad, broke into
+Saxony and plundered the land almost without hindrance. In 924 they
+returned, and this time by good fortune one of their greatest princes
+fell into the hands of the Germans. Henry restored him to his countrymen
+on condition that they made a truce for nine years; and he promised to
+pay yearly tribute during this period. The barbarians accepted his
+terms, and faithfully kept their word in regard to Henry's own lands,
+although Bavaria, Swabia and Franconia they occasionally invaded as
+before. The king made admirable use of the opportunity he had secured,
+confining his efforts, however, to Saxony and Thuringia, the only parts
+of Germany over which he had any control.
+
+
+ Henry's work in Saxony.
+
+In the southern and western German lands towns and fortified places had
+long existed; but in the north, where Roman influence had only been
+feeble, and where even the Franks had not exercised much authority until
+the time of Charlemagne, the people still lived as in ancient times,
+either on solitary farms or in exposed villages. Henry saw that, while
+this state of things lasted, the population could never be safe, and
+began the construction of fortresses and walled towns. Of every group of
+nine men one was compelled to devote himself to this work, while the
+remaining eight cultivated his fields and allowed a third of their
+produce to be stored against times of trouble. The necessities of
+military discipline were also a subject of attention. Hitherto the
+Germans had fought mainly on foot, and, as the Magyars came on
+horseback, the nation was placed at an immense disadvantage. A powerful
+force of cavalry was now raised, while at the same time the infantry
+were drilled in new and more effective modes of fighting. Although these
+preparations were carried on directly under Henry's supervision, only in
+Saxony and Thuringia the neighbouring dukes were stimulated to follow
+his example. When he was ready he used his new troops, before turning
+them against their chief enemy, the Magyars, to punish refractory
+Slavonic tribes; and he brought under temporary subjection nearly all
+the Slavs between the Elbe and the Oder. He proceeded also against the
+Bohemians, whose duke was compelled to do homage.
+
+
+ The Magyars return.
+
+The truce with the Magyars was not renewed, whereupon in 933 a body of
+invaders crossed, as in former years, the frontier of Thuringia. Henry
+prudently waited until dearth of provisions forced the enemy to divide
+into two bands. He then swept down upon the weaker force, annihilated
+it, and rapidly advanced against the remaining portion of the army. The
+second battle was more severe than the first, but not less decisive. The
+Magyars, unable to cope with a disciplined army, were cut down in great
+numbers, and those who survived rode in terror from the field. The exact
+scenes of these conflicts are not known, although the date of the second
+encounter was the 15th of March 933; but few more important battles have
+ever been fought. The power of the Magyars was not indeed destroyed, but
+it was crippled, and the way was prepared for the effective liberation
+of Germany from an intolerable plague. While the Magyars had been
+troubling Germany on the east and south, the Danes had been irritating
+her on the north. Charlemagne had established a march between the Eider
+and the Schlei; but in course of time the Danes had not only seized this
+territory, but had driven the German population beyond the Elbe. The
+Saxons had been slowly reconquering the lost ground, and now Henry,
+advancing with his victorious army into Jutland, forced Gorm, the Danish
+king, to become his vassal and regained the land between the Eider and
+the Schlei. But Henry's work concerned the duchy of Saxony rather than
+the kingdom of Germany. He concentrated all his energies on the
+government and defence of northern and eastern Germany, leaving the
+southern and western districts to profit by his example, while his
+policy of refraining from interference in the affairs of the other
+duchies tended to diminish the ill-feeling which existed between the
+various German tribes and to bring peace to the country as a whole. It
+is in these directions that the reign of Henry the Fowler marks a stage
+in the history of Germany.
+
+
+ The growth of towns.
+
+When this great king died in July 936 every land inhabited by a German
+population formed part of the German kingdom, and none of the duchies
+were at war either with him or among themselves. Along the northern and
+eastern frontier were tributary races, and the country was for the time
+rid of an enemy which, for nearly a generation, had kept it in perpetual
+fear. Great as were these results, perhaps Henry did even greater
+service in beginning the growth of towns throughout north Germany. Not
+content with merely making them places of defence, he decreed that they
+should be centres for the administration of justice, and that in them
+should be held all public festivities and ceremonies; he also instituted
+markets, and encouraged traders to take advantage of the opportunities
+provided for them. A strong check was thus imposed upon the tendency of
+freemen to become the vassals of great lords. This movement had become
+so powerful by the troubles of the epoch that, had no other current of
+influence set in, the entire class of freemen must soon have
+disappeared. As they now knew that they could find protection without
+looking to a superior, they had less temptation to give up their
+independence, and many of them settled in the towns where they could be
+safe and free. Besides maintaining a manly spirit in the population, the
+towns rapidly added to their importance by the stimulus they gave to all
+kinds of industry and trade.
+
+
+ Otto the Great.
+
+Before his death Henry obtained the promise of the nobles at a national
+assembly, or diet, at Erfurt to recognize his son Otto as his successor,
+and the promise was kept, Otto being chosen German king in July 936.
+Otto I. the Great began his reign under the most favourable
+circumstances. He was twenty-four years of age, and at the coronation
+festival, which was held at Aix-la-Chapelle, the dukes performed for the
+first time the nominally menial offices known as the arch-offices of the
+German kingdom. But these peaceful relations soon came to an end.
+Reversing his father's policy, Otto resolved that the dukes should act
+in the strictest sense as his vassals, or lose their dignities. At the
+time of his coronation Germany was virtually a federal state; he wished
+to transform it into a firm and compact monarchy. This policy speedily
+led to a formidable rebellion, headed by Thankmar, the king's
+half-brother, a fierce warrior, who fancied that he had a prior claim to
+the crown, and who secured a number of followers in Saxony. He was
+joined by Eberhard, duke of Franconia, and it was only by the aid of the
+duke of Swabia, whom the duke of Franconia had offended, that the rising
+was put down. This happened in 938, and in 939 a second rebellion, led
+by Otto's brother Henry, was supported by the duke of Franconia and by
+Giselbert, duke of Lorraine. Otto again triumphed, and derived immense
+advantages from his success. The duchy of Franconia he kept in his own
+hands, and in 944 he granted Lorraine to Conrad the Red, an energetic
+and honourable count, whom he still further attached to himself by
+giving him his daughter for his wife. Bavaria, on the death of its duke
+in 947, was placed under his brother Henry, who, having been pardoned,
+had become a loyal subject. The duchy of Swabia was also brought into
+Otto's family by the marriage of his son Ludolf with Duke Hermann's
+daughter, and by these means Otto made himself master of the kingdom.
