Political union
A political union is a type of political entity which is composed of, or created from, smaller polities or the process which achieves this. These smaller polities are usually called federated states and federal territories in a federal government; they are called prefectures, regions, or provinces in the case of a centralised government. This form of government may be created through voluntary and mutual cession and is described as unionism by its constituent members and proponents. In other cases, it may arise from political unification, characterised by coercion and conquest. The unification of separate states which, in the past, had together constituted a single entity is known as reunification. Unlike a personal union or real union, the individual constituent entities may have devolution of powers but are subordinate to a central government or coordinated in some sort of organization. In a federalised system, the constituent entities usually have internal autonomy, for example in the setup of police departments, and share power with the federal government, for whom external sovereignty, military forces, and foreign affairs are usually reserved. The union is recognised internationally as a single political entity. A political union may also be called a legislative union or state union.
A union may be effected in many forms, broadly categorized as:
- Incorporating union
- Incorporating annexation
- Federal union
- Confederal union
- Federative annexation
- Mixed unions
Incorporating union
Incorporating unions have been present throughout much of history, such as when:
- The Union of Lublin between the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland led to the creation of a Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, an elective monarchy where the Polish nobility elected the monarch;
- the Acts of Union, between the Kingdom of Scotland and the Kingdom of England created the Kingdom of Great Britain;
- in 1910 the colonies of the Cape of Good Hope, Natal, Orange River Colony, and Transvaal were incorporated into the Union of South Africa;
- After the accession of the Bourbon dynasty to the throne of the Spanish Monarchy, they began to replace the system of personal union of the Crown of Castile, the states of the Crown of Aragon, and the Kingdom of Navarre into the unitary Kingdom of Spain, though the process did not became effective until the end of the War of the Spanish Succession, in which the Nueva Planta decrees of 1707, 1715 and 1716 abolished their respective legal jurisdictions, institutions and public laws, which were replaced by those of Castile. However, Navarre retained its political existence until the 1833 territorial division of Spain;
- the Acts of Union 1800 united the Kingdom of Ireland and the Kingdom of Great Britain into the United Kingdom;
- in 1990 the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen united with the Yemen Arab Republic to form the Republic of Yemen;
- and in 1783 the Articles of Confederation were signed by each of the Thirteen Colonies, uniting them into the United States of America.
Preservation of interests
This marks a delineation of states that are able to ensure preservation of interests: there has to be some mutually beneficial reasoning behind the formal or informal preservation of interests. In the Union creating the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1801, no such guarantee was given for the laws and courts of the Kingdom of Ireland, though they were continued as a matter of practice. The informal recognition of such interests represents the different circumstances of the two Unions, the small base of institutional power in Ireland at the time had faced a revolution in the Irish Rebellion of 1798, and as a result there was an institutional drive toward unification, limiting the Irish negotiating power. However, informal guarantees were given to preclude the possibility of further Irish unrest in the period following the French Revolution of 1789 and the 1798 rebellion. These types of informal arrangements are more susceptible to changes; for example, Tyrol was guaranteed that its Freischütz companies would not be posted to fight outside Tyrol without their consent, a guarantee later revoked by the Austrian state. However, this case can be contrasted with the continued existence of the Scottish Parliament and a separate body of Scottish law distinct from English law.
Incorporating annexation
In an incorporating annexation a state or states is united to and dissolved in an existing state, whose legal existence continues.Annexation may be voluntary or, more frequently, by conquest.
Incorporating annexations have occurred at various points in history, such as when:
- in 1535 and 1542, under the two Laws in Wales Acts, the Kingdom of England formally annexed the Principality of Wales;
- in 1822 the Republic of Spanish Haiti was annexed by the Republic of Haiti;
- the Kingdom of Prussia used incorporating annexation to unite many of the German Princes during the Second Schleswig War, the Austro-Prussian War, and the Franco-Prussian War;
- the Kingdom of Sardinia annexed many of the Duchies and City-states in Italy during the period of Italian unification;
- in 1918, during the Podgorica Assembly, the Kingdom of Serbia annexed the Kingdom of Montenegro;
- also in 1918, following the Romanian military intervention in Bessarabia, the Kingdom of Romania annexed the Moldavian Democratic Republic;
- the People's Republic of China annexed Tibet, East Turkestan , Hong Kong, and Macau.
Federal annexation
Prominent historical federal annexations include:
- Canada's annexations of British Columbia in 1871, Prince Edward Island in 1873, and the Dominion of Newfoundland in 1949;
- Ethiopia's annexation of Eritrea from 1951 to 1993;
- the admission of Geneva to the Swiss Confederation in 1815;
- West Germany's annexation of Saarland in 1957;
- the United States of America's annexations and subsequent granting of statehood to the Vermont Republic, Republic of Texas, and California Republic ;
- and the 2014 annexations of the Crimea and the city of Sevastopol by the Russian Federation.
Mixed unions
The unification of Germany began in earnest when the Kingdom of Prussia annexed numerous petty states in 1866.
Historical unions
- Unification of Nepal starting from 1744 A.D.
- Thai reunification in 1776 under King Taksin the Great
- Union of Moldavia and Wallachia, leading to the apparition of modern Romania, in 1859
- Bulgarian unification in 1885, after the 1396 Ottoman conquest.
- Great Union of Romania in 1918
- * Unification of Bessarabia with Romania in 1918
- * Union of Bukovina with Romania in 1918
- * Union of Transylvania with Romania in 1918
- Creation of Yugoslavia in 1918
- Ukrainian unification in 1919
- Chinese reunification or "Northeast Flag Replacement" proclaimed the victory of the Guangzhou/Nanjing government led by the Kuomintang over the Beiyang government after the 1912 division.
- German reunification after the Peaceful Revolution 1989–90 on 3 October 1990, divided into West Germany and East Germany since the Potsdam Agreement on 1 August 1945.
- * German unification in 1866–1871; what became Germany was heavily fragmented by feudalism and partible inheritance during the Middle Ages but remained united under the overlordship of East Francia/the Kingdom of Germany and the Holy Roman Empire. However, the states grew steadily more de facto independent through the early modern era as imperial power waned. Finally, the Empire was dissolved in 1806 during the Napoleonic Wars, and the German states became fully sovereign and were only united by the non-sovereign German Confederation.
- * Anschluss
- Italian unification 1815–1871, divided since its partition into the Lombard Kingdom and the Byzantine Exarchate of Ravenna in 568, Italy was further divided since Charlemagne's conquest of Langobardia Major and Spoleto in 774 and the subsequent fragmentation due to feudalism.
- Polish reunification in 1918–1922, divided since 24 October 1795 save for a brief revival as the Duchy of Warsaw during the Napoleonic Wars.
- Vietnamese reunification after the Vietnam War in 1976, divided into South and North Vietnam since 1954.
- Tanganyika United with Zanzibar in 1964 to form Tanzania from 26 April 1964 to date.
- Yemeni unification between the country's north and south halves in 22 May 1990, divided since the North Yemen's independence from the Turkish Empire in November 1918.
- Union State of Russia and Belarus from 1999