Meuse-Inférieure

Meuse-Inférieure (French: [møz ɛ̃.fe.ʁjœʁ] "Lower Meuse"; Dutch: Beneden-Maas; German: Unteren-Maas) was a department of the French First Republic and French First Empire in present-day Belgium, Netherlands and Germany. It was named after the river Meuse. Its territory corresponded largely with the present-day provinces of Belgian and Dutch Limburg. It was created on 1 October 1795, when the Austrian Netherlands and the Prince-Bishopric of Liège were officially annexed by the French Republic. Before this annexation, its territory was part of the County of Loon, the Austrian Upper Guelders, the Staats-Oppergelre, the County of Horne, the Abbacy of Thorn, Maastricht and part of the Lands of Overmaas. The lands of the original medieval Duchy of Limburg were associated with the Overmaas lands, lying to their south. The two regions had long been governed together and referred to collectively with both names, but the original Duchy lands were not part of this new entity.

Department of Meuse-Inférieure
Département de la Meuse-Inférieure (French)
Departement Beneden-Maas (Dutch)
Departement der Unteren-Maas (German)
1795–1814
Meuse-Inférieure and other annexed departments
StatusDepartment of the French First Republic and the French First Empire
Chef-lieuMaastricht
51°0′N 5°35′E
Official languagesFrench
Historical eraFrench Revolutionary Wars
 Creation
1 October 1795
 Treaty of Paris, disestablished
30 May 1814
Population
 1814
267,249
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Duchy of Limburg
Prince-Bishopric of Liège
Staats-Oppergelre
Staats-Overmaas
Province of Limburg
Today part of

The Chef-lieu of the department was Maastricht. The department was subdivided into the following three arrondissements and cantons:

After Napoleon was defeated in 1814, the department (excluding Niederkrüchten and Herzogenrath which were assigned to the Kingdom of Prussia and are located in the present-day state of North Rhine-Westphalia) became part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, as the Province of Limburg (with a part of the Roer département).

In subsequent events starting in 1830, a part of this Kingdom split out to become Belgium. By 1839 it was settled that the Hasselt canton of Limburg, plus significant parts of the other two, went into Belgium, while the rest remained in the Netherlands. Both provinces have kept the name Limburg.

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