+For the time, feudalism in truth meant that lands and offices were held
+on condition of service; the king was the genuine ruler, not only of
+freemen, but of the highest vassals in the nation.
+
+
+ Otto's wars with France and with the Slavs.
+
+In the midst of these internal troubles Otto was attacked by the French
+king, Louis IV., who sought to regain Lorraine. However, the German king
+was soon able to turn his arms against his new enemy; he marched into
+France and made peace with Louis in 942. Otto's subsequent interventions
+in the affairs of France were mainly directed towards making peace
+between Louis and his powerful and rebellious vassal, Hugh the Great,
+duke of the Franks, both of whom were married to sisters of the German
+king. Much more important than Otto's doings in France were his wars
+with his northern and eastern neighbours. The duke of Bohemia, after a
+long struggle, was brought to submission in 950. Among the Slavs between
+the Elbe and the Oder the king was represented by Margrave Gero, a
+warrior well fitted for the rough work he had to do, loyal to his
+sovereign, but capable of any treachery towards his enemies, who
+conquered much of the country north of Bohemia between the Oder and the
+upper and middle Elbe. Margrave Billung, who looked after the Abotrites
+on the lower Elbe, was less fortunate, mainly because of the
+neighbourhood of the Danes, who, after the death of King Henry, often
+attacked the hated Germans, but some progress was made in bringing this
+district under German influence. Otto, having profound faith in the
+power of the church to reconcile conquered peoples to his rule, provided
+for the benefit of the Danes the bishoprics of Schleswig, Ripen and
+Aarhus; and among those which he established for the Slavs were the
+important bishoprics of Brandenburg and Havelberg. In his later years he
+set up the archbishopric of Magdeburg, which took in the sees of
+Meissen, Zeitz and Merseburg.
+
+
+ Otto in Italy.
+
+Having secured peace in Germany and begun the real conquest of the
+border races, Otto was by far the greatest sovereign in Europe; and, had
+he refused to go beyond the limits within which he had hitherto acted,
+it is probable that he would have established a united monarchy. But a
+decision to which he soon came deprived posterity of the results which
+might have sprung from the policy of his earlier years. About 951
+Adelaide, widow of Lothair, son of Hugh, king of Italy, having refused
+to marry the son of Berengar, margrave of Ivrea, was cast into prison
+and cruelly treated. She appealed to Otto; other reasons called him in
+the same direction, and in 951 he crossed the Alps and descended into
+Lombardy. He displaced Berengar, and was so fascinated by Queen Adelaide
+that within a few weeks he was married to her at Pavia. But Otto's son,
+Ludolf, who had received a promise of the German crown, saw his rights
+threatened by this marriage. He went to an old enemy of his father,
+Frederick, archbishop of Mainz, and the two plotted together against the
+king, who, hearing of their proceedings, returned to Germany in 952,
+leaving Duke Conrad of Lorraine as his representative in Italy. Otto,
+who did not suspect how deep were the designs of the conspirators, paid
+a visit to Mainz, where he was seized and was compelled to take certain
+solemn pledges which, after his escape, he repudiated.
+
+
+ The civil war.
+
+ Defeat of Magyars.
+
+War broke out in 953, and the struggle was the most serious in which he
+had been engaged. In Lorraine, of which duchy Otto made his brother
+Bruno, archbishop of Cologne, administrator, his cause was triumphant;
+but everywhere else dark clouds gathered over his head. Conrad the Red
+hurried from Italy and joined the rebels; in Swabia, in Bavaria, in
+Franconia and even in Saxony, the native land of the king, many sided
+with them. It is extremely remarkable that this movement acquired so
+quickly such force and volume. The explanation, according to some
+historians, is that the people looked forward with alarm to the union of
+Germany with Italy. There were still traditions of the hardships
+inflicted upon the common folk by the expeditions of Charlemagne, and it
+is supposed that they anticipated similar evils in the event of his
+empire being restored. Whether or not this be the true explanation, the
+power of Otto was shaken to its foundations. At last he was saved by the
+presence of an immense external peril. The Magyars were as usual
+stimulated to action by the disunion of their enemies; and Conrad and
+Ludolf made the blunder of inviting their help, a proceeding which
+disgusted the Germans, many of whom fell away from their side and
+rallied to the head and protector of the nation. In a very short time
+Conrad and the archbishop of Mainz submitted, and although Ludolf held
+out a little longer he soon asked for pardon. Lorraine was given to
+Bruno; but Conrad, its former duke, although thus punished, was not
+disgraced, for Otto needed his services in the war with the Magyars. The
+great battle against these foes was fought on the 10th of August 955 on
+the Lechfeld near Augsburg. After a fierce and obstinate fight, in which
+Conrad and many other nobles fell, the Germans were victorious; the
+Magyars were even more thoroughly scourged than in the battles in which
+Otto's father had given them their first real check. The deliverance of
+Germany was complete, and from this time, notwithstanding certain wild
+raids towards the east, the Magyars began to settle in the land they
+still occupy, and to adapt themselves to the conditions of civilized
+life.
+
+
+ Otto crowned emperor.
+
+Entreated by Pope John XII., who needed a helper against Berengar, Otto
+went a second time to Italy, in 961; and on this occasion he received
+from the pope at Rome the imperial crown. In 966 he was again in Italy,
+where he remained six years, exercising to the full his imperial rights
+in regard to the papacy, but occupied mainly in an attempt to make
+himself master of the southern, as well as of the northern half of the
+peninsula.
+
+
+ Connexion of Germany with the Empire.
+
+By far the most important act of Otto's eventful life was his assumption
+of the Lombard and the imperial crowns. His successors steadily followed
+his example, and the sovereign crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle claimed as his
+right coronation by the pope in Rome. Thus grew up the Holy Roman
+Empire, that strange state which, directly descending through the empire
+of Charlemagne from the empire of the Caesars, contained so many
+elements foreign to ancient life. We are here concerned with it only as
+it affected Germany. Germany itself never until our own day became an
+empire. It is true that at last the Holy Roman Empire was in reality
+confined to Germany; but in theory it was something quite different.
