- For the term free state as it arises in United States history, see "Free state". For the current province in South Africa of that name, see "Free State". For the libertarian project, see "Free State Project".
Free state is an ambiguous term occasionally used in the official titles of states. Sometimes it is used as a synonym for republic but not all "free states" have been republics. While the historical German free states and the Orange Free State were republican in form, the Congo and Irish Free States were governed under forms of monarchy.
Overview
Germany
In
Germany the term
free state (in German,
Freistaat) was part of the full names of most
Länder (federal states) during the inter-war period. The term was synonymous with
republic and was introduced to emphasise the transition of
Imperial Germany to the
Weimar Republic after the defeat in
World War I and the fact of the
German Revolution, which deposed all German monarchs. Just as
Free Cities (
Freistadt), such as the
Imperial Free Cities of
Hamburg,
Bremen, and
Lübeck, were ruled not by a hereditary
monarch but by an elected council of
burghers, so all of the
free states were no longer to be ruled by a noble or royal
head of state but by elected representatives of the
citizens. The term
Freistaat is still used for the
states of
Bavaria,
Saxony and
Thuringia.
Africa
In
South Africa the term
free state was used in the title of the nineteenth century
Orange Free State (
Oranje Vrystaat in
Afrikaans) and is today used in the title of its successor,
Free State province; both entities were established as republican in form. In contrast, the
Congo Free State came into being between
1877 and
1884 as a private kingdom or
dictatorship of
King Léopold II of Belgium.
Irish Free State
The
Irish Free State of
1922-
1937 was a form of
constitutional monarchy under the
British monarch. The Irish state was a special case because the term
free state was deliberately chosen as a literal translation of the Irish word
saorstát. At the time in which Irish nationalists were negotiating the secession of most of
Ireland from the
United Kingdom the word
saorstát was a commonly used Irish word for
republic. The British did not wish to permit the creation of an Irish republic (which would mean severing all links with the British crown) and so insisted that the literal translation of
saorstát be used in the new state's English title instead.
Puerto Rico
The official Spanish name of the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico is
Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico, literally, "Associated Free State of Puerto Rico", expressing a "politically organized community” or “State,” which is simultaneously connected by a compact to a larger political system and hence does not have an independent and separate status.
Republican England
Parliament, in the act forming the Commonwealth of England of 1649 to 1660, declared England "* confirmed to be a Commonwealth and free State And shall from henceforth be Governed as a Commonwealth and Free State." The Commonwealth had a republican constitution.
List of 'free states'
Extant
Historical
See also
Freistaat |
Forms of government |
Country name etymology