Online Encyclopedia

MARIENBAD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 714 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

MARIENBAD  , a

See also:
town of Bohemia, Austria, 115 M . W. of Prague by
See also:
rail . Pop . (1900), 4588 . It is one of the most frequented watering-places of
See also:
Europe, lying on the outskirts of the Kaiserwald at an altitude of 2093 ft., and is 4o m . S.W. of
See also:
Carlsbad by rail . Marienbad is enclosed on all sides except the south by gently sloping hills clad with fragrant pine forests, which are intersected by lovely walks . The
See also:
principal buildings are: the
See also:
Roman Catholic church, which was completed in 1851; the
See also:
English church, the theatre, the Kurhaus, built in 1901, and several bathing establishments and hospitals . The
See also:
mineral springs, which belong to the adjoining abbey of Tepl, are eight in number, and are used both for bathing and drinking, except the Marienquelle, which is used only for bathing . Some of them, like the Kreuzbrunnen and the Ferdinandsbrunnen, contain alkaline-saline waters which resemble those of Carlsbad, except that they are cold and contain nearly twice the quantity of purgative salts . Others, like the Ambrosiusbrunnen and the Karolinenbrunnen, are among the strongest iron waters in the
See also:
world, while the Rudolfsbrunnen is an earthy-alkaline spring . The waters are used in cases of liver affections,
See also:
gout, diabetes and obesity; and the patients must conform during the cure to a strictly regulated
See also:
diet .

Besides the mineral

See also:
water
See also:
baths there are also
See also:
moor or mud-baths, and the peat used for these baths is the richest in iron in the world . About 1,000,000 bottles of mineral water are exported annually . Amongst the places of
See also:
interest round Marienbad is the basaltic rock of Podhorn (2776 ft.), situated about 3 M. to the east, from which an extensive view of the Bohmerwald, Fichtelgebirge and
See also:
Erzgebirge is obtained . About 7 M. in the same direction lies the old and wealthy abbey of Tepl, founded in 1193 . The actual
See also:
building
See also:
dates from the end of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th century, and contains a
See also:
fine library with a collection of rare
See also:
manuscripts and
See also:
incunabula; near it is the small and old town of Tepl (pop . 2789) . To the north-east of Marienbad lies the small watering-place of Konigswart; near it is a castle belonging since 1618 to the princes of Metternich, which contains an interesting museum, created by the famous
See also:
Austrian states-man in the first
See also:
part of the 19th century . It contains, besides a fine library, a collection of the presents he received during his long career; numerous
See also:
autographs, and other
See also:
historical relics, a collection of rare coins, armour, portraits and various minerals . Marienbad is among the youngest of the Bohemian watering-places, although its springs were known from of old . They appear in a document dating from 1341, where they are called " the Auschowitzer springs belonging to the abbey of Tepl;" but it was only through the efforts of Dr Josef Nehr, the doctor of the abbey, who from 1779 until his
See also:
death in 1820 worked hard to demonstrate the curative properties of the springs, that the waters began to be used for medicinal purposes . The place obtained its actual name of Marienbad in 18o8; became a watering-place in 1818, and received its charter as a town in 1868 . See Lang, Fuhrer durch Marienbad and Umgebung (Marienbad .

19o2); and Kisch, Marienbad,

seine Umgebung and Heilmittel (Marienbad, 1895) .

End of Article: MARIENBAD
[back]
MARIE THERESE (1638-1683)
[next]
MARIENBERG

Additional information and Comments

The town of Marienbad is not in Austria, but in the Czech Republic. This name was used while the Czechs were under the Austrian power, but the real name is "Marianske Lazne". Karlsbad is actually "Karlovy Lazne", also in the Czech Republic.
The original article is correct. In 1911, when it was published, Bohemia (now in the Czech Republic) was part of Austria.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.