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Haut-Rhin

Department of France


Summary

Department of France

FieldValue
nameHaut-Rhin
native_namegsw
typeDepartment of France
image_skylineColmar Prefecture.JPG
image_captionPrefecture building of the Haut-Rhin department, in Colmar
image_flagDrapeau Haut-Rhin.svg
image_shieldBlason département fr Haut-Rhin.svg
image_mapHaut-Rhin-Position.svg
map_captionLocation of Haut-Rhin in France
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameFrance
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1Grand Est
seat_typePrefecture
seatColmar
parts_typeSubprefectures
parts_stylepara
p1Altkirch
Mulhouse
Thann
leader_titlePrefect
leader_nameLouis Laugier
unit_prefMetric
area_footnotes
area_total_km23525
population_total
population_as_of
population_footnotes
population_rank29th
population_density_km2auto
blank_name_sec1Department number
blank_info_sec168
blank_name_sec2Arrondissements
blank_info_sec24
blank1_name_sec2Cantons
blank1_info_sec217
blank2_name_sec2Communes
blank2_info_sec2366
timezone1CET
utc_offset1+1
timezone1_DSTCEST
utc_offset1_DST+2
footnotesFrench Land Register data, which exclude estuaries and lakes, ponds and glaciers larger than 1 km2

Mulhouse Thann Haut-Rhin () is a department in the Grand Est region, France, bordering both Germany and Switzerland. It is named after the river Rhine. Its name means Upper Rhine. Haut-Rhin is the smaller and less populated of the two departments of the former administrative Alsace region, the other being Bas-Rhin (Lower Rhine), especially after the 1871 cession of the southern territory known since 1922 as the Territoire de Belfort, although it is still rather densely populated compared to the rest of metropolitan France. It had a population of 767,083 in 2021.

On 1 January 2021, the départemental collectivities of Bas-Rhin and Haut-Rhin were merged into the European Collectivity of Alsace.

History

Haut-Rhin is one of the original 83 départements, created during the French Revolution, on 4 March 1790 through the application of the law of 22 December 1789 in respect of the southern half of the province of Alsace (Haute-Alsace).

Its boundaries have been modified many times:

  • 1798, it absorbed Mulhouse, formerly a free city, and the last Swiss enclave in the south of Alsace;
  • 1800, it absorbed the whole département of Mont-Terrible;
  • 1814, it lost the territories which had been part of Mont-Terrible, which were returned to Switzerland, except for the former County of Montbéliard;
  • 1816, it lost Montbéliard, which was transferred to the département of Doubs;
  • 1871, it was mostly annexed by the German Empire (Treaty of Frankfurt); the remaining French part formed the Territoire de Belfort in 1922;
  • 1919, it was reverted to France (Treaty of Versailles) but remains administratively separated from Belfort.
  • 1940, it was annexed de facto by Nazi Germany.
  • 1944, it was recovered by France.

Geography

Haut-Rhin is bordered by the Territoire de Belfort and Vosges départements and the Vosges Mountains to the west, the Bas-Rhin département to the North, Switzerland to the south and its eastern border with Germany is also the Rhine. In the centre of the département lies a fertile plain. The climate is semi-continental.

Subdivisions

The department consists of the following arrondissements:

  • Altkirch
  • Colmar-Ribeauvillé
  • Mulhouse
  • Thann-Guebwiller

Principal towns

The most populous commune is Mulhouse; the prefecture Colmar is the second-most populous. As of 2021, there are 11 communes with more than 10,000 inhabitants:

CommunePopulation (2021)
Mulhouse106,341
Colmar67,730
Saint-Louis22,698
Wittenheim15,262
Illzach14,829
Rixheim13,795
Kingersheim13,178
Riedisheim12,163
Cernay11,745
Guebwiller11,137
Wittelsheim10,334

Demographics

Population development between 1801 and 2016:

Economy

Haut-Rhin is one of the richest French départements. Mulhouse is the home of the Stellantis Mulhouse Plant automobile factory, where the Peugeot 2008 and Peugeot 508 are currently built. The lowest unemployment rate in France can be found in the Southern Sundgau region (approximately 2%). The countryside is marked by hills. Many Haut-Rhinois work in Switzerland, especially in the chemical industries of Basel, but commute from France where living costs are lower. However, the region does have some of France's worst socio-economic inequalities; Mulhouse has long been one of France's poorest major cities.

Law

Alsace and the adjacent Moselle department have a legal system slightly different from the rest of France. The statutes in question date from the period 1871–1919 when the area was part of the German Empire. With the return of Alsace-Lorraine to France by the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, Paris accepted that Alsace and Moselle should retain some local laws in respect of certain matters, especially with regard to hunting, economic life, local government relationships, health insurance and social rights. It includes notably the absence of any formal separation between church and state: several mainstream denominations of the Christian church benefit from state funding, in contrast to principles applied in the rest of France.

Politics

Presidential elections 2nd round

ElectionWinning candidateParty%2nd place candidateParty%
La République En Marche!}}"2022Emmanuel MacronLREM52.90Marine Le PenFN
La République En Marche!}}"2017Emmanuel MacronLREM57.97Marine Le PenFN
Union for a Popular Movement}}"2012Nicolas SarkozyUMP63.33François HollandePS
Union for a Popular Movement}}"2007Nicolas SarkozyUMP65.39Ségolène RoyalPS
Rally for the Republic}}"2002Jacques ChiracRPR77.65Jean-Marie Le PenFN
Rally for the Republic}}"1995Jacques ChiracRPR57.26Lionel JospinPS

Current National Assembly Representatives

ConstituencyMemberParty
The Republicans (France)}}"Haut-Rhin's 1st constituencyÉric Straumann
The Republicans (France)}}"Haut-Rhin's 2nd constituencyJacques Cattin
The Republicans (France)}}"Haut-Rhin's 3rd constituencyJean-Luc Reitzer
The Republicans (France)}}"Haut-Rhin's 4th constituencyRaphaël Schellenberger
Agir (France)}}"Haut-Rhin's 5th constituencyOlivier Becht
La République En Marche!}}"Haut-Rhin's 6th constituencyBruno Fuchs

Tourism

File:Mulhouse - Town hall.jpg|Mulhouse town hall File:Colmar - Alsace.jpg|Colmar File:67-Riquewihr-arcade.jpg|Riquewihr File:2012-11-16 16-00-31-vallee-doller.jpg|View from the Ballon d'Alsace File:Hunawihr1P7.jpg|Hunawihr and Alsatian vineyards

Transport

The department's main airport is served by EuroAirport Basel Mulhouse Freiburg located in Saint-Louis, it provides air travel for the department as well as Basel-Stadt in the nearby border of Switzerland and Freiburg im Breisgau in Germany. Strasbourg Airport is another alternative airport that the department also uses, it is located 109 km north of Mulhouse.

Culture

  • Alsatian language

References

References

  1. [https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/jorf/id/JORFTEXT000042171198 Décret du 29 juillet 2020 portant nomination du préfet du Haut-Rhin], Légifrance
  2. Office pour la Langue et la Culture d’Alsace. "Wàs brücht m'r im Elsàss ? Petit lexique français-alsacien".
  3. "Populations légales en vigueur à compter du 1er janvier 2024: 68 Haut-Rhin". [[Institut national de la statistique et des études économiques.
  4. "Historique du Haut-Rhin".
  5. "Évolution et structure de la population en 2016". INSEE.
  6. "Présidentielles".
  7. "Résultats de l'élection présidentielle de 1995 par département - Politiquemania".
  8. Nationale, Assemblée. "Assemblée nationale ~ Les députés, le vote de la loi, le Parlement français".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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