&
Frans Hogenberg:
Civitates Orbis Terrarum, vol. 1, 1572. , from the
Thesaurus philopoliticus (1625) by
Daniel Meisner In 1473, Emperor
Frederick III and
Charles the Bold, Duke of
Burgundy convened in Trier. In this same year, the
University of Trier was founded in the city. From 1581 until 1593,
intense witch persecutions, involving nobility as well as commoners, abounded throughout this region, leading to mass executions of hundreds of people. In the 17th century, the Archbishops and Prince-Electors of Trier relocated their residences to
Philippsburg Castle in
Ehrenbreitstein, near
Koblenz. A session of the
Reichstag was held in Trier in 1512, during which the demarcation of the
Imperial Circles was definitively established. The
Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) did initially not touch Trier. Warfare reached the city as part of the
French–Habsburg rivalry and the conflict between townspeople and the archbishop
Philipp Christoph von Sötern. The city asked the Spanish government in Luxemburg for help against the bishop's absolutist tendencies in 1630. While Spain sent troops and installed a garrison, the bishop used the aid of French troops to regain Trier two times in 1632 and 1645, interrupted by a surprise Spanish attack in 1635 and 10 years of Spanish occupation and imprisonment of the bishop, an event that served as a pretext to start the
Franco-Spanish War. The cathedral chapter finally disempowered the bishop in 1649 using mercenaries and Lorrain troops against the bishop's French auxiliary forces. Trier experienced peace until 1673 when
French troops besieged and occupied the city. They fortified it heavily and destroyed all churches, abbeys and settlements in front of the city walls for military reasons. Despite their efforts, they were forced to leave by Imperial troops after the
Battle of Konzer Brücke in 1675 In 1684, with the
War of the Reunions, an era of French expansion began. Trier was again captured in 1684; all walls and fortresses were destroyed this time. After Trier and its associated electorate were yet again taken during the
War of Palatinate Succession in 1688, many cities in the electorate were systematically destroyed in 1689 by the French Army. Nearly all castles were blown up and the only bridge across the
Moselle in Trier was burnt. King
Louis XIV of France personally issued the order for these acts of destruction but also gave the command to spare the city of Trier. As the French Army retreated in 1698, it left a starving city without walls and only 2,500 inhabitants. During the
War of the Spanish Succession in 1702, Trier was occupied again by a French army. In 1704-05 an allied
Anglo-
Dutch army commanded by the
Duke of Marlborough passed Trier on its way to France. When the campaign failed, the French came back to Trier in 1705 and stayed until 1714. After a short period of peace, the
War of the Polish Succession started in 1734; the following year Trier was again occupied by the French, who stayed until 1737. The last Prince-Elector,
Clement Wenceslaus of Saxony, relocated to
Koblenz in 1786. In August 1794,
French Republican troops took Trier. This date marked the end of the era of the old electorate. Churches, abbeys and clerical possessions were sold or the buildings put to practical use, such as stables. With the peace treaties of
Basel and
Campo Formio in 1797, German hegemonic powers
Prussia and
Austria ceded all German territories on the left bank of the
Rhine river to France. Trier became a
de facto French city. The
University of Trier was dissolved in the same year. In 1798, it became the capital of the newly founded French
Département de la Sarre. With the
Treaty of Lunéville in 1801, Trier became also a
de jure French city. In 1801,
Napoleon Bonaparte signed a concordate with
Pope Pius VII, thus stopping defamations of clerics and making Trier a
diocese. Its territory was identical with the Département de la Sarre, much smaller than the
Archbishopric of Trier had been until 1794. In 1802, the Frenchman
Charles Mannay became first bishop of the new founded diocese and, in 1803, the first
Holy Mass since 1794 was celebrated in the
Cathedral of Trier. Emperor Napoleon visited Trier in 1804. In this time, French Trier began to prosper. In 1814, the French era ended suddenly as Trier was taken by
Prussian troops. After the defeat of Napoleon, the Franco-German borders of 1792 were restored in the
1814 and
1815 Paris peace treaties. The city was proclaimed part of the
Kingdom of Prussia in 1815 and made part of the
Grand Duchy of the Lower Rhine, with six administrative districts. Trier became seat of one these district administrations, the
Regierungsbezirk Trier. Because of the new political situation and the new
customs frontiers in the West, the economy of Trier began a steady decline that was to last until 1840. The Province of the Lower Rhine was merged into the
Rhine Province in 1822. The influential philosopher and revolutionary
Karl Marx was born in Trier in 1818. His birthplace, the
Karl-Marx-Haus, was opened in 1947 and renovated in 1983. From 1840 on, the situation of Trier began to improve as the neighbouring state of
Luxembourg, an important market for Trier-made products, joined the
German Customs Union in 1842. Trier, with a population of 15,500 at this time, produced mainly
leather,
cloth,
wine and
tobacco. Iron works were founded in Quint near Trier at this time. An important infrastructural improvement was the introduction of a shipping line operating with
paddle-wheel steamers on the
Moselle River, connecting Trier, Koblenz and
Metz. The first railway line, linking Trier with
Saarbrücken and Luxembourg was inaugurated in 1860, followed by the Trier-
Cologne line across the
Eifel in 1871 and the
Moselle Railway to Koblenz in 1879. Minor lines to
Bitburg via
Irrel along the
Sauer River, to
Hermeskeil along the
Ruwer River and the
Moselbahn to
Bullay (near
Zell) were built later. A sign of increasing prosperity were the first
trade fairs in modern Trier in 1840 and 1842. During the
revolutions of 1848 in the German states, Trier also saw protests and conflicts. The city council sent a letter to King
Frederick William IV of Prussia, demanding more civic liberties. The lawyer
Ludwig Simon was elected to represent Trier in the first German
parliament in Frankfurt. After Prussian soldiers killed one citizen and wounded others in a melée, the situation escalated. The people of Trier hoisted
black-red-gold flags as
democratic symbols, rang the church bells, organized a
militia and took away the signs of Prussian rule. A second melée between demonstrators and soldiers, which left two citizens dead, led to a collective outburst of fury. The people began to build barricades and wave the
red flag. There were even reports that a statue of the Prussian king was smashed into pieces. Trier was on the eve of a
civil war when the commander of the VIII Prussian army corps arrived and threatened to shell Trier. After being confronted with superior Prussian military power, the citizens gave up and removed the barricades. Some citizens were jailed for their democratic attitude; Ludwig Simon emigrated like many others and died in
Switzerland. Trier became part of the
German Empire during the Prussian-led
unification of Germany in 1871. ==Second World War==