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HAMELN , a See also: town of See also: Germany, in the Prussian province of See also: Hanover, at the confluence of the Weser and Hamel, 33 M
.
S.W. of Hanover, on the See also: line to Altenbeken, which here effects a junction with See also: railways to Lohne and See also: Brunswick
.
Pop
.
(1905) 20,736
.
It has a venerable appearance and has many interesting and picturesque houses
.
The chief public buildings of See also: interest are the minster, dedicated to St Boniface and restored in 187o–1875; the town See also: hall; the so-called Rattenfangerhaus (rat-catc'her's
See also: house) with mural frescoes illustrating the See also: legend (see below); and the Hochzeitshaus (See also: wedding house) with beautiful gables
.
There are classical, See also: modern and commercial See also: schools
.
The See also: principal See also: industries are the manufacture of paper, See also: leather, chemicals and See also: tobacco, See also: sugar refining, See also: shipbuilding and See also: salmon fishing
.
By the steamboats on the Weser there is communication with Karlshafen and See also: Minden
.
In See also: order to avoid the dangerous See also: part of the See also: river near the town a channel was cut in 1734, the repairing and deepening of which, begun in 1868, was completed in 1873
.
The Weser is here crossed by an iron suspension See also: bridge 83o ft. in length, supported by a pier erected on an See also: island in the See also: middle of the river
.
The older name of Hameln was Hameloa or Hamelowe, and the town owes its origin to an abbey
.
It existed as a town as early as the 11th century, and in 1259 it was sold by the abbotofSee also: Fulda to the See also: bishop of Minden, afterwards passing under the See also: protection of the See also: dukes of Brunswick
.
About 1540 the See also: Reformation gained an entrance into the town, which was taken by both parties during the See also: Thirty Years' War
.
In 1757 it capitulated to the French, who, however, vacated it in the following See also: year
.
Its fortifications were strengthened in 1766 by the erection of Fort See also: George, on an See also: eminence to the west of the town, across the river
.
On the capitulation of the Hanoverian army in 1803 Hameln See also: fell into the hands of the French; it was retaken by the Prussians in 18o6, but, after the See also: battle of See also: Jena, again passed to the French, who dismantled the fortifications and incorporated the town in the See also: kingdom of Westphalia
.
In 1814 it again became Hanoverian, but in 1866 fell with that kingdom to Prussia
.
Legend of the Pied See also: Piper.—Hameln is famed as the scene of the myth of the piper of Hameln
.
According to the legend, the town in the year 1284 was infested by a terrible plague of rats
.
One See also: day there appeared upon the scene a piper clad in a fantastic suit, who offered for a certain sum of See also: money to charm all the vermin into the Weser
.
His conditions were agreed to, but after he had fulfilled his promise the inhabitants, on the ground that he was a sorcerer, declined to fulfil their part of the bargain, whereupon on the 26th of See also: June he reappeared in the streets of the town, and putting his See also: pipe to his lips began a soft and curious strain
.
This See also: drew all the See also: children after him and he led them out of the town to the Koppelberg See also: hill, in the
See also: side of which a door suddenly opened, by which he entered and the children after him, all but one who was lame and could not follow fast enough to reach the door before it shut again
.
Some trace the origin of the legend to the Children's Crusade of 1211; others to an abduction of children; and others to a dancing See also: mania which seized upon some of the See also: young See also: people of Hameln who See also: left the town on a mad pilgrimage from which they never returned
.
For a considerable See also: time the town dated its public documents from the event
.
The See also: story is the subject of a poem by Robert See also: Browning, and also of one by See also: Julius See also: Wolff
.
Curious evidence that the story rests on a basis of truth is given by the fact that the Koppelberg is not one of the imposing hills by which Hameln is surrounded, but no more than a slight See also: elevation of the ground, barely high enough to hide the children from view as they left the town
.
See C
.
Langlotz, Geschichte der Stadt Hameln(Hameln, 1888 fol.); See also: Sprenger, Geschichte der Stadt Hameln (1861); O
.
Meinardus, Der historische See also: Kern der Rattenfangersage (Hameln, 1882) ; Jostes, Der Rattenfanger von Hameln (See also: Bonn, 1885) ; and S
.
See also: Baring-See also: Gould, Curious Myths of the Middle Ages (1868)
.
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