+Like France, Germany was a kingdom, but it differed from France in this,
+that its king was also king in Italy and Roman emperor. As the latter
+title made him nominally the secular lord of the world, it might have
+been expected to excite the pride of his German subjects; and doubtless,
+after a time, they did learn to think highly of themselves as the
+imperial race. But the evidence tends to show that at first at least
+they had no wish for this honour, and would have preferred their ruler
+to devote himself entirely to his own people.
+
+There are signs that during Otto's reign they began to have a distinct
+consciousness of national life, their use of the word "deutsch" to
+indicate the whole people being one of these symptoms. Their common
+sufferings, struggles and triumphs, however, account far more readily
+for this feeling than the supposition that they were elated by their
+king undertaking obligations which took him for years together away from
+his native land. So solemn were the associations of the imperial title
+that, after acquiring it, Otto probably looked for more intimate
+obedience from his subjects. They were willing enough to admit the
+abstract claims of the Empire; but in the world of feudalism there was a
+multitude of established customs and rights which rudely conflicted with
+these claims, and in action, remote and abstract considerations gave way
+before concrete and present realities. Instead of strengthening the
+allegiance of the Germans towards their sovereign, the imperial title
+was the means of steadily undermining it. To the connexion of their
+kingdom with the Empire they owe the fact that for centuries they were
+the most divided of European nations, and that they have only recently
+begun to create a genuinely united state. France was made up of a number
+of loosely connected lands, each with its own lord, when Germany, under
+Otto, was to a large extent moved by a single will, well organized and
+strong. But the attention of the French kings was concentrated on their
+immediate interests, and in course of time they brought their unruly
+vassals to order. The German kings, as emperors, had duties which often
+took them away for long periods from Germany. This alone would have
+shaken their authority, for, during their absence, the great vassals
+seized rights which were afterwards difficult to recover. But the
+emperors were not merely absent, they had to engage in struggles in
+which they exhausted the energies necessary to enforce obedience at
+home; and, in order to obtain help, they were sometimes glad to concede
+advantages to which, under other conditions, they would have tenaciously
+clung. Moreover, the greatest of all their struggles was with the
+papacy; so that a power outside their kingdom, but exercising immense
+influence within it, was in the end always prepared to weaken them by
+exciting dissension among their people. Thus the imperial crown was the
+most fatal gift that could have been offered to the German kings;
+apparently giving them all things, it deprived them of nearly
+everything. And in doing this it inflicted on many generations
+incalculable and needless suffering.
+
+
+ Otto and the duchies.
+
+By the policy of his later years Otto did much to prepare the way for
+the process of disintegration which he rendered inevitable by restoring
+the Empire. With the kingdom divided into five great duchies, the
+sovereign could always have maintained at least so much unity as Henry
+the Fowler secured; and, as the experience of Otto himself showed, there
+would have been chances of much greater centralization. Yet he threw
+away this advantage. Lorraine was divided into two duchies, Upper
+Lorraine and Lower Lorraine. In each duchy of the kingdom he appointed a
+count palatine, whose duty was to maintain the royal rights; and after
+Margrave Gero died in 965 his territory was divided into three marches,
+and placed under margraves, each with the same powers as Gero. Otto gave
+up the practice of retaining the duchies either in his own hands or in
+those of relatives. Even Saxony, his native duchy and the chief source
+of his strength, was given to Margrave Billung, whose family kept it for
+many years. To combat the power of the princes, Otto, especially after
+he became emperor and looked upon himself as the protector of the
+church, immensely increased the importance of the prelates. They
+received great gifts of land, were endowed with jurisdiction in criminal
+as well as civil cases, and obtained several other valuable sovereign
+rights. The emperor's idea was that, as church lands and offices could
+not be hereditary, their holders would necessarily favour the crown. But
+he forgot that the church had a head outside Germany, and that the
+passion for the rights of an order may be not less intense than that for
+the rights of a family. While the Empire was at peace with the popes the
+prelates did strongly uphold it, and their influence was unquestionably,
+on the whole, higher than that of rude secular nobles. But with the
+Empire and the Papacy in conflict, they could not but abide, as a rule,
+by the authority which had the most sacred claims to their loyalty. From
+all these circumstances it curiously happened that the sovereign who did
+more than almost any other to raise the royal power, was also the
+sovereign who, more than any other, wrought its decay.
+
+
+ Otto II.
+
+Otto II. had been crowned German king at Aix-la-Chapelle and emperor at
+Rome during his father's lifetime. Becoming sole ruler in May 973, his
+troubles began in Lorraine, but were more serious in Bavaria, which was
+now a very important duchy. Its duke, Henry, the brother of Otto I., had
+died in 955 and had been succeeded by a young son, Henry, whose
+turbulent career subsequently induced the Bavarian historian Aventinus
+to describe him as _rixosus_, or the Quarrelsome. In 973 Burchard II.,
+duke of Swabia, died, and the new emperor refused to give this duchy to
+Henry, further irritating this duke by bestowing it upon his enemy,
+Otto, a grandson of the emperor Otto I. Having collected allies Henry
+rebelled, and in 976 the emperor himself marched against him and drove
+him into Bohemia. Bavaria was taken from him and given to Otto of
+Swabia, but it was deprived of some of its importance. The southern
+part, Carinthia, which had hitherto been a march district, was separated
+from it and made into a duchy, and the church in Bavaria was made
+dependent upon the king and not upon the duke. Having arrived at this
+settlement Otto marched against the Bohemians, but while he was away
+from Germany war was begun against him by Henry, the new duke of
+Carinthia, who, forgetting the benefits he had just received, rose to
+avenge the wrongs of his friend, the deposed duke Henry of Bavaria. The
+emperor made peace with the Bohemians and quickly put down the rising.
+Henry of Bavaria was handed over to the keeping of the bishop of Utrecht
+and Carinthia received another duke.
+
+
+ Otto and France.
+
+In his anxiety to obtain possession of southern Italy, Otto I. had
+secured as a wife for his son and successor Theophano, daughter of the
+East Roman emperor, Romanus II., the ruler of much of southern Italy.
+Otto II., having all his father's ambition with much of his strength and
+haughtiness, longed to get away from Germany and to claim these remoter
+districts. But he was detained for some time owing to the sudden
+invasion of Lower Lorraine by Lothair, king of France, in 978. So
+stealthily did the invader advance that the emperor had only just time
+to escape from Aix-la-Chapelle before the town was seized and plundered.
+As quickly as possible Otto placed himself at the head of a great army
+and marched to Paris, but he was compelled to retreat without taking the
+city, and in 980 peace was made.
