Braunschweig is one of the four Regierungsbezirke of Lower Saxony, Germany, located in the southeast of the state.
The region covers roughly the area of the former state of Brunswick.

BRUNSWICK (Ger. Braunschweig), a sovereign duchy of northern Germany, and a constituent state of the Getman
empire, comprising three larger and six smaller portions of territory. The principal or northern part, containing the
towns of Brunswick, Wolfenbtittel and Helmstedt, is situated between the Prussian provinces~of Hanover and Saxony
to the south-east of the former. The western part, containing Holzminden and Gandersheim, extends eastward from
the river Weser to Goslat. The Blankenburg, or eastern portion, lies to the south-east of the two former, between
Prussia, the duchy of Anhalt and the Prussian province of Hanover. The six small enclaves, lying in the Prussian
provinces of
Hanover and Saxony, are the districts Thedingbausen, Harzburg and Kalvrde, and the three demesnes
of Bodenburg, Olsburg and Ostharingen. A portion of the Harz mountains was, down to 1874, common to Brunswick
and Prussia (Hanover) and known as the Communion Harz. In. 1874 a partition was effected, but the mines are still
worked in common, four-sevenths of the revenues derived from them fallii-ig to Prussia and the remaining
three-sevenths to Brunswick.

The northern portion of the duchy has its surface diversified by hill and plain; it is mostly arable and has little forest.
The other two principal portions are intersected by the Harz mountains, and its spurs and the higher parts are
covered with forests of fir, oak and beech. The greatest elevations are the Wurmberg (3230 ft.), and the
Achtermannshoh (3100 ft.), lying south of the Brocken. Brunswick belongs almost entirely to the basin of the river
Weser, into which the Oker, the Aller and the Leine, having their sources~in the Harz, discharge their Waters. The
climate is mild in the north, but in the hilly country raw and cold in winter, and in autumn and spring damp. The area
of the duchy is 1424 sq. m., and of this total fully one-half is arable land, 10% meadow and pasture, and 33% under
forest. The population in 1905 was 485,655. The religion is, in the main~ that of the Lutheran Evangelical church;
but there is a large Roman Catholic community centred in and round Hildesheim, the seat of the bishopric of North
Germany. The Jews have several synagogues, with a rabbinate in Brunswick. The birthrate is 35.3, and the
death-rate 21 ~6 per thousand inhabitants. In the rural districts, broad Low German is spoken; but the language of
the upper and educated classes is distinguished by its purity of style and pronunciation.

The land devoted to agriculture is excellently farmed, and cereais, beet (for sugar), potatoes and garden produce of
all kinds, particularly fruit, obtain the best market prices. The pasture land rears cattle and sheep of first-rate quality,
and great attention is paid to the breeding of horses, in which the famous stud farm at Harzburg has of late years
been eminently conspicuous. Timber cutting, in the forests of the Harz, employs a large number of hands. But
agriculture, which, until recently, formed the chief wealth of the duchy, has now given way to the mining industry,
both in point of the numbers of inhabitants employed and in the general prosperity distributed by it. The chief seat of
the mining industry is the Harz, and its development annually increases in extent and importance. Coal (bituminous),
iron, lead, copper, sulphur, alum, marble, alabaster, lime and salt are produced in large quantities, and the
by-products of some of these, particularly chemicals and asphalt, constitute a great source of revenue. The
manufactures embrace sugar (from beet), spinning, tobacco, paper, soap machines, glass, china, beer and
sausages. The last are famous throughout Germany. The principal articles of export are thread, dyes, cement,
chicory, beer, timber, preserves, chemicals and sausages. The railways, formerly belonging to the state, were, Ifl
1870, leased to private companies and ifl 1884 purchased by Prussia, and have a length of about 320 m. The roads,
of which one quarter are in the hands of the state, are excellently kept, and vie with those of any European country.

