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Archbishopric of Strasbourg : ウィキペディア英語版 | Prince-Bishopric of Strasbourg
| |year_start = 982 |year_end = 1803 | |event_pre = Prince-Bishopric founded |date_pre = before 343 |event_start = Gained autonomy |date_start = 775 |event1 = Imperial immediacy |date_event1 = 982 |event2 = Left-bank territories annexed by France |date_event2 = 1681 |event3 = Annexation recognised by the Holy Roman Empire |date_event3 = 1697 |event_end = Right-bank territories mediatised to Baden |date_end = | |p1 = Duchy of Swabia |image_p1 = |s1 = Early modern France |flag_s1 = Royal Standard of the King of France.svg |s2 = Margraviate of Baden |image_s2 = |capital = Strassburg | |footnotes = }} The Prince-Bishopric of Strassburg (German: ''Fürstbistum Straßburg'') was an ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire from the 13th century until 1803. During the late 17th century, most of its territory was annexed by France; this consisted of the areas on the left bank of the Rhine, around the towns of Saverne, Molsheim, Bevefelden, Dachstein, Dambach, Dossenheim-Kochersberg, Erstein, Kästenbolz, Rhinau, and the ''Mundat'' (consisting of Rouffach, Soultz, and Eguisheim). The annexations were recognized by the Holy Roman Empire in the Treaty of Ryswick of 1697. Only the part of the state that was to the right of the Rhine remained; it consisted of areas around the towns of Oberkirch, Ettenheim, and Oppenau. The remaining territory was secularized to Baden in 1803. == Gallery ==
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