The Confederation of the Rhine or Rhine Confederation (Rheinbund in German; in French officially États confédérés du Rhin but in practice Confédération du Rhin) lasted from 1806 to 1813 and was formed initially from sixteen German states by Napoleon after he defeated Habsburg's Francis II and Russia's Alexander I in the Battle of Austerlitz.
The members of the confederation were German princes (Fürsten) from the Holy Roman Empire, technically not their states as such. They were later joined by 19 others, a total of over 15 million subjects providing a significant strategic advantage to France on its eastern front.
According to the treaty (only official version in French; Rheinbundsakte in German), the confederation was to be run by common constitutional bodies, but the individual states (in particular the larger ones) wanted unlimited sovereignty.
Instead of a (feudal, rather nominal) head of state, as the Holy Roman Emperor had been, its highest office was Karl Theodor von Dalberg, the Grand Duke of Frankfurt am Main and Napoleon's close ally. He was president of the College of Kings, styled Prince-Primate of the confederation, sort of a head of government. The 'Diet of the confederation' (closest thing to a parliament) which Von Dalberg should have called together in Frankfurt am Main never met.
The Confederation was above all a military alliance; the members had to supply France with large numbers of military personnel.
In return for their cooperation some state rulers were given higher statuses: Baden, Hessen, Cleves and Berg were made into grand duchies and Württemberg and Bavaria became kingdoms; and/or states could be made larger by incorporating other -generally the many smaller, cfr. Kleinstaaterei- former imperial member states.
After Prussia lost to France in 1806, many medium-sized and small states joined the Rheinbund. It was at its largest in 1808, including four kingdoms, five grand duchies, thirteen duchies, seventeen principalities and the Hansa towns of Hamburg, Lübeck and Bremen.
In 1810 large parts of northwest Germany were quickly incorporated into the Napoleonic Empire in order to better monitor the embargo on trade with Britain, the Continental System.
In 1813, when Napoleon's campaign in Russia failed and some of its members changed sides, the Confederation of the Rhine collapsed.
On 30 May 1814 the Treaty of Paris declared the German states independent.
In 1815 the Congress of Vienna redrew the continent's political map. In fact, only minor changes were made to inner-German borders, and the resulting German Confederation consisted more or less of the same members as the Confederation of the Rhine.
History of Germany | Former countries in Europe | Client states of the Great French War | 1806 establishments | 1813 disestablishments
Rhinforbundet | Rheinbund | Confederación del Rin | Confédération du Rhin | Reino konfederacija | Rijnbond (1806) | ライン同盟 | Rhinforbundet | Związek Reński | Confederação do Reno | Rhenförbundet | 萊茵聯邦
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It uses material from the
"Confederation of the Rhine".
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