+
+
+ Otto in Italy.
+
+At last, after an expedition against the Poles, Otto was able to fulfil
+the wish of his heart; he went to Italy in 980 and never returned to
+Germany. His claims to southern Italy were vehemently opposed, and in
+July 982 he suffered a disastrous defeat at the hands of the East Roman
+emperor's subjects and their Saracen allies. The news of this crushing
+blow cast a gloom over Germany, which was again suffering from the
+attacks of her unruly neighbours. The Saxons were able to cope with the
+Danes and the German boundary was pushed forward in the south-east; but
+the Slavs fought with such courage and success that during the reigns of
+the emperors Otto II. and Otto III. much of the work effected by the
+margraves Hermann Billung and Gero was undone, and nearly two centuries
+passed before they were driven back to the position which they had
+perforce occupied under Otto the Great. Such were the first-fruits of
+the assumption of the imperial crown.
+
+
+ Otto III.
+
+About six months before his death in Rome, in December 983, Otto held a
+diet at Verona which was attended by many of the German princes, who
+recognized his infant son Otto as his successor. Otto was then taken to
+Germany, and after his father's death he was crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle
+on Christmas Day 983. Henry of Bavaria was released from his confinement
+and became his guardian; but as this restless prince showed an
+inclination to secure the crown for himself, the young king was taken
+from him and placed in the care of his mother Theophano. Henry, however,
+gained a good deal of support both within and without Germany and caused
+much anxiety to Otto's friends, but in 985 peace was made and he was
+restored to Bavaria. While Theophano acted as regent, the chief
+functions of government were discharged by Willigis, archbishop of Mainz
+(d. 1011), a vigorous prelate who had risen from a humble rank to the
+highest position in the German Church. He was aided by the princes, each
+of whom claimed a voice in the administration, and, during the lifetime
+of Theophano at least, a stubborn and sometimes a successful resistance
+was offered to the attacks of the Slavs. But under the prevalent
+conditions a vigorous rule was impossible, and during Otto's minority
+the royal authority was greatly weakened. In Saxony the people were
+quickly forgetting their hereditary connexion with the successors of
+Henry the Fowler; in Bavaria, after the death of Duke Henry in 995, the
+nobles, heedless of the royal power, returned to the ancient German
+custom and chose Henry's son Henry as their ruler.
+
+
+ The character of Otto.
+
+In 995 Otto III. was declared to have reached his majority. He had been
+so carefully trained in all the learning of the time that he was called
+the "wonder of the world," and a certain fascination still belongs to
+his imaginative and fantastic nature. Imbued by his mother with the
+extravagant ideas of the East Roman emperors he introduced into his
+court an amount of splendour and ceremonial hitherto unknown in western
+Europe. The heir of the western emperors and the grandson of an eastern
+emperor, he spent most of his time in Rome, and fancied he could unite
+the world under his rule. In this vague design he was encouraged by
+Gerbert, the greatest scholar of the day, whom, as Silvester II., he
+raised to the papal throne. Meanwhile Germany was suffering severely
+from internal disorders and from the inroads of her rude neighbours; and
+when in the year 1000 Otto visited his northern kingdom there were hopes
+that he would smite these enemies with the vigour of his predecessors.
+But these hopes were disappointed; on the contrary, Otto seems to have
+released Boleslaus, duke of the Poles, from his vague allegiance to the
+German kings, and he founded an archbishopric at Gnesen, thus freeing
+the Polish sees from the authority of the archbishop of Magdeburg.
+
+
+ Henry II.
+
+When Otto III. died in January 1002 there remained no representative of
+the elder branch of the imperial family, and several candidates came
+forward for the vacant throne. Among these candidates was Henry of
+Bavaria, son of Duke Henry the Quarrelsome and a great-grandson of Henry
+the Fowler, and at Mainz in June 1002 this prince was chosen German king
+as Henry II. Having been recognized as king by the Saxons, the
+Thuringians and the nobles of Lorraine, the new king was able to turn
+his attention to the affairs of government, but on the whole his reign
+was an unfortunate one for Germany. For ten years civil war raged in
+Lorraine; in Saxony much blood was shed in petty quarrels; and Henry
+made expeditions against his turbulent vassals in Flanders and
+Friesland. He also interfered in the affairs of Burgundy, but the
+acquisition of this kingdom was the work of his successor, Conrad II.
+During nearly the whole of this reign the Germans were fighting the
+Poles. Boleslaus of Poland, who was now a very powerful sovereign,
+having conquered Lusatia and Silesia, brought Bohemia also under his
+rule and was soon at variance with the German king. Anxious to regain
+these lands Henry allied himself with some Slavonic tribes, promising
+not to interfere with the exercise of their heathen religion, while
+Boleslaus found supporters among the discontented German nobles. The
+honours of the ensuing war were with Henry, and when peace was made in
+1006 Boleslaus gave up Bohemia, but the struggle was soon renewed and
+neither side had gained any serious advantage when peace was again made
+in 1013. A third Polish war broke out in 1015. Henry led his troops in
+person and obtained assistance from the Russians and the Hungarians;
+peace was concluded in 1018, the Elbe remaining the north-east boundary
+of Germany. Henry made three journeys to Italy, being crowned king of
+the Lombards at Pavia in 1004 and emperor at Rome ten years later.
+Before the latter event, in order to assert his right of sovereignty
+over Rome, he called himself king of the Romans, a designation which
+henceforth was borne by his successors until they received the higher
+title from the pope. Hitherto a sovereign crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle had
+been "king of the West Franks," or "king of the Franks and Saxons."
+Henry was generous to the church, to which he looked for support, but he
+maintained the royal authority over the clergy. Although generally
+unsuccessful he strove hard for peace, and during this reign the
+principle of inheritance was virtually established with regard to German
+fiefs.
+
+
+ Conrad II.
+
+After Henry's death the nobles met at Kamba, near Oppenheim, and in
+September 1024 elected Conrad, a Franconian count, to the vacant throne.
+Although favoured by the German clergy the new king, Conrad II., had to
+face some opposition; this, however, quickly vanished and he received
+the homage of the nobles in the various duchies and seemed to have no
+reason to dread internal enemies. Nevertheless, he had soon to battle
+with a conspiracy headed by his stepson, Ernest II., duke of Swabia.
