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GOSLAR , a See also: town of See also: Germany, in the Prussian province of See also: Hanover, romantically situated on the Gose, an affluent of the Oker, at the See also: north See also: foot of the Harz, 24 M
.
S.E. of See also: Hildesheim and 31 M
.
S:W. from See also: Brunswick, by See also: rail
.
Pop
.
(1905) 17,817
.
It is surrounded by walls and is of See also: antique appearance
.
Among the noteworthy buildings are the " Zwinger," a tower with walls 23 ft. thick; the market See also: church, in the Romanesque
See also: style, restored since its partial destruction by fire in 1844, and containing the town archives and a library in which are some of See also: Luther's See also: manuscripts; the old town See also: hall (Rathaus), possessing many interesting antiquities; the Kaiserworth (formerly the hall of the tailors'. gild and now an
See also: inn) with the statues of eight of the See also: German emperors; and the Kaiserhaus, the See also: oldest secular See also: building in Germany, built by the emperor See also: Henry III. before 1050 and often the residence of his successors
.
This was restored in 1867-1878 at the cost of the Prussian
See also: government, and was adorned with frescoes portraying events in German See also: history
.
Other buildings of See also: interest are:—the small See also: chapel which is all that remains since 1820 of the old and famous See also: cathedral of St See also: Simon and St See also: Jude founded by Henry III. about 1040, containing among other See also: relics of the cathedral . an old altar supposed to be that of the idol Kredo which formerly stood on the Burgberg near See also: Neustadt-See also: Harzburg; the church of the former See also: Benedictine monastery of St Mary, or Neuwerk, of the 12th century, in the Romanesque style, with See also: wall-paintings of considerable merit; and the See also: house of the bakers' gild now an hotel, the birthplace of Marshal Saxe
.
There are four Evangelical churches, a See also: Roman Catholic church, a synagogue, several See also: schools, a natural science museum, containing a collection of Harz minerals, the Fenkner museum of antiquities' and a number of small See also: foundations
.
The town has equestrian statues of the emperor See also: Frederick I. and of the German emperor See also: William I
.
The population is chiefly occupied in connexion with the
See also: sulphur, copper, See also: silver and other mines in the neighbourhood
.
The town has also been long noted for itsSee also: beer, and possesses some small manufactures and a considerable See also: trade in fruit
.
Goslar is believed to have been founded by Henry the See also: Fowler about 920, and when in the See also: time of See also: Otto the See also: Great the See also: mineral treasures in the neighbourhood were discovered it increased rapidly in prosperity
.
It was often the meeting-place of German diets, twenty-three of which are said to have been held here, and was frequently the residence of the emperors
.
About 1350 it joined the Hanseatic See also: League
.
In the See also: middle of the 14th century, the famous Goslar statutes, a See also: code of See also: laws, which was adopted by many other towns, was published
.
The town was unsuccessfully besieged in 1625, during the See also: Thirty Years' War, but was taken by the Swedes in 1632 and nearly destroyed by fire
.
Further conflagrations in 1728 and 1780 gave a severe See also: blow to its prosperity
.
It was a See also: free town till 1802, when it
came into the possession of Prussia
.
In 1807 it was joined to Westphalia, in 1816 to Hanover and in 1866 it was, along with Hanover, re-See also: united to Prussia
.
See T
.
Erdmann, Die alte Kaiserstadt Goslar and ihre Umgebung in Geschichte, See also: Sage and Bild (Goslar, 1892); Crusius, Geschichte der vormals kaiserlichen freien Reichstadt Goslar (1842—1843); A
.
Wolfstieg, Verfassungsgeschichte von Goslar (Berlin, 1885); T
.
Asche, Die Kaiserpfalz zu Goslar (1892); See also: Neuburg, Goslars Bergbau bis 1552 (Hanover, 1892); and the Urkundenbuch der Stadt Goslar, edited by G
.
See also: Bode (See also: Halle, 1893-1900)
.
For the Goslarische Statuten see the edition published by GSschen (Berlin, 1840)
.
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