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Leipzig
- Leipzig and his
history
Despite
a great variety of incidents,
the history of Leipzig was mainly
influenced by the way the citizens
saw themselves and their town.
Economic and political independence
had always been first and highest
aim during more than 8 centuries. |
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LEIPZIG
AND TRADE FAIRS
Already
the first document, from about
1165, which certifies Leipzig
as a town, declares also the
right to hold markets. Provided
with special privileges - 1497
and 1507 by the emperor Maximilian
I - the town developed to an
important East-West trading
centre, often called the 'Mother
of all Trade Fairs'. Even in
the 18th century Leipzig became
the most important exhibition
centre in Germany.
1895 the
trade fair was replaced by a
sample fair (Mustermesse - MM),
which was hold twice a year,
in spring and autumn, until
1991 at the historical exhibition
houses (Messehäuser) in
the centre of town and at different
exhibition halls, pavilions
and open areas of the 'Old Fair'
south of the centre.
1996 the
'New Fair of Leipzig' was opened
in the north of the town, with
five modern exhibition halls
and a congress centre, meanwhile
a location for many important
international fairs, congresses
and specialist conferences throughout
the whole year. |
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LEIPZIG
AND BOOKS
Beside
a centre of commerce and fairs
Leipzig is a city of significant
cultural, artistic and scientific
importance.
The Leipzig university,
founded 1409, is the second
oldest in Germany, following
Heidelberg.
Leipzig
is a very famous city of books
and publishers, just giving
you a few names for the publishers:
Baedeker, Reclam, Göschen
and Brockhaus, and Goethe, Schiller,
Gottsched, Gellert, Klopstock
and Lessing for the authors.
Leipzig is the seat of the German
Library and the Central Library
for the Blind. The Academy of
Visual Arts (Hochschule für
Grafik und Buchkunst) is one
of the most important one of
its kind. |


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LEIPZIG
AND MUSIC
There is
no doubt that Leipzig is one
of the most important music
towns in Europe. Bach, Mendelssohn-Bartholdy,
Schumann, Wagner, Lortzing,
and Mahler worked in Leipzig.
Meanwhile the annual Bach festival
is a performance of high international
reputation, attracting visitors
from all over the world.
Not to
forget the 'Thomanerchor', a
famous choir, whose singers
can be heard regularly in the
Thomas church, the place, where
Johann Sebastian Bach worked
from 1723 until 1750, and we
have to mention the 'Gewandhausorchester',
one of the oldest and most famous
orchestra, founded by citizens
of Leipzig in the 18th century. |
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LEIPZIG
AND ITS INDUSTRY IN THE 19TH
CENTURY
After the
Battle of Leipzig (Völkerschlacht)
and the Congress of Vienna great
political and social as well
as technical and industrial
revolutions started.
Nearly
no other period brought greater
changes for Leipzig than the
19th century.
With the
construction of a Saxon-German
railway, which started 1839
with the first German long-distance
railway line from Leipzig to
Dresden, an active industrialization
began in the middle of the 19th
century.
By the incorporation
of former independent country
communities Leipzig spread out
step by step nearly to its size
of today. |


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LEIPZIG
AND ITS ARCHITECTURE
The expansion
of the town was accompanied
by a construction boom. A height
of the building boom was the
new town hall, built from 1899
- 1905 on the area of an old
castle (Pleißenburg) in
the southwest of the city.
An
imposing architecture, reflecting
the self-confidence of the citizens
of Leipzig, not only at that
time.
Today Leipzig
is the capital of historicism,
a result of the construction
boom during the second half
of the 19th century.
During
the 'Gründerzeit' architects
borrowed elements from many
different periods, as from the
Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance
or Baroque, to combine and interpret
them in a new way, just to find
out their own style. Most of
the 15000 cultural monuments
in Leipzig are built during
this time. |
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LEIPZIG
TODAY
During
the last few years great investments
were done for the complete renewal
of the infrastructure and the
reconstruction of many old buildings
in the city. By that the public
became aware of the abundance
of the historic building stock
of Leipzig.
Worth mentioning
are the many passages, arcades,
areaways and alley ways in the
centre of the city, forming
their own network of ways through
the inner-city.
Meanwhile
renowned companies as BMW, Porsche
and DHL chose Leipzig for new
production or logistic sites.
Surely because of the modern
and perfect infrastructure of
the region, but perhaps also
because of the circumstance
that in Leipzig modern age,
tradition and history perfectly
found together.
Beside
all the historic sights, the
museums and cultural events,
Leipzig is an ideal town for
shopping, strolling around,
and relaxing.
You will find
a lot of shopping malls, coffee-houses,
bars, and restaurants, e.g.
the main station, the biggest
'Kopfbahnhof' in Europe, from
1995 till 1997 completely renovated,
nowadays is a shopping mall
and a meeting place on three
floors with more then 100 shops,
cafés and restaurants. |



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