LEIPZIG

līpˈtsĭkh, city (1994 pop. 490,850), Saxony, E central Germany, at the confluence of the Pleisse, White Elster, and Parthe rivers.

Economy

One of Germany's major industrial, commercial, and transportation centers, it has many rail lines and two airports. Manufactures include textiles, electrical products, automobiles, machine tools, and chemicals. The city harbors major industries in heavy construction and engineering. The area is heavily polluted with sulfur dioxide from nearby coal-processing plants. Important international trade and industrial fairs have been held in the city since the Middle Ages.

Points of Interest

Noteworthy buildings include the Church of St. Thomas (late 15th cent.), which has housed the tomb of Bach since 1950; the Gewandhaus, built in 1884 to replace the earlier structure; the 13th-century Pauline Church; Auerbach's Keller (16th cent.), an inn in which a scene of Goethe's Faust is set; the old city hall (1558); the old stock exchange (1682); the Church of St. John (17th cent.); the large main railroad station; the former German supreme court building (which now houses an art museum); and the opera (1960). In addition to the university (est. 1409), the city has institutes of applied radioactivity and stable isotopes.

History

Originally a Slavic settlement called Lipsk, Leipzig was chartered at the end of the 12th cent. and rapidly developed into a commercial center located at the intersection of important trade routes. A printing industry, which later became important, was started there c.1480. The city was the scene of the famous religious debate between Martin Luther, Carlstadt, and Johann Eck in 1519. In 1539 it accepted the Reformation. Three great battles of the Thirty Years War (two at Breitenfeld and one at Lützen) were fought near Leipzig.

The city was one of the leading cultural centers of Europe in the age of the philosopher and mathematician Leibnitz, who was born there in 1646, and of the composer Johann Sebastian Bach, who was cantor at the Church of St. Thomas from 1723 until his death. The Univ. of Leipzig (founded 1409) became one of the most important in Germany. In the 18th cent. Gottsched, Gellert, Schiller, and many others made Leipzig a literary center; the young Goethe studied there in 1765. The city's musical reputation reached its peak in the 19th and early 20th cent. Felix Mendelssohn, who died there in 1847, made the Gewandhaus concerts (begun in the 18th cent. in a former guildhouse and still continuing) internationally famous. Robert Schumann worked in Leipzig, Richard Wagner was born there in 1813, and the Leipzig Conservatory (founded by Mendelssohn in 1842–43) became one of the world's best-known musical academies.

The battle of Leipzig, Oct. 16–19, 1813, also called the Battle of the Nations, was a decisive victory of the Austrian, Russian, and Prussian forces over Napoleon I. On Oct. 16 the Prussians under General Blücher defeated the French under Auguste de Marmont at Möckern, near Leipzig. A peace offer by the vastly outnumbered French army was rejected on the following day while the Allies closed in. On Oct. 18 the French were driven to the gates of Leipzig, and most of their Saxon and Württemberg auxiliaries (but not the king of Saxony himself) passed over to the enemy camp. Leipzig was stormed on Oct. 19, and Napoleon's forces began their flight across Germany and beyond the Rhine. It is estimated that 120,000 men (of both sides) were killed or wounded in the battle. Allied losses were heavier than those of the French. The battle is commemorated by a large monument in the city.

Until World War II, Leipzig was the center of the German book and music publishing industry, and the center of the European trade in furs and smoked foods. The city (including the book-trade quarter) was badly damaged in World War II. In Oct., 1989, Leipzig was the site of the largest demonstration against the East German government since 1953; the demonstration was instrumental in the downfall of the Communist government and the subsequent reunification of Germany.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Leipzig
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books on: Leipzig  - 14515 results

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Jahresbericht der Gesellschaft der Armenfreunde zu Leipzig, nos. 64 1911 and 65 1912 . Jahresbericht der Handelskammer zu Leipzig, Jahre 1905. Leipzig: Handelskammer zu Leipzig, 1905. Jahresbericht der Handelskammer zu...
...councils to meet with high officials. 65 If Leipzig suffered neglect from high party and government...Indeed, Stasi leaders long regarded Leipzig as second only to Berlin in being a center...had built up a large operation in the Leipzig District. The district headquarters in...
...Composition Dresden, 1728 , Johann Gottfried Walther Musicalisches Lexicon Leipzig, 1732 , and Lorenz Christoph Mizlers annotated German translation of Fux Gradus ad Parnassum Leipzig, 1742 . At the same time, he himself apparently never engaged in...
...Science , Boston, 1917. Meyer, E. von, Geschichte der Chemie , Leipzig, 1914. Ornstein, M., The Role of the Scientific Societies...Universal Lexicon aller Wissenschaften und Kunste , Halle and Leipzig, 1732- 1750, 64 volumes.
190 Robert Leipzig 7/7/1839 191 Robert Leipzig 7/10/1839 192 Clara Bougival 7/10/1839 193 Clara Bougival 7/12/1839 194 Robert Leipzig 7/12/1839 195 Clara Bougival 7/15/1839 196 Robert...
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journal articles on: Leipzig  - 1725 results

