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Albert II
Monkeys
Monkeys Albert II (monkey), first primate and first mammal in space, died on impact following V-2 flight June 14, 1949
Albert II
People
People Albert II, Count of Namur (died 1067) Albert II, Count of Tyrol (died 1120s) Albert II, Margrave of Brandenburg (–1220) Albert II, Archbishop of Riga (1200–1273) Albert II, Margrave of Meissen (1240–1314), Albert II, Duke of Saxony (1250–1298) Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (–1318) Albert II of Austria (1298–1358) Albert II, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst (died 1362) Albert II, Duke of Mecklenburg (1318–1379) Albert II, Duke of Bavaria-Straubing (1368–1397) Albert II, Count of Holstein-Rendsburg (1369–1403) Albert II of Germany (1397–1439), King of Germany, Hungary, Croatia and Bohemia, Duke of Austria Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen (1419–1485) Albert II, Duke of Mecklenburg-Stargard (1400s) Albert II, Count of Hoya (1526–1563) Albert II, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1620–1667) Albert II of Belgium (born 1934), King of the Belgians Albert II, Prince of Monaco (born 1958), ruler of the principality of Monaco Albert II, Prince of Thurn and Taxis (born 1983), Prince of Thurn und Taxis, German prince
Albert II
Table of Content
'''Albert II''', Monkeys, People
Albert III
'''Albert III'''
Albert III may refer to: Albert III, Count of Namur (1048–1102) Albert III, Count of Habsburg (died 1199) Albert III, Margrave of Brandenburg-Salzwedel (–1300) Albert III, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg (1281–1308) Albert III, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst (died 1359) Albert III, Count of Gorizia (died 1374) Albert III of Mecklenburg (c. 1338 – 1412) Albert III, Duke of Austria (1349–1395) Albert III, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg (1375/1380–1422) Albrecht III Achilles, Elector of Brandenburg (1414–1486) Albert III, Duke of Bavaria (1438–1460) Albert III, Duke of Saxony (1443–1500)
Albert III
Table of Content
'''Albert III'''
Albert Alcibiades, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
Use dmy dates
Albert II (; 28 March 15228 January 1557) was the margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach (Brandenburg-Bayreuth) from 1527 to 1553. He was a member of the Franconian branch of the House of Hohenzollern. Because of his bellicose nature, Albert was given the cognomen Bellator ("the Warlike") during his lifetime. Posthumously, he became known as Alcibiades.
Albert Alcibiades, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
Biography
Biography Albert was born in Ansbach and, losing his father Casimir in 1527, he came under the regency of his uncle George, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach, a strong adherent of Protestantism. In 1541, he received Bayreuth as his share of the family lands, but as the chief town of his principality was Kulmbach, he is sometimes referred to as the Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach. His restless and turbulent nature marked him out for a military career; and having collected a small band of soldiers, he assisted Emperor Charles V in his war with France in 1543. The Peace of Crépy in September 1544 deprived him of this employment, but he won a considerable reputation, and when Charles was preparing to attack the Schmalkaldic League, he took pains to win Albert's assistance. Sharing in the attack on the Electorate of Saxony, Albert was taken prisoner at Rochlitz in March 1547 by Elector John Frederick of Saxony, but was released as a result of the Emperor's victory at the Battle of Mühlberg in the succeeding April. He then followed the fortunes of his friend Elector Maurice of Saxony, deserted Charles, and joined the league which proposed to overthrow the Emperor by an alliance with King Henry II of France. He took part in the subsequent campaign, but when the Peace of Passau was signed in August 1552 he separated himself from his allies and began a crusade of plunder in Franconia, which led to the Second Margrave War. Having extorted a large sum of money from the citizens of Nuremberg, he quarrelled with his supporter, the French King, and offered his services to the Emperor. Charles, anxious to secure such a famous fighter, gladly assented to Albert's demands and gave the imperial sanction to his possession of the lands taken from the bishops of Würzburg and Bamberg; and his conspicuous bravery was of great value to the Emperor on the retreat from the Siege of Metz in January 1553. When Charles left Germany a few weeks later, Albert renewed his depredations in Franconia. These soon became so serious that a league was formed to crush him, and Maurice of Saxony led an army against his former comrade. The rival forces met at Sievershausen on 9 July 1553, and after a combat of unusual ferocity Albert was put to flight. Henry, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, then took command of the troops of the league, and after Albert had been placed under the Imperial ban in December 1553 he was defeated by Duke Henry, and compelled to flee to France. He there entered the service of Henry II of France and had undertaken a campaign to regain his lands when he died at Pforzheim on 8 January 1557. He is defined by Thomas Carlyle as "a failure of a Fritz," with "features" of a Frederick the Great in him, "but who burnt away his splendid qualities as a mere temporary shine for the able editors, and never came to anything, full of fire, too much of it wildfire, not in the least like an Alcibiades except in the change of fortune he underwent". He was buried at Heilsbronn Münster. His hymn "Was mein Got will, das g'scheh allzeit" was translated as "The will of God is always best".it is #477 in Evangelical Lutheran Hymnary, #758 in Lutheran Service Book, and #435 in Christian Worship: A Lutheran Hymnal, see also the entry for the hymn on hymnary.org
Albert Alcibiades, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
References
References
Albert Alcibiades, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
Citations
Citations
Albert Alcibiades, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
Works cited
Works cited Endnote: See J. Voigt, Markgraf Albrecht Alcibiades von Brandenburg-Kulmbach (Berlin, 1852). Category:1522 births Category:1557 deaths Category:16th-century people from the Holy Roman Empire Category:House of Hohenzollern Category:People from Ansbach Category:People from the Principality of Ansbach Category:Margraves of Bayreuth
Albert Alcibiades, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
Table of Content
Use dmy dates, Biography, References, Citations, Works cited
Albert the Bear
Short description
Albert the Bear (; 1100 – 18 November 1170) was the first margrave of Brandenburg from 1157 to his death and was briefly duke of Saxony between 1138 and 1142.
Albert the Bear
Life
Life Albert was the only son of Otto, Count of Ballenstedt, and Eilika, daughter of Magnus Billung, Duke of Saxony. He inherited his father's valuable estates in northern Saxony in 1123, and on his mother's death, in 1142, succeeded to one-half of the lands of the house of Billung. Albert was a loyal vassal of his relation, Lothar I, Duke of Saxony, from whom, about 1123, he received the Margraviate of Lusatia, to the east; after Lothar became King of the Germans, he accompanied him on a disastrous expedition to Bohemia against the upstart, Soběslav I, Duke of Bohemia in 1126 at the Battle of Kulm, where he suffered a short imprisonment. Albert's entanglements in Saxony stemmed from his desire to expand his inherited estates there. After the death of his brother-in-law, Henry II, Margrave of the Nordmark, who controlled a small area on the Elbe called the Saxon Northern March, in 1128, Albert, disappointed at not receiving this fief himself, attacked Udo V, Count of Stade, the heir, and was consequently deprived of Lusatia by Lothar. Udo, however, was said to have been assassinated by servants of Albert on 15 March 1130 near Aschersleben. In spite of this, Albert went to Italy in 1132 in the train of the king, and his services there were rewarded in 1134 by the investiture of the Northern March, which was again without a ruler. In 1138 Conrad III, the Hohenstaufen King of the Germans, deprived Albert's cousin and nemesis, Henry the Proud, of his Saxon duchy, which was awarded to Albert if he could take it. After some initial success in his efforts to take possession, Albert was driven from Saxony, and also from his Northern March by a combined force of Henry and Jaxa of Köpenick, and compelled to take refuge in south Germany. Henry died in 1139 and an arrangement was found. Henry's son, Henry the Lion, received the duchy of Saxony in 1142. In the same year, Albert renounced the Saxon duchy and received the counties of Weimar and Orlamünde. Once he was firmly established in the Northern March, Albert's covetous eye lay also on the thinly populated lands to the north and east. For three years he was occupied in campaigns against the Slavic Wends, who as pagans were considered fair game, and whose subjugation to Christianity was the aim of the Wendish Crusade of 1147 in which Albert took part. Albert was a part of the army that besieged Demmin, and at the end of the war, recovered Havelberg, which had been lost since 983. Diplomatic measures were more successful, and by an arrangement made with the last of the Wendish princes of Brandenburg, Pribislav-Henry of the Hevelli, Albert secured this district when the prince died in 1150. Taking the title "Margrave in Brandenburg", he pressed the crusade against the Wends, extended the area of his mark, encouraged Dutch and German settlement in the Elbe-Havel region (Ostsiedlung), established bishoprics under his protection, and so became the founder of the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1157, which his heirs — the House of Ascania — held until the line died out in 1320. In 1158 a feud with Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony, was interrupted by a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. On his return in 1160, he, with the consent of his sons, Siegfried not being mentioned, donated land to the Knights of Saint John in memory of his wife, Sofia, at Werben on the Elbe. Around this same time, he minted a pfennig in memory of his deceased wife. In 1162 Albert accompanied Emperor Frederick Barbarossa to Italy, where he distinguished himself at the storming of Milan. In 1164 Albert joined a league of princes formed against Henry the Lion, and peace being made in 1169, Albert divided his territories among his six sons. He died on 18 November 1170, and was buried at Ballenstedt.
Albert the Bear
Cognomen
Cognomen thumb|upright|Foundation of the memorial to Albert at Spandau Citadel. Albert's personal qualities won for him the cognomen of the Bear, "not from his looks or qualities, for he was a tall handsome man, but from the cognisance on his shield, an able man, had a quick eye as well as a strong hand, and could pick what way was straightest among crooked things, was the shining figure and the great man of the North in his day, got much in the North and kept it, got Brandenburg for one there, a conspicuous country ever since," says Thomas Carlyle, who called Albert "a restless, much-managing, wide-warring man." He was also called "the Handsome."
Albert the Bear
Marriage and children
Marriage and children Albert was married in 1124 to Sophie of Winzenburg (died 25 March 1160) and they had the following children: Otto I, Margrave of Brandenburg (1126/1128–7 March 1184) Count Hermann I of Orlamünde (died 1176), father of Siegfried III, Count of Weimar-Orlamünde Siegfried (died 24 October 1184), Bishop of Brandenburg from 1173 to 1180, Prince-Archbishop of Bremen, the first ranked prince, from 1180 to 1184 Heinrich (died after 1185), a canon in Magdeburg Count Albert of Ballenstedt (died after 6 December 1172) Count Dietrich of Werben (died after 5 September 1183) Count Bernhard of Anhalt (1138/1142–9 February 1212), Duke of Saxony from 1180 to 1212 as Bernard III Hedwig (d. 1203), married to Otto II, Margrave of Meissen Gertrude, married in to Duke Děpold of Moravia Unknown daughter, married to Vladislav of Olomouc, the eldest son of Soběslav I, Duke of Bohemia Adelheid (died before 1162), a nun in Lamspringe Unknown daughter, married before 1146 Otto the Younger, son of Otto of Salm Sybille (died ), Abbess of Quedlinburg
Albert the Bear
Notes
Notes
Albert the Bear
References
References
Albert the Bear
Works cited
Works cited
Albert the Bear
General references
General references
Albert the Bear
External links
External links Thomas Carlyle, History of Friedrich ii Chapter iv: Albert the Bear The History Files: Rulers of Brandenburg Albert 00 Category:Margraves of Brandenburg Category:Counts of Anhalt Category:People from Brandenburg an der Havel Category:Christians of the Wendish Crusade Category:1100s births Category:1170 deaths Category:Year of birth uncertain Category:Place of birth unknown
Albert the Bear
Table of Content
Short description, Life, Cognomen, Marriage and children, Notes, References, Works cited, General references, External links
Albert of Brandenburg
Short description
Albert of Brandenburg (; 28 June 149024 September 1545) was a German cardinal, elector, Archbishop of Mainz from 1514 to 1545, and Archbishop of Magdeburg from 1513 to 1545. Through his notorious sale of indulgences, he became the catalyst for Martin Luther's Reformation and its staunch opponent.
