, the ducal palace Castle near Eisenach The duchies of
Saxe-Weimar and
Saxe-Eisenach had been ruled in
personal union by the same branch of the
House of Wettin since 1741, after the Eisenach line had died out upon the death of Duke
Wilhelm Heinrich. The first Duke of the personal union was
Ernest Augustus I, who built the
Belvedere Palace in
Weimar. His son
Ernest Augustus II reigned for only three years, and died at the age of 20. At the age of 18, he married the Brunswick Princess
Anna Amalia, one year his junior and a niece of King
Frederick the Great of
Prussia. A year later she gave birth to her son,
Charles Augustus and after another year, when she was already a widow, to her son
Constantine. As Dowager Duchess Anna Amalia actively took up the
regency, with the approval of the Empress
Maria Theresa and the support of her ethical Minister Baron von Fritsch. As educator for her sons, she employed the poet
Christoph Martin Wieland, who was a professor at the
University of Erfurt. At 18 years of age, Charles Augustus married Princess
Louise of Hesse-Darmstadt. He employed the poet
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, with whom he soon became friends. Goethe, in turn, invited the authors
Johann Gottfried Herder and
Friedrich Schiller to Weimar, thus laying the foundation for the
Weimar Classicism circle, which was supported in the background by Anna Amalia. Later regents would see it as main task to guard this heritage. In 1804 Duke Charles Augustus' eldest son and heir
Charles Frederick married
Maria Pavlovna Romanova, sister of Emperor
Alexander I of Russia, a conjugal union which decisively promoted the rise of the Ernestine Saxe-Weimar dynasty. It also gave the duchy some protection during the turmoil of the
Napoleonic Wars. Though at first an ally of
Prussia in the Napoleonic
War of the Fourth Coalition, Duke Charles Augustus escaped his deposition by joining the
Confederation of the Rhine on 15 December 1806. After the official merger in 1809, the Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach consisted of the separate districts around the capital Weimar in the north and
Eisenach in the west. Thanks to their Russian connection, the duchy gained substantially from the
Congress of Vienna in 1815. In the east, it gained most of the (
Neustadt district; ) from the
Kingdom of Saxony. It also received most of the
Principality of Erfurt, which had been an exclave of
Mainz before the war and a directly administered French fief under occupation. It further gained smaller possessions, such as
Blankenhain and
Kranichfeld. In the
Rhön area, the was created from adjacent former parts of
Hesse-Kassel and territories held by the secularized
Princely Abbey of Fulda. Finally, the country was raised to a
grand duchy – as the only branch of the
Ernestine line of the
House of Wettin, which had several reigning dukes but only one grand duke. The
Albertine line simultaneously attained the rank of kings of Saxony. The cosmopolitan Grand Duke Charles Augustus gave his grand duchy the first liberal constitution in Germany, on 5 May 1816. Students of the
University of Jena organized themselves as Germany's first fraternity, the and celebrated
Wartburg Festival at the
Wartburg in October 1817. Many liberal-minded people participated and the speakers, most of them students, must be regarded as having been among the earliest democrats in Germany.
Maria Pavlovna, who was grand duchess from 1828, featuring composers like
Franz Liszt and
Peter Cornelius. Her art-loving son
Charles Alexander (1818–1901), who was grand duke from 1853, also supported the arts, and music in particular. He was married to
Sophie, who supported his plans, and he rebuilt the decaying
Wartburg the romantic
historicism style of the day and had it painted by
Moritz von Schwind. He also supported, albeit half-heartedly, the founding of the
School of Applied Arts in Weimar, which merged to form the
Bauhaus in 1919. A member of the
German Confederation from 1815, the grand duchy was not seriously affected by the
German revolutions of 1848 and remained neutral during the growing friction between
Austria and Prussia over the following two decades. After the
Austro-Prussian War the grand duchy became a member of the
North German Confederation and in 1871 joined the new
German Empire as a constituent state. In 1901 Charles Alexander was succeeded by his grandson
William Ernest, who was married to
Caroline Reuss of Greiz and later to
Feodora of Saxe-Meiningen. In 1903, the grand duchy officially changed its name to
Grand Duchy of Saxony. However, many people continued to call it Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, to avoid confusion with the neighbouring
Kingdom of Saxony. William Ernest abdicated the throne on 9 November 1918, thereby ending the monarchy in the state. It continued as the
Free State of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, until 1920, when it merged with most of its neighbours to form
Thuringia, with Weimar as the state capital.
Religion In the Grand Duchy of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, as in all the
Thuringian states, the
Lutheran faith was the most prevalent. Specifically, in 1895, the reported religious affiliations of the 339,217 were: • Evangelical: 325,315 (95.9%) • Catholic: 12,112 (3.6%) • Jewish: 1,290 (0.4%) • Other / Non-denominational: 500 (0.1%) In the district of Eisenach, the distribution was slightly different. Of the 95,226 inhabitants were: • Evangelical: 85,319 (89.6%) • Catholic: 8,809 (9.3%) • Jewish: 979 (1.0%) • Other / Non-denominational: 119 (0.1%) The Catholic and Jewish minorities in the district Eisenach lived mainly in the Rhön. The area around the town of
Geisa was predominantly Catholic and belonged to the
Diocese of Fulda. == Constitution and administration ==