Online Encyclopedia

MERGENTHEIM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 164 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MERGENTHEIM  , a

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town of Germany, in the
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kingdom of
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Wurttemberg, situated in the valley of the Tauber, 7 M . S. from Lauda by
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rail . Pop . (1905), 4535• It contains an Evangelical and three
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Roman Catholic churches, a Latin and other
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schools, and a magnificent castle with a natural
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history collection and the archives of the Teutonic order . This is now used as barracks . The
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industries of the town include tanning, the manufacture of agricultural machinery and wine-making . Near the town is a medicinal spring called the Karlsbad . Mergentheim (Marine domes) is mentioned in chronicles as early as 1058, as the residence of the
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family of the
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counts of
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Hohenlohe, who early in the 13th century assigned the greater
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part of their estates in and around Mergentheim to the Teutonic order . It rapidly increased in fame, and became the most important of the eleven commanderies of that society . On the secularization of the Teutonic Order in Prussia in 1525, Mergentheim became the residence of the
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grand master, and remained so until the final dissolution of the order in 1809 . See Honing, Das Karlsbad bei Mergentheim (Mergentheim, 1887); and Schmitt, Garnisongeschichte der Stadt Mergentheim (
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Stuttgart, 1895) .

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