Online Encyclopedia

SIGMARINGEN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 70 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SIGMARINGEN  , a

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town of Germany, chief town of the Prussian principality of
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Hohenzollern, on the right
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bank of the Danube, 55 M . S. of
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Tubingen, on the railway to
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Ulm . Pop . (1905) 4621 . The castle of the Hohenzollerns crowns a high rock above the
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river, and contains a collection of pictures, an exceptionally interesting museum (textiles, enamels, metal-
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work, &c.), an armoury and a library . On the opposite bank of the Danube there is a war monument to the Hohenzollern men who fell in 1866 and 187o-1871 . The division of Sigmaringen is composed of the two formerly
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sovereign principalities of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern-Hechingen (see HOHENZOLLERN), and has an
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area of 440 sq. m. and a population (1905) of 68,282 . The Sigmaringen
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part of the Hohenzollern lands was the larger of the two (297 sq. m.) and
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lay mainly to the south of Hechingen, though the
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district of Haigerloch on the
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Neckar also belonged to it . The name of Hohenzollern is used much more frequently than the official Sigmaringen to designate the combined principalities . See Woerl, Fuhrer durch Sigmaringen (
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Wurzburg,1886) .

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