Online Encyclopedia

SUHL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 50 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SUHL  , a

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town of Germany, in the province of Prussian Saxony, picturesquely situated on the Lauter, on the
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southern slope of the Thuringian
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Forest, 61 m . N.E. of
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Meiningen and 29 M . S.W. of
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Erfurt by
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rail . Pop . (1905), 13,814 . The armourers of Suhl are mentioned as early as the 9th century, but they enjoyed their highest vogue from 1550 to 1634 . The knights of south Germany especially prized the swords and armour of this town, and many of the weapons used in
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campaigns against the
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Turks and in the Seven Years' War are said to have been manufactured at Suhl . It has suffered considerably in
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modern times from the competition of other towns in this industry, especially since the introduction of the breech-loading
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rifle . It still contains, however, large factories for firearms military and sporting, and side arms, besides ironworks, machine-
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works, potteries and tanneries . The once considerable manufacture of
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fustian has declined . A brine spring (Soolquelle) at the
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foot of the neighbouring Domberg is said to have given name to the town . Suhl, which obtained civic rights in 1527, belonged to the principality of Henneberg, and formed
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part of the possessions of the
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kingdom of Saxony assigned to Prussia by the Congress of Vienna in 1815 .

See Werther, Chronik der Stadt Suhl_(2 vols., Suhl, 1846-1847) .

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