+This was caused primarily by Conrad's avowed desire to acquire the
+kingdom of Burgundy, but other reasons for dissatisfaction existed, and
+the revolting duke found it easy to gather around him the scattered
+forces of discontent. However, the king was quite able to deal with the
+rising, which, indeed, never attained serious proportions, although
+Ernest gave continual trouble until his death in 1030. With regard to
+the German duchies Conrad followed the policy of Otto the Great. He
+wished to control, not to abolish them. In 1026, when Duke Henry of
+Bavaria died, he obtained the duchy for his son Henry, afterwards the
+emperor Henry III.; later, despite the opposition of the nobles, he
+invested the same prince with Swabia, where the ducal family had died
+out. Franconia was in the hands of Conrad himself; thus Saxony,
+Thuringia, Carinthia and Lorraine were the only duchies not completely
+dependent upon the king.
+
+
+ The neighbouring countries.
+
+When Conrad ascended the throne the safety of Germany was endangered
+from three different points. On the north was Denmark ruled by Canute
+the Great; on the east was the wide Polish state whose ruler, Boleslaus,
+had just taken the title of king; and on the south-east was Hungary,
+which under its king, St Stephen, was rapidly becoming an organized and
+formidable power. Peace was maintained with Canute, and in 1035 a treaty
+was concluded and the land between the Eider and the Schlei was ceded to
+Denmark. In 1030 Conrad waged a short war against Hungary, but here also
+he was obliged to assent to a cession of territory. In Poland he was
+more fortunate. After the death of Boleslaus in 1025 the Poles plunged
+into a civil war, and Conrad was able to turn this to his own advantage.
+In 1031 he recovered Lusatia and other districts, and in 1033 the Polish
+duke of Mesislaus did homage to him at Merseburg. His authority was
+recognized by the Bohemians, and two expeditions taught the Slavonic
+tribes between the Elbe and the Oder to respect his power.
+
+
+ Conrad in Italy.
+
+In Italy, whither he journeyed in 1026 and 1036, Conrad was not
+welcomed. Although as emperor and as king of the Lombards he was the
+lawful sovereign of that country, the Germans were still regarded as
+intruders and could only maintain their rights by force. The event which
+threw the greatest lustre upon this reign was the acquisition of the
+kingdom of Burgundy, or Arles, which was bequeathed to Conrad by its
+king, Rudolph III., the uncle of his wife, Gisela. Rudolph died in 1032,
+and in 1033 Conrad was crowned king at Peterlingen, being at once
+recognized by the German-speaking population. For about two years his
+rival, Odo, count of Champagne, who was supported by the
+Romance-speaking inhabitants, kept up the struggle against him, but
+eventually all opposition was overcome and the possession of Burgundy
+was assured to the German king.
+
+
+ The nobles and the land.
+
+This reign is important in the history of Germany because it marks the
+beginning of the great imperial age, but it has other features of
+interest. In dealing with the revolt of Ernest of Swabia Conrad was
+aided by the reluctance of the vassals of the great lords to follow them
+against the king. This reluctance was due largely to the increasing
+independence of this class of landholders, who were beginning to learn
+that the sovereign, and not their immediate lord, was the protector of
+their liberties; the independence in its turn arose from the growth of
+the principle of heredity. In Germany Conrad did not definitely decree
+that fiefs should pass from father to son, but he encouraged and took
+advantage of the tendency in this direction, a tendency which was,
+obviously, a serious blow at the power of the great lords over their
+vassals. In 1037 he issued from Milan his famous edict for the kingdom
+of Italy which decreed that upon the death of a landholder his fief
+should descend to his son, or grandson, and that no fiefholder should be
+deprived of his fief without the judgment of his peers. In another
+direction Conrad's policy was to free himself as king from dependence
+upon the church. He sought to regain lands granted to the church by his
+predecessors; prelates were employed on public business much less
+frequently than heretofore. He kept a firm hand over the church, but his
+rule was purely secular; he took little or no interest in ecclesiastical
+affairs. During this reign the centre and basis of the imperial power in
+Germany was moved southwards. Saxony, the home of the Ottos, became less
+prominent in German politics, while Bavaria and the south were gradually
+gaining in importance.
+
+
+ Henry III.
+
+Henry III., who had been crowned German king and also king of Burgundy
+during his father's lifetime, took possession of his great inheritance
+without the slightest sign of opposition in June 1039. He was without
+the impulsiveness which marred Conrad's great qualities, but he had the
+same decisive judgment, wide ambition and irresistible will as his
+father. During the late king's concluding years a certain Bretislaus,
+who had served Conrad with distinction in Lusatia, became duke of
+Bohemia and made war upon the disunited Poles, easily bringing them into
+subjection. Thus Germany was again threatened with the establishment of
+a great and independent Slavonic state upon her eastern frontier. To
+combat this danger Henry invaded Bohemia, and after two reverses
+compelled Bretislaus to appear before him as a suppliant at Regensburg.
+The German king treated his foe generously and was rewarded by receiving
+to the end of his reign the service of a loyal vassal; he also gained
+the goodwill of the Poles by helping to bring about the return of their
+duke, Casimir I., who willingly did homage for his land. The king of
+Denmark, too, acknowledged Henry as his feudal lord. Moreover, by
+several campaigns in Hungary the German king brought that country into
+the position of a fief of the German crown. This war was occasioned by
+the violence of the Hungarian usurper, Aba Samuel, and formed Henry's
+principal occupation from 1041 to 1045.
+
+
+ Henry's internal policy.
+
+In Germany itself Henry acquired, during the first ten years of his
+rule, an authority which had been unknown since the days of Otto the
+Great. Early in his reign he had made a determined enemy of Godfrey the
+Bearded, duke of upper Lorraine, who, in 1044, conspired against him and
+who found powerful allies in Henry I., king of France, in the counts of
+Flanders and Holland, and in certain Burgundian nobles. However, Godfrey
+and his friends were easily worsted, and when the dispossessed duke
+again tried the fortune of war he found that the German king had
+detached Henry of France from his side and was also in alliance with the
+English king, Edward the Confessor. While thus maintaining his authority
+in the north-east corner of the country by alliances and expeditions,
+Henry was strong enough to put the laws in motion against the most
+powerful princes and to force them to keep the public peace. Under his
+severe but beneficent rule, Germany enjoyed a period of internal quiet
+such as she had probably never experienced before, but even Henry could
+not permanently divert from its course the main political tendency of
+the age, the desire of the great feudal lords for independence.
+
+
+ Henry's wars.
