Zollverein
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- For the well-known German coal mine, see Zeche Zollverein.
The Zollverein had been originally established by Prussia early in the 19th century. At first it included only the close neighbours of Prussia, and was seen as a way to transport goods between the two non-contiguous parts of Prussia: Eastern Prussia and Western Prussia. The greater customs union of 38 states was the fruit of a continuous effort by Prussian bureaucrats over several decades. Its gradual inception was made against the more modest efforts of the Austrian bureaucracy to establish their own customs union with neighbouring states.
Some economic historians such as Helmut Böhme use the Zollverein to dispute the general view of Bismarck as the unifier of Germany. They point out that, firstly, Prussia's economic dominance made unification inevitable. Economic dominance led to political and military control and once that was achieved unification was only a matter of time. Secondly, the Zollverein established an anti-Austrian tradition among the Prussians. Bismarck cannot be said to have revolutionized Prussian politics when the Zollverein had been working actively against Austria for about 30 years before he came along.
Timeline
1828 Original customs convention between Prussia and the Grand Duchy of Hesse.1831 Hesse-Cassel joined.
1834 Bavaria, Württemberg, Saxony, Thuringia etc joined.
1851 Hanover, Oldenburg joined.
1868 Schleswig-Holstein, Kausenburg, Mecklenburg.
1871 Alsace-Lorraine joined (after being acquired by Germany following the Franco-Prussian war).
External links
- http://members.aol.com/BevinSoc/ltur6.htm
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