LÜBECK

lüˈbĕk, city (1994 pop. 217,270), Schleswig-Holstein, central Germany, on the Trave River near its mouth on the Baltic Sea. It is a major port and a commercial and industrial center; the port is the city's primary employer. Among its industries are shipbuilding, metalworking, food processing, and manufacturing of ceramics, wood products, and medical instruments. Known in the 11th cent., Lübeck was destroyed by fire in 1138 but was refounded in 1143. It was acquired and chartered by Henry the Lion c.1158; the charter, which granted far-reaching communal rights, was copied by more than 100 other cities in the Baltic area. In 1226, Frederick II made Lübeck a free imperial city. Ruled by a merchant aristocracy, it soon rose to great commercial prosperity, acquired hegemony over the Baltic trade, and headed the Hanseatic League. However, the rise of the maritime powers of Denmark and Sweden and the revolution in commerce caused by the discovery and development of the Americas resulted in the decline of the League and, with it, of Lübeck. In 1630 the last of the Hanseatic diets was held there. The city escaped the ravages of the Thirty Years War (1618–48), and, in spite of a decline in Lübeck's power, its patrician merchant families continued to prosper. In the French Revolutionary Wars, Lübeck was sacked by French troops in 1803, and, after the Prussian army under Blücher capitulated (1806) to the French at nearby Ratekau, the city was occupied by the French. Lübeck, governed by a senate, joined the North German Confederation and later the German Empire as a free Hanseatic city; it retained that status until 1937, when it was incorporated into Schleswig-Holstein. The opening (1900) of the Elbe-Lübeck Canal (formerly called the Elbe-Trave Canal) helped increase Lübeck's trade. Despite heavy damage by bombing in World War II, the inner city of Lübeck remains one of the finest examples of medieval Gothic architecture in N Europe. Among the buildings that have been restored are the magnificent city hall (13th–15th cent.); the churches of St. Catherine and St. Jacob (both: 14th cent.); the Hospital and Church of the Holy Ghost (13th cent.); the Holstentor (completed 1477), an imposing city gate flanked by two round towers; the cathedral (founded in 1173); the large brick Church of St. Mary (13th–14th cent.); and many of the old patrician residences. There are also several museums in the city. Dietrich Buxtehude, the composer and organist, was active in Lübeck from 1668 to 1707. The life and decline of a Lübeck patrician family is the subject of the novel Buddenbrooks, by Thomas Mann, who, with his brother Heinrich Mann, was born in the city. The city of Lübeck should not be confused with the former bishopric of Lübeck, whose rulers resided from c.1300 at nearby Eutin.

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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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books on: LUbeck  - 2082 results

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...I. LUBECK RECEIVES AN IMPERIAL VISITOR...Hesitation of Lubeck , 75 -- Procession from St. Gertrudes Chapel , 77 - Lubeck Hospitality , 79 -- Records of...
...aided by cobelligerents Poland and Lubeck, fought a war against Sweden known as...squared off at sea.2 The decision of Lubeck and Poland to join Denmarks military undertaking...Saxony and the free Imperial city of Lubeck were Imperial estates. The official...
...Recovery 93 The Hanseatic Towns: Lubeck, Hamburg, Bremen 123 The Failed...Reproduced with permission. Fig. 15. Lubeck. A panoramic view of the city with the...Art, Sutherland Collection, C IV* 242: Lubeck, View, Hogenberg?. Reproduced with permission...
...failed. 8. 1933. The people of Lubeck demonstrating against the Nazis. 9...I am not a Berliner. I was born in Lubeck, I spent many years in foreign countries...recollection. I know that he was born in Lubeck just before Christmas 1913, on December...
...East. In northern Europe enterprising German merchants of Lubeck, Stettin and Danzig were laboring to make the Baltic a German...the estuary of the Elbe, Bremen at the mouth of the Weser, Lubeck in the angle of the Baltic, and Brunswick and Halle in inland...
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journal articles on: LUbeck  - 188 results

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...Practice for Everyone? by Sally Lubeck "As the number and type of early...structure our professional lives (Apple, 1992; Lubeck, 1994). Paradigms and Paradigm Shifts...understandings in ways that make sense to them (Lubeck Post, in press). Human beings are subjects...
...Circle. by Jackie Post , Sally Lubeck Traditionally, university researchers...2) "The Social Context of Head Start" (Lubeck, 1996-98). (3) It is important to note...Jackie Post is Instructor and Sally Lubeck is Associate Professor, Educational Studies...
...Cross-National Perspective: Introduction by Sally Lubeck Ms. Lubeck, guest editor of this special section, points out...New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1986). SALLY LUBECK is an associate professor in the School of Education...
...and Care In England. by Sally Lubeck England has universal health care...Croom Helm, 1985), pp. 139-64; and Sally Lubeck, "Nested Contexts," in Lois Weis, ed...National Academy Press, 1998). SALLY LUBECK, guest editor of this Kappan special section...
Is DAP for Everyone? A Response. by Sally Lubeck In Peter Hoegs novel Smillas Sense of Snow, the narrator and central character observes that it is easier to believe a simple...
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magazine articles on: LUbeck  - 56 results