The constitution is that of a limited monarchy, and dates from a revision of the fundamental law on the 12th of
October 1832. The throne is hereditary in the house of BrunswickLtineburg, according to the law of primogeniture,
and in the male line of succession, but the rightful heir, Ernest, duke of Cumberland, was not allowed to take
possession. The parliament of the duchy. (Landes- or Standeversammiung) is an assembly of estates forming one
house of 48 deputies, of whom 30 are elected by municipal and rural communities, while the remainder represent the
Evangelical church, the large landed proprietors, manufacturers and the professions. The house, however, has little
power in initiating legislation, but it can refuse taxation, impeach ministers and receive petitions. The executive
functions of the administration and government reside in the ministry (Staatsministerium) consisting of three
responsible ministers, assisted by a council of the holders of the other chief offices of state. The public debt amounts
to about 33/4 millions sterling, and the civil list to about ~56,ooo a year, mostly derived from the revenues of the
state domains. By virtue of a convention with Prussia, of March 1886, the Brunswick contingent to the imperial forces
forms a part of the Prussian army and is attached to the X. army corps. The convention can be rescinded only after
a two years notice.

History.The lands which comprise the modern duchy of Brunswick belonged in the 10th century to the family of the
Brunos, whence the name Brunswick is derived, of the counts of Nordheim, and the counts of Supplinburg. Inherited
during the 12th century by Henry the Proud, duke of Saxony and Bavaria, and a member of the family of Weif, they
subsequently formed part of the extensive Saxon duchy ruled by his son, Henry the Lion.

When Henry was placed under the imperial ban and his duchy dismembered in 1181, he was allowed to retain his
hereditary possessions, which consisted of a large part of Brunswick and Lflneburg. The bulk of these lands came
subsequently to Henrys grandson, Otto, and in 1235 the emperor Frederick II., anxious to be reconciled with the
Welfs, recognized Ottos title and created him duke of Brunswick and Luneburg. Otto added several counties and the
town of Hanover to his possessions, and when he died in 1252 was succeeded by his sons Albert and John. In 1267
these princes divided the duchy, Albert becoming duke of Brunswick, and John duke of Luneburg. The dukes of
LUneburg increased the area of their duchy, and when the family died out in 1369 a stubborn contest took place for
its possession. Claimed by Magnus II., duke of BrunswickWolfenbuttel, this prince was forced by the emperor Charles
IV. to abandon his pretensions, but in 1388 his sons succeeded in incorporating Luneburg with
Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel. In 1285 the duchy of Brunswick had been divided between Duke Alberts three sons, whose
relations with each other were far from harmonious, and the lines of Wolfenbuttel, Gottingen and Grubenhagen had
been established. The Wolfenbttel branch died out in 1292, but was refounded in 1345 by Magnus I., a younger
member of the Gottingen family; the elder Gottingen branch died out in 1463, and the Grubenhagen branch in 1596.
Magnus I., duke of Brunswick-WolfenbUttel from 1345 to i 369, was the ancestor of the later dukes of Brunswick. His
grandsons, Frederick, Bernard and Henry, secured Ltineburg in 1388, but in 1428 Bernard, the only survivor of the
three, was forced to make a division of the duchy, by which he received LUneburg, while his nephews, William and
Henry, obtained Brunswick, which ill 1432 they divided into Calenberg and WolfenbUttel. In 1473, however, William,
who had added GOttingen to his possessions in 1463, united these lands; but they were again divided from 1495 to
1584. In 1584 Brunswick was united by Duke Julius, and in 1596 Grubenhagen was added to it. Duke Frederick
Ulrich, however, was obliged to cede this territory to Lilneburg in 1617, and when he died in 134 his family became,
extinct, and ~Brunswick was divided between the two branches of the LUneburg family.

The duchy of Luneburg, founded by Bernard in 1428, remained undivided until 1520, when Duke Henry abdicated
and his three, sons divided the duchy. Two of the branches founded at this time soon died out; and in 1569, after
the death of ErnestI., the representative of the third branch, his two sons agreed upon a partition which is of
considerable importance in the history of Brunswick, since it established the lines of Dannenberg and of
Ltmeburg-Celle, and these two families divided the duchy of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel in 1635. The dukes of
Luneburg-Celle subsequently took the name of Hanover, and were the ancestors of the later kings of Hanover (q.v.).
After the acquisition of 1635 the family of Dannenberg took the title of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, and ruled in the direct
line until 735. It was then followed by the family of Brunswick-Bevern, which had split off from the parent line in 1666
and ruled until 1884.