Albert of Brandenburg
Biography
Biography
Albert of Brandenburg
Career
Career thumb|right|Cardinal Albert, Archbishop of Magdeburg and Mainz, by Albrecht Dürer Born in Cölln on the Spree, now a central part of Berlin, into the ruling House of Hohenzollern, Albert was the younger son of John Cicero, Elector of Brandenburg and Margaret of Thuringia. After their father's death in 1499, Albert's older brother Joachim I Nestor became elector of Brandenburg while Albert held only the title of a margrave of Brandenburg. Albert studied at the university of Frankfurt (Oder), and in 1513 became Archbishop of Magdeburg at the age of 23 and administrator of the Diocese of Halberstadt. Endnote: See J. H. Hennes, Albrecht von Brandenburg, Erzbischof von Mainz und Magdeburg (Mainz, 1858) J. May, Der Kurfürst, Kardinal, und Erzbischof Albrecht II. von Mainz und Magdeburg (Munich, 1865–1875) W. Schum, Kardinal Albrecht von Mainz und die Erfurter Kirchenreformation (Halle, 1878) P. Redlich, Kardinal Albrecht von Brandenburg, und das neue Stift zu Halle (Mainz, 1900). In 1514 he was also elected Archbishop of Mainz and thus sovereign of the Electorate of Mainz and archchancellor of the Holy Roman Empire. By electing him, the Mainz cathedral chapter hoped for the support of the Elector of Brandenburg in defending the city of Erfurt, which belonged to the archbishopric of Mainz, against the expansionist efforts of the neighboring Saxon dukes. However, this choice violated the canonical prohibition to hold more than one bishopric. Albert also did not meet the requirements for taking over any diocese, since he had not yet reached the age, and he didn't have a college degree; therefore he received a study dispensation in 1513. Albert borrowed 20,000 guilders from Jacob Fugger to pay the confirmation fee to the Roman Curia (see: simony).Luther's nuisance: indulgence for the new building of St. Peter's, Letter of indulgence for the good of the new building of St. Peter's in Rome, 1517, Herzog August Library, Wolfenbüttel In 1514 Albert suggested to Pope Leo X that a special indulgence be announced in his three dioceses as well as in his native diocese of Brandenburg and that half of the income should be used for the construction of the new St. Peter's Basilica and half for Albert's own cash register. The papal bull was issued on 31 March 1515.Christiane Schuchard: What is an indulgence commissioner?; in: ed. H. Kühne, Johann Tetzel and the indulgence: Companion volume to the exhibition »Tetzel - indulgence - purgatory«; exhibition in St. Nikolai church (Jüterbog) and in the monks' monastery; ISBN 978-3-86732-262-1 publisher Lukas Verlag, July 2017, p. 122 The indulgence was entrusted to Albert in 1517 for publication in Saxony and Brandenburg. It cost him the considerable sum of ten thousand ducats,At first, "the pope demanded twelve thousand ducats for the twelve apostles. Albert offered seven thousand ducats for the seven deadly sins. They compromised on ten thousand, presumably not for the Ten Commandments". Bainton, Roland. Here I Stand: A Life of Martin Luther (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1950), p. 75, online and Albert employed Johann Tetzel for the actual preaching of the indulgence. Later, Martin Luther addressed a letter of protest to Albert concerning the conduct of Tetzel. Largely in reaction to Tetzel's actions, Luther wrote his famous Ninety-five Theses, which led to the Reformation. Luther sent these to Albert on 31 October 1517, and according to a disputableAccording to Roland Bainton, for example, it is true. Bainton, Roland. Here I Stand: A Life of Martin Luther (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1950), p. 79, online tradition, nailed a copy to the door of Castle Church in Wittenberg. Albert forwarded the theses to Rome, suspecting Luther of heresy. As Archbishop of Mainz, he tried unsuccessfully in 1515 and 1516 to expel the Jews living in Mainz.Arye Maimon: Der Judenvertreibungsversuch Albrechts II. von Mainz und sein Mißerfolg (1515/.16), in: Jahrbuch für westdeutsche Landesgeschichte Albert II of Mainz's attempt to expel the Jews and its failure (1515/16). In: Yearbook for West German regional history. Volume 4, 1978, pp. 191-220. In 1518, at the age of 28, he was made a cardinal. When the imperial election of 1519 drew near, partisans of the two leading candidates (kings Charles I of Spain and Francis I of France) eagerly solicited the vote of the Prince-Archbishop of Mainz, and Albert appears to have received a large amount of money for his vote. The electors eventually chose Charles, who became the Emperor Charles V. Like other high-ranking clergymen of his time, Archbishop Albert lived in concubinage, gave his lovers gifts and favored his children as far as possible without causing much offense. Recent research assumes that he lived in a marriage-like relationship at first with Elisabeth "Leys" Schütz from Mainz and then with the Frankfurt widow Agnes Pless, née Strauss. With Leys Schütz he had a daughter named Anna, whom he married to his secretary Joachim Kirchner.Kerstin Merkel: Albrecht and Ursula. A hike through literature and the formation of legends. In: Andreas Tacke (ed.): »... we want to give love space«. Concubinage of ecclesiastical and secular princes around 1500 (= publication series of the Moritzburg Foundation, Art Museum of the State of Saxony-Anhalt. Original title: Albrecht und Ursula. Eine Wanderung durch Literatur und Legendenbildung. In: Andreas Tacke (Hrsg.): »... wir wollen der Liebe Raum geben«. Konkubinate geistlicher und weltlicher Fürsten um 1500 (= Schriftenreihe der Stiftung Moritzburg, Kunstmuseum des Landes Sachsen-Anhalt; 3). Wallstein-Verlag, Göttingen 2006, ISBN 3-8353-0052-0, p. 157–187. thumb|left|Cardinal Albert, Archbishop of Mainz, as Saint Jerome while studying, by Lucas Cranach the Elder, 1526 Albert's large and liberal ideas, his correspondence with leading humanists, his friendship with Ulrich von Hutten whom he drew to his court, and his political ambitions, appear to have raised hopes that he could be won over to Protestantism; but after the German Peasants' War of 1525 he ranged himself definitely among the supporters of Catholicism, and was among the princes who joined the League of Dessau in July 1525. From 1514 until his flight on 21 February 1541, Albert ruled mostly from his residence Moritzburg in Halle. In 1531, he had a spacious new residential palace built there. Albert also needed a prestigious church that met his expectations at a central location in his residenz town. He feared for his peace of mind in heaven, and collected more than 8,100 relics and 42 holy skeletons which needed to be stored. From 1529, he had two parish churches standing next to each other demolished and only their four towers from with pointed helmets stood. Between these towers he had a large new nave built, which was named Market Church of Our Lady since she received a Marian patronage. However, these precious treasures, known as Hallesches Heilthum (the Halle sanctuary), indirectly related to the sale of indulgences which had triggered the Reformation a few years before because it should attract pilgrims willing to pay. Then, the cardinal and the Catholic members of the town council wanted to repress the growing influence of the Reformation by holding far grander Masses and services in a new church dedicated solely to the Blessed Virgin Mary, whose excessive worship Luther disliked. thumb|Meeting of Saint Erasmus of Formiae and Saint Maurice, by Matthias Grünewald, between 1517 and 1523. Grünewald used Albert of Mainz, who commissioned the painting, as the model for St. Erasmus (left). Albert's hostility towards the reformers, however, was not so extreme as that of his brother Joachim I; and he appears to have exerted himself towards peace, although he was a member of the League of Nuremberg, formed in 1538 as a counterpoise to the League of Schmalkalden. New doctrines nevertheless made considerable progress in his dominions, and he was compelled to grant religious liberty to the inhabitants of Magdeburg in return for 500,000 florins. In his later years, he showed more intolerance towards the Protestants, and favoured the teaching of the Jesuits in his dominions. The Market Church of Our Lady in Halle, which had been built to defend against the spread of Reformation sympathies, was the spot where Justus Jonas officially introduced the Reformation into Halle with his Good Friday sermon in 1541. The service must have been at least partly conducted in the open air, because at that time construction had only been finished at the eastern end of the nave. Jonas began a successful preaching crusade and attracted so many people that the church overflowed. Albert left the town permanently after the estates in the city had announced that they would take over his enormous debt at the bank of Jakob Fugger. Halle became Protestant and in 1542 Jonas was appointed as priest to St. Mary's and, in 1544, bishop over the city.
Albert of Brandenburg
Patron of the arts
Patron of the arts He became a friend of science and a patron of the arts. As a patron of learning, he counted Erasmus among his friends. However, Albert's ideas about founding a Catholic university in Halle were not implemented. Nonetheless, he adorned Halle Cathedral and Mainz Cathedral in sumptuous fashion, and took as his motto the words (Latin for "I have loved, O Lord, the beauty of thy house", from Psalm 25:8). Matthias Grünewald and Lucas Cranach the Elder created magnificent paintings for the Halle Cathedral which was decorated from 1519 to 1525 with 16 Passion altars with 140 pictures by Cranach and his workshop, the largest single commission in German art history. Grünewald contributed the famous wood painting Saint Erasmus and Saint Maurice. Albert also ordered paintings from Hans Baldung Grien and a cycle of 18 life-size statues of saints from Peter Schro in Mainz, which can still be admired in Halle Cathedral today. In 1526 he donated the market fountain in Mainz. In 1521, Martin Luther referred to the ever-growing collection of relics as the "idol of Halle". thumb|upright=0.6|Albert's tomb in Mainz Cathedral When Albert left Halle for good in 1541 and moved to his residence in Aschaffenburg in the electoral state of Mainz, he took with him the collection of relics, his private art collection and a large part of the works of art he had donated to the cathedral and other Catholic churches that now became Protestant. He sold parts of the treasure of relics in order to be able to settle claims of the cathedral chapters of Magdeburg and Halberstadt; the sanctuaries are scattered today. He took his private paintings with him to his residence in Johannisburg Castle, where a large part was plundered and destroyed in 1552 during the Second Margrave War. He had the works of art brought from Halle Cathedral hung in the St. Peter und Alexander's church, where they survived all wars until the Elector-Archbishop Carl Theodor von Dalberg had them brought to Johannisburg Castle in 1803. There they were evacuated in good time before the damaging fire caused by bombing in 1945. Today they can be seen in the reconstructed castle in the Staatsgalerie Aschaffenburg, which was reopened in 2023 after several years of renovation.Staatsgalerie Aschaffenburg wiedereröffnet (State Gallery Aschaffenburg reopened), in: Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 7 May 2023 Despite the losses caused by wars, looting and sales, the Aschaffenburg collection is considered the largest Cranach collection in Europe. In addition to 17 altar wings, some of which consist of several panels, and individual paintings from the Cranach workshop, 9 autographed works by the older and 2 by the younger Cranach are on display. In addition, a crucifixion group by Hans Baldung Grien and a large number of paintings by Cranach's students. Some other altars and paintings from the school are also preserved in the St. Peter und Alexander's church and its museum. Other paintings are in the Alte Pinakothek in Munich.
Albert of Brandenburg
Death
Death Albert died at the Martinsburg, Mainz in 1545.Biographical Dictionary BRANDENBURG, Albrecht von (1490-1545) His tomb is in Mainz Cathedral.
Albert of Brandenburg
Ancestry
Ancestry
Albert of Brandenburg
References
References
Albert of Brandenburg
Sources
Sources Helmut Börsch-Supan, et al. "Hohenzollern, House of." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 24 Jul. 2016. Roesgen, Manfred von. Kardinal Albrecht von Brandenburg : ein Renaissancefürst auf dem Mainzer Bischofsthron. Moers : Steiger, 1980. Schauerte, Thomas and Andreas Tacke. Der Kardinal Albrecht von Brandenburg : Renaissancefürst und Mäzen. 2 v. Regensburg : Schnell + Steiner, 2006. Contents: Bd. 1. Katalog / herausgegeben von Thomas Schauerte—Bd. 2. Essays / herausgegeben von Andreas Tacke ; mit Beiträgen von Bodo Brinkmann ... [et al.]. Note: Exhibition held September 9November 26, 2006, Halle an der Saale. "Prayer Book of Cardinal Albrecht of Brandenburg." The J. Paul Getty Museum, viewed 24 July 2016.
Albert of Brandenburg
External links
External links Category:1490 births Category:1545 deaths Category:16th-century German cardinals Category:Archbishop-electors of Mainz Category:Archbishops of Magdeburg Category:Clergy from Berlin Category:Knights' War Category:Roman Catholic prince-bishops of Halberstadt Category:Simony Category:Sons of prince-electors
Albert of Brandenburg
Table of Content
Short description, Biography, Career, Patron of the arts, Death, Ancestry, References, Sources, External links
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Short description
Albert of Prussia (; 17 May 149020 March 1568) was a German prince who was the 37th grand master of the Teutonic Knights and, after converting to Lutheranism, became the first ruler of the Duchy of Prussia, the secularized state that emerged from the former Monastic State of the Teutonic Knights. Albert was the first European ruler to establish Lutheranism, and thus Protestantism, as the official state religion of his lands. He proved instrumental in the political spread of Protestantism in its early stage, ruling the Prussian lands for nearly six decades (1510–1568). Albert was great-grandson of the converted pagan ruler Jogaila of Poland and Lithuania, vanquisher of the Teutonic Knights at the Battle of Grunwald. He was also a member of the Brandenburg-Ansbach branch of the House of Hohenzollern. He became grand master of the Teutonic Knights in their attempt to diplomatically win over the Polish-Lithuanian union. His skill in political administration and leadership ultimately succeeded in reversing the decline of the Teutonic Order. But Albert was sympathetic to the demands of Martin Luther, whose teachings had become popular in his lands. So he rebelled against the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy Roman Empire by converting the Teutonic state into a Protestant and hereditary realm, the Duchy of Prussia, for which he paid homage to his uncle, Sigismund I, king of Poland. That arrangement was confirmed by the Treaty of Kraków in 1525. Albert pledged a personal oath to the king and in return was invested with the duchy for himself and his heirs. Albert's rule in Prussia was fairly prosperous. Although he had some trouble with the peasantry, the confiscation of the lands and treasures of the Catholic Church enabled him to propitiate the nobles and provide for the expenses of the newly established Prussian court. He was active in imperial politics, joining the League of Torgau in 1526, and acted in unison with the Protestants in plotting to overthrow Emperor Charles V after the issue of the Augsburg Interim in May 1548. Albert established schools in every town and founded the University of Königsberg in 1544. He promoted culture and arts, patronising the works of Erasmus Reinhold and Caspar Hennenberger. During the final years of his rule, Albert was forced to raise taxes instead of further confiscating now-depleted church lands, causing peasant rebellion. The intrigues of the court favourites Johann Funck and Paul Skalić also led to various religious and political disputes. Albert spent his final years virtually deprived of power, and died at Tapiau on 20 March 1568. His son, Albert Frederick, succeeded him as Duke of Prussia.
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Early life
Early life Albert was born in Ansbach in Franconia as the third son of Frederick I, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach. His mother was Sophia, daughter of Casimir IV Jagiellon, Grand Duke of Lithuania and king of Poland, and his wife Elisabeth of Austria. His great-grandfather was Władysław II Jagiełło, the last pagan ruler in Europe, who defeated the Teutonic Knights at the Battle of Grunwald in 1410. He was raised for a career in the Church and spent some time at the court of Hermann IV of Hesse, Elector of Cologne, who appointed him canon of the Cologne Cathedral. Not only was he quite religious; he was also interested in mathematics and science and sometimes is claimed to have contradicted the teachings of the Church in favour of scientific theories. His career was forwarded by the Church, however, and institutions of the Catholic clerics supported his early advancement. Turning to a more active life, Albert accompanied Emperor Maximilian I to Italy in 1508 and after his return spent some time in the Kingdom of Hungary.
