For a long time the region of the Emsland was extremely sparsely populated, due to the
fens on both sides of the river. Small villages were established in medieval times along the river and on the
Hümmling. In the 13th century the bishops of
Münster gained control over the region; the Emsland remained property of the bishop
until 1803, when the clerical states
were dissolved. It came under the rule of
Prussia and
Arenberg, but after the
Napoleonic Wars the
Congress of Vienna decided to hand the territory over to the
Kingdom of Hanover. The Duchy of Arenberg continued to exist as a fief of the Hanoverian kings. When Hanover was annexed by Prussia (1866), the dukes were deposed soon after (1875). The now Prussian Province of Hanover was subdivided into districts in 1885; four districts were established on the territory of what is now the Landkreis Emsland. The districts were merged in 1977 to form the present district. Under
Nazi rule,
labour camps known as the
Emslandlager ("Emsland camps") held thousands of political opponents of the
Nazi Party, located outside
Börgermoor, now part of the commune
Surwold, not far from
Papenburg. A memorial of these camps, the Dokumentations- und Informationszentrum (DIZ) Emslandlager, is located at Papenburg. The well known resistance song "
Peat Bog Soldiers" was composed by political prisoners at one of these camps. In 1950 a governmental plan for the development of Emsland was adopted. Its aim was to turn the region into an industrial location. This was accomplished by draining the fens and establishing projects like the test track of the
maglev "
Transrapid" and several large
shipyards such as the
Meyer-Werft in
Papenburg. Although the Landkreis Emsland lost much of its original character, some areas retain their natural character, for example the Hümmling. The 1977 district reforms in Lower Saxony united the former districts of
Lingen,
Meppen and
Aschendorf-Hümmling in the district of Emsland, with Meppen as administrative seat. The Emsland remains a very
Roman Catholic region compared to other parts of Lower Saxony. == Geography ==