+
+Cowed, but unpacified and discontented, the princes awaited their
+opportunity, while the king played into their hands by allowing the
+southern duchies, Swabia, Bavaria and Carinthia, to pass from under his
+own immediate control. His position was becoming gradually weaker when
+in 1051 he invaded Hungary, where a reaction against German influence
+was taking place. After a second campaign in 1052 the Hungarian king,
+Andrew, was compelled to make peace and to own himself the vassal of the
+German king. Meanwhile Saxony and Bavaria were permeated by the spirit
+of unrest, and Henry returned from Hungary just in time to frustrate a
+widespread conspiracy against him in southern Germany. Encouraged by the
+support of the German rebels, Andrew of Hungary repudiated the treaty of
+peace and the German supremacy in that country came to a sudden end.
+Among the causes which undermined Henry's strength was the fact that the
+mediate nobles, who had stood loyally by his father, Conrad, were not
+his friends; probably his wars made serious demands upon them, and his
+strict administration of justice, especially his insistence upon the
+maintenance of the public peace, was displeasing to them.
+
+
+ Henry and the church.
+
+At the beginning of Henry's reign the church all over Europe was in a
+deplorable condition. Simony was universally practised and the morality
+of the clergy was very low. The Papacy, too, had sunk to a degraded
+condition and its authority was annihilated, not only by the character
+of successive popes, but by the fact that there were at the same time
+three claimants for the papal throne. Henry, a man of deep, sincere and
+even rigorous piety, regarded these evils with sorrow; he associated
+himself definitely with the movement for reform which proceeded from
+Cluny, and commanded his prelates to put an end to simony and other
+abuses. Then moving farther in the same direction he resolved to strike
+at the root of the evil by the exercise of his imperial authority. In
+1046 he entered Italy at the head of an army which secured for him
+greater respect than had been given to any German ruler since
+Charlemagne, and at Sutri and in Rome he deposed the three rival popes.
+He then raised to the papal see Suidger, bishop of Bamberg, who, as Pope
+Clement II., crowned him emperor; after Clement three other German
+popes--Damasus II., Leo IX. and Victor II.--owed their elevation to
+Henry. Under these popes a new era began for the church, and in thus
+reforming the Papacy Henry III. fulfilled what was regarded as the
+noblest duty of his imperial office, but he also sharpened a weapon
+whose keen edge was first tried against his son.
+
+The last years of Henry III. form a turning-point in German history.
+Great kings and emperors came after him, but none of them possessed the
+direct, absolute authority which he freely wielded; even in the case of
+the strongest the forms of feudalism more and more interposed themselves
+between the monarch and the nation, and at last the royal authority
+virtually disappeared. During this reign the towns entered upon an age
+of prosperity, and the Rhine and the Weser became great avenues of
+trade.
+
+
+ The minority of Henry IV.
+
+When Henry died in October 1056 the decline of the royal authority was
+accelerated by the fact that his successor was a child. Henry IV., who
+had been crowned king in 1054, was at first in charge of his mother, the
+empress Agnes, whose weak and inefficient rule was closely watched by
+Anno, archbishop of Cologne. In 1062, however, Anno and other prominent
+prelates and laymen, perhaps jealous of the influence exercised at court
+by Henry, bishop of Augsburg (d. 1063), managed by a clever trick to get
+possession of the king's person. Deserted by her friends Agnes retired,
+and forthwith Anno began to rule the state. But soon he was compelled to
+share his duties with Adalbert, archbishop of Bremen, and a year or two
+later Adalbert became virtually the ruler of Germany, leaving Anno to
+attend to affairs in Italy. Adalbert's rule was very successful.
+Compelling King Solomon to own Henry's supremacy he restored the
+influence of Germany in Hungary; in internal affairs he restrained the
+turbulence of the princes, but he made many enemies, especially in
+Saxony, and in 1066 Henry, who had just been declared of age, was
+compelled to dismiss him. The ambitious prelate, however, had gained
+great influence over Henry, who had grown up under the most diverse
+influences. The young king was generous and was endowed with
+considerable intellectual gifts; but passing as he did from Anno's
+gloomy palace at Cologne to Adalbert's residence in Bremen, where he was
+petted and flattered, he became wayward and wilful.
+
+
+ Henry's personal rule.
+
+Henry IV. assumed the duties of government soon after the fall of
+Adalbert and quickly made enemies of many of the chief princes,
+including Otto of Nordheim, the powerful duke of Bavaria, Rudolph, duke
+of Swabia, and Berthold of Zahringen, duke of Carinthia. In Saxony,
+where, like his father, he frequently held his court, he excited intense
+hostility by a series of injudicious proceedings. While the three Ottos
+were pursuing the shadow of imperial greatness in Italy, much of the
+crown land in this duchy had been seized by the nobles and was now held
+by their descendants. Henry IV. insisted on the restoration of these
+estates and encroached upon the rights of the peasants. Moreover, he
+built a number of forts which the people thought were intended for
+prisons; he filled the land with riotous and overbearing Swabians; he
+kept in prison Magnus, the heir to the duchy; and is said to have spoken
+of the Saxons in a tone of great contempt. All classes were thus
+combined against him, and when he ordered his forces to assemble for a
+campaign against the Poles the Saxons refused to join the host. In 1073
+the universal discontent found expression in a great assembly at
+Wormesleben, in which the leading part was taken by Otto of Nordheim, by
+Werner, archbishop of Magdeburg, and by Burkhard II., bishop of
+Halberstadt. Under Otto's leadership the Thuringians joined the rising,
+which soon spread far and wide. Henry was surprised by a band of rebels
+in his fortress at the Harzburg; he fled to Hersfeld and appealed to the
+princes for support, but he could not compel them to aid him and they
+would grant him nothing. After tedious negotiations he was obliged to
+yield to the demands of his enemies, and peace was made at Gerstungen in
+1074. Zealously carrying out the conditions of the peace, the peasants
+not only battered down the detested forts, they even destroyed the
+chapel at the Harzburg and committed other acts of desecration. These
+proceedings alarmed the princes, both spiritual and secular, and Henry,
+who had gained support from the cities of the Rhineland, was able to
+advance with a formidable army into Saxony in 1075. He gained a
+decisive victory, rebuilt the forts and completely restored the
+authority of the crown.
+
+
+ Pope Gregory VII.
