- Free State Bottleneck
Infobox Former Country
native_name = "Freistaat Flaschenhals"
conventional_long_name = Free State Bottleneck
common_name = Bottleneck
continent = Europe
region = Rhineland
country = Germany
era = Interwar period
status = Special
status_text = Unoccupied territory within post-WWI Germany
government_type = Republic
year_start = 1919
year_end = 1923
event_start =
date_start =10 January ,1919
event_end = Abolished
date_end =23 February 1923
p1 = Province of Hesse-Nassau
flag_p1 = Flagge Preußen - Provinz Hessen-Nassau.svg
s1 = Province of Hesse-Nassau
flag_s1 = Flagge Preußen - Provinz Hessen-Nassau.svg
image_map_caption =
capital = Lorch
national_motto =
national_anthem =
common_languages =
religion =
currency = Freistaattaler
leader1 = Edmund Pnischeck
year_leader1 =
title_leader = President
stat_year1 = 1920
stat_area1 =
stat_pop1 = 8000
footnotes = The Free State Bottleneck ( _de. Freistaat Flaschenhals) was a short-lived quasi-state that existed from10 January 1919 until25 February 1923 . It was formed out of part of thePrussia n province of Hesse-Nassau as a consequence of the French and American occupation of theRhineland followingWorld War I . The Bottleneck is now part of the modern German states ofHesse andRhineland-Palatinate .Creation
Following the Armistice of 1918, Allied forces occupied the German territory west of the
Rhine . To maintain a military presence on the eastern side, the Allied powers extended their zones of occupation by creating three semi-circular bridgeheads of 30 km radius, radiating fromCologne (British zone),Koblenz (American zone), andMainz (French zone).Because of an error in measurement, the French and American zones did not meet. The resulting gap on the eastern side of the Rhine contained the
Wisper valley, the towns of Lorch andKaub , and villages of Lorchhausen, Sauerthal, Ransel, Wollmerschied, Welterod, Zorn, Strüth and Egenrod. Surrounded by the two Allied bridgeheads, theTaunus range to the north-east, and the Rhine to the south-west, this tiny region was effectively cut off from the rest of Germany and subsequently separated from the administration of theWeimar Republic . Owing to the circular nature of the Allied bridgeheads, this enclosed territory took on the shape of a bottleneck, hence the name that was given to the microstate, when it was declared on10 January 1919 .Life in the Bottleneck
The region contained approximately 8000 people and its largest town, Lorch, was established as its capital. The mayor of Lorch, Edmund Pnischeck, was subsequently elected as president of this small territory. Pnischeck headed the Bottleneck's administration for the time of its existence, which even oversaw the production of its own stamps and currency.
There were no roads connecting the Bottleneck to unoccupied Germany, trains were not permitted to stop there, and air or river transportation was impossible. The movement of goods and post to and from the state was only made possible by
smuggling . One time, a French train loaded with coal from theRuhr valley was hijacked from neighbouring Rüdesheim and taken to the Bottleneck, where the coal was distributed among the populace for heating purposes. [ [http://www.freistaat-flaschenhals.de/eng/index.htm "Official" website of the Free State Bottleneck] ]Foreign relations
The state issued its own passports to its citizens, and had plans to establish an embassy in Berlin. Furthermore, it was intended to establish diplomatic relations with other countries, but the state ceased to exist before these plans were realised. [de icon [http://www.hr-online.de/website/fernsehen/sendungen/index.jsp?rubrik=3036&key=standard_document_1908900 Lebendige Geschichte: Vor 80 Jahren: der Freistaat Flaschenhals]
Hessischer Rundfunk ]Abolition
After four years of existence, the Free State Bottleneck was abolished on
23 February 1923 following the FrenchOccupation of the Ruhr . The Bottleneck was eventually reincorporated with the Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau.The Bottleneck today
The territory that formerly comprised the Bottleneck is now part of the
Rhine Gorge UNESCO World Heritage Site . The history of the Bottleneck is now a tourist attraction in the area, particularly in the former Free State's major towns of Limburg,Kaub and Lorch.Bottleneck stamps and currency are now sought-after rarities. Wine that was smuggled in from occupied Germany and stored in Lorch and Kaub can also fetch high prices.
ee also
*
Free Republic of Schwarzenberg References
External links
* [http://www.freistaat-flaschenhals.de/eng/index.htm "Official" website of the Free State Bottleneck]
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