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Lubeck logic by Jurgen Stock The new concert and congress hall of Lubeck does not attempt to conform to the dense medieval texture...with the late twentieth century. The island heart of Lubeck retains much of the texture of the medieval Hansa city...
...lovely," and the German port city of Lubeck in 1400 was one of the glories of Europe...from the devastation of the Black Plague, Lubeck and its neighbor, Hamburg, had roughly...Sweden. They could have been twin cities: Lubeck connected to the Baltic Sea via the Trave...
...Corby Kummer On a recent trip to Lubeck Germany, Kummer ate local herring and...intensely flavored I recently went to Lubeck, the northernGerman city on the Baltic...kitchen of the beautiful Baroque mansion in Lubeck where he and his wife, Heike, live and...
...Corby Kummer I recently went to Lubeck, the northern-German city on the Baltic...kitchen of the beautiful Baroque mansion in Lubeck where he and his wife, Heike, live and...in Lachswehrs history--and, indeed, in Lubecks. Two of Germanys sprightliest odes to...
...Roman Emperor Frederick II had declared Lubeck an Imperial City, owing allegiance only...In the late 12th century Hamburg and Lubeck had begun to trade together along the...interested in the matters to be discussed. Lubeck was used as a meeting place more often...
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newspaper articles on: LUbeck  - 70 results

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Travel: Look at Lubeck; Discover Citys Hidden Charms. Byline: By Samantha Booth LUBECK is probably not many peoples first choice when...his original works are on show. But, of course, Lubeck is also a great base for seeing another of Germanys...
...alliance. The original cities of the league were Lubeck, Wismar and Rostock, with Lubeck as the leader. The league reached its summit of...league, although it was never formally dissolved. Lubeck, Hamburg, Bremen, Wismar and Rostock continue...
...available flight. But passengers at Hamburg Lubeck airport were told that the next available...mornings flight from Prestwick to Hamburg Lubeck was cancelled because of technical problems...meant that the return flight from Hamburg Lubeck to Prestwick was also cancelled. We are...
...four-storey building in the northern port of Lubeck. One terrified mother jumped with her...saw petrol bombs being thrown inside. Lubecks mayor, Michael Bouteiller, said: `Its...people died. At Molln, 12 miles south of Lubeck, in 1992, a Turkish woman and two girls...
...Inspirational Interiors from Northern Europe, takes the reader on a lavish visual tour of the Baltic, from St Petersburg to Lubeck in Germany, via improbable spots such as Juodkrante in Lithuania and Ekskr, a small island off Finland. The decorative schemes...
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encyclopedia articles on: LUbeck  - 23 results

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LUBECK lu bek, city (1994 pop. 217,270), Schleswig-Holstein...products, and medical instruments. Known in the 11th cent., Lubeck was destroyed by fire in 1138 but was refounded in 1143...other cities in the Baltic area. In 1226, Frederick II made Lubeck a free imperial city. Ruled by a merchant aristocracy...
...Germany. Kiel (the capital and chief port), Lubeck, Flensburg, and Neumunster are the major...popular tourist resorts, while Eutin, Lubeck, and Schleswig are historic centers...province to Denmark. The former free city of Lubeck and the Lubeck district of Oldenburg were...
...was delayed because he was a Lutheran. The German city of Lubeck invaded Denmark to reinstate the deposed Christian II , and...Christian III allied with Gustavus I of Sweden to defeat Lubeck in 1536. That victory broke the power of the Hanseatic League...
...and the district (but not the city) of Lubeck . Oldenburg proper is a low-lying, fertile...Augustus of Holstein-Gottorp, bishop of Lubeck, who assumed (1777) the ducal title. Peter...recovered Oldenburg and the bishopric of Lubeck in 1813 and subsequently acquired Birkenfeld...
MANN, THOMAS to mas man, 1875 1955, German novelist and essayist, the outstanding German novelist of the 20th cent., b. Lubeck; brother of Heinrich Mann . A writer of great intellectual breadth, Mann developed literary themes that not only delved into...
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