Online Encyclopedia

RATHENOW

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 916 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RATHENOW  , a

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town of Germany, in the Prussian province of
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Brandenburg, on the
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Havel, 45 M . N.W. of Berlin on the main railway to Hanover . Pop . (1905) 23,095, including the garrison . The
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Protestant church of St Mary and St Andrew, originally a
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basilica, and transformed to the
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Gothic style in 1517-1589, and the
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Roman Catholic church of St George, are noteworthy . Rathenow is known for its "Rathenow stones," bricks made of the clay of the Havel, and for its
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spectacles and
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optical
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instruments, which are exported . Rathenow received its incorporation as a town in 1295 . In 1394 it was taken and partly destroyed by the archbishop of
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Magdeburg . It suffered much from the ravages of the
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Thirty Years' War, being occupied in turn by the
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Saxons and the Swedes, from whom in 1675 it was taken by the Brandenburgers, when most of the garrison were put to the sword . See Wagener, Denkwitrdigkeiten der Stadt Rathenow (Berlin, ' 903) .

End of Article: RATHENOW
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