Online Encyclopedia

HARBURG

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 938 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HARBURG  , a seaport

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town of Germany, in the Prussian province of Hanover, on the
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left
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bank of the
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southern arm of the Elbe, 6 m. by
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rail S. of
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Hamburg . Pop . (1885), 26,320; (1905)β€”the
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area of the town having been increased since 1895β€”55,676 . It is pleasantly situated at the
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foot of a lofty range of hills, which here dip down to the
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river, at the junction of the main lines of railway from
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Bremen and Hanover to Hamburg, which are carried to the latter city over two
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grand bridges
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crossing the southern and the
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northern arms of the Elbe . It possesses a
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Roman Catholic and two
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Protestant churches, a palace, which from 1524 to 1642 was the residence of the Harburg
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line of the house of Brunswick, a high-grade
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modern school, a commercial school and a theatre . The leading
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industries are the crushing of palm-kernels and
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linseed and the manufacture of india-rubber,
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phosphates,
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starch, nitrate and jute .
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Machines are manufactured here;
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beer is brewed, and
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shipbuilding is carried on . The
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port is accessible to vessels
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drawing 18 ft. of
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water, and, despite its proximity to Hamburg, its trade has of
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late years shown a remarkable development . It is the chief mart in the
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empire for resin and palm-oil . The Prussian government proposes establishing here a
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free port, on the lines of the Freihafen in Hamburg . Harburg belonged originally to the bishopric of Bremen, and received municipal rights in 1297 . In 1376 it was
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united to the principality of
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Luneburg, along with which it fell in 1705 to Hanover, and in 18o6 to Prussia .

In 1813 and 1814 it suffered considerably from the

French, who then held Hamburg, and who built a
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bridge between the two towns, which remained
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standing till 1816 . See Ludewig, Geschichte
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des Schlosses and der Stadt Harburg (Harburg, 1845); and Hoffmeyer, Harburg and die nachste Umgegend (1885) .

End of Article: HARBURG
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