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Grand Master
Grand Master thumb|upright|left|As grand master of the Teutonic Order, painting from 1522 thumb|upright|Coat of arms as grand master of the Teutonic Order Duke Frederick of Saxony, grand master of the Teutonic Order, died in December 1510. Albert was chosen as his successor early in 1511 in the hope that his relationship to his maternal uncle, Sigismund I the Old, Grand Duke of Lithuania and king of Poland, would facilitate a settlement of the disputes over eastern Prussia, which had been held by the order under Polish suzerainty since the Second Peace of Thorn (1466). The new grand master, aware of his duties to the empire and to the papacy, refused to submit to the crown of Poland. As war over the order's existence appeared inevitable, Albert made strenuous efforts to secure allies and carried on protracted negotiations with Emperor Maximilian I. The ill-feeling, influenced by the ravages of members of the Order in Poland, culminated in a war which began in December 1519 and devastated Prussia. Albert was granted a four-year truce early in 1521. The dispute was referred to Emperor Charles V and other princes, but as no settlement was reached Albert continued his efforts to obtain help in view of a renewal of the war. For this purpose, he visited the Diet of Nuremberg in 1522, where he made the acquaintance of the Reformer Andreas Osiander, by whose influence Albert was won over to Protestantism. The grand master then journeyed to Wittenberg, where he was advised by Martin Luther to abandon the rules of his order, to marry, and to convert Prussia into a hereditary duchy for himself. This proposal, which was understandably appealing to Albert, had already been discussed by some of his relatives; but it was necessary to proceed cautiously, and he assured Pope Adrian VI that he was anxious to reform the order and punish the knights who had adopted Lutheran doctrines. Luther for his part did not stop at the suggestion, but in order to facilitate the change made special efforts to spread his teaching among the Prussians, while Albert's brother, Margrave George of Brandenburg-Ansbach, laid the scheme before their uncle, Sigismund I the Old of Poland.
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Duke in Prussia
Duke in Prussia 350px|thumb|Prussian Homage: Albert and his brothers receive the Duchy of Prussia as a fief from Polish King Sigismund I the Old, 1525. Painting by Matejko, 1882. After some delay Sigismund assented to the offer, with the provision that Prussia should be treated as a Polish fiefdom; and after this arrangement had been confirmed by a treaty concluded at Kraków, Albert pledged a personal oath to Sigismund I and was invested with the duchy for himself and his heirs on 10 February 1525. The Estates of the land then met at Königsberg and took the oath of allegiance to the new duke, who used his full powers to promote the doctrines of Luther. This transition did not, however, take place without protest. Summoned before the imperial court of justice, Albert refused to appear and was proscribed, while the order elected a new grand master, Walter von Cronberg, who received Prussia as a fief at the imperial Diet of Augsburg. As the German princes were experiencing the tumult of the Reformation, the German Peasants' War, and the wars against the Ottoman Turks, they did not enforce the ban on the duke, and agitation against him soon died away. In imperial politics, Albert was fairly active. Joining the League of Torgau in 1526, he acted in unison with the Protestants, and was among the princes who banded and plotted together to overthrow Charles V after the issue of the Augsburg Interim in May 1548. For various reasons, however, poverty and personal inclination among others, he did not take a prominent part in the military operations of this period. thumb|upright|left|One Groschen coin, 1534, Iustus ex fide vivit — The Just lives on Faith The early years of Albert's rule in Prussia were fairly prosperous. Although he had some trouble with the peasantry, the lands and treasures of the church enabled him to propitiate the nobles and for a time to provide for the expenses of the court. He did something for the furtherance of learning by establishing schools in every town and by freeing serfs who adopted a scholastic life. In 1544, in spite of some opposition, he founded Königsberg University, where he appointed his friend Andreas Osiander to a professorship in 1549. Albert also paid for the printing of the Astronomical "Prutenic Tables" compiled by Erasmus Reinhold and the first maps of Prussia by Caspar Hennenberger. Osiander's appointment was the beginning of the troubles which clouded the closing years of Albert's reign. Osiander's divergence from Luther's doctrine of justification by faith involved him in a violent quarrel with Philip Melanchthon, who had adherents in Königsberg, and these theological disputes soon created an uproar in the town. The duke strenuously supported Osiander, and the area of the quarrel soon broadened. There were no longer church lands available with which to conciliate the nobles, the burden of taxation was heavy, and Albert's rule became unpopular. After Osiander's death in 1552, Albert favoured a preacher named Johann Funck, who, with an adventurer named Paul Skalić, exercised great influence over him and obtained considerable wealth at public expense. The state of turmoil caused by these religious and political disputes was increased by the possibility of Albert's early death and the need, should that happen, to appoint a regent, as his only son, Albert Frederick was still a mere youth. The duke was forced to consent to a condemnation of the teaching of Osiander, and the climax came in 1566 when the Estates appealed to King Sigismund II Augustus of Poland, Albert's cousin, who sent a commission to Königsberg. Skalić saved his life by flight, but Funck was executed. The question of the regency was settled, and a form of Lutheranism was adopted and declared binding on all teachers and preachers. thumb|170px|Portrait of Pavao Skalić, an encyclopedist, Renaissance humanist and adventurer from Croatia, who strongly influenced the Duke in the closing years of his reign Virtually deprived of power, the duke lived for two more years, and died at Tapiau on 20 March 1568 of the plague, along with his wife. Cornelis Floris de Vriendt designed his tomb within Königsberg Cathedral.Mühlpfordt, p. 73 Albert was a voluminous letter writer, and corresponded with many of the leading personages of the time.
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Legacy
Legacy thumb|Tomb of Albert by Cornelis Floris de Vriendt in Königsberg Cathedral thumb|"Albertus" with sword from the Silberbibliothek Albert was the first German noble to support Luther's ideas and in 1544 founded the University of Königsberg, the Albertina, as a rival to the Roman Catholic Krakow Academy. It was the second Lutheran university in the German states, after the University of Marburg. A relief of Albert over the Renaissance-era portal of Königsberg Castle's southern wing was created by Andreas Hess in 1551 according to plans by Christoph Römer.Mühlpfordt, p. 90 Another relief by an unknown artist was included in the wall of the Albertina's original campus. This depiction, which showed the duke with his sword over his shoulder, was the popular "Albertus", the symbol of the university. The original was moved to Königsberg Public Library to protect it from the elements, while the sculptor Paul Kimritz created a duplicate for the wall. Another version of the "Albertus" by Lothar Sauer was included at the entrance of the Königsberg State and Royal Library. In 1880 Friedrich Reusch created a sandstone bust of Albert at the Regierungsgebäude, the administrative building for Regierungsbezirk Königsberg. On 19 May 1891 Reusch premiered a famous statue of Albert at Königsberg Castle with the inscription: "Albert of Brandenburg, Last Grand Master, First Duke in Prussia".Mühlpfordt, p. 82 Albert Wolff also designed an equestrian statue of Albert located at the new campus of the Albertina. King's Gate contains a statue of Albert. Albert was oft-honored in the quarter Maraunenhof in northern Königsberg. Its main street was named Herzog-Albrecht-Allee in 1906. Its town square, König-Ottokar-Platz, was renamed Herzog-Albrecht-Platz in 1934 to match its church, the Herzog-Albrecht-Gedächtniskirche.Mühlpfordt, p. 133
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Spouse and issue
Spouse and issue thumb|Dorothea of Denmark, Duchess of Prussia by Cornelis Floris de Vriendt Albert married first, to Dorothea (1 August 150411 April 1547), daughter of King Frederick I of Denmark, in 1526. They had six children: Anna Sophia (11 June 15276 February 1591), married John Albert I, Duke of Mecklenburg-Güstrow. Katharina (b. and d. 24 February 1528) died at birth. Frederick Albert (5 December 15291 January 1530). died young. Lucia Dorothea (8 April 15311 February 1532) died in infancy. Lucia (3 February 1537 1 May 1539) died young. Albert (b. and d. 1 March 1539) died at birth. He married secondly to Anna Maria (1532–20 March 1568), daughter of Eric I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, in 1550. The couple had two children: Elisabeth (20 May 155119 February 1596) died unmarried and without issue. Albert Frederick (29 April 155318 August 1618), Duke of Prussia.
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Ancestors
Ancestors
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Notes
Notes
Albert, Duke of Prussia
References
References
Albert, Duke of Prussia
External links
External links William Urban on the situation in Prussia K. P. Faber: Briefe Luthers an Herzog Albrecht (1811) letters of Martin Luther to Albrecht |- Category:Dukes of Prussia Category:Protestant monarchs Category:1490 births Category:1568 deaths Category:16th-century dukes of Prussia Category:Converts to Lutheranism from Roman Catholicism Category:German people of Polish descent Category:German Lutherans Category:Grand masters of the Teutonic Order Category:House of Hohenzollern Category:People excommunicated by the Catholic Church Category:People from Ansbach Category:People from the Principality of Ansbach Category:People from the Duchy of Prussia Category:People of the Polish–Teutonic War (1519–1521) Category:University of Königsberg Category:Duchy of Prussia Category:People of the Count's Feud Category:16th-century Lutheran theologians Category:German Lutheran hymnwriters Category:German people of Lithuanian descent
Albert, Duke of Prussia
Table of Content
Short description, Early life, Grand Master, Duke in Prussia, Legacy, Spouse and issue, Ancestors, Notes, References, External links
August 25
pp-move
August 25
Events
Events
August 25
Pre-1600
Pre-1600 766 – Emperor Constantine V humiliates nineteen high-ranking officials, after discovering a plot against him. He executes the leaders, Constantine Podopagouros and his brother Strategios. 1248 – The Dutch city of Ommen receives city rights and fortification rights from Otto III, the Archbishop of Utrecht. 1258 – Regent George Mouzalon and his brothers are killed during a coup headed by the aristocratic faction under Michael VIII Palaiologos, paving the way for its leader to ultimately usurp the throne of the Empire of Nicaea. 1270 – Philip III, although suffering from dysentery, becomes King of France following the death of his father Louis IX, during the Eighth Crusade. His uncle, Charles I of Naples, is forced to begin peace negotiations with Muhammad I al-Mustansir, Hafsid Sultan of Tunis. 1537 – The Honourable Artillery Company, the oldest surviving regiment in the British Army, and the second most senior, is formed. 1543 – António Mota and a few companions become the first Europeans to visit Japan. 1580 – War of the Portuguese Succession: Spanish victory at the Battle of Alcântara brings about the Iberian Union.
August 25
1601–1900
1601–1900 1609 – Galileo Galilei demonstrates his first telescope to Venetian lawmakers. 1630 – Portuguese forces are defeated by the Kingdom of Kandy at the Battle of Randeniwela in Sri Lanka. 1758 – Seven Years' War: Frederick II of Prussia defeats the Russian army at the Battle of Zorndorf. 1814 – War of 1812: On the second day of the Burning of Washington, British troops torch the Library of Congress, United States Treasury, Department of War, and other public buildings. 1823 – American fur trapper Hugh Glass is mauled by a grizzly bear while on an expedition in South Dakota. 1825 – The Thirty-Three Orientals declare the independence of Uruguay from Brazil. 1830 – The Belgian Revolution begins. 1835 – The first Great Moon Hoax article is published in The New York Sun, announcing the discovery of life and civilization on the Moon. 1875 – Captain Matthew Webb becomes the first person to swim across the English Channel, traveling from Dover, England, to Calais, France, in 21 hours and 45 minutes. 1883 – France and Viet Nam sign the Treaty of Huế, recognizing a French protectorate over Annam and Tonkin. 1894 – Kitasato Shibasaburō discovers the infectious agent of the bubonic plague and publishes his findings in The Lancet.
