Page:EB1911 - Volume 11.djvu/837

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RAILWAYS]
GERMANY
815

The commerce of Germany shows an upward tendency, which progresses pari passu with its greatly increased production. The export of ships from the United Kingdom to the empire decreased during two years, 1903 (£305,682) and 1904 (£365,062), almost to a vanishing point, German yards being able to cope with the demands made upon them for the supply of vessels of all classes, including mercantile vessels and ships of war. In 1905 and subsequent years, however, the degree of employment in German yards increased to such an extent, principally owing to the placing of the Admiralty contracts with private builders, that the more urgent orders for mercantile vessels were placed abroad.

The following tables give the value of trade between the United Kingdom and Germany in 1900 and 1905:—

 Staple Imports into the United Kingdom 
from Germany.
1900. 1905.



  £ £
 Sugar  9,164,573   10,488,085 
 Glass and manufactures 1,078,648  1,108,117 
 Eggs 1,017,119  764,966 
 Cottons and yarn 992,244  1,476,385 
 Woollens and yarn 1,312,671  1,984,475 
 Iron and steel and manufactures 1,012,376  379,479 
 Machinery 411,178  735,536 
 Paper 523,544  528,946 
 Musical instruments 660,777  676,391 
 Toys 644,690  714,628 
 Zinc and manufactures 461,023  673,602 
 Wood and manufactures 1,470,839  1,109,584 
 Chemicals 513,200  735,830 


 Principal Articles exported by 
Great Britain to Germany.
1900. 1905.



  £ £
 Cottons and yarn  3,843,917   4,941,917 
 Woollens and yarn  3,743,842  3,795,591
 Alpaca, &c., yarn  1,022,259  1,325,519
 Wool 742,632   1,691,035
 Ironwork  2,937,055  1,500,414
 Herrings  1,651,441  2,042,483
 Machinery  2,040,797  2,102,835
 Coals, cinders  4,267,172  3,406,535
 New ships  1,592,865  1,377,081

Navigation.—The seamen of Frisia are among the best in the world, and the shipping of Bremen and Hamburg had won a respected name long before a German mercantile marine, properly so called, was heard of. Many Hamburg vessels sailed under charter of English and other houses in foreign, especially Chinese, waters. Since 1868 all German ships have carried a common flag—black, white, red; but formerly Oldenburg, Hanover, Bremen, Hamburg, Lübeck, Mecklenburg and Prussia had each its own flag, and Schleswig-Holstein vessels sailed under the Danish flag. The German mercantile fleet occupies, in respect of the number of vessels, the fourth place—after Great Britain, the United States of America and Norway; but in respect of tonnage it stands third—after Great Britain and the United States only.

The following table shows its distribution on the 1st of January of the two years 1905 and 1908:—

  Baltic Ports. North Sea Ports. Total Shipping.



 Number.   Tonnage.   Number.   Tonnage.   Number.   Tonnage. 







 1905—            
 Sailing vessels 386 19,067  2181 559,436  2567 578,503 
 Steamers 486 236,509  1171 1,537,563  1657 1,774,072 







Totals  872 255,576  3352 2,096,999  4224 2,352,575 
 





 1908—            
 Sailing vessels  394 17,472  2255 516,180  2649 533,652 
 Steamers 521 274,952  140l 1,981,831  1922 2,256,783 
 





Totals  915 292,424  3656  2,498,011  4571  2,790,435 

In 1905, 2136 vessels of 283,171 tons, and in 1908, 2218 vessels of 284,081 tons, belonged to Prussian ports, and the number of sailors of the mercantile marine was 60,616 in 1905 and 71,853 in 1908.

The chief ports are Hamburg, Stettin, Bremen, Kiel, Lübeck, Flensburg, Bremerhaven, Danzig (Neufahrwasser), Geestemünde and Emden; and the number and tonnage of vessels of foreign nationality entering and clearing the ports of the empire, as compared with national shipping, were in 1906:—

 Foreign Ships.  Number
entered
 in Cargo. 
 Tonnage.  Number
cleared
 in Cargo. 
 Tonnage. 





 Danish 5917 1,589,346  5059 1,219,388 
 British 5327  5,129,017  3211  2,552,268 
 Swedish 4891 1,164,431  3317 747,656 
 Dutch 2181 458,401  1973 316,562 
 Norwegian 1565 817,483   720 347,811 
 Russian  720 250,564   439 143,983 

The ports of Hamburg and Bremen, which are the chief outlets for emigration to the United States of America, carry on a vast commercial trade with all the chief countries of the world, and are the main gates of maritime intercourse between the United Kingdom and Germany.

The inland navigation is served by nearly 25,000 river, canal and coasting vessels, of a tonnage of about 4,000,000.

Railways.—The period of railway construction was inaugurated in Germany by the opening of the line (4 m. in length) from Nuremberg to Fürth in 1835, followed by the main line (71 m.) between Leipzig and Dresden, opened throughout in 1839. The development of the railway system was slow and was not conceived on any uniform plan. The want of a central government operated injuriously, for it often happened that intricate negotiations and solemn treaties between several sovereign states were required before a line could be constructed; and, moreover, the course it was to take was often determined less by the general exigencies of commerce than by many trifling interests or desires of neighbouring states. The state which was most self-seeking in its railway politics was Hanover, which separated the eastern and western parts of the kingdom of Prussia. The difficulties arising to Prussia from this source were experienced in a still greater degree by the seaports of Bremen and Hamburg, which were severely hampered by the particularism displayed by Hanover.

The making of railways was from the outset regarded by some German states as exclusively a function of the government. The South German states, for example, have only possessed state railways. In Prussia numerous private companies, in the first instance, constructed their systems, and the state contented itself for the most part with laying lines in such districts only as were not likely to attract private capital.

The development of the German railway system falls conveniently into four periods. The first, down in 1840, embraces the beginnings of railway enterprise. The next, down to 1848, shows the linking-up of various existing lines and the establishment of inter-connexion between the chief towns. The third, down to 1881, shows the gradual establishment of state control in Prussia, and the formation of direct trunk lines. The fourth begins from 1881 with the purchase of practically all the railways in Prussia by the government, and the introduction of a uniform system of interworking between the various state systems. The purchase of the railways by the Prussian government was on the whole equably carried out, but there were several hard cases in the expropriation of some of the smaller private lines.

The majority of the German railways are now owned by the state governments. Out of 34,470 m. of railway completed and open for traffic in 1906, only 2579 m. were the property of private undertakings, and of these about 150 were worked by the state. The bulk of the railways are of the normal 4 ft. 8½ in. gauge. Narrow-gauge (2½ ft.) lines—or light railways—extended over 1218 m. in 1903, and of these 537 m. were worked by the state.

The board responsible for the imperial control over the whole railway system in Germany is the Reichseisenbahnamt