+
+In 1073, while Germany was in this confused state, Hildebrand had become
+pope as Gregory VII., and in 1075 he issued his famous decree against
+the marriage of the clergy and against their investiture by laymen. To
+the latter decree it was impossible for any sovereign to submit, and in
+Germany there were stronger reasons than elsewhere for resistance. A
+large part of the land of the country was held by the clergy, and most
+of it had been granted to them because it was supposed that they would
+be the king's most efficient helpers. Were the feudal tie broken, the
+crown must soon vanish, and the constitution of medieval society undergo
+a radical change. Henry, who hitherto had treated the new pope with
+excessive respect, now announced his intention of going to Rome and
+assuming the imperial title. The pope, to whom the Saxons had been
+encouraged to complain, responded by sending back certain of Henry's
+messengers, with the command that the king should do penance for the
+crimes of which his subjects accused him. Enraged by this unexpected
+arrogance, Henry summoned a synod of German bishops to Worms in January
+1076, and Hildebrand was declared deposed. The papal answer was a bull
+excommunicating the German king, dethroning him and liberating his
+subjects from their oath of allegiance.
+
+
+ Effect of Henry's excommunication.
+
+Never before had a pope ventured to take so bold a step. It was within
+the memory even of young men that a German king had dismissed three
+popes, and had raised in turn four of his own prelates to the Roman see.
+And now a pope attempted to drag from his throne the successor of this
+very sovereign. The effect of the bull was tremendous; no other was ever
+followed by equally important results. The princes had long been chafing
+under the royal power; they had shaken even so stern an autocrat as
+Henry III., and the authority of Henry IV. was already visibly weakened.
+At this important stage in their contest with the crown a mighty ally
+suddenly offered himself, and with indecent eagerness they hastened to
+associate themselves with him. Their vassals and subjects, appalled by
+the invisible powers wielded by the head of the church, supported them
+in their rebellion. The Saxons again rose in arms and Otto of Nordheim
+succeeded in uniting the North and South German supporters of the pope.
+Henry had looked for no such result as this; he did not understand the
+influences which lay beneath the surface and was horrified by his
+unexpected isolation. At a diet in Tribur he humbled himself before the
+princes, but in vain. They turned from him and decided that the pope
+should be asked to judge Henry; that if, within a year, the sentence of
+excommunication were not removed, the king should lose his crown; and
+that in the meantime he should live in retirement.
+
+
+ Scene at Canossa.
+
+Next came the strange scene at Canossa which burned itself into the
+memory of Europe. For three days the representative of the Caesars
+entreated to be admitted into the pope's presence. No other mode of
+escape than complete subjection to Gregory had suggested itself, or was
+perhaps possible; but it did not save him. Although the pope forgave
+him, the German princes, resolved not to miss the chance which fortune
+had given them, met in March 1077, and deposed him, electing Rudolph,
+duke of Swabia, as his successor. But Henry's bitter humiliations
+transformed his character; they brought out all his latent capacities of
+manliness.
+
+
+ The struggle over investitures.
+
+The war of investitures that followed was the opening of the tremendous
+struggle between the Empire and the Papacy, which is the central fact of
+medieval history and which, after two centuries of conflict, ended in
+the exhaustion of both powers. Its details belong more to the history of
+Italy than to that of Germany, where it took the form of a fight between
+two rival kings, but in Germany its effects were more deeply felt. The
+nation now plucked bitter fruit from the seed planted by Otto the Great
+in assuming the imperial crown and by a long line of kings and emperors
+in lavishing worldly power upon the church. In the ambition of the
+spiritual and the secular princes the pope had an immensely powerful
+engine of offence against the emperor, and without the slightest scruple
+this was turned to the best advantage.
+
+
+ Henry IV. and the anti-kings.
+
+When this struggle began it may be said in general that Henry was
+supported by the cities and the lower classes, while Rudolph relied upon
+the princes and the opponents of a united Germany; or, to make another
+division, Henry's strength lay in the duchies of Franconia and Bavaria,
+Rudolph's in Swabia and Saxony. In the Rhineland and in southern Germany
+the cities had been steadily growing in wealth and power, and they could
+not fail to realize that they had more to fear from the princes than
+from the crown. Hence when Henry returned to Germany in 1078 Worms,
+Spires and many other places opened their gates to him and contributed
+freely to his cause; nevertheless his troops were beaten in three
+encounters and Pope Gregory thundered anew against him in March 1080.
+However, the fortune of war soon turned, and in October 1080 Rudolph of
+Swabia was defeated and slain. Henry then carried the war into Italy; in
+1084 he was crowned emperor in Rome by Wibert, archbishop of Ravenna,
+whom, as Clement III., he had set up as an anti-pope, and in 1085
+Gregory died an exile from Rome. Meanwhile in Germany Henry's opponents
+had chosen Hermann, count of Luxemburg, king in succession to Rudolph of
+Swabia. Hermann, however, was not very successful, and when Henry
+returned to Germany in 1084 he found that his most doughty opponent,
+Otto of Nordheim, was dead, and that the anti-king had few friends
+outside Saxony. This duchy was soon reduced to obedience and was treated
+with consideration, and when the third anti-king, Egbert, margrave of
+Meissen, was murdered in 1090 there would have been peace if Germany had
+followed her own impulses.
+
+
+ Henry and the Papacy.
+
+In the Papacy, however, Henry had an implacable foe; and again and again
+when he seemed on the point of a complete triumph the smouldering embers
+of revolt were kindled once more into flame. In Italy his son, Conrad,
+was stirred up against him and in 1093 was crowned king at Monza; then
+ten years later, when Germany was more peaceful than it had been for
+years and when the emperor's authority was generally acknowledged, his
+second son, Henry, afterwards the emperor Henry V., was induced to head
+a dangerous rebellion. The Saxons and the Thuringians were soon in arms,
+and they were joined by those warlike spirits of Germany to whom an age
+of peace brought no glory and an age of prosperity brought no gain.
+After some desultory fighting Henry IV. was taken prisoner and compelled
+to abdicate; he had, however, escaped and had renewed the contest when
+he died in August 1106.
+
+
+ The First Crusade.
+
+During this reign the first crusade took place, and the German king
+suffered severely from the pious zeal which it expressed and
+intensified. The movement was not in the end favourable to papal
+supremacy, but the early crusaders, and those who sympathized with them,
+regarded the enemies of the pope as the enemies of religion.
+
+
+ Henry V. in Germany.
