Map of Germany showing Braunschweig.

Brunswick , German-Braunschweig [broun'shfIk] , former state, central Germany, surrounded by the former
Prussian provinces of
Saxony, Hanover, and Westphalia. Braunschweig (Brunswick) may refer to the City of
Braunschweig or the Region of Braunschweig.

Statistics
State:
Lower Saxony
Capital: Braunschweig (city)
Area: 8,098.5 km²
Inhabitants: 1,666,864 (2001)
Population Density: 206 People/km²


The
region of Braunschweig is situated on the North German plain and in the northern foothills of the Harz
Mountians. The land is drained by the Leine and Oker rivers. The
duchy of Braunschweig emerged (13th
cent.) from the remnants of the domains of
Henry the Lion, the duke of Saxony, to whom Emperor Frederick I
had left only the territories of Braunschweig and Lüneburg (roughly modern Braunschweig and Hanover).
Because the Guelphic house divided frequently, it remained somewhat separated from the German political
scene. The duchy as incorporated into the kingdom of Westphalia in 1807 and recovered by Duke Frederick
William (1771–1815) in 1813. The line became extinct in 1884, and Braunschweig was ruled by regents until
1913, when Ernest Augustus of Cumberland, grandson of King George V of Hanover, was made duke. A
member of the North German Confederation from 1866 and of the German Empire from 1871, Braunschweig
became a republic in 1918 and then joined the Weimar Republic. In 1946 it was included (except for several
small territories placed in East Germany) in the West German state of
Lower Saxony. Braunschweig (the
former capital), Goslar, Helmstedt, and Wolfenbüttel were the chief towns.

Video of
Branschweig
(in German)