Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 11.djvu/424

404 about five miles from the coast, and the bailiwick (amt) of Bergedorf, which up to 1867 was held in common by Lu beck and Hamburg. The whole territory has an area of 157 1 8 square miles, exclusive of 99 square miles occupied by the Elbe. Of this area 124 square miles are within the limits of the German customs, but the rest continues to be practically &quot; abroad &quot; in relation to the com merce of the empire. In 1871 the total population was 338,974; by 1875 it had increased to 388,618 (191,339 males and 197,279 females); by 1877 to 406,014 ; and by 1878 to 417,239. Administratively the state is divided into the city or metropolitan district, which had 239,107 inhabitants in 1871, the domain of the Geestland with 57,216 inhabitants, the domain of the Marsch- land with 22,982, the bailiwick of Bergedorf with 13,112, and the bailiwick of Ritzebiittel with 6557. Cuxhaven- Rltzebiittel and Bergedorf are the only towns besides the capital, and they had respectively 4102 and 3899 inhabit ants in 1875. The Geestland comprises the suburban districts of Rotherbaum, Harvestehude, Eimsbuttel, Eppen- dorf, Hohenfelde, Uhlenhorst, Eilbeck, Barmbeck, Winter- hude, Borgfelde, Harum, and Horn, which encirclo the city on the north and east ; and the Marschland includes various &quot;werders,&quot; such as the Billwerder Ausschlag to the east of the city, the Steinwerder and the Little Grasbrook to the south of the Elbe, the Billwerder, the Ochsenwerder, and the so-called Vierlande or Four Districts (Corslake, Altegamme, Nauegamme, and Kirchwerder) as far east as Geesthacht. While the Geestland has in many places an almost unpro ductive soil, the Marschland is of extraordinary fertility, and its pastures, corn-fields, and market-gardens furnish Hamburg with large quantities of country produce. As a state of the empire Hamburg is represented in the federal council by one plenipotentiary and in the diet by three deputies. According to the present constitution, which has been in force since September 28, 1860, the legislative power is in the hands of the senate and the general body of citizens, and the executive is committed to the senate alone. Of the 18 members of the senate no less than 9 must have studied law and finance, and of the remain ing 9, 7 must be representatives of commerce. The members are chosen by the senate and the burgesses after a complicated process, and the burgess upon whom their choice falls is obliged to accept office for at least six years, on pain of losing his civic rights. The senate by itself has the election of the first and the second burgomaster, each of whom holds office for only a year. There are 196 burgesses, of whom 88 are chosen by ballot by the general community, 48 by and from the owners of ground within the town, and 60 by the courts and administrative bodies. They are elected for a period of six years, but as half of each class go out at the end of every three years the elections occur twice as often. Both the senate and the burgesses have the right of introducing new bills. The basis of the civil law is the Jus Hamburgicum, revised in and supplemented by the Boman law; but in some of the rural districts local customs prevail, and in Bergedorf the Liibeck rights are still partly in force. Hamburg has appeal to the common high court of the Free Cities in Liibeck. There is a special court for commercial disputes. Juries are summoned in the more important trials ; and since 1869 there has been public and responsible prose cution of criminal cases. The ecclesiastical arrangements of Hamburg have undergone great modifications since the general constitution of 1860. From the &quot;Reformation to the French occupation in the beginning of this century, Hamburg was a purely Lutheran state ; according to the &quot;Recess&quot; of 1529, re-enacted in 1603, non-Lutherans were subject to legal punishment and expulsion from the country. Exceptions were gradually made in favour of foreign resi dents ; but it was not till 1785 that regular inhabitants were .allowed to exercise the religious rites of other denominations, and it was not till after the war of freedom that they were allowed to have buildings in the style of churches. In 1860 full religious liberty was guaranteed, and the identification of church and state abolished. By the new constitution of the Lutheran Church, published at first in 1870 for the city only, but in 1876 extended to the rest of the Hamburg territory, the parishes or communes are divided into three church-districts, and the general affairs of the whole community are entrusted to a synod of 53 members and to an ecclesiastical council of 9 members which acts as an executive. A central fund for the church was formed in 1870 out of the surplus property of the convent of St John; and in some of the communes there is a church rate. According to the returns of 1871 there were 300,968 Lutherans, 5585 members of other Evangeli cal Churches, 7771 Boman Catholics, 194 Mennonites, 2696 Christians of other sects, and 13,71*6 Jew?, while 628 described themselves as without religion 01 heathens, and 7071 gave no information as to creed. Since 1871 the ratio of Lutherans to non-Lutherans must have somewhat diminished. The German Reformed Church, the French Reformed, the English Episcopal, the English &quot; Reformed,&quot; the Roman Catholic, and the Baptist are all recognized by the state, Civil marriages have been permissible in Hamburg since 1866, and since the introduc tion of the imperial law in January 1876 the number of such marriages has greatly increased.

1em 1em

1em  HAMBURG, one of the most remarkable cities of Germany and indeed of Europe, ranking as it does as the first of all the seats of commerce on the Continent, is situated on the right bank of the northern arm of the Elbe, about 93 miles from the mouth of that river, just where it is joined by the Alster and the Bille. The latitude of the observatory in the western part of the city is 53 33 55&quot; N. and the longitude 9 58 23 6&quot; E., the latitude of the tower of St Michael s 53 32 557&quot; N. and the longitude 9 58 41 7&quot; E. Were it not for political and municipal boundaries Hamburg might be considered as forming one town with Altona and Ottensen, the three presenting to the river a continuous frontage of nearly 4 miles ; and long lines of suburbs radiate inland in various directions. The city proper lies on both sides of the Alster, which having been dammed up a short distance from its mouth now forms a considerable lake, of which the southern portion within the line of the fortifications bears the name of the Inner Alster (Binnen Alster), and the other and larger portion (2300 