Online Encyclopedia

PFORZHEIM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 341 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PFORZHEIM  , a

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town of Germany, in the
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grand duchy of Baden, at the confluence of the Nagold and the Enz, on the
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northern margin of the Black
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Forest, 19 m . S.E. of Karlsruhe by
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rail, and at the junction of lines to
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Wildbad and
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Ettlingen . Pop . (1895), 33,345; (1905), 59,395, most of whom are Protestants . Its most interesting buildings are the old palace of the margraves of Baden, and the Schlosskirche, the latter an edifice of the 12thβ€”15th centuries, containing the tombs and monuments of the margraves . Pforzheim is the chief centre in Germany for the manufacture of gold and
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silver ornaments and jewelry, an industry which gives employment to about 22,000 hands, besides which there are iron and copper
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works, and manufactures of chemicals, paper, leather, machinery, &c . A brisk trade is maintained in
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timber, cattle and agricultural produce . Pforzheim (Porta Hercyniae) is of
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Roman origin . From about 1300 to 1565 it was the seat of the margraves of Baden . It was taken by the troops of the Catholic
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League in 1624, and was destroyed by the French in 1689 . The story of the 400 citizens of Pforzheim who sacrificed themselves for their prince after the
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battle of Wimpfen in May 1622 has been relegated by
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modern
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historical research to the domain of legend . See Coste, Die 400 Pforzheimer (1879) ; Brombacher, Der Tod der 400 Pforzheimer (Pforzheim, 1886); Stolz, Geschichte der Stadl Pforzheim (Pforzheim, 1901) .

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