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18th and 19th centuries
Weimar is one of the great cultural sites of Europe, having been home to such luminaries as Goethe, Schiller, and Herder; and in music the piano virtuosi Hummel (a pupil of Mozart), Liszt and Bach. It has been a site of pilgrimage for the German intelligentsia since Goethe first moved to Weimar in the late 18th century. The tombs of Goethe and Schiller as well as their archives, may be found in the city. Goethe's Elective Affinities (1809) is set around the city of Weimar.
Description
Coordinates: 50°59′0″N 11°19′0″E / 50.98333°N 11.31667°E / 50.98333; 11.31667 Weimar (German pronunciation: [ˈvaɪmaÊ]) is a city in Germany. It is located in the Bundesland of Thuringia (German: Thüringen), north of the Thüringer Wald, east of Erfurt, and southwest of Halle and Leipzig. Its current population is approximately 65,000. The oldest record of the city dates from the year 899. Weimar was the capital of the Duchy (after 1815 the Grand Duchy) of Saxe-Weimar (German Sachsen-Weimar). In the 20th century, the city gave its name to the Weimar Republic.
Districts
* Ehringsdorf * Gaberndorf * Gelmeroda * Holzdorf * Legefeld * Niedergrunstedt * Oberweimar * Possendorf * Schöndorf * Süßenborn * Taubach * Tiefurt * Tröbsdorf
Education
* Bauhaus-University Weimar * Liszt School of Music Weimar[5]
Famous residents of Weimar
* Johann Sebastian Bach * Uziel Gal * Hector Berlioz * Hans von Bülow * Peter Cornelius * Lucas Cranach the Elder * Marlene Dietrich * Johann Peter Eckermann * Lyonel Feininger * Johann Wolfgang von Goethe * Walter Gropius * Nina Hagen * Johann Gottfried Herder * Johann Gottfried Walther * John Horrocks * Johann Nepomuk Hummel * Johannes Itten * Joseph Joachim * Wassily Kandinsky * Harry Graf Kessler * Paul Klee * Franz Liszt * Martin Luther * László Moholy-Nagy * Friedrich Nietzsche * Friedrich Preller * Joseph Joachim Raff * Friedrich Schiller * Oskar Schlemmer * Arthur Schopenhauer * Frédéric Soret * Rudolf Steiner * Richard Strauss * Henry van de Velde * Richard Wagner * Christoph Martin Wieland * Carl Zeiss
German Democratic Republic (East Germany)
Weimar was part of the German Democratic Republic (DDR, East Germany) from 1949 to 1990.
Nazi Germany
In 1937, the Nazis constructed the Buchenwald concentration camp, only eight kilometers from Weimar's city center. The slogan Jedem das Seine (literally "to each his own", but figuratively "everyone gets what he deserves") was placed over the camp's main entrance gate. Between July 1938 and April 1945, some 240,000 people were incarcerated in Buchenwald by the Nazi regime, including 168 Western Allied POWs.[2] The number of deaths at Buchenwald is estimated at 56,545.[3] The Buchenwald concentration camp provided slave labour for local industry (arms industry of Wilhelm-Gustloff-Werk).[4] World War II ended with Nazi Germany's defeat and division into East and West Germany. From 1945 to 1950, the Soviet Union used the occupied Buchenwald concentration camp to imprison defeated Nazis and other Germans. The camp slogan remained Jedem das Seine. On 6 January 1950, the Soviets handed over Buchenwald to the East German Ministry of Internal Affairs.
Popular culture
Weimar, as "Traktionstadt Weimar", is the founder of the Traktionstadtsgesellschaft in Philip Reeve's series, the Mortal Engines Quartet. This is a fictional league of German traction cities, later joined by Manchester, formed to combat the Anti-tractionists thousands of years in the future.
Recent years
The European Council of Ministers selected the city as European Capital of Culture for 1999. On 3 September 2004, a fire broke out at the Duchess Anna Amalia Library. The library contains a 13,000-volume collection including Goethe's masterpiece Faust, in addition to a music collection of the Duchess. An authentic Lutheran Bible from 1534 was saved from the fire. The damage stretched into the millions of dollars. The number of books in this historic library exceeded 1,000,000, of which 40,000 to 50,000 were destroyed past recovery. The library, which dates back to 1691, belongs to UNESCO world heritage, and is one of the oldest libraries in Europe. The fire, with its destruction of much historical literature, amounts to a huge cultural loss for Germany, Europe, and indeed the world. A number of books were shock-frozen in the city of Leipzig to save them from rotting.
See also
* World Heritage Site
Sister cities
* Blois, France * Shiraz,Iran * Hämeenlinna, Finland * Siena, Italy * Trier, Germany
Transportation
It is connected by one motorway and two routes: * Autobahn * A4 * Routes: * 7 * 85 There are railways running from Weimar to Erfurt (westbound), Halle/Leipzig (north-east-bound), Jena-Gera-Chemnitz (eastbound) and Kranichfeld (southbound). The ICE-line-trains from Frankfurt to Dresden arrive in Weimar every hour.
Weimar Republic
The period in German history from 1919 to 1933 is commonly referred to as the Weimar Republic, as the Republic's constitution was drafted here because the capital, Berlin, with its street rioting after the 1918 German Revolution, was considered too dangerous for the National Assembly to use it as a meeting place. Weimar was, beside Dessau, the center of the Bauhaus movement. The city houses art galleries, museums and the German national theatre. The Bauhaus University and the Liszt School of Music Weimar attracted many students, specializing in media and design, architecture, civil engineering and music, to Weimar.