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ERFURT , a city ofSee also: Germany, in Prussian See also: Saxony, on the See also: Gera, and the railway See also: Halle-Bebra, about midway between See also: Gotha and See also: Weimar, which are 14 M. distant
.
Pop
.
(1875) 48,025; (1905) 100,065
.
The city, which is dominated on the
west by the two citadels of Pet ersbergand Cyriaxburg,is irregularly built, the only feature in its See also: plan, or want of plan, being the See also: Friedrich Wilhelmsplatz, a broad open space of irregular shape abutting on the Petersberg
.
On the See also: south-western See also: side of this square, which contains a monument to the elector See also: Frederick See also: Charles
See also: Joseph of See also: Mainz (1719-1802), is the Domberg, an See also: eminence on which stand, side -by side, the See also: cathedral and the See also: great See also: church of St Severus with its three
See also: spires (14th century)
.
The churches are approached by a See also: flight of See also: forty-eight See also: stone steps, the grouping of the whole mass of buildings being exceedingly impressive
.
The cathedral (Beatae Mariae Virginis) is one of the finest churches in Germany
.
It was begun in the 12th century, but the
See also: nave was rebuilt in the 13th in the See also: Gothic See also: style
.
The magnificent chancel (1349-1372), with the 14th-century crypt below, rests on massive substructures, known as the Cavate
.
The twin towers are set between the chancel and nave
.
The cathedral contains, besides See also: fine 15th-century See also: glass, some very See also: rich portal sculptures and See also: bronze castings, among others the See also: coronation of the Virgin by See also: Peter Vischer
.
In one of its towers is the famous See also: bell, called Maria See also: Gloriosa, which bears the date 1497, and weighs 270 cwt
.
Besides the cathedral and St Severus, which are See also: Roman Catholic, Erfurt possesses several very interesting See also: medieval churches, now Evangelical
.
Among these may be mentioned the Predigerkirche, dating from the latter See also: half of the 12th century; the Reglerkirche, a Romanesque See also: building (restored in 1859) with a r2th-century tower; and the Barfiisserkirche, a Gothic building containing fine 14th-century monuments
.
All these were originally monastic churches
.
Of the former religious houses there survive a Franciscan convent, with a girls' school attached, and an Ursuline convent
.
The Augustinian monastery, in which See also: Luther lived as a friar, is now used as an orphanage, under the name of the Martinsstift
.
The cell of Luther was destroyed by fire in 1872
.
A bronze statue of the reformer was erected in the Anger, the chief street of the See also: town, in 1890
.
At one See also: time Erfurt had a university, of which the charter dated from 1392; but it was suppressed in ,816, and its funds devoted to other purposes, among these being the endowment of an institution founded in 1758 and now called the royal See also: academy of sciences, and the support of the royal library, which now contains 6o,000 volumes and over l000 See also: manuscripts
.
On the W. and S.W. extensive new quarters have grown up within See also: recent years, e.g
.
Hirschbruhl
.
The interior of the town See also: hall (1869-1875) is adorned with legendary and
See also: historical frescoes by Kampfer and Peter See also: Janssen
.
Erfurt possesses also a picture gallery and an antiquarian collection
.
The educational establishments of the town include a gymnasium, a realgymnasium, a realschule, technical See also: schools for building and handicrafts, a high-class commercial school, a school of See also: agriculture, and an academy of See also: music
.
The most notable industry of Erfurt is the culture of See also: flowers and of vegetables, which is very extensively carried on
.
This industry had its origin in the large gardens attached to the monasteries
.
It has also important and growing manufactures of ladies' mantles, boots and shoes, See also: machines, furniture, woollen goods, musical See also: instruments, agricultural machinery and implements, See also: leather, See also: tobacco, chemicals, &c
.
See also: Brewing, See also: bleaching and dyeing are also carried on on a large See also: scale, and there are extensive railway See also: works and a See also: government See also: rifle factory
.
Erfurt (Med
.
Erpesfurt, Erphorde, See also: Lat
.
Erfordia) is a town of great antiquity
.
Its origin is obscure, but in 741 it was sufficiently important for St Boniface to found a bishopric here, which was, however, after the martyrdom of the first See also: bishop, Adolar, in 755, reabsorbed in that of Mainz
.
In 8o5 the place received certain market rights from the emperor Charlemagne
.
Later the overlordship was claimed by the archbishops of Mainz, on the strength of charters granted by the emperor See also: Otto I., and their authority in Erfurt was maintained by a See also: burgrave and an advocatus, the office of the latter becoming in the 12th century hereditary in the See also: family of the See also: counts of See also: Gleichen
.
In spite of many vicissitudes (from 11o9 to 1137, for instance, the town was subject to the landgraves of Thuringia), and of a charter granted in 1242 by the emperor Frederick II., the archbishops succeededin upholding their claims
.
In 1255, however, Archbishop Gerhard I. had toSee also: grant the city municipal rights, the burgraviate disappeared, and Erfurt became practically a
See also: free town
.
Its power was at its height early in the 15th century, when it joined the Hanseatic See also: League
.
It had acquired by force or See also: purchase various countships and other fiefs in the neighbourhood; and ruled a considerable territory; and its See also: wealth was so great that in 1378 it established a university, the first in See also: Europe that em-braced the four faculties
.
By the end of the century, however, its prosperity had sunk owing to the perpetual See also: feud with Mainz, the internecine war in Saxony, and the consequent dwindling of See also: trade
.
By the See also: convention of Amorbach in 1483 the over-lordship of Erfurt was ultimately transferred by the electors of Mainz to Saxony
.
The See also: political and religious quarrels of the 16th century still further depressed the city, in which the reformed See also: religion was established in 1521
.
Then came the See also: Thirty Years' War, during which Erfurt was for a while occupied by the Swedes
.
After the See also: peace of Westphalia (1648) the city was assigned by the emperor to the elector of Mainz, and, on its refusal to submit, it was placed under the See also: ban of the See also: Empire (166o)
.
In 1664 it was captured by the troops of the archbishop of Mainz, and remained in the possession of the electorate till 1802, when it came into the possession of Prussia
.
In 18o8 it was the scene of the memorable ' interview between See also: Napoleon and the emperor See also: Alexander I. of
See also: Russia, at which the See also: kings of See also: Bavaria, Saxony, Westphalia and See also: Wurttemberg also assisted, which is known as the congress of Erfurt
.
Here in 185o the parliament of the See also: short-lived Prussian See also: Northern Union (known as the Erfurt parliament) held its sittings
.
In 1902 the tooth anniversary of the city's incorporation with Prussia was celebrated
.
See W . J . A. von Tettau, Erfurt in seiner Vergangenheit and Gegenwart (Erfurt, r88o) ; C . Beyer, Geschichte der Stadt Erfurt (Erfurt, 190o); and F . W . Kampschulte, Die Universildt Erfurt in ihrem Verh(ltnisse zu dem Humanismus and derSee also: Reformation (1856-1858)
.
For a detailed bibliography see U
.
Chevalier, Repertoire See also: des See also: sources
.
Topo-bibliographie (Montebeliard, 1894--1899), S.V
.
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