Bouches-de-l'Elbe

Contemporary map (1812)
Part of a series on the
History of Hamburg
'Hamburg' by Robert Bowyer, 1814
by timeline
Prehistory and Antiquity
  • Hamburg culture (15 ka)
  • Treva (1st CE)
  • Tangendorf disc brooch (3rd CE)
Middle Ages
  • Hammaburg (810)
  • Archbishops (832–1072)
  • Cathedral (1035)
  • Bornhöved (1227)
  • Hanseatic League (1321–1669)
  • Victual Brothers (1389–1401)
  • Constitution (1410)
Early Modern
  • Free Imperial city (1510–1806)
  • All Saints' Flood (1570)
  • Barbary pirates (1578–1751)
  • Greenland whaling (1644–1806)
Continental Blockade
  • Bouches-de-l'Elbe (1811–14)
  • Siege of Hamburg (1813)
  • Hanseatic Legion (1813)
Modern
  • Great Fire (1842)
  • Speicherstadt (1888)
  • Cholera Epidemic (1892)
  • Dockers' Strike (1896)
  • Greater Hamburg Act (1937)
  • Neuengamme concentration camp (1938–45)
  • Bombing in World War II (1940–45)
by other topic
Political and economic history
  • Other Hamburg topics

  • Hamburg portal
  • v
  • t
  • e

Bouches-de-l'Elbe (French: [buʃ.də.lɛlb]; lit.'Mouths of the Elbe', German: Elbmündungen) was a department of the First French Empire in present-day Germany that survived for three years. It was named after the mouth of the river Elbe. It was formed in 1811, when the region, originally belonging partially to Bremen-Verden (which in 1807 had been intermittently incorporated into the Kingdom of Westphalia), to Hamburg, Lübeck and Saxe-Lauenburg, was annexed by France. Its territory is part of the present-day German states of Lower Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein and Hamburg. Its capital was Hamburg.

The department was subdivided into four arrondissements and the following cantons (situation in 1812, French translated names where applicable):[1]

Its population in 1812 was 375,976.[1]

After Napoleon was defeated in 1814, the department were dissolved and the area was redivided between the Kingdom of Hanover (Bremen-Verden), the Duchy of Saxe-Lauenburg, and the free cities of Hamburg and Lübeck.

References

  1. ^ a b Almanach Impérial an bissextil MDCCCXII, p. 376-377, accessed in Gallica 24 July 2013 (in French)

External links

Media related to Département des Bouches de l’Elbe at Wikimedia Commons

53°35′00″N 9°59′00″E / 53.5833°N 9.98333°E / 53.5833; 9.98333

  • v
  • t
  • e
Annexed departments of the French First Republic (1792–1804) and of the French First Empire (1804–1814)
Ionian Islands
Austrian Netherlands
Old Swiss Confederacy
Kingdom of Holland
Holy Roman Empire
Italian states
Kingdom of Spain
Austrian Empire
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
  • VIAF


Stub icon

This Hamburg-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e