August 25
1901–present
1901–present 1904 – Russo-Japanese War: The Battle of Liaoyang begins. 1912 – The Kuomintang is founded for the first time in Peking. 1914 – World War I: Japan declares war on Austria-Hungary. 1914 – World War I: The library of the Catholic University of Leuven is deliberately destroyed by the German Army. Hundreds of thousands of irreplaceable volumes and Gothic and Renaissance manuscripts are lost. 1916 – The United States National Park Service is created. 1920 – Polish–Soviet War: Battle of Warsaw, which began on August 13, ends with the Red Army's defeat. 1933 – The Diexi earthquake strikes Mao County, Sichuan, China and kills 9,000 people. 1933 – Nazi Germany and the Zionist Federation of Germany signed the Haavara Agreement. The agreement was a major factor in breaking the anti-Nazi boycott of 1933 and facilitated Jewish emigration from Germany and into Palestine. 1939 – The Irish Republican Army carries out the 1939 Coventry bombing in which five civilians were killed. 1939 – The United Kingdom and Poland form a military alliance in which the UK promises to defend Poland in case of invasion by a foreign power. 1940 – World War II: The first Bombing of Berlin by the British Royal Air Force. 1941 – World War II: Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran: The United Kingdom and the Soviet Union jointly stage an invasion of the Imperial State of Iran. 1942 – World War II: Second day of the Battle of the Eastern Solomons; a Japanese naval transport convoy headed towards Guadalcanal is turned back by an Allied air attack. 1942 – World War II: Battle of Milne Bay: Japanese marines assault Allied airfields at Milne Bay, New Guinea, initiating the Battle of Milne Bay. 1944 – World War II: Paris is liberated by the Allies. 1945 – Ten days after World War II ends with Japan announcing its surrender, armed supporters of the Chinese Communist Party kill U.S. intelligence officer John Birch, regarded by some of the American right as the first victim of the Cold War. 1945 – The August Revolution ends as Emperor Bảo Đại abdicates, ending the Nguyễn dynasty. 1948 – The House Un-American Activities Committee holds first-ever televised congressional hearing: "Confrontation Day" between Whittaker Chambers and Alger Hiss. 1950 – To avert a threatened strike during the Korean War, President Truman orders Secretary of the Army Frank Pace to seize control of the nation's railroads. 1958 – The world's first publicly marketed instant noodles, Chikin Ramen, are introduced by Taiwanese-Japanese businessman Momofuku Ando. 1960 – The Games of the XVII Olympiad commence in Rome, Italy. 1961 – President Jânio Quadros of Brazil resigns after just seven months in power, initiating a political crisis that culminates in a military coup in 1964. 1967 – George Lincoln Rockwell, founder of the American Nazi Party, is assassinated by a former member of his group. 1980 – Zimbabwe joins the United Nations. 1981 – Voyager 2 spacecraft makes its closest approach to Saturn. 1985 – Bar Harbor Airlines Flight 1808 crashes near Auburn/Lewiston Municipal Airport in Auburn, Maine, killing all eight people on board including peace activist and child actress Samantha Smith. 1989 – Voyager 2 spacecraft makes its closest approach to Neptune, the last planet in the Solar System at the time, due to Pluto being within Neptune's orbit from 1979 to 1999. Is Pluto or Neptune farthest from the Sun? StarChild Question of the Month for January 1999. NASA. 1989 – Pakistan International Airlines Flight 404, carrying 54 people, disappears over the Himalayas after takeoff from Gilgit Airport in Pakistan. The aircraft was never found. 1991 – Belarus gains its independence from the Soviet Union. 1991 – The Battle of Vukovar begins. An 87-day siege of Vukovar by the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), supported by various Serb paramilitary forces, between August and November 1991 (during the Croatian War of Independence). 1991 – Linus Torvalds announces the first version of what will become Linux. 1997 – Egon Krenz, the former East German leader, is convicted of a shoot-to-kill policy at the Berlin Wall. 2001 – American singer Aaliyah and several members of her entourage are killed as their overloaded aircraft crashes shortly after takeoff from Marsh Harbour Airport, Bahamas. 2003 – NASA successfully launches the Spitzer Space Telescope into space. 2005 – Hurricane Katrina makes landfall in Florida. 2006 – Former Prime Minister of Ukraine Pavlo Lazarenko is sentenced to nine years imprisonment for money laundering, wire fraud, and extortion. 2010 – A Filair Let L-410 Turbolet crashes on approach to Bandundu Airport, killing 20. 2011 – Fifty-two people are killed during an arson attack caused by members of the drug cartel Los Zetas. 2012 – Voyager 1 spacecraft enters interstellar space, becoming the first man-made object to do so. 2017 – Hurricane Harvey makes landfall in Texas as a powerful Category 4 hurricane, the strongest hurricane to make landfall in the United States since 2004. 2017 – Conflict in Rakhine State (2016–present): One hundred seventy people are killed in at least 26 separate attacks carried out by the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, leading to the governments of Myanmar and Malaysia designating the group as a terrorist organisation.
August 25
Births
Births
August 25
Pre-1600
Pre-1600 1467 – Francisco Fernández de la Cueva, 2nd Duke of Alburquerque, Spanish duke (d. 1526) 1491 – Innocenzo Cybo, Italian cardinal (d. 1550) 1509 – Ippolito II d'Este, Italian cardinal and statesman (d. 1572) 1530 – Ivan the Terrible, Russian ruler (d. 1584) 1540 – Lady Catherine Grey, English noblewoman (d. 1568) 1561 – Philippe van Lansberge, Dutch astronomer and mathematician (d. 1632)
August 25
1601–1900
1601–1900 1605 – Philipp Moritz, Count of Hanau-Münzenberg, German noble (d. 1638) 1624 – François de la Chaise, French priest (d. 1709) 1662 – John Leverett the Younger, American lawyer, academic, and politician (d. 1724) 1707 – Louis I of Spain (d. 1724) 1724 – George Stubbs, English painter and academic (d. 1806) 1741 – Karl Friedrich Bahrdt, German theologian and author (d. 1792) 1744 – Johann Gottfried Herder, German poet, philosopher, and critic (d. 1803) 1758 – Franz Teyber, Austrian organist and composer (d. 1810) 1767 – Louis Antoine de Saint-Just, French soldier and politician (d. 1794) 1776 – Thomas Bladen Capel, English admiral (d. 1853) 1786 – Ludwig I of Bavaria, King of Bavaria (d. 1868) 1793 – John Neal, American writer, critic, editor, lecturer, and activist (d. 1876) 1796 – James Lick, American carpenter and piano builder (d. 1876) 1802 – Nikolaus Lenau, Romanian-Austrian poet and author (d. 1850) 1803 – Luís Alves de Lima e Silva, Duke of Caxias (d. 1880) 1812 – Nikolay Zinin, Russian organic chemist (d. 1880) 1817 – Marie-Eugénie de Jésus, French nun and saint, founded the Religious of the Assumption (d. 1898) 1829 – Carlo Acton, Italian pianist and composer (d. 1909) 1836 – Bret Harte, American short story writer and poet (d. 1902) 1840 – George C. Magoun, American businessman (d. 1893) 1841 – Emil Theodor Kocher, Swiss physician and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1917) 1845 – Ludwig II of Bavaria, King of Bavaria (d. 1886) 1850 – Charles Richet, French physiologist and occultist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1935) 1867 – James W. Gerard, American lawyer and diplomat, United States Ambassador to Germany (d. 1951) 1869 – Tom Kiely, British-Irish decathlete (d. 1951) 1875 – Agnes Mowinckel, Norwegian actress (d. 1963) 1877 – Joshua Lionel Cowen, American businessman, co-founded the Lionel Corporation (d. 1965) 1878 – Ted Birnie, English footballer and manager (d. 1935) 1882 – Seán T. O'Kelly, Irish journalist and politician, 2nd President of Ireland (d. 1966) 1889 – Alexander Mair, Australian politician, 26th Premier of New South Wales (d. 1969) 1891 – David Shimoni, Belarusian-Israeli poet and translator (d. 1956) 1893 – Henry Trendley Dean, American dentist (d. 1962) 1898 – Helmut Hasse, German mathematician and academic (d. 1975) 1898 – Arthur Wood, English cricketer (d. 1973) 1899 – Paul Herman Buck, American historian and author (d. 1978) 1900 – Isobel Hogg Kerr Beattie, Scottish architect (d. 1970) 1900 – Hans Adolf Krebs, German physician and biochemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1981)
August 25
1901–present
1901–present 1902 – Stefan Wolpe, German-American composer and educator (d. 1972) 1903 – Arpad Elo, Hungarian-American chess player, created the Elo rating system (d. 1992) 1905 – Faustina Kowalska, Polish nun and saint (d. 1938) 1906 – Jim Smith, English cricketer (d. 1979) 1909 – Ruby Keeler, Canadian-American actress, singer, and dancer (d. 1993) 1909 – Michael Rennie, English actor and producer (d. 1971) 1910 – George Cisar, American baseball player (d. 2010) 1910 – Dorothea Tanning, American painter, sculptor, and poet (d. 2012) 1911 – Võ Nguyên Giáp, Vietnamese general and politician, 3rd Minister of Defence for Vietnam (d. 2013) 1912 – Erich Honecker, German politician (d. 1994) 1913 – Don DeFore, American actor (d. 1993) 1913 – Walt Kelly, American illustrator and animator (d. 1973) 1916 – Van Johnson, American actor (d. 2008) 1916 – Frederick Chapman Robbins, American pediatrician and virologist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2003) 1916 – Saburō Sakai, Japanese lieutenant and pilot (d. 2000) 1917 – Mel Ferrer, American actor, director, and producer (d. 2008) 1918 – Leonard Bernstein, American pianist, composer, and conductor (d. 1990) 1918 – Richard Greene, English actor (d. 1985) 1919 – William P. Foster, American bandleader and educator (d. 2010) 1919 – George Wallace, American lawyer, and politician, 45th Governor of Alabama (d. 1998) 1919 – Jaap Rijks, Dutch Olympic medalist (d. 2017) 1921 – Monty Hall, Canadian television personality and game show host (d. 2017) 1921 – Bryce Mackasey, Canadian businessman and politician, 20th Canadian Minister of Labour (d. 1999) 1921 – Brian Moore, Northern Irish-Canadian author and screenwriter (d. 1999) 1923 – Álvaro Mutis, Colombian-Mexican author and poet (d. 2013) 1923 – Allyre Sirois, Canadian lawyer and judge (d. 2012) 1924 – Zsuzsa Körmöczy, Hungarian tennis player and coach (d. 2006) 1925 – Thea Astley, Australian journalist and author (d. 2004) 1925 – Hilmar Hoffmann, German film and culture academic (d. 2018) 1925 – Stepas Butautas, Lithuanian basketball player and coach (d. 2001) 1927 – Althea Gibson, American tennis player and golfer (d. 2003) 1927 – Des Renford, Australian swimmer (d. 1999) 1928 – John "Kayo" Dottley, American football player (d. 2018) 1928 – Darrell Johnson, American baseball player, coach, and manager (d. 2004) 1928 – Karl Korte, American composer and academic (d. 2022) 1928 – Herbert Kroemer, German-American physicist, engineer, and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 2024) 1930 – Sean Connery, Scottish actor and producer (d. 2020) 1930 – György Enyedi, Hungarian economist and geographer (d. 2012) 1930 – Graham Jarvis, Canadian actor (d. 2003) 1930 – Crispin Tickell, English academic and diplomat, British Permanent Representative to the United Nations (d. 2022) 1931 – Regis Philbin, American actor and television host (d. 2020) 1932 – Anatoly Kartashov, Soviet aviator and cosmonaut (d. 2005) 1933 – Patrick F. McManus, American journalist and author (d. 2018) 1933 – Wayne Shorter, American saxophonist and composer (d. 2023) 1933 – Tom Skerritt, American actor 1934 – Lise Bacon, Canadian judge and politician, Deputy Premier of Quebec 1934 – Eddie Ilarde, Filipino journalist and politician (d. 2020) 1935 – Charles Wright, American poet 1936 – Giridharilal Kedia, Indian businessman, founded the Image Institute of Technology & Management (d. 2009) 1937 – Jimmy Hannan, Australian television host and singer (d. 2019) 1937 – Virginia Euwer Wolff, American author 1938 – David Canary, American actor (d. 2015) 1938 – Frederick Forsyth, English journalist and author 1939 – John Badham, English-American actor, director, and producer 1939 – Marshall Brickman, Brazilian-American director, producer, and screenwriter (d. 2024) 1940 – Wilhelm von Homburg, German boxer and actor (d. 2004) 1941 – Mario Corso, Italian footballer and coach (d. 2020) 1941 – Ludwig Müller, German footballer (d. 2021) 1942 – Nathan Deal, American lawyer, and politician, 82nd Governor of Georgia 1942 – Pat Ingoldsby, Irish poet and television presenter (d. 2025) 1942 – Ivan Koloff, Canadian wrestler (d. 2017) 1944 – Conrad Black, Canadian historian and author 1944 – Jacques Demers, Canadian ice hockey player, coach, and politician 1944 – Anthony Heald, American actor 1944 – Andrew Longmore, British lawyer and judge 1945 – Daniel Hulet, Belgian cartoonist (d. 2011) 1945 – Hannah Louise Shearer, American screenwriter and producer 1946 – Rollie Fingers, American baseball player 1946 – Charles Ghigna, American poet and author 1946 – Charlie Sanders, American football player and sportscaster (d. 2015) 1947 – Michael Kaluta, American author and illustrator 1947 – Keith Tippett, British jazz pianist and composer (d. 2020) 1948 – Ledward Kaapana, American singer and guitarist 1948 – Nicholas A. Peppas, Greek chemist and biologist 1949 – Martin Amis, British novelist (d. 2023) 1949 – Rijkman Groenink, Dutch banker and academic 1949 – John Savage, American actor and producer 1949 – Gene Simmons, Israeli-American singer-songwriter, producer, and actor 1950 – Willy DeVille, American singer and songwriter (d. 2009) 1950 – Charles Fambrough, American bassist, composer, and producer (d. 2011) 1951 – Rob Halford, English heavy metal singer-songwriter 1951 – Bill Handel, Brazilian-American lawyer and radio host 1952 – Kurban Berdyev, Turkmen footballer and manager 1952 – Geoff Downes, English keyboard player, songwriter, and producer 1952 – Duleep Mendis, Sri Lankan cricketer and coach 1954 – Elvis Costello, English singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer 1954 – Jim Wallace, Baron Wallace of Tankerness, Scottish lawyer and politician, First Minister of Scotland 1955 – John McGeoch, Scottish guitarist (d. 2004) 1955 – Gerd Müller, German businessman and politician 1956 – Matt Aitken, English songwriter and record producer 1956 – Takeshi Okada, Japanese footballer, coach, and manager 1956 – Henri Toivonen, Finnish race car driver (d. 1986) 1957 – Sikander Bakht, Pakistani cricketer and sportscaster 1957 – Simon McBurney, English actor and director 1957 – Frank Serratore, American ice hockey player and coach 1958 – Tim Burton, American director, producer, and screenwriter 1958 – Christian LeBlanc, American actor 1959 – Ian Falconer, American author and illustrator (d. 2023) 1959 – Steve Levy, American lawyer and politician 1959 – Bernardo Rezende, Brazilian volleyball coach and player 1959 – Lane Smith, American author and illustrator 1959 – Ruth Ann Swenson, American soprano and actress 1960 – Ashley Crow, American actress 1960 – Georg Zellhofer, Austrian footballer and manager 1961 – Billy Ray Cyrus, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and actor 1961 – Dave Tippett, Canadian ice hockey player and coach 1961 – Ally Walker, American actress 1961 – Joanne Whalley, English actress 1962 – Taslima Nasrin, Bangladeshi author 1962 – Theresa Andrews, American competition swimmer and Olympic champion 1962 – Vivian Campbell, Northern Irish rock guitarist and songwriter 1962 – Michael Zorc, German footballer 1963 – Miro Cerar, Slovenian lawyer and politician, 8th Prime Minister of Slovenia 1963 – Shock G, American rapper and producer (d. 2021) 1963 – Tiina Intelmann, Estonian lawyer and diplomat 1964 – Azmin Ali, Malaysian mathematician and politician 1964 – Maxim Kontsevich, Russian-American mathematician and academic 1964 – Blair Underwood, American actor 1965 – Cornelius Bennett, American football player 1965 – Tim Cain, American video game designer 1965 – Sanjeev Sharma, Indian cricketer and coach 1965 – Mia Zapata, American singer (d. 1993) 