Apennins

      Département des Apennins
      Département of First French Empire

      1805–1815
      Flag Coat of arms
      Flag Coat of arms
      Location of Apennins
      Admimistrative map of French Empire in 1812. Apennins is on the lower right corner.
      Capital Chiavari
      History
       -  Annexion from the Ligurian Republic 4 June 1805
       -  Congress of Vienna 1815
      Area
       -  1810[1] 4,160 km2(1,606 sq mi)
      Population
       -  1810[1] 214,746 
      Density 51.6 /km2  (133.7 /sq mi)
      Political subdivisions 3 Arrondissements[1]

      Apennins was a département of the First French Empire in present-day Italy. Named after the Apennine Mountains, it was formed in 1805, when the Ligurian Republic (formerly the Republic of Genoa) was annexed to France. Its capital was Chiavari.

      The département was disbanded after the defeat of Napoleon in 1814. It was followed by a brief restoration of the Ligurian Republic, but at the Congress of Vienna the old territory of Genoa was awarded to the Kingdom of Sardinia. Its territory is now divided between the Italian provinces of Genoa, La Spezia, Massa-Carrara and Parma.

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      Last modified on 27 February 2013, at 03:39