Online Encyclopedia

ZWEIBRUCKEN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 1061 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ZWEIBRUCKEN  , a

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town of Germany, in the Palatinate, on the Schwarzbach, and on the railway between
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Germersheim and
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Saarbrucken . Pop . (1905) 14,711 . The town was the capital of the former duchy of Zweibriicken, and the Alexander-Kirche contains the tombs of the dukes . The ducal castle is now occupied by the chief court of the Palatinate . There is a
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fine
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Gothic Catholic church .
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Weaving and
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brewing and the manufacture of machinery,
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chicory, cigars, malt, boots, furniture and
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soap are the chief
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industries . Zweibrucken (" two bridges ") is the Latin Bipontinum; it appears in early documents also as Geminus Pons, and was called by the French Deux-Ponts . The
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independent territory was at first a countship, the
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counts being descended from Henry I., youngest son of Simon I., count of Saarbrucken (d . 118o) . This
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line became
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extinct on the
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death of Count Eberhard (1393), who in 1385 had sold
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half his territory to the count palatine of the Rhine, and held the other half as his feudatory . Louis (d .

1489), son of

Stephen, count palatine of Zimmern-Veldenz, founded the line of the dukes of Zweibrucken, which became extinct in 1731, when the duchy passed to the
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Birkenfeld branch, whence it came under the sway of Bavaria in 1799 . At the peace of
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Luneville Zweibrucken was ceded to France; on its
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reunion with Germany in 1814 the greater
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part of the territory was given to Bavaria, the remainder to
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Oldenburg and Prussia . At the ducal printing office at Zweibrucken the fine edition of the
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classics known as the Bipontine
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Editions was published (1799 sqq.) . See Lehmann, Geschichte
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des Herzogtums Zweibrucken (Munich, 1867) .

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