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See also: town of See also: Germany in the See also: kingdom of See also: Saxony, on the Munzbach, near its confluence with the See also: Mulde, 1g m
.
S.W. of See also: Dresden on the railway to Chemnitz, with a branch to See also: Nossen
.
Pop
.
(1905) 30,896
.
Its situation, on the rugged See also: northern slope of the See also: Erzgebirge, is somewhat See also: bleak and uninviting, but the town is generally well built and makes a prosperous impression
.
A See also: part of its See also: ancient walls still remains; the other portions have been converted into public walks and gardens
.
See also: Freiberg is the seat of the general administration of the mines throughout the kingdom, and its celebrated See also: mining See also: academy (Bergakademie), founded in 1765, is frequented by students from all parts of the See also: world
.
Connected with it are extensive collections of minerals and See also: models, a library of 50,000 volumes, and laboratories for chemistry, metallurgy and See also: assaying
.
Among its distinguished scholars it reckons Abraham Gottlob See also: Werner (1750-1817), who was also a professor there, and See also: Alexander von Humboldt
.
Freiberg has extensive manufactures of gold and
See also: silver lace, woollen cloths, See also: linen and See also: cotton goods, iron, copper and See also: brass wares, See also: gunpowder and See also: white-
See also: lead
.
It has also several large breweries
.
In the immediate vicinity are its famous silver and lead mines, See also: thirty in number, and of which the See also: principal ones passed into the See also: property of the See also: state in 1886
.
The See also: castle of Freudenstein or Freistein, as rebuilt by the elector See also: Augustus in 1572, is situated in one of the suburbs and is now used as a military See also: magazine
.
In its grounds a monument was erected to Werner in 1851
.
The See also: cathedral, rebuilt in See also: late See also: Gothic styleafter its destruction by fire in 1484 and restored in 1893, was founded in the 12th century
.
Of the See also: original See also: church a magnificent
See also: German Romanesque doorway, known as the See also: Golden See also: Gate (Goldene Pforte), survives
.
The church contains numerous monuments, among others one to See also: Prince See also: Maurice of Saxony
.
Adjoining the cathedral is the See also: mausoleum (Begrdbniskapelle), built in 1594 in the See also: Italian See also: Renaissance See also: style, in which are buried the remains of See also: Henry the Pious and his successors down to
See also: John
See also: George IV., who died in 1694
.
Of the other four See also: Protestant churches the most noteworthy is the Peterskirche which, with its three towers, is a conspicuous See also: object on the highest point of the town
.
Among the other public buildings are the old town-See also: hall, dating from the 15th century, the antiquarian museum, and the natural
See also: history museum
.
There are a classical and See also: modern, a commercial and an agricultural school, and numerous charitable institutions
.
Freiberg owes its origin to the See also: discovery of its silver mines (c
.
1163)
.
The town, with the castle of Freudenstein, was built by See also: Otto the See also: Rich, See also: margrave of See also: Meissen, in 1175, and its name, which first appears in 1221, is derived from the extensive mining franchises granted to it about that See also: time
.
In all the partitions of the territories of the Saxon See also: house of See also: Wettin, from the latter part of the 13th century onward, Freiberg always remained See also: common property, and it was not till 1485 (the mines not till 1537) that it was definitively assigned to the Albertine See also: line
.
The See also: Reformation was introduced into Freiberg in 1536 by Henry the Pious, who resided here
.
The town suffered severely during the Thirty Years' War, and again during the French occupation from 1806 to 1814, during which time it had to support an army of 700,000 men and find See also: forage for 200,000 horses
.
See H
.
Gerlach, Kleine Chronik von Freiberg (2nd ed., Freiberg, 1898) ; H
.
Ermisch, Das Freiberger Stadtrecht (See also: Leipzig, '889); Errnisch and O
.
Posse, Urkundenbuch der Stadt Freiberg, in Codex diplom
.
See also: Sax. reg
.
(3 vols., Leipzig, 1883–1891); Freibergs See also: Berg- and Hiittenwesen, published by the Bergmannischer Verein (Freiberg, '883); Ledebur, Ober die Bedeutung der Freiberger Bergakademie (ib
.
'9o3); Steche, Bau- and Kunstdenkmdler der Amtshauptmannschaft Freiberg (Dresden, 1884)
.
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