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ALTONA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 765 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALTONA  , a

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town of Germany, in the Prussian province of Schleswig-Holstein, on the right
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bank of the Elbe immediately west of
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Hamburg . Though administratively distinct, the two cities so closely adjoin as virtually to form one whole . Lying higher than Hamburg, Altona enjoys a purer and healthier atmosphere . It has spacious squares and streets, among the latter the Palmaille, a stately avenue ending on a terrace about
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ioo ft. above the Elbe, whence a
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fine view is obtained of the
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river and the lowlands beyond . Of the six Evangelical churches, the Hauptkirche (parish church), with a lofty steeple, is note-worthy . The main thoroughfares are embellished by several striking monuments, notably the memorials of the
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wars of 1864 and 1870,
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bronze statues of the emperor William I. and Bismarck and the column of Victory (Siegessaule) . The museum (19o1) is an imposing
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building in the German Renaissance style and contains, in addition to a valuable library, ethnographical and natural
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history collections . Its site is that formerly occupied by the
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terminus of the Schleswig-Holstein
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railways, but a hand-some central station lying somewhat farther to the N., connected with Hamburg by an elevated railway, now accommodates all the
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traffic and provides through communication with the main Prussian railway systems . There are also fine municipal and judicial buildings, a theatre (under the same management as the Stadttheater in Hamburg), a gymnasium, technical
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schools, a school of navigation and a hospital . In respect of its
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local
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industries Altona has manufactures of
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tobacco and cigars, of machinery, woollens, cottons and chemicals .. There are also extensive breweries, tanneries and
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soap and oil
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works . Altona carries on an extensive maritime trade with
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Great Britain, France and
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America, but it has by no means succeeded in depriving Hamburg of its commercial superiority—indeed, so dependent is it upon its
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rival that most of its business is trans-acted on the Hamburg
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exchange, while the magnificent
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ware-houses on the Altona river bank are to a large extent occupied by the goods of Hamburg merchants .

Since 1888, when Altona joined the imperial

Zollverein, approximately
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half a million sterling has been spent upon harbour improvement works . The exports and imports resemble those of Hamburg . In the ten years 1871-188o, the
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port was entered on an
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average annually by 737 vessels of 67,735 tons, in 1881–1890 by 6o8 vessels of 154,713 tons, and in 1891–1898 by 839 vessels of 253,384 tons . In 1890 the populous suburbs of Ottensen to the W., where the poet Gottlieb Klopstock lies buried,Bahrenfeld, Othmarschen and Ovelgonne were incorporated . Without these suburbs the growth of the town may be seen from the following figures: (1864, when it ceased to be Danish) 53,039; (188o) 91,049; (1885) 104,717; (1890) together with the four suburbs, 143,249; (1895) 148,944; (1900) 161,508; (1905) 168,301 . Altona is the headquarters of the IX . German army corps . The name Altona is said to be derived from allzu-nah (" all too near "), the Hamburgers' designation for an
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inn which in the
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middle of the 16th century
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lay too close to their territory . For a long time this was the only house in the locality . When in 164o Altona passed to Denmark it was a small fishing
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village . Its rise to its
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present position is mainly due to the fostering care of the Danish kings who conferred certain customs privileges and exemptions upon it with a view to making it a formidable rival to Hamburg . In 1713 it was burnt by the Swedes, but rapidly recovered from this disaster, and despite the trials of the
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Napoleonic wars, gradually increased in prosperity .

In 1853, owing to the withdrawal by Denmark of its customs privileges, its trade waned . In 1864 Altona was occupied in the name of the German

Confederation, passed to Prussia after the war of 1866, and 1888 together with Hamburg joined the Zollverein, while retaining certain
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free trade rights over the Freihafengebiet which it shares with Hamburg and
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Wandsbek . See Wichmann, Geschichte Altonas (2 vols., Alt., 1896) ; Ehrenberg & Stahl, Altonas topographische Entwickelung (Alt., 1894) .

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