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WURZBURG

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 860 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WURZBURG  , a university

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town and episcopal see of Bavaria, Germany, capital of the province of
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Lower Franconia, situated on the Main, 6o m. by
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rail S.E. from
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Frankfort and at the junction of main lines to
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Bamberg and Nuremberg . Pop . (1905) 80,220 . An ancient stone
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bridge (1474-1607), 650 ft. long and adorned with statues of saints, and two
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modern bridges, the Luitpold (1887) and the Ludwig (1894), connect the two parts of the town on each side of the
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river . On the lofty Leistenberg stands the fortress of
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Marienberg, which from 1261 to 1720 was the residence of the bishops . The main
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part of the town, on the right
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bank, is surrounded by shady promenades, the Ringstrasse and the quay . Wurzburg is- quaintly and irregularly built; many of the houses are interesting specimens of
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medieval architecture; and the numerous old churches recall the fact that it was long the capital of an ecclesiastical principality . The
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principal church is the imposing Rdmanesque
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cathedral, a
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basilica with transepts, begun in 1042 and consecrated in 1189 . The four towers, how-ever, date from 1240, the (rococo)
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facade from 1711-1719, and the dome from 1731 . The spacious transepts terminate in apses . The exterior was restored in 1882-1883 . The beautiful Marienkapelle, a
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Gothic edifice of 1317-1441, was restored in 1856; it is embellished with twenty statues by Tilman Riemenschneider (d .

1531) . The Haugerstifts church, with two towers and a lofty dome, was built in the

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Italian Renaissance style in 1670-1691 . The bones of St Kilian, the
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patron saint of Wurzburg, are preserved in the
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Neumunster church, which
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dates from the 11th century; Walther von der Vogelweide is buried in the adjoining cloisters . The church of St Burkhard is externally one of the best-preserved architectural monuments in the city . It was built in 1033-1042, in the Romanesque style, and was restored in 1168 . The
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Late Gothic choir dates from 1494-1497 . The Neubaukirche, or university church, curiously unites a Gothic exterior with a Classical interior . The
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Protestant church of St Stephen (1782-1789) originally belonged to a
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Benedictine abbey . Of the secular buildings in Wurzburg the most conspicuous is the palace, a huge and magnificent edifice built in 1720-1744 in imitation of
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Versailles, and formerly the residence of the bishops and
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grand-dukes of Wurzburg . The
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Julius hospital, a large and richly endowed institution affording food and lodging to 600 persons daily, was founded in 1576 by Bishop Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn (1545-1619) . In 1906 it was
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WURZEN arranged to convert this into a residential college for students, the hospital being removed to a site outside the town . The quaint town hall dates in part from 1456 .

Among the other

chief buildings are the government offices, the law courts, the theatre, the Maxschule, the
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observatory and the various university buildings . A university was founded at Wurzburg in 1403, but it only existed for a few years . The
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present university was founded by Bishop Julius in 1582 . The medical faculty speedily became famous, and has remained the most important faculty in Wurzburg ever since . Here W . K . Rontgen discovered the " Rontgen rays " in 1896 . Wurzburg was long the stronghold of Jesuitism in Germany, and the
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Roman Catholic theological faculty still attracts a large number of students . The university has a library containing 300,000 volumes, and is attended by about 1400 students . In no other university city of Germany has so much of the medieval
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academic
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life been preserved . Wurzburg is surrounded by vineyards, which yield some of the best wine in Germany . Its principal
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industries are the manufacture of
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tobacco, furniture, machinery, scientific
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instruments and railway carriages .

It has also breweries, and produces bricks,

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vinegar, malt and
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chocolate . The site of the Leistenberg was occupied by a Roman fort, and was probably fortified early in the 13th century . Wircebirgum is the old Latin form of the name of the town; Herbipolis (herb town) first appears in the 12th century . The bishopric was probably founded in 741, but the town appears to have existed in the previous century . The first bishop was St Burkhard, and his successors soon acquired much temporal power; about the 12th century they had ducal authority' in Eastern Franconia . It is not surprising that quarrels broke out between the bishops and the citizens, and the latter espoused the cause of the emperor Henry IV., while the former joined the emperor's foes . The struggle continued intermittently until 1400, when the citizens were decisively defeated and submitted . Several imperial diets were held in Wurzburg, chief among these being the one of 118o when Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, was placed under the
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ban . By the peace of
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Luneville the bishopric was secularized, and in 1803 Wurzburg passed to Bavaria . The peace of Pressburg in 1805 transferred it, under the name of an electorate, to Ferdinand, formerly grand-duke of Tuscany, who joined the confederation of the Rhine and tack the title of grand-duke of Wurzburg . In 1815 the congress of Vienna restored Wurzburg to Bavaria . The Wurzburg
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Conference is the name given to the meeting of representatives of the smaller German states in 1859 to devise some means of mutual support .

The conference, however, had no result . Wurzburg was bombarded and taken by the Prussians in 1866, in which

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year it ceased to be a fortress . The bishopric of Wurzburg at one time embraced an
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area of about 1900 sq. m. and had about 250,000 inhabitants . A new bishopric of Wurzburg was created in 1817 . For the town see S . GSbl, Wurzburg, Ein kulturhistorisches Stadtebild (Wurzburg, 1896) ; J . Gramich, Verfassung and Verwallung der Stadt Wurzburg (Wurzburg, 1882) ; M . Cronthal, Die Strait Wurzburg im Bauernkriege (Wurzburg, 1887) ; Heffner, Wurzburg and seine Umgebungen (Wurzburg, 1871) ; Beckmann, Fiihrer durch Wurzburg (1906) ; and Hollander and Hessler, Malerisches aus Alt-Wurzburg (Wurzburg, 1898) . For the university see F . X. von Wegele, Geschichte der Universitat Wurzburg (Wurzburg, 1882) . For the bishopric see J . Hofmann, Die Heiligen und Seligen
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des Bistums Wurzburg (Wiirzbur , 1889) ; F .

J . B . Stamminger and A . Amrhein, Franconia sacra . Geschichte des Bistums Wurzburg (Wurzburg, 1889-1901); and T .

Henner, Die herzogliche Gewalt der Bischofe von Wurzburg (Wurzburg, 1874) .

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