+
+The early years of Henry V.'s reign were spent in campaigns in Flanders,
+Bohemia, Hungary and Poland, but the new king was soon reminded that the
+dispute over investitures was unsettled. Pope Paschal II. did not doubt,
+now that Henry IV. was dead, that he would speedily triumph; but he was
+soon undeceived. Henry V., who with unconscious irony had promised to
+treat the pope as a father, continued, like his predecessors, to invest
+prelates with the ring and the staff, and met the expostulations of
+Paschal by declaring that he would not surrender a right which had
+belonged to all former kings. Lengthened negotiations took place but
+they led to no satisfactory result, while the king's enemies in Germany,
+taking advantage of the deadlock, showed signs of revolt. One of the
+most ardent of these enemies was Lothair of Supplinburg, whom Henry
+himself had made duke of Saxony upon the extinction of the Billung
+family in 1106. Lothair was humbled in 1112, but he took advantage of
+the emperor's difficulties to rise again and again, the twin pillars of
+his strength being the Saxon hatred of the Franconian emperors and an
+informal alliance with the papal see. Henry's chief friends were his
+nephews, the two Hohenstaufen princes, Frederick and Conrad, to whose
+father Frederick the emperor Henry IV. had given the duchy of Swabia
+when its duke Rudolph became his rival. The younger Frederick succeeded
+to this duchy in 1105, while ten years later Conrad was made duke of
+Franconia, a country which for nearly a century had been under the
+immediate government of the crown. The two brothers were enthusiastic
+imperialists, and with persistent courage they upheld the cause of their
+sovereign during his two absences in Italy.
+
+
+ The concordat of Worms.
+
+At last, in September 1122, the investiture question was settled by the
+concordat of Worms. By this compromise, which exhaustion forced upon
+both parties, the right of electing prelates was granted to the clergy,
+and the emperor surrendered the privilege of investing them with the
+ring and the staff. On the other hand it was arranged that these
+elections should take place in the presence of the emperor or his
+representative, and that he should invest the new prelate with the
+sceptre, thus signifying that the bishop, or abbot, held his temporal
+fiefs from him and not from the pope. In Germany the victory remained
+with the emperor, but it was by no means decisive. The Papacy was far
+from realizing Hildebrand's great schemes; yet in regard to the question
+in dispute it gained solid advantage, and its general authority was
+incomparably more important than it had been half a century before.
+During this period it had waged war upon the emperor himself. Instead of
+acknowledging its inferiority as in former times it had claimed to be
+the higher power; it had even attempted to dispose of the imperial crown
+as if the Empire were a papal fief; and it had found out that it could
+at any time tamper, and perhaps paralyse, the imperial authority by
+exciting internal strife in Germany. Having thus settled this momentous
+dispute Henry spent his later years in restoring order in Germany, and
+in planning to assist his father-in-law, Henry I. of England, in France.
+During this reign under the lead of Otto, bishop of Bamberg (c.
+1063-1139), Pomerania began to come under the influence of Germany and
+of Christianity.
+
+
+ The reign of Lothair the Saxon.
+
+The Franconian dynasty died out with Henry V. in May 1125, and after a
+protracted contest Lothair, duke of Saxony, the candidate of the clergy,
+was chosen in the following August to succeed him. The new king's first
+enterprise was a disastrous campaign in Bohemia, but before this
+occurrence he had aroused the enmity of the Hohenstaufen princes by
+demanding that they should surrender certain lands which had formerly
+been the property of the crown. Lothair's rebuff in Bohemia stiffened
+the backs of Frederick and Conrad, and in order to contend with them the
+king secured a powerful ally by marrying his daughter Gertrude to Henry
+the Proud, a grandson of Welf, whom Henry IV. had made duke of Bavaria,
+a duchy to which Henry himself had succeeded in 1126. Henry was perhaps
+the most powerful of the king's subjects, nevertheless the dukes of
+Swabia and Franconia withstood him, and a long war desolated South
+Germany. This was ended by the submission of Frederick in 1134 and of
+Conrad in the following year. Lothair's position, which before 1130 was
+very weak, had gradually become stronger. He had put down the disorder
+in Bavaria, in Saxony and in Lorraine; a diet held at Magdeburg in 1135
+was attended by representatives from the vassal states of Denmark,
+Hungary, Bohemia and Poland; and in 1136, when he visited Italy for the
+second time, Germany was in a very peaceful condition. In June 1133
+during the king's first visit to Italy he had received from Pope
+Innocent II. the imperial crown and also the investiture of the
+extensive territories left by Matilda, marchioness of Tuscany; and at
+this time the pope seems to have claimed the emperor as his vassal, a
+statement to this effect (_post homo fit papae, sumit quo dante
+coronam_) being inscribed in the audience hall of the Lateran at Rome.
+
+ (_Continued in volume 11 slice 8._)
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+ [1] i.e. the territory once under the jurisdiction of an imperial
+ _Vogt_ or _advocatus_ (see ADVOCATE).
+
+ [2] The question, much disputed between Germans and Danes, is
+ exhaustively treated by P. Lauridsen in F. de Jessen's _La Question
+ de Sleswig_ (Copenhagen, 1906), pp. 114 et seq.
+
+ [3] See the comparative study in Percy Ashley's _Local and Central
+ Government_ (London, 1906).
+
+ [4] The _Kreis_ in Wurttemberg corresponds to the _Regierungsbezirk_
+ elsewhere.
+
+ [5] The system of compulsory registration, which involves a
+ notification to the police of any change of address (even temporary),
+ of course makes it easy to determine the domicile in any given case.
+
+ [6] Actually between 1883 and 1908 over five million recruits passed
+ through the drill sergeant's hands, as well as perhaps 210,000
+ one-year volunteers.
+
+ [7] These last have a curious history. They were formed from about
+ 1890 onwards, by individual squadrons, two or three being voted each
+ year. Ostensibly raised for the duties of mounted orderlies, at a
+ time when it would have been impolitic to ask openly for more
+ cavalry, they were little by little trained in real cavalry work,
+ then combined in provisional regiments for disciplinary purposes and
+ at last frankly classed as cavalry.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th
+Edition, Volume 11, Slice 7, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENCYC. BRITANNICA, VOL 11 SL 7 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37523.txt or 37523.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/5/2/37523/
+
+Produced by Marius Masi, Don Kretz and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/37523.zip b/37523.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7084814
--- /dev/null
+++ b/37523.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..99645cc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #37523 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/37523)