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LANGENSALZA , a See also: town in the Prussian province of See also: Saxony, on the See also: Salza, about 20 M
.
N
.
W. from See also: Erfurt
.
Pop
.
(1905) 12,545
.
Near it are the remains of the old See also: Benedictine monastery of Homburg or Hohenburg, where the emperor See also: Henry IV. defeated the
See also: Saxons in 1075
.
The manufacture of See also: cloth is the chief industry; lace, See also: starch, See also: machines, cigars and chemicals are also produced, while spinning, dyeing, See also: brewing and printing are carried on
.
There is a See also: sulphur See also: bath in the neighbourhood, situated in a pleasant See also: park, in which there are monuments to those who See also: fell in the war of 1866
.
Langensalza became a town in 1211 and was afterwards See also: part of the electorate of Saxony
.
In 1815 it came into the possession of Prussia
.
It is remarkable in See also: history as the scene of three battles: (I) the victory of the Prussians and See also: English over the imperial army on the 15th of See also: February 1761; (2) that of the Prussians over the Bavarians on the 17th of See also: April 1813; and (3) the engagement on the 27th of See also: June 1866 between the Prussians and the Hanoverians, in which the latter, though victorious in the See also: field, were compelled to
See also: lay down their arms on the arrival of overwhelming Prussian reinforcements
.
See Goschel, Chronik der Stadt Langensalza (Langensalza, 1818–1842) ; G. and H
.
Schutz, Chronik der Stadt Langensalza (Langensalza, 1901) ; and Gutbier, Schwefelbad Langensalza (Langensalza, 1900) . |
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