1966 – Albert Belle, American baseball player 1966 – Robert Maschio, American actor 1966 – Derek Sherinian, American keyboard player, songwriter, and producer 1966 – Terminator X, American hip-hop DJ 1967 – Tom Hollander, English actor 1967 – Jeff Tweedy, American singer-songwriter, musician, and producer 1968 – David Alan Basche, American actor 1968 – Yuri Mitsui, Japanese actress, model, and race car driver 1968 – Stuart Murdoch, Scottish singer-songwriter 1968 – Spider One, American singer-songwriter and producer 1968 – Rachael Ray, American chef, author, and television host 1968 – Takeshi Ueda, Japanese singer-songwriter and bass player 1969 – Olga Konkova, Norwegian-Russian pianist and composer 1969 – Cameron Mathison, Canadian actor and television personality 1969 – Catriona Matthew, Scottish golfer 1969 – Vivek Razdan, Indian cricketer, coach, and sportscaster 1970 – Doug Glanville, American baseball player and sportscaster 1970 – Debbie Graham, American tennis player 1970 – Robert Horry, American basketball player and sportscaster 1970 – Adrian Lam, Papua New Guinean-Australian rugby league player and coach 1970 – Jo Dee Messina, American singer-songwriter 1970 – Claudia Schiffer, German model and fashion designer 1971 – Jason Death, Australian rugby league player 1971 – Nathan Page, Australian actor 1972 – Marvin Harrison, American football player 1973 – Fatih Akın, German director, producer, and screenwriter 1974 – Eric Millegan, American actor 1974 – Pablo Ozuna, Dominican baseball player 1975 – Brad Drew, Australian rugby league player 1975 – Petria Thomas, Australian swimmer and coach 1976 – Damon Jones, American basketball player and coach 1976 – Javed Qadeer, Pakistani cricketer and coach 1976 – Alexander Skarsgård, Swedish actor 1977 – Masumi Asano, Japanese voice actress and producer 1977 – Andy McDonald, Canadian ice hockey player 1977 – Jonathan Togo, American actor 1978 – Kel Mitchell, American actor, producer, and screenwriter 1978 – Robert Mohr, German rugby player 1979 – Marlon Harewood, English footballer 1979 – Philipp Mißfelder, German historian and politician (d. 2015) 1979 – Deanna Nolan, American basketball player 1981 – Rachel Bilson, American actress 1981 – Jan-Berrie Burger, Namibian cricketer 1981 – Camille Pin, French tennis player 1982 – Jung Jung-suk, South Korean footballer (d. 2011) 1982 – Nick Schultz, Canadian ice hockey player 1983 – James Rossiter, English race car driver 1984 – Florian Mohr, German footballer 1984 – Anya Monzikova, Russian-American model and actress 1986 – Rodney Ferguson, American footballer 1987 – Stacey Farber, Canadian actress 1987 – Velimir Jovanović, Serbian footballer 1987 – Blake Lively, American model and actress 1987 – Amy Macdonald, Scottish singer-songwriter and guitarist 1987 – Justin Upton, American baseball player 1987 – Adam Warren, American baseball player 1987 – James Wesolowski, Australian footballer 1988 – Angela Park, Brazilian-American golfer 1988 – Giga Chikadze, Georgian mixed martial artist and kickboxer 1989 – Hiram Mier, Mexican footballer 1990 – Max Muncy, American baseball player 1992 – Miyabi Natsuyaki, Japanese singer and actress 1992 – Ricardo Rodriguez, Swiss footballer 1994 – Edmunds Augstkalns, Latvian ice hockey player 1994 – Caris LeVert, American basketball player 1995 – Ong Seong-wu, South Korean singer and actor 1995 – Dowoon, South Korean musician 1998 – China Anne McClain, American actress and singer 2000 – Nicki Nicole, Argentine rapper and singer-songwriter 2003 – Rebeka Jančová, Slovak alpine ski racer 2004 – Evann Girault, French-Nigerien sabre fencer
August 25
Deaths
Deaths
August 25
Pre-1600
Pre-1600 AD 79 – Pliny the Elder, Roman commander and philosopher (b. 23) 274 – Yang Yan, Jin Dynasty empress (b. 238) 306 – Saint Maginus, Christian hermit and martyr from Tarragona 383 – Gratian, Roman emperor (b. 359) 471 – Gennadius I, patriarch of Constantinople 766 – Constantine Podopagouros, Byzantine official 766 – Strategios Podopagouros, Byzantine general 985 – Dietrich of Haldensleben, German margrave 1091 – Sisnando Davides, military leader 1192 – Hugh III, Duke of Burgundy (b. 1142) 1258 – George Mouzalon, regent of the Empire of Nicaea 1270 – Louis IX of France (b. 1214) 1270 – Alphonso of Brienne (b. c. 1225) 1271 – Joan, Countess of Toulouse (b. 1220) 1282 – Thomas de Cantilupe, English bishop and saint (b. 1218) 1322 – Beatrice of Silesia, queen consort of Germany (b. c. 1292) 1327 – Demasq Kaja, Chobanid 1330 – Sir James Douglas, Scottish guerrilla leader (b. 1286) 1339 – Henry de Cobham, 1st Baron Cobham (b. 1260) 1368 – Andrea Orcagna, Italian painter, sculptor, and architect 1482 – Margaret of Anjou wife of Henry VI and Queen of England (b. 1429) 1485 – William Catesby, supporter of Richard III (b. 1450) 1554 – Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, English soldier and politician, Lord High Treasurer (b. 1473) 1592 – William IV, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel (b. 1532) 1600 – Hosokawa Gracia, Japanese aristocrat and Catholic convert (b. 1563)
August 25
1601–1900
1601–1900 1603 – Ahmad al-Mansur, Sultan of the Saadi dynasty (b. 1549) 1631 – Nicholas Hyde, Lord Chief Justice of England (b.c. 1572) 1632 – Thomas Dekker, English author and playwright (b. 1572) 1688 – Henry Morgan, Welsh admiral and politician, Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica (b. 1635) 1699 – Christian V of Denmark (b. 1646) 1711 – Edward Villiers, 1st Earl of Jersey, English politician, Secretary of State for the Southern Department (b. 1656) 1742 – Carlos Seixas, Portuguese organist and composer (b. 1704) 1774 – Niccolò Jommelli, Italian composer and educator (b. 1714) 1776 – David Hume, Scottish economist, historian, and philosopher (b. 1711) 1794 – Florimond Claude, Comte de Mercy-Argenteau, Belgian-Austrian diplomat (b. 1727) 1797 – Thomas Chittenden, Governor of the Vermont Republic, and first Governor of the State of Vermont (b. 1730) 1815 – Stephen Badlam, American artisan and military officer (b. 1815) 1819 – James Watt, Scottish engineer and instrument maker (b. 1736) 1822 – William Herschel, German-English astronomer and composer (b. 1738) 1867 – Michael Faraday, English physicist and chemist (b. 1791) 1882 – Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald, Estonian physician and author (b. 1803) 1886 – Zinovios Valvis, Greek lawyer and politician, 35th Prime Minister of Greece (b. 1791) 1892 – William Champ, English-Australian politician, 1st Premier of Tasmania (b. 1808) 1900 – Friedrich Nietzsche, German philologist, philosopher, and critic (b. 1844)
August 25
1901–present
1901–present 1904 – Henri Fantin-Latour, French painter and lithographer (b. 1836) 1908 – Henri Becquerel, French physicist and chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1852) 1916 – Mary Tappan Wright, American novelist and short story writer (b. 1851) 1921 – Nikolay Gumilyov, Russian poet and critic (b. 1886) 1924 – Mariano Álvarez, Filipino general and politician (b. 1818) 1924 – Velma Caldwell Melville, American editor, and writer of prose and poetry (b. 1858) 1925 – Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf, Austrian field marshal (b. 1852) 1930 – Frankie Campbell, American boxer (b. 1904) 1931 – Dorothea Fairbridge, South African author and co-founder of Guild of Loyal Women (b. 1862) 1936 – Juliette Adam, French author (b. 1836) 1938 – Aleksandr Kuprin, Russian pilot, explorer, and author (b. 1870) 1939 – Babe Siebert, Canadian ice hockey player and coach (b. 1904) 1940 – Prince Jean, Duke of Guise (b. 1874) 1942 – Prince George, Duke of Kent (b. 1902) 1945 – John Birch, American soldier and missionary (b. 1918) 1956 – Alfred Kinsey, American biologist and academic (b. 1894) 1965 – Moonlight Graham, American baseball player and physician (b. 1879) 1966 – Lao She, Chinese novelist and dramatist (b. 1899) 1967 – Stanley Bruce, Australian lawyer and politician, 8th Prime Minister of Australia (b. 1883) 1967 – Oscar Cabalén, Argentine race car driver (b. 1928) 1967 – Paul Muni, Ukrainian-born American actor (b. 1895) 1967 – George Lincoln Rockwell, American commander, politician, and activist, founded the American Nazi Party (b. 1918) 1968 – Stan McCabe, Australian cricketer and coach (b. 1910) 1969 – Robert Cosgrove, Australian politician, 30th Premier of Tasmania (b. 1884) 1970 – Tachū Naitō, Japanese architect and engineer, designed the Tokyo Tower (b. 1886) 1971 – Ted Lewis, American singer and clarinet player (b. 1890) 1973 – Dezső Pattantyús-Ábrahám, Hungarian lawyer and politician, Prime Minister of Hungary (b. 1875) 1976 – Eyvind Johnson, Swedish novelist and short story writer, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1900) 1977 – Károly Kós, Hungarian architect, ethnologist, and politician (b. 1883) 1979 – Stan Kenton, American pianist, composer, and bandleader (b. 1911) 1980 – Gower Champion, American dancer and choreographer (b. 1919) 1981 – Nassos Kedrakas, Greek actor and cinematographer (b. 1915) 1982 – Anna German, Polish singer (b. 1936) 1984 – Truman Capote, American novelist, playwright, and screenwriter (b. 1924) 1984 – Viktor Chukarin, Ukrainian gymnast and coach (b. 1921) 1984 – Waite Hoyt, American baseball player and sportscaster (b. 1899) 1988 – Art Rooney, American businessman, founded the Pittsburgh Steelers (b. 1901) 1990 – Morley Callaghan, Canadian author and playwright (b. 1903) 1995 – Doug Stegmeyer, American bass player and producer (b. 1951) 1998 – Lewis F. Powell, Jr., American lawyer and Supreme Court justice (b. 1907) 1999 – Rob Fisher, English keyboard player and songwriter (b. 1956) 2000 – Carl Barks, American author and illustrator (b. 1901) 2000 – Frederick C. Bock, American soldier and pilot (b. 1918) 2000 – Jack Nitzsche, American pianist, composer, and producer (b. 1937) 2000 – Allen Woody, American bass player and songwriter (b. 1955) 2001 – Aaliyah, American singer and actress (b. 1979) 2001 – Carl Brewer, Canadian ice hockey player (b. 1938) 2001 – Üzeyir Garih, Turkish engineer and businessman, co-founded Alarko Holding (b. 1929) 2001 – Ken Tyrrell, English race car driver and businessman, founded Tyrrell Racing (b. 1924) 2002 – Dorothy Hewett, Australian author and poet (b. 1923) 2003 – Tom Feelings, American author and illustrator (b. 1933) 2005 – Peter Glotz, Czech-German academic and politician (b. 1939) 2006 – Noor Hassanali, Trinidadian-Tobagonian lawyer and politician, 2nd President of Trinidad and Tobago (b. 1918) 2007 – Benjamin Aaron, American lawyer and scholar (b. 1915) 2007 – Ray Jones, English footballer (b. 1988) 2008 – Ahmad Faraz, Pakistani poet (b. 1931) 2008 – Kevin Duckworth, American basketball player (b. 1964) 2009 – Ted Kennedy, American politician (b. 1932) 2009 – Mandé Sidibé, Malian economist and politician, Prime Minister of Mali (b. 1940) 2011 – Lazar Mojsov, Macedonian politician (b. 1920) 2012 – Florencio Amarilla, Paraguayan footballer, coach, and actor (b. 1935) 2012 – Neil Armstrong, American pilot, engineer, and astronaut (b. 1930) 2012 – Roberto González Barrera, Mexican banker and businessman (b. 1930) 2012 – Donald Gorrie, Scottish politician (b. 1933) 2013 – Ciril Bergles, Slovene poet and translator (b. 1934) 2013 – António Borges, Portuguese economist and banker (b. 1949) 2013 – William Froug, American screenwriter and producer (b. 1922) 2013 – Liu Fuzhi, Chinese academic and politician, 3rd Minister of Justice for China (b. 1917) 2013 – Raghunath Panigrahi, Indian singer-songwriter (b. 1932) 2013 – Gylmar dos Santos Neves, Brazilian footballer (b. 1930) 2014 – William Greaves, American director and producer (b. 1926) 2014 – Marcel Masse, Canadian educator and politician, 29th Canadian Minister of National Defence (b. 1936) 2014 – Nico M. M. Nibbering, Dutch chemist and academic (b. 1938) 2014 – Uziah Thompson, Jamaican-American drummer and producer (b. 1936) 2014 – Enrique Zileri, Peruvian journalist and publisher (b. 1931) 2015 – José María Benegas, Spanish lawyer and politician (b. 1948) 2015 – Francis Sejersted, Norwegian historian and academic (b. 1936) 2016 – Marvin Kaplan, American actor (b. 1927) 2017 – Rich Piana, American bodybuilder (b. 1971) 2018 – John McCain, American politician (b. 1936) 2019 – Ferdinand Piëch, Austrian business magnate and engineer (b. 1937) 2022 – Mable John, American blues vocalist (b. 1930) 2024 – Salim Al-Huss, Lebanese statesman, 34th Prime Minister of Lebanon (b. 1929)
August 25
Holidays and observances
Holidays and observances Christian feast day: Æbbe of Coldingham Aredius Genesius of Arles Genesius of Rome Ginés de la Jara (or Genesius of Cartagena) Gregory of Utrecht Joseph Calasanz Louis IX of France Blessed Ludovicus Baba Blessed Ludovicus Sasada Blessed Luis Sotelo Menas of Constantinople Blessed Miguel de Carvalho Patricia of Naples Blessed Pedro Vásquez Thomas de Cantilupe (or of Hereford) August 25 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics) Day of Songun (North Korea) Independence Day, celebrates the independence of Uruguay from Brazil in 1825. Soldier's Day (Brazil)
August 25
References
References
August 25
External links
External links Category:Days of August
August 25
Table of Content
pp-move, Events, Pre-1600, 1601–1900, 1901–present, Births, Pre-1600, 1601–1900, 1901–present, Deaths, Pre-1600, 1601–1900, 1901–present, Holidays and observances, References, External links
Aachen
Short description
thumb|290px|location of Aachen in the Meuse (Dutch and German: Maas) river system () Aachen ( , ; ; ; French and historical English: Aix-la-Chapelle or ) is the 13th-largest city in North Rhine-Westphalia and the 27th-largest city of Germany, with around 261,000 inhabitants. Aachen is located at the northern foothills of the High Fens and the Eifel Mountains. It sits on the Wurm River, a tributary of the Rur, and together with Mönchengladbach, it is the only larger German city in the drainage basin of the Meuse. It is the westernmost larger city in Germany, lying approximately west of Cologne and Bonn, directly bordering Belgium in the southwest, and the Netherlands in the northwest. The city lies in the Meuse–Rhine Euroregion and is the seat of the district of Aachen (Städteregion Aachen). The once Celtic settlement was equipped with several in the course of colonization by Roman pioneers settling at the warm Aachen thermal springs around the 1st century. After the withdrawal of the Roman troops, the vicus Aquae Granni was Frankized around the 5th century. This was followed by a period of sedentism under first Merovingian and then Carolingian rule. With the completion of the Carolingian Palace of Aachen at the transition to the 9th century, Aachen was constituted as the main royal residence of the Frankish Empire ruled by Charlemagne. Because of that the city is sometimes called "cradle of Europe". After the Treaty of Verdun, the city was within the borders of Middle Francia, until it became part of East Francia after the Treaty of Meerssen (870). It subsequently was part of the Holy Roman Empire and was granted city rights in 1166 by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, becoming an imperial city. It served as the coronation site where 31 Holy Roman Emperors were crowned Kings of the Germans from 936 to 1531, until Frankfurt am Main became the preferred place of coronation. One of Germany's leading institutes of higher education in technology, the RWTH Aachen University , is located in the city. Its university hospital Uniklinikum Aachen is Europe's largest single-building hospital. Aachen's industries include science, engineering and information technology. In 2009, Aachen was ranked eighth among cities in Germany for innovation. The regional dialect spoken in the city is a Central Franconian, Ripuarian variant with strong Limburgish influences from the dialects in the neighbouring Netherlands. As a Rhenish city, Aachen is one of the main centres of carnival celebrations in Germany, along with Cologne and Mainz. The culinary specialty for which the city is best known is Aachener Printen, a type of gingerbread.
