People's State of Reuss
Republic in central Germany (April 1919 - May 1920); now part of Thuringia
People's State of Reuss Volksstaat Reuß | |||||||||||
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1919–1920 | |||||||||||
Flag Coat of arms | |||||||||||
Capital | Gera | ||||||||||
Common languages | German | ||||||||||
Government | Republic | ||||||||||
Historical era | Aftermath of World War I | ||||||||||
• Established | 4 April 1919 | ||||||||||
• Merged into Thuringia | 1 May 1920 | ||||||||||
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The People's State of Reuss (German: Volksstaat Reuß) was a short-lived state in what is now Thuringia. The state was formed on 4 April 1919 after the reigning princes of the two Reuss principalities abdicated and elections were held in both states.[1] The People's State of Reuss had a non-contiguous area of 1,143 square kilometers, 211,324 inhabitants (1919) and was divided into three districts.
It united with six other small states to form Thuringia, a member state of the Weimar Republic, on 1 May 1920.
References
- ^ The Statesman's Year-Book. Palgrave Macmillan UK. 2016. p. 969. ISBN 9780230270565.
External links
- https://web.archive.org/web/20080217200153/http://home.att.net/~david.danner/militaria/reuss.htm
- Principalities of Reuss-Gera and Reuss-Greiz 1778-1919 (Reuss, Germany), also with flag source
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States of the Weimar Republic (1919–33)
- Anhalt
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- Thuringia (from 1920)
- Waldeck (until 1929)
- Württemberg
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Reuss |
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Schwarzburg |
separatist movements
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