Brunswick has not played a very important part in German politics. Many counties were added to its area, but it was
weakened by constant divisions of territory, and during the period of the Reformation some of the princes took one
side and some the other. The treaty of Westphalia in 1648 made little difference to its prestige, but its subsequent
position was greatly affected by the growth of Prussia. During the Seven, Years War Brunswick supported Frederick
the Great, and in return was severely ravaged by the French. Duke Charles I., who accumulated a large amount of
debt, sought to discharge his liabilities by sending his soldiers as mercenaries to assist England during the American
War of Independence. The succeeding duke, Charles William Ferdinand, brought order into the finances, led the
Prussian troops against Napoleon, and died in I8o6 from wounds received at the battle of Auerstadt. Napoleon then
declared the ducal family deposed and included Brunswick in the kingdom of Westphalia. In 1813 it was restored to
Duke Frederick William, who was killed in 1815 at the battle of Quatre Bras. His son, Charles II., while a minor, was
under the regency of George, afterwards the English king George IV., who ruled the duchy through Ernest, Count
Mnster-Ledenburg (1766-1839), assisted by Justus von Schmidt-Phiseldeck (1769 1851). A new constitution was
granted in 1820, but after Charles came of age in 1823 a period of disorder ensued. The duke, who was very
unpopular with his subjects; quarrelled with his relatives, and in 1830 a revolution drove him from the country. The
government was undertaken by his brother Wffliam, and in 1831 Charles was declared incapable of ruling, and
William was appointed as his successor. The ex-duke, who made a fine collection of diamonds, died childless at
Geneva in August 1873. Williams long reign witnessed many excellent and necessary reforms. A new constitution
was granted in 1832, and in 1844 Brunswick joined the Prussian Zollverein. Trial by jury and freedom of the press
were established, many religious disabilities were removed, and measures were taken towards the freedom of trade.

Brunswick took very little part in the war between Prussia and Austria in 1866, but her troops fought for Prussia
during the Franco-German War of 187071. The duchy joined the German Confederation in 1815, the North German
Confederation ifl 1866, and became a state of the German empire in 1871.

In 1866 the question of the succession to Brunswick became acute. Duke William was unmarried, and according to
the existing conventions it would pass to George, king of Hanover, who had just been deprived of his kingdom by the
king of Prussia. In 1879, however, the duke and the estates, with the active support of Prussia, concluded an
arrangement for a temporary council of regency to take over the government on Williams death. Moreover, if in this
event the rightful heir was unable to take possession of the duchy, the council was empowered to appoint a regent.
William died on the 18th of October 1884, and Georges son, Ernest, duke of Cumberland, claimed Brunswick and
promised to respect the Germanconstitution. lhis claim was disregarded by the council of regency, and the
Bundesrat declared that the accession of the duke of Cumberland would be inimical to the peace and security of the
empire on account of his attitude towards Prussia. In the following year the council chose Albert, prince of Prussia,
as regent, a step which brought Brunswick still more under the influence of her powerful neighbor. Albert died in
September 1906, and after some futile negotiations with the duke of Cumberland, the Brunswick diet chose Duke
John Albert of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (b. 1857) as regent in May 1907.

See 0. von Heinemann, Geschichle Braunschweigs und Hannovers (Gotha, 1882-1892); W. Havemann, Geschichte
der Lande Braunschweig und Lnebur~ (Gottingen, 1853-1857); H. Sudendorf, Urkundenbuch zur Geschichte der
Herzage von Braunschweig und Luneburg und ihrer Lande (Hanover, 1859-1883); H. Guthe, Die Lande
Braunschweig und Hannover (Hanover, 1890); J. Beste, Geschichte der braunschweigischen Landeskirche von der
Reformation bis auf unsere Tage (Wolfenbttel, 1889); A. KOcher, Geschichte von Hannover find Braunschweig
1648-1714 (Leipzig, f 884).