Aachen
Etymology
Etymology The name Aachen is a modern descendant, like southern German , , meaning "river" or "stream", from Old High German , meaning "water" or "stream", which directly translates (and etymologically corresponds) to Latin , referring to the springs. The location has been inhabited by humans since the Neolithic era, about 5,000 years ago, attracted to its warm mineral springs. Latin figures in Aachen's Roman name , which meant "waters of Grannus", referring to the Celtic god of healing who was worshipped at the springs.. This word became in Walloon and in French, and subsequently to distinguish it from Aix-en-Provence, after Charlemagne had his palatine chapel built there in the late 8th century and then made the city his empire's capital. The city is known by a variety of different names in other languages: Language Name Pronunciation in IPA Aachen dialect Catalan , Czech Dutch / Low German French Greek () Italian Latin , , Limburgish Luxembourgish Polish Portuguese , , Russian (Akhen) Spanish Walloon
Aachen
History
History
Aachen
Early history
Early history Flint quarries on the Lousberg, Schneeberg, and Königshügel, first used during Neolithic times (3000–2500 BC), attest to the long occupation of the site of Aachen, as do recent finds under the modern city's Elisengarten pointing to a former settlement from the same period. Bronze Age (around 1600 BC) settlement is evidenced by the remains of barrows (burial mounds) found, for example, on the Klausberg. During the Iron Age, the area was settled by Celtic peoples. who were perhaps drawn by the marshy Aachen basin's hot sulphur springs where they worshipped Grannus, god of light and healing. The 25-hectare Roman spa resort town of Aquae Granni was, according to legend, founded by Grenus, under Hadrian, around 124 AD. Grenus refers to the Celtic god, and it seems it was the Roman 6th Legion at the start of the 1st century AD that first channelled the hot springs into a spa at Büchel, adding at the end of the same century the Münstertherme spa,. two water pipelines, and a probable sanctuary dedicated to Grannus. A kind of forum, surrounded by colonnades, connected the two spa complexes. There was an extensive residential area. The Romans built bathhouses near Burtscheid. A temple precinct called Vernenum was built near the modern Kornelimünster/Walheim. Today, remains have been found of three bathhouses,. including two fountains in the Elisenbrunnen and the Burtscheid bathhouse. Roman civil administration in Aachen eventually broke down as the baths and other public buildings (along with most of the villae rusticae of the surrounding countryside) were destroyed around AD 375 at the start of the migration period. The last Roman coin finds are from the time of Emperor Gratian (AD 375–383). Rome withdrew its troops from the area, but the town remained populated. By 470, the town came to be ruled by the Ripuarian Franks. and subordinated to their capital, Cologne. During the Roman period, Aachen was the site of a flourishing Jewish community..
Aachen
Middle Ages
Middle Ages Pepin the Short had a castle residence built in the town, due to the proximity of the hot springs and also for strategic reasons as it is located between the Rhineland and northern France.. Einhard mentions that in 765–766 Pepin spent both Christmas and Easter at Aquis villa (). ("and [he] celebrated the birth of the Lord [Christmas] in the town Aquis, and similarly Easter"), which must have been sufficiently equipped to support the royal household for several months. In the year of his coronation as king of the Franks, 768, Charlemagne came to spend Christmas at Aachen for the first time. He remained there in a mansion which he may have extended, although there is no source attesting to any significant building activity at Aachen in his time, apart from the building of the Palatine Chapel (since 1930, cathedral) and the Palace. Charlemagne spent most winters in Aachen between 792 and his death in 814. Aachen became the focus of his court and the political centre of his empire. During the Carolingian empire, a Jewish community lived near the royal palace. In Jewish texts, the city of Aachen was called Aish or Ash (אש). In 797, Isaac, a Jewish merchant, accompanied two ambassadors of Charlemagne to the court of Harun al-Rashid. He returned to Aachen in July 802, bearing an elephant called Abul-Abbas as a gift for the emperor. After Charlemagne's death, he was buried in the church which he had built;. his original tomb has been lost, while his alleged remains are preserved in the Karlsschrein, the shrine where he was reburied after being declared a saint; his saintliness, however, was never officially acknowledged by the Roman Curia as such. thumb|right|Construction of Aix-la-Chapelle, by Jean Fouquet thumb|150px|Presentation of the four "Great Relics" during the Aachen pilgrimage, after a 17th-century painting In 936, Otto I was crowned king of East Francia in the collegiate church built by Charlemagne. During the reign of Otto II, the nobles revolted and the West Franks under Lothair. raided Aachen in 978.. Aachen was attacked again by Odo of Champagne, who attacked the imperial palace while Conrad II was absent. Odo relinquished it and was killed afterwards.. The palace and town of Aachen had fortifying walls built by order of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa between 1172 and 1176. Over the next 500 years, most kings of Germany who ruled the Holy Roman Empire were crowned in Aachen. The original audience hall built by Charlemagne was torn down and replaced by the current city hall in 1330. During the 13th century, many Jews converted to Christianity, as shown in the records of the Aachen Minster (today's Cathedral). In 1486, the Jews of Aachen offered gifts to Maximilian I during his coronation ceremony. The last king to be crowned here was Ferdinand I in 1531. During the Middle Ages, Aachen remained a city of regional importance, due to its proximity to Flanders; it achieved a modest position in the trade in woollen cloths, favoured by imperial privilege. The city remained a free imperial city, subject to the emperor only, but was politically far too weak to influence the policies of any of its neighbours. The only dominion it had was over Burtscheid, a neighbouring territory ruled by a Benedictine abbess, which was forced to accept that all of its traffic must pass through the "Aachener Reich". As an imperial city, Aachen held certain political privileges that allowed it to remain independent of the troubles of Europe for many years. It remained a direct vassal of the Holy Roman Empire throughout most of the Middle Ages. It was also the site of many important church councils, including the Council of 837 and the Council of 1166, a council convened by the antipope Paschal III.
Aachen
Manuscript production
Manuscript production Aachen was an important site for the production of historical manuscripts. Under Charlemagne's purview, both the Ada Gospels and the Coronation Gospels may have been produced in Aachen.. In addition, quantities of the other texts in the court library were also produced locally. During the reign of Louis the Pious (814–840), substantial quantities of ancient texts were produced at Aachen, including legal manuscripts such as the leges scriptorium group, patristic texts including the five manuscripts of the Bamberg Pliny Group. Finally, under Lothair I (840–855), texts of outstanding quality were still being produced. This however marked the end of the period of manuscript production at Aachen.
Aachen
16th–18th centuries
16th–18th centuries thumb|upright=1.2|The siege of Aachen by the Spanish Army of Flanders under Ambrogio Spinola in 1614 thumb|upright=1.2|View of Aachen in 1690 In 1598, following the invasion of Spanish troops from the Netherlands, Rudolf deposed all Protestant office holders in Aachen and went as far as expelling them from the city.. From the early 16th century, Aachen started to lose its power and influence. First the coronations of emperors were moved from Aachen to Frankfurt. This was followed by the religious wars and the great fire of 1656.. After the destruction of most of the city in 1656, the rebuilding was mostly in the Baroque style. The decline of Aachen culminated in 1794, when the French, led by General Charles Dumouriez, occupied Aachen. In 1542, the Dutch humanist and physician Francis Fabricius published his study of the health benefits of the hot springs in Aachen. By the middle of the 17th century, the city had developed a considerable reputation as a spa, although this was in part because Aachen was then – and remained well into the 19th and early 20th century – a place of high-level prostitution. Traces of this hidden agenda of the city's history are found in the 18th-century guidebooks to Aachen as well as to the other spas. The main indication for visiting patients, ironically, was syphilis; only by the end of the 19th century had rheumatism become the most important object of cures at Aachen and Burtscheid. Aachen was chosen as the site of several important congresses and peace treaties: the first congress of Aachen (often referred to as the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle in English) on 2 May 1668,. leading to the First Treaty of Aachen in the same year which ended the War of Devolution.. The second congress ended with the second treaty in 1748, ending the War of the Austrian Succession.. In 1789, there was a constitutional crisis in the Aachen government,. and in 1794 Aachen lost its status as a free imperial city. In 1629, the Aachen Jewish community was expelled from the city. In 1667, six Jews were allowed to return. Most of the Aachen Jewish community settled in Burtscheid. As recently as the late 18th century the Abbess of Burtscheid was still prevented from building a road linking her territory to the neighbouring estates of the duke of Jülich; the city of Aachen deployed its handful of soldiers to chase away road-diggers.
Aachen
19th century
19th century thumb|The modern Elisabethhalle pool On 9 February 1801, the Peace of Lunéville removed the ownership of Aachen and the entire "left bank" of the Rhine from Germany (the Holy Roman Empire) and granted it to France. In 1815, control of the town was passed to the Kingdom of Prussia through an agreement reached by the Congress of Vienna. The third congress took place in 1818, to decide the fate of occupied Napoleonic France. By the middle of the 19th century, industrialisation had swept away most of the city's medieval rules of production and commerce, although the remains of the city's medieval constitution were kept in place until 1801, when Aachen became the "chef-lieu du département de la Roer" in Napoleon's First French Empire. In 1815, after the Napoleonic Wars, the Kingdom of Prussia took over within the new German Confederation. The city was one of its most socially and politically backward centres until the end of the 19th century. Administered within the Rhine Province, by 1880 the population was 80,000. Starting in 1838, the railway from Cologne to Belgium passed through Aachen.. The city suffered extreme overcrowding and deplorable sanitary conditions until 1875, when the medieval fortifications were abandoned as a limit to building and new, better housing was built in the east of the city, where sanitary drainage was easiest. In December 1880, the Aachen tramway network was opened, and in 1895 it was electrified.. In the 19th century and up to the 1930s, the city was important in the production of railway locomotives and carriages, iron, pins, needles, buttons, tobacco, woollen goods, and silk goods.
