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EISENACH , a See also: town of See also: Germany, second capital of the See also: grand-duchy of Saxe-See also: Weimar-Eisenach, lies at the See also: north-west See also: foot of the Thuringian See also: forest, at the confluence of the Nesse and Horsel, 32 M. b.y See also: rail W. from See also: Erfurt
.
Pop
.
(1905) 35,123
.
The town mainly consists of a long street, See also: running from See also: east to west
.
Off this are the market square, containing the grand-ducal palace, built in 1742, where the duchess Helene of See also: Orleans Iong resided, the town-
See also: hall, and the
See also: late See also: Gothic St Georgenkirche; and the square on which stands the Nikolaikirche, a See also: fine Romanesque See also: building, built about 1150 and restored in 1887
.
Noteworthy are also the Klemda, a small See also: castle dating from 126o; the Lutherhaus, in which the reformer stayed with the Cotta See also: family in 1498; the See also: house in which See also: Sebastian Bach was See also: born, and that (now a museum) in which Fritz Reuter lived (1863-1874)
.
There are monuments to the two former in the town, while the resting-place of the latter in the cemetery is marked by a less pretentious memorial
.
Eisenach has a school of forestry, a school of design, a classical school (Gymnasium) and See also: modern school (Realgymnasium), a See also: deaf and dumb school, a teachers' seminary, a theatre and a Wagner museum
.
The most important See also: industries of the town are worsted-spinning, See also: carriage and See also: wagon building, and the making of See also: colours and pottery
.
Among others are the manufacture of cigars, cement pipes, iron-See also: ware and See also: machines, alabaster ware, shoes, See also: leather, &c., See also: cabinet-making, See also: brewing, granite See also: quarrying and working, tile-making, and saw- and corn-milling
.
The natural beauty of its surroundings and the extensive forests of the See also: district have of late years attracted many summer residents
.
Magnificently situated on a precipitous See also: hill, 600 ft. above the town to the
See also: south, is the historic See also: Wartburg (q.v.), the See also: ancient castle of the landgraves of Thuringia, famous as the scene of the contest of Minnesingers immortalized in Wagner's Tannhduser, and as the place where See also: Luther, on his return from the See also: diet of See also: Worms in 1521, was kept in hiding and made his See also: translation of the See also: Bible
.
On a high See also: rock adjacent to the See also: Wart-See also: burg are the ruins of the castle of Madelstein
.
Eisenach (Isenacum) was founded in 1070 by See also: Louis II. the Springer, landgrave of Thuringia, and its
See also: history during the See also: middle ages was closely bound up with that of the Wartburg, the seat of the landgraves
.
The Klemda, mentioned above, was built by See also: Sophia (d
.
1284), daughter of the landgrave Louis IV., and wife of Duke See also: Henry II. of
See also: Brabant, to defend the town against Henry III., See also: margrave of See also: Meissen, during the succession contest that followed the extinction of the male See also: line of the Thuringian landgraves in 1247
.
The principality of Eisenach See also: fell to the Saxon house of See also: Wettin in 1440, and in the See also: partition of 1485 formed See also: part of the territories given to the Ernestine line
.
It was a See also: separate Saxon duchy from 1596 to 1638, from 164o
.
to 164.4, and again from 1662 to 1741, when it finally fell to Saxe-Weimar
.
The town of Eisenach, by reason of its associations, has been a favourite centre for the religious propaganda of Evangelical Germany, and since 1852 it has been the scene of the See also: annual See also: conference of the See also: German Evangelical See also: Church, known as the Eisenach conference
.
See Trinius, Eisenach and Umgebung (
See also: Minden, 1900) ; and H
.
A
.
Daniel, Deutschland (See also: Leipzig, 1895), and further references in U
.
Chevalier, " Repertoire See also: des See also: sources," &c., Topo-bibliogr
.
( See also: Montbeliard, 1894-1899), S.V
.
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