Heidelberg

Heidelberg
/huyd"l berrg'/; Ger. /huyd"l berddk'/, n.
a city in NW Baden-Württemberg, in SW Germany: university, founded 1386. 127,500.

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City (pop., 2002 est.: 141,509), southwestern Germany, situated on the Neckar River.

First mentioned in historical record in 1196, it was the capital of the Rhenish Palatinate and the residence of the electoral counts palatine until 1720. It was a centre of German Calvinism in the 16th century. Heidelberg was devastated during the Thirty Years' War (1622) and by the French in 1689 and 1693. It is the site of the 13th-century Heidelberg Castle, a major tourist attraction, and of the University of Heidelberg (1386), the oldest university in Germany.

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 city, Baden-Württemberg Land (state), southwestern Germany. The city lies on the canalized Neckar River where it emerges from the forested hills of Odenwald into the Rhine plain. First mentioned in 1196, it was the capital of the Rhenish Palatinate (Pfalz) and the residence of the electoral counts palatine until 1720. It was devastated in 1622 during the Thirty Years' War and almost completely destroyed by the French in 1689 and 1693, so that most of its important buildings are in the Baroque architectural style (which prevailed until the late 18th century) rather than Gothic medieval. It passed to Baden in 1802 and experienced considerable growth in the 20th century.

 The University of Heidelberg (Heidelberg, University of) (Ruprecht-Karl-Universität), the oldest higher educational institution in Germany, was founded by Rupert I and chartered by Pope Urban VI in 1386. Its Geological-Paleontological Institute houses the Heidelberg jaw, a fossil jawbone, probably 500,000 years old, that was found in the vicinity in 1907.

  Heidelberg remains primarily a university and residential city, but it also has developed a significant industrial base. Manufactures include machines, precision instruments, and leather, tobacco, and wood products. The main business, however, is the tourist trade; several million people visit the imposing Heidelberg Castle every year. Although devastated by the French in 1689 and 1693 and then struck by lightning in 1764, this magnificent red sandstone structure, 330 feet (100 metres) above the river, still dominates the city. Construction began in the 13th century, but the most notable work was done in the Renaissance and includes the Otto-Heinrichsbau and Friedrichsbau. In the cellar of the Friedrichsbau is the Heidelberg Tun (1751), an enormous wine cask with a capacity of 49,000 gallons (185,500 litres). The castle can be reached from the lower city by a cable railway, which continues to the summit of the Königsstuhl (massif). The only other buildings to escape razing in 1693 were the Heiliggeistkirche (Holy Ghost Church; 1400–36), the Marstall (1590; formerly the Royal Mews), and the Knight's House (1592). Other landmarks include the Old (or Karl-Theodor) Bridge (1786–88, rebuilt after 1945), the town hall (1701–03), and the Jesuitenkirche (1712). Pop. (2005 est.) 142,993.
 

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Universalium. 2010.

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