Aachen
20th century
20th century
Aachen
World War II
World War II thumb|upright=1.2|thumbtime=06:42|start=00:08|Films shot on 13, 14 and 15 October 1944 in Aachen by US forces After World War I, Aachen was occupied by the Entente until 1930, along with the rest of German territory west of the Rhine. Aachen was one of the locations involved in the Rhenish Republic. On 21 October 1923, an armed mob took over the city hall. Similar actions took place in Mönchengladbach, Duisburg, and Krefeld. This republic lasted about a year.. Aachen was heavily damaged during World War II. According to Jörg Friedrich in The Fire (2008), two Allied air raids on 11 April and 24 May 1944 "radically destroyed" the city. The first killed 1,525, including 212 children, and bombed six hospitals. During the second, 442 aircraft hit two railway stations, killed 207, and left 15,000 homeless. The raids destroyed Aachen-Eilendorf and Aachen-Burtscheid.. The city and its fortified surroundings were besieged from 12 September to 21 October 1944 by the US 1st Infantry Division. with the 3rd Armored Division assisting from the south.. Around 13 October the US 2nd Armored Division, coming from the north, and got as close as Würselen,. while the 30th Infantry Division completed the encirclement of Aachen on 16 October 1944.. With reinforcements from the US 28th Infantry Division. the battle continued involving direct assaults through the heavily defended city, which forced the German garrison to surrender on 21 October 1944. Aachen was the first German city to be captured by the Western Allies, and its residents welcomed the soldiers as liberators.. What remained of the city was destroyed—in some areas completely—during the fighting, mostly by American artillery fire and demolitions carried out by the Waffen-SS defenders. Damaged buildings included medieval churches of and the Rathaus (city hall), although Aachen Cathedral was largely unscathed. 4,000 inhabitants remained in the city; the rest had followed evacuation orders. Its first Allied-appointed mayor, Franz Oppenhoff, was assassinated by an SS commando unit.
Aachen
Expulsion of Aachen Jews
Expulsion of Aachen Jews thumb|View of the after its destruction on Kristallnacht, November 1938 On 16 May 1815, the Jewish community of the city offered an homage in its synagogue to the Prussian king, Friedrich Wilhelm III. In 1862, a large synagogue was built, later called the . By 1933, 1,345 Jews lived in the city. On Kristallnacht in 1938, the synagogue was destroyed. By the onset of World War II in 1939, many Jews had emigrated or were arrested, and only 782 remained in the city. At the end of the war in 1945, only 62 Jews lived in the city. As of 2003, 1,434 Jews were again living in Aachen.
Aachen
21st century
21st century The city of Aachen has developed into a technology hub as a by-product of hosting one of the leading universities of technology in Germany with the RWTH Aachen (Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule), known especially for mechanical engineering, automotive and manufacturing technology as well as for its research and academic hospital Klinikum Aachen, one of the largest medical facilities in Europe.
Aachen
Geography
Geography thumb|View towards Aachen at the foothills of the High Fens, with the university hospital visible, from the Vaalserberg, the highest elevation in Aachen and of the European part of the Netherlands. thumb|Physiogeographical location of Aachen Aachen is located in the middle of the Meuse–Rhine Euroregion, close to the border tripoint of Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium. The town of Vaals in the Netherlands lies nearby at about from Aachen's city centre, while the Dutch city of Heerlen and Eupen, the capital of the German-speaking Community of Belgium, are both located about from Aachen city centre. Aachen lies near the head of the open valley of the Wurm (which today flows through the city in canalised form), part of the larger basin of the Meuse, and about north of the High Fens, which form the northern edge of the Eifel uplands of the Rhenish Massif. The maximum dimensions of the city's territory are from north to south, and from east to west. The city limits are long, of which border Belgium and the Netherlands. The highest point in Aachen, located in the far southeast of the city, lies at an elevation of above sea level. The lowest point, in the north, and on the border with the Netherlands, is at .
Aachen
Climate
Climate As the westernmost city in Germany. (and close to the Low Countries), Aachen and the surrounding area belongs to a temperate climate zone (Cfb), with humid weather, mild winters, and warm summers. Because of its location north of the Eifel and the High Fens and its subsequent prevailing westerly weather patterns, rainfall in Aachen (on average 805 mm/year) is comparatively higher than, for example, in Bonn (with 669 mm/year). Another factor in the local weather forces of Aachen is the occurrence of Foehn winds on the southerly air currents, which results from the city's geographic location on the northern edge of the Eifel. Because the city is surrounded by hills, it suffers from inversion-related smog. Some areas of the city have become urban heat islands as a result of poor heat exchange, both because of the area's natural geography and from human activity. The city's numerous cold air corridors, which are slated to remain as free as possible from new construction, therefore play an important role in the urban climate of Aachen.. The January average is , while the July average is . Precipitation is almost evenly spread throughout the year. The city's oceanic climate provides comparably mild winters: While Aachen falls within the coldest extents covered by USDA plant hardiness zone 8b in the 1991–2020 period, having an average yearly minimum of -9.22 °C (15.4 °F), the Canadian city of Regina, Saskatchewan which is located at a similar latitude but at the heart of the North American landmass, far away from the sea's moderating effects, is classified as being in zone 3a. In the 1991–2020 period, the last freeze (at 2 m above ground) of spring occurred on April 28th and the first fall freeze on October 13th, on average. The Aachen weather station has recorded the following extreme values: Highest Temperature on 25 July 2019. Warmest Minimum on 29 July 1947. Coldest Maximum on 22 January 1940. Lowest Temperature on 11 January 1945. Highest Daily Precipitation on 14 July 2021. Wettest Month in July 2021. Wettest Year in 1966. Driest Year in 1959. Earliest Snowfall: 4 November 1941. Latest Snowfall: 30 April 1938. Longest annual sunshine: 2,128.4 hours in 2003. Shortest annual sunshine: 1,277.4 hours in 1981.
Aachen
Geology
Geology thumb|Layered sandstone and claystone formation from the Devonian period below St. Adalbert Church in Aachen The geology of Aachen is very structurally heterogeneous. The oldest occurring rocks in the area surrounding the city originate from the Devonian period and include carboniferous sandstone, greywacke, claystone and limestone. These formations are part of the Rhenish Massif, north of the High Fens. In the Pennsylvanian subperiod of the Carboniferous geological period, these rock layers were narrowed and folded as a result of the Variscan orogeny. After this event, and over the course of the following 200 million years, this area has been continuously flattened. During the Cretaceous period, the ocean penetrated the continent from the direction of the North Sea up to the mountainous area near Aachen, bringing with it clay, sand, and chalk deposits. While the clay (which was the basis for a major pottery industry in nearby Raeren) is mostly found in the lower areas of Aachen, the hills of the Aachen Forest and the Lousberg were formed from upper Cretaceous sand and chalk deposits. More recent sedimentation is mainly located in the north and east of Aachen and was formed through tertiary and quaternary river and wind activities. Along the major thrust fault of the Variscan orogeny, there are over 30 thermal springs in Aachen and Burtscheid. Additionally, the subsurface of Aachen is traversed by numerous active faults that belong to the Rurgraben fault system, which has been responsible for numerous earthquakes in the past, including the 1756 Düren earthquake. and the 1992 Roermond earthquake,. which was the strongest earthquake ever recorded in the Netherlands.
Aachen
Demographics
Demographics + Largest groups of foreign residents Nationality Population (30.06.2024) 6,745 4,365 3,998 3,751 3,662 2,369 1,786 1,836 1,745 1,542 1,495 Aachen had 245,885 inhabitants as of 31 December 2015, of whom 118,272 were female, and 127,613 were male. At the end of 2009, the foreign-born residents of Aachen made up 13.6 percent of the total population.. A significant portion of foreign residents are students at the RWTH Aachen University. Year Population 1994 246,570. 2007 247,740 2011 238,665 2014 243,336 2015 245,885 thumb|120px|Age distribution of Aachen's population next to Germany's (2014)
Aachen
Dialect
Dialect Aachen is at the western end of the Benrath line that divides High German to the south from the rest of the West Germanic speech area to the north. Aachen's local dialect is called Öcher Platt and belongs to Ripuarian.
Aachen
Boroughs
Boroughs The city is divided into seven administrative districts, or boroughs, each with its own district council, district leader, and district authority. The councils are elected locally by those who live within the district, and these districts are further subdivided into smaller sections for statistical purposes, with each sub-district named by a two-digit number. The districts of Aachen, including their constituent statistical districts, are: Aachen-Mitte: 10 Markt, 13 Theater, 14 Lindenplatz, 15 St. Jakob, 16 Westpark, 17 Hanbruch, 18 Hörn, 21 Ponttor, 22 Hansemannplatz, 23 Soers, 24 Jülicher Straße, 25 Kalkofen, 31 Kaiserplatz, 32 Adalbertsteinweg, 33 Panneschopp, 34 Rothe Erde, 35 Trierer Straße, 36 Frankenberg, 37 Forst, 41 Beverau, 42 Burtscheid Kurgarten, 43 Burtscheid Abbey, 46 Burtscheid Steinebrück, 47 Marschiertor, 48 Hangeweiher Brand: 51 Brand Eilendorf: 52 Eilendorf Haaren: 53 Haaren (including Verlautenheide) Kornelimünster/Walheim: 61 Kornelimünster, 62 Oberforstbach, 63 Walheim Laurensberg: 64 Vaalserquartier, 65 Laurensberg Richterich: 88 Richterich Regardless of official statistical designations, there are 50 neighbourhoods and communities within Aachen, here arranged by district: thumb|Aachen districts and quarters Aachen-Mitte: Beverau, Bildchen, Burtscheid, Forst, Frankenberg, Grüne Eiche, Hörn, Lintert, Pontviertel, Preuswald, Ronheide, Rosviertel, Rothe Erde, Stadtmitte, Steinebrück, West Brand: Brand, Eich, Freund, Hitfeld, Niederforstbach Eilendorf: Eilendorf, Nirm Haaren: Haaren, Hüls, Verlautenheide Kornelimünster/Walheim: Friesenrath, Hahn, Kitzenhaus, Kornelimünster, Krauthausen, Lichtenbusch, Nütheim, Oberforstbach, Sief, Schleckheim, Schmithof, Walheim Laurensberg: Gut Kullen, Kronenberg, Laurensberg, Lemiers, Melaten, Orsbach, Seffent, Soers, Steppenberg, Vaalserquartier, Vetschau Richterich: Horbach, Huf, Richterich
Aachen
Neighbouring communities
Neighbouring communities The following cities and communities border Aachen, clockwise from the northwest: Herzogenrath, Würselen, Eschweiler, Stolberg and Roetgen (which are all in the district of Aachen); Raeren, Kelmis and Plombières (Liège Province in Belgium) as well as Vaals, Gulpen-Wittem, Simpelveld, Heerlen and Kerkrade (all in Limburg Province in the Netherlands).