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Music Printing in Leipzig during the Thirty Years War by Stephen...Hermann Schein, who was Thomaskantor in Leipzig between 1616 and 1630, declared in 1617...article focuses on the music printers of Leipzig between 1590 and 1660. This period was...
...Literatur in der Universitatsbibliothek Leipzig, 1500-1939: Eine Systematische Bibliographie...Literatur in der Universitatsbibliothek Leipzig, 1500-1939: Eine systematische Bibliographie...Richard Teschke, and Katharina Zinn. Leipzig: LEIPZIGER UNIVERSITATSVERLAG, 2003...
...PUNISHMENT, RELIGION, AND PATRIARCHY IN LEIPZIG, 1700-1730. by Tanya Kevorkian...1700 and 1704 the city council of Leipzig, in central Germany, presided over...background of poverty and crime in Leipzig; of the city councils ideology regarding...
...Piety: Religion, Society, and Music in Leipzig, 1650-1750. by Mark A. Peters Tanya...Piety: Religion, Society, and Music in Leipzig, 1650-1750. Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing...explores three main themes in relation to Leipzig during the years 1650-1750: religion...
Authority and Upheaval in Leipzig, 1910-1920: The Story of a Relationship...Menninger Authority and Upheaval in Leipzig, 1910-1920. The Story of a Relationship...Germany. First, Sean Dobsons focus on Leipzig and Saxony makes an important contribution...
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magazine articles on: Leipzig  - 759 results

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Uwe Scholz and the Leipzig Ballet. by RITA FELCIANO Ten years...Uwe Scholz has succeeded in putting Leipzig Ballet on a firm footing. When German...accepted the artistic directorship of Leipzig Ballet in 1991, it was the opportunity...
Mein Leipzig. by Suzanne Ruta On June 29, 1912...brought a shy, tongue-tied Franz Kafka to Leipzig to meet a daring young editor named Kurt...OMITTED Peter Hinke, a plump, cheerful Leipzig native, who founded the publishing house...
Leipzig Gewandhaus. by Evan Eisenberg Wagner writes...prevalent among musicians, not only in Leipzig but elsewhere, that this work had been...or less annual event in his home town of Leipzig. In My Life he remembers the rehearsal...
...Piety: Religion, Society, and Music in Leipzig, 1650-1750 by Arthur Lawrence BAROQUE PIETY: RELIGION, SOCIETY, AND MUSIC IN LEIPZIG, 1650-1750. Tanya Kevorkian. Ashgate...Burlington, VT 05401). Readers interested in Leipzig church music and the services at which...
Die Orgeln in der Thomaskirche Zu Leipzig DIE ORGELN IN DER THOMASKIRCHE ZU LEIPZIG, ed. Christian Wolff. Leipzig: Evengelische Verlagsanstalt, 2005. 144 pp., ill. ISBN 3-374-02300-2. euro9.80. J.S. Bach was cantor in Leipzig...
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`Leipzig is coming!: In constructing future...proud of past by Richard Slusser To call Leipzig a boom town takes emphasis away from its...trade, music, religion and politics, but Leipzig is second only to Berlin in having the...
48 Hours in LEIPZIG; ..and a Trip to Colditz. STEPPING out from the shadows of Communism, Leipzig is bringing colour back into its life. The...15-minute journey costs pounds 2.30. Leipzig is a city of tucked-away squares and hidden...
6 Things You Must Do In. Leipzig. LEIPZIG - once a bleak and forbidding town on the wrong side of the...trip on a Venetian gondola ... 1 ...TOP TABLE I REACHED Leipzig by high-speed train from Berlin, which took an hour over...
Directors Cut - John Leffler, Bach at Leipzig. Director John Leffler talks about Benet Academys production of "Bach at Leipzig." The inspiration for choosing "Bach at Leipzig" came from my participation in the Interdisciplinary Institute...
Directors Cut - John Leffler, Bach at Leipzig. Director John Leffler talks about Benet AcademyEs production of "Bach at Leipzig." The inspiration for choosing "Bach at Leipzig" came from my participation in the Interdisciplinary Institute...
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encyclopedia articles on: Leipzig  - 141 results

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LEIPZIG lip tsikh, city (1994 pop. 490,850...Originally a Slavic settlement called Lipsk, Leipzig was chartered at the end of the 12th cent...Breitenfeld and one at Lutzen ) were fought near Leipzig. The city was one of the leading cultural...
LEIPZIG, UNIVERSITY OF at Leipzig, Germany; founded 1409 when German scholars withdrew from Charles...Since German reunification, it is again known as the Univ. of Leipzig. Its divisions include economics, law, philosophy, history...
...Meissen territories, including Dresden and Leipzig. Duke Maurice of Saxony, a grandson...The universities of Wittenberg and Leipzig had long been leading intellectual centers, and 18th-century Leipzig led in the rise of German literature...
...music director of the church of St. Thomas, Leipzig, and of its choir school; he remained in Leipzig until his death. Compositions Since few...John Passion was performed (1723) at Leipzig when Bach was a candidate for the position...
...nits, 1646 1716, German philosopher and mathematician, b. Leipzig. Although known primarily as a philosopher, Leibnizs scholarship...him as the founder of symbolic logic. Life After studying at Leipzig, his native city, and at Jena, he became a doctor of law...
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