Swabia

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition

Swabia

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Swabia , Ger. Schwaben, historic region, mainly in S Baden-Württemberg and SW Bavaria, SW Germany. It is bounded in the east by Upper Bavaria, in the west by France, and in the south by Switzerland and Austria. It includes the former Prussian province of Hohenzollern. The main physical features of Swabia are the Black Forest ; the valley of the upper Danube River, which rises there; the Swabian Jura, a mountain range that extends parallel to and N of the Danube; and the valley of the upper Neckar River. The Rhine and Lake Constance (sometimes called the Swabian Sea) form the western and southern borders. The easternmost section of Swabia is part of the Danubian plateau of Bavaria and is a Bavarian province (c.3,940 sq mi/10,205 sq km), with Augsburg as capital.

History

Swabia is rich in history and is a treasury of German architecture. Settled in the 3d cent. by the Germanic Suebi and Alemanni during the great migrations, the region was also known as Alamannia until the 11th cent. (The Alemannic, or Swabian, dialects of the various regions of Swabia [in its largest sense] remain linguistically closely related.) It became one of the five basic or stem duchies of medieval Germany in the 9th cent., when it far exceeded its present boundaries, including also Alsace and Switzerland E of the Reuss River. In 1079 the duchy was bestowed on the house of Hohenstaufen , which in 1138 also obtained the imperial title.

On the extinction (1268) of the dynasty, Swabia broke up into small temporal and ecclesiastic lordships and lost its political identity. The Swiss part became independent in 1291 and the Hapsburg territories in Alsace passed to France in 1648, but Breisgau and the other Hapsburg domains in S Baden remained Austrian until 1803-6, except from 1469 to 1477, when they were ruled by Charles the Bold of Burgundy. The rest of Swabia was held in large part by the counts (later dukes) of Württemberg, by the margraves of Baden-Durlach, by the landgraves of Fürstenberg, by the princes of Hohenzollern, by the bishops of Strasbourg, Konstanz (Constance), and Augsburg, by several powerful abbeys, and by a multitude of petty princes, counts, and knights.

Most of the Swabian municipalities had obtained the status of free imperial cities (i.e., virtually independent republics) by 1300. Among them were Augsburg, Ulm, Schwäbisch Gmünd, Reutlingen, and Ravensburg. Their wealth, due mainly to commerce and industry, made them the most powerful element of the country, and they made their superior power felt by forming a series of leagues, starting in 1331. The Swabian League of 1376-89 successfully opposed Emperor Charles IV but was eventually defeated by the count of Württemberg. The most important Swabian League was that of 1488-1534.

The chief Swabian cities accepted the Reformation in the 16th cent., but the countryside has remained divided between Catholics and Protestants to the present day. With the commercial revolution of the 15th and 16th cent. the Swabian cities temporarily lost most of their importance. (In the 19th cent. some, especially Stuttgart, revived as industrial centers.) When the Holy Roman Empire was organized in circles in the 16th cent., the Swabian Circle, similar in extent to the present region, was created. At the diet of Regensburg of 1801-3, which acted largely under the influence of Napoleon I, many of the small ecclesiastic and feudal holdings were taken over by Baden, Württemberg, and Bavaria.

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Swabia

Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names | 2005 | | © Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Swabia (Schwaben), Bavaria/Germany Alemannia A historic region that now encompasses part of Germany, France, and Switzerland. The present German element is a much smaller administrative district within Bavaria which takes its name from the Suebi, a Germanic people, whose name came from the Old German sweba ‘free’ or ‘independent’. Originally named after the Alemanni, the name was changed in the 11th century.

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JOHN EVERETT-HEATH. "Swabia." Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names. Oxford University Press. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. (July 6, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O209-Swabia.html

JOHN EVERETT-HEATH. "Swabia." Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names. Oxford University Press. 2005. Retrieved July 06, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O209-Swabia.html

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Magazine article from: Journal of Social History; 6/22/1996; ; 700+ words ; Swabia, with its abundant source materials, has attracted much attention from historians, and since the 1980s this historiography...a result, Wegert successfully argues that, even though state and church initiatives were widespread, the countryfolk of Swabia held onto many of their traditional values and mores. In ... Read more
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Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques; 1/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...was portrayed in the Munich satirical weekly Fliegende Blatter as a recently deceased schoolteacher and poet from a village in Swabia, Germany. His name can be translated as common man, and his uneventful daily life and naive poems were paraded in issue after... Read more
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Magazine article from: Dance Magazine; 1/1/1995; ; 567 words ; ...historical figures of renown were born here: the eighteenth-century musician Giovanni Battista Pergolesi and Frederick II of Swabia, who became king of Naples and Sicily, king of the Germans, and head of the Holy Roman Empire in the thirteenth century. The... Read more
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Magazine article from: The Historian; 6/22/2001; ; 636 words ; ...led it? Doge Dandalo of Venice, who transported it? Or were some of the peripheral players, such as Alexius IV or Philip of Swabia, responsible? Theories abound, as if medievalists are playing the game, Clue. But, as Donald E. Queller argued in the first... Read more
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