Department of Lorraine
Bezirk Lothringen, also called German Lorraine, was a government region in the western part of Alsace-Lorraine when it was part of the German Empire from 1871 to 1918.
History
The Department or District of Lorraine differed from other Prussian government regions, as it was not a simple governorate. As a corporation of self-rule of the pertaining rural and urban districts and cantons, it was similar to regions in the then neighbouring Bavaria, which had been formed after the French model départements into which that region had been divided under French annexation. Thus the district parliaments delegated deputies to the General Council, the Bezirkstag von Lothringen. The capital of the Department of Lorraine was Metz.Territorial composition
The department comprised the districts of :- Metz, independent city
- "Kreis Bolchen", seated in Bolchen (Boulay)
- "Kreis Château-Salins", seated in Château-Salins
- "Kreis Diedenhofen-Ost", seated in Diedenhofen (Thionville)
- "Kreis Diedenhofen-West", seated in Diedenhofen
- "Kreis Forbach", seated in Forbach
- "Kreis Metz-Land", seated in Metz
- "Kreis Saarburg", seated in Saarburg (Sarrebourg)
- "Kreis Saargemünd", seated in Saargemünd (Sarreguemines)
Department presidents
- 1871-1872 : Guido Henckel von Donnersmarck, as préfet/Präfekt
- 1872-1873 : Botho zu Eulenburg, as department president
- 1873-1874 : Adolf von Arnim-Boitzenburg
- 1875-1876 : Robert von Puttkamer
- 1877-1880 : Friedrich Albrecht Karl Johann von Reitzenstein
- 1881-1882 : Adalbert von Flottwell
- 1883-1900 : Hans von Hammerstein-Loxten
- 1901-1912 : Johann Friedrich Alexander von Zeppelin-Aschhausen
- 1913-1918 : Karl von Gemmingen-Hornberg