Aachen
Politics
Politics
Aachen
Mayor
Mayor The current mayor of Aachen is Sibylle Keupen, an independent endorsed by Alliance 90/The Greens, since 2020. The most recent mayoral election was held on 13 September 2020, with a runoff held on 27 September, and the results were as follows: ! rowspan=2 colspan=2| Candidate ! rowspan=2| Party ! colspan=2| First round ! colspan=2| Second round |- ! Votes ! % ! Votes ! % |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Sibylle Keupen | align=left| Independent (Green) | 39,662 | 38.9 | 53,685 | 67.4 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Harald Baal | align=left| Christian Democratic Union | 25,253 | 24.8 | 26,003 | 32.6 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Mathias Dopatka | align=left| Social Democratic Party | 23,031 | 22.6 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Markus Mohr | align=left| Alternative for Germany | 3,387 | 3.3 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Wilhelm Helg | align=left| Free Democratic Party | 3,122 | 3.1 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Leo Deumens | align=left| The Left | 2,397 | 2.4 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Hubert vom Venn | align=left| Die PARTEI | 2,112 | 2.1 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Jörg Polzin | align=left| Independent | 938 | 0.9 |- | | align=left| Ralf Haupts | align=left| Independent Voters' Association Aachen | 932 | 0.9 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Matthias Achilles | align=left| Pirate Party Germany | 848 | 0.8 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Adonis Böving | align=left| Independent | 317 | 0.3 |- ! colspan=3| Valid votes ! 101,999 ! 99.2 ! 79,688 ! 99.3 |- ! colspan=3| Invalid votes ! 819 ! 0.8 ! 532 ! 0.7 |- ! colspan=3| Total ! 102,818 ! 100.0 ! 80,220 ! 100.0 |- ! colspan=3| Electorate/voter turnout ! 192,502 ! 53.4 ! 192,435 ! 41.7 |- | colspan=7| Source: State Returning Officer |}
Aachen
City council
City council thumb|upright 1.2|Results of the 2020 city council election The Aachen city council governs the city alongside the mayor. The most recent city council election was held on 13 September 2020, and the results were as follows: ! colspan=2| Party ! Votes ! % ! +/- ! Seats ! +/- |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne) | 34,712 | 34.1 | 17.5 | 20 | 7 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Christian Democratic Union (CDU) | 25,268 | 24.8 | 11.5 | 14 | 14 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Social Democratic Party (SPD) | 18,676 | 18.3 | 7.7 | 11 | 9 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Free Democratic Party (FDP) | 5,042 | 4.9 | 0.5 | 3 | ±0 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| The Left (Die Linke) | 4,694 | 4.6 | 1.5 | 3 | 2 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Alternative for Germany (AfD) | 3,816 | 3.7 | 1.2 | 2 | ±0 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Volt Germany (Volt) | 3,784 | 3.7 | New | 2 | New |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Die PARTEI (PARTEI) | 2,295 | 2.3 | 1.8 | 1 | 1 |- | | align=left| Independent Voters' Association Aachen (UWG) | 1,632 | 1.6 | 0.2 | 1 | ±0 |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Pirate Party Germany (Piraten) | 1,226 | 1.2 | 2.2 | 1 | 2 |- | colspan=7 bgcolor=lightgrey| |- | bgcolor=| | align=left| Ecological Democratic Party (ÖDP) | 673 | 0.7 | New | 0 | New |- | | align=left| Voter Group | 45 | 0.0 | New | 0 | New |- ! colspan=2| Valid votes ! 101,863 ! 99.1 ! ! ! |- ! colspan=2| Invalid votes ! 918 ! 0.9 ! ! ! |- ! colspan=2| Total ! 102,781 ! 100.0 ! ! 58 ! 18 |- ! colspan=2| Electorate/voter turnout ! 192,502 ! 53.4 ! 0.7 ! ! |- | colspan=7| Source: State Returning Officer |}
Aachen
Main sights
Main sights
Aachen
Cathedral
Cathedral thumb|upright=1.2|Aachen Cathedral Aachen Cathedral was erected on the orders of Charlemagne. Construction began c. AD 796, and it was, on completion c. 798,. the largest cathedral north of the Alps. It was modelled after the Basilica of San Vitale, in Ravenna, Italy, and was built by Odo of Metz. Charlemagne also desired for the chapel to compete with the Lateran Palace, both in quality and authority. It was originally built in the Carolingian style, including marble covered walls, and mosaic inlay on the dome.. On his death, Charlemagne's remains were interred in the cathedral and can be seen there to this day. The cathedral was extended several times in later ages, turning it into a curious and unique mixture of building styles. The throne and gallery portion date from the Ottonian, with portions of the original opus sectile floor still visible. The 13th century saw gables being added to the roof, and after the fire of 1656, the dome was rebuilt. Finally, a choir was added around the start of the 15th century. After Frederick Barbarossa canonised Charlemagne in 1165 the chapel became a destination for pilgrims. For 600 years, from 936 to 1531, Aachen Cathedral was the church of coronation for 30 German kings and 12 queens. The church built by Charlemagne is still the main attraction of the city.. In addition to holding the remains of its founder, it became the burial place of his successor Otto III. In the upper chamber of the gallery, Charlemagne's marble throne is housed.. Aachen Cathedral has been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Most of the marble and columns used in the construction of the cathedral were brought from Rome and Ravenna, including the sarcophagus in which Charlemagne was eventually laid to rest.. A bronze bear from Gaul was placed inside, along with an equestrian statue from Ravenna, believed to be Theodric, in contrast to a wolf and a statue of Marcus Aurelius in the Capitoline. Bronze pieces such as the doors and railings, some of which have survived to present day, were cast in a local foundry. Finally, there is uncertainty surrounding the bronze pine cone in the chapel, and where it was created. Wherever it was made, it was also a parallel to a piece in Rome, this in Old St. Peter's Basilica.
Aachen
Cathedral Treasury
Cathedral Treasury thumb|upright|Cross of Lothair, Aachen Cathedral Treasury Aachen Cathedral Treasury has housed, throughout its history, a collection of liturgical objects. The origin of this church treasure is in dispute as some say Charlemagne himself endowed his chapel with the original collection, while the rest were collected over time. Others say all of the objects were collected over time, from such places as Jerusalem and Constantinople. The location of this treasury has moved over time and was unknown until the 15th century when it was located in the Matthiaskapelle (St. Matthew's Chapel) until 1873, when it was moved to the Karlskapelle (Charles' Chapel). From there it was moved to the Hungarian Chapel in 1881 and in 1931 to its present location next to the Allerseelenkapelle (Poor Souls' Chapel). Only six of the original Carolingian objects have remained, and of those only three are left in Aachen: the Aachen Gospels, a diptych of Christ, and an early Byzantine silk. The Coronation Gospels and a reliquary burse of St. Stephen were moved to Vienna in 1798 and the Talisman of Charlemagne was given as a gift in 1804 to Josephine Bonaparte and subsequently to Rheims Cathedral. 210 documented pieces have been added to the treasury since its inception, typically to receive in return legitimisation of linkage to the heritage of Charlemagne. The Lothar Cross, the Gospels of Otto III and multiple additional Byzantine silks were donated by Otto III. Part of the Pala d'Oro and a covering for the Aachen Gospels were made of gold donated by Henry II. Frederick Barbarossa donated the candelabrum that adorns the dome and also once "crowned" the Shrine of Charlemagne, which was placed underneath in 1215. Charles IV donated a pair of reliquaries. Louis XI gave, in 1475, the crown of Margaret of York, and, in 1481, another arm reliquary of Charlemagne. Maximilian I and Charles V both gave numerous works of art by Hans von Reutlingen. Continuing the tradition, objects continued to be donated until the present, each indicative of the period of its gifting, with the last documented gift being a chalice from 1960 made by Ewald Mataré.
Aachen
Rathaus
Rathaus thumb|Aachen Rathaus seen from the south The Aachen Rathaus, (English: Aachen City Hall or Aachen Town Hall) dated from 1330, lies between two central squares, the Markt (marketplace) and the Katschhof (between city hall and cathedral). The coronation hall is on the first floor of the building. Inside one can find five frescoes by the Aachen artist Alfred Rethel which show legendary scenes from the life of Charlemagne, as well as Charlemagne's signature. Also, precious replicas of the Imperial Regalia are kept here. Since 2009, the city hall has been a station on the Route Charlemagne, a tour programme by which historical sights of Aachen are presented to visitors. At the city hall, a museum exhibition explains the history and art of the building and gives a sense of the historical coronation banquets that took place there. A portrait of Napoleon from 1807 by Louis-André-Gabriel Bouchet and one of his wife Joséphine from 1805 by Robert Lefèvre are viewable as part of the tour. As before, the city hall is the seat of the mayor of Aachen and of the city council, and annually the Charlemagne Prize is awarded there.
Aachen
Other sights
Other sights The Grashaus, a late medieval house at the Fischmarkt, is one of the oldest non-religious buildings in central Aachen. It hosted the city archive, and before that, the Grashaus was the city hall until the present building took over this function. The Elisenbrunnen is one of the most famous sights of Aachen. It is a neo-classical hall covering one of the city's famous fountains. It is just a minute away from the cathedral. Just a few steps in a south-easterly direction lies the 19th-century theatre. Also of note are two remaining city gates, the Ponttor (Pont gate), northwest of the cathedral, and the Marschiertor (marching gate), close to the central railway station. There are also a few parts of both medieval city walls left, most of them integrated into more recent buildings, but some others still visible. There are even five towers left, some of which are used for housing. St. Michael's Church, Aachen was built as a church of the Aachen Jesuit Collegium in 1628. It is attributed to the Rhine mannerism, and a sample of a local Renaissance architecture. The rich façade remained unfinished until 1891, when the architect Peter Friedrich Peters added to it. The church is a Greek Orthodox church today, but the building is used also for concerts because of its good acoustics. The synagogue in Aachen, which was destroyed on the Night of Broken Glass (Kristallnacht), 9 November 1938, was reinaugurated on 18 May 1995... One of the contributors to the reconstructions of the synagogue was Jürgen Linden, the Lord Mayor of Aachen from 1989 to 2009. There are numerous other notable churches and monasteries, a few remarkable 17th- and 18th-century buildings in the particular Baroque style typical of the region, a synagogue, a collection of statues and monuments, park areas, cemeteries, among others. Among the museums in the town are the Suermondt-Ludwig Museum, which has a fine sculpture collection and the Aachen Museum of the International Press, which is dedicated to newspapers from the 16th century to the present.. The area's industrial history is reflected in dozens of 19th- and early 20th-century manufacturing sites in the city.
Aachen
Economy
Economy thumb|Ford Research Center, Aachen Aachen is the administrative centre for the coal-mining industries in neighbouring places to the northeast. Products manufactured in Aachen include electrical goods, fine woolen textiles, foodstuffs (chocolate and candy), glass, machinery, rubber products, furniture, metal products. Also in and around Aachen chemicals, plastics, cosmetics, and needles and pins are produced.. Though once a major player in Aachen's economy, today glassware and textile production make up only 10% of total manufacturing jobs in the city. There have been a number of spin-offs from the university's IT technology department.
Aachen
Electric vehicle manufacturing
Electric vehicle manufacturing thumb|StreetScooter Work as DHL delivery van (2016) In June 2010, Achim Kampker, together with Günther Schuh, founded a small company to develop electric powered light utility vehicles; in August 2014, it was renamed StreetScooter GmbH. This started as a privately organised research initiative at the RWTH Aachen University, before becoming the independent company in Aachen. Kampker was also the founder and chairman of the European Network for Affordable and Sustainable Electromobility. In May 2014, the company announced that the city of Aachen, the city council Aachen and the savings bank Aachen had ordered electric vehicles from the company. In late 2014, approximately 70 employees were manufacturing 200 vehicles annually in the premises of the Waggonfabrik Talbot, the former Talbot/Bombardier plant in Aachen. In December 2014 DHL Group purchased the StreetScooter company from Günther, operating it as a wholly owned subsidiary.Deutsche Post DHL übernimmt StreetScooter GmbH 9. In 2015, Günther founded a new electric vehicle company, e.GO Mobile, which started producing the e.GO Life electric passenger car and other vehicles in April 2019. By April 2016, StreetScooter announced that it would produce 2000 of its electric vans, branded the Work, in Aachen by the end of the year, and would be scaling up to manufacture approximately 10,000 Works annually, starting in 2017, also in Aachen. At the time, this target would make it the largest electric light utility vehicle manufacturer in Europe, surpassing Renault's smaller Kangoo Z.E.
Aachen
Culture
Culture thumb|Aachen is also famous for its carnival (Karneval, Fasching), in which families dress in colourful costumes. In 1372, Aachen became the first coin-minting city in the world to regularly place an Anno Domini date on a general circulation coin, a groschen. The Scotch Club in Aachen was the first discothèque in Germany, opened from 19 October 1959 until 1992. Klaus Quirini as DJ Heinrich was the first DJ ever. The thriving Aachen black metal scene is among the most notable in Germany, with such bands as Nagelfar, The Ruins of Beverast, Graupel and Verdunkeln. The local speciality of Aachen is an originally hard type of sweet bread, baked in large flat loaves, called Aachener Printen. Unlike Lebkuchen, a German form of gingerbread sweetened with honey, Printen use a syrup made from sugar. Today, a soft version is sold under the same name which follows an entirely different recipe. Asteroid 274835 Aachen, discovered by amateur astronomer Erwin Schwab in 2009, was named after the city. The official was published by the Minor Planet Center on 8 November 2019 (). Kammerchor Carmina Mundi, a professional chamber choir
Aachen
Education
Education thumb|left|The main building of RWTH Aachen University thumb|right|Typical Aachen street with early 20th-century Gründerzeit houses thumb|Another example of Aachen early 20th-century Gründerzeit houses RWTH Aachen University, established as Polytechnicum in 1870, is one of Germany's Universities of Excellence with strong emphasis on technological research, especially for electrical and mechanical engineering, computer sciences, physics, and chemistry. The university clinic attached to the RWTH, the Klinikum Aachen, is the biggest single-building hospital in Europe.. Over time, a host of software and computer industries have developed around the university. It also maintains a botanical garden (the Botanischer Garten Aachen). FH Aachen, Aachen University of Applied Sciences (AcUAS) was founded in 1971. The AcUAS offers a classic engineering education in professions such as mechatronics, construction engineering, mechanical engineering or electrical engineering. German and international students are educated in more than 20 international or foreign-oriented programmes and can acquire German as well as international degrees (Bachelor/Master) or Doppelabschlüsse (double degrees). Foreign students account for more than 21% of the student body. The Katholische Hochschule Nordrhein-Westfalen – Abteilung Aachen (Catholic University of Applied Sciences Northrhine-Westphalia – Aachen department). offers its some 750 students a variety of degree programmes: social work, childhood education, nursing, and co-operative management. It also has the only programme of study in Germany especially designed for mothers.. The (Cologne University of Music) is one of the world's foremost performing arts schools and one of the largest music institutions for higher education in Europe. with one of its three campuses in Aachen.. The Aachen campus substantially contributes to the Opera/Musical Theatre master's programme by collaborating with the Theater Aachen and the recently established musical theatre chair through the Rheinische Opernakademie. The German Army's technical school (Ausbildungszentrum Technik Landsysteme) is located in Aachen..
Aachen
Sports
Sports thumb|left|New Tivoli, home ground of Alemannia Aachen The annual CHIO (short for the French term Concours Hippique International Officiel) is the biggest equestrian meeting of the world and among horsemen is considered to be as prestigious for equitation as the tournament of Wimbledon for tennis. Aachen hosted the 2006 FEI World Equestrian Games. The local football team Alemannia Aachen had a short run in Germany's first division, after its promotion in 2006. However, the team could not sustain its status and is now back in the third division. The stadium "Tivoli", opened in 1928, served as the venue for the team's home games and was well known for its incomparable atmosphere throughout the whole of the second division.. Before the old stadium's demolition in 2011, it was used by amateurs, whilst the Bundesliga Club held its games in the new stadium "Neuer Tivoli" – meaning New Tivoli—a couple of metres down the road. The building work for the stadium which has a capacity of 32,960, began in May 2008 and was completed by the beginning of 2009. The Ladies in Black women's volleyball team (part of the "PTSV Aachen" sports club since 2013) has played in the first German volleyball league (DVL) since 2008. In June 2022, the local basketball club BG Aachen e.V. was promoted to the 1st regional league.
Aachen
Transport
Transport thumb|Aachen Central Station
Aachen
Rail
Rail Aachen's railway station, the Hauptbahnhof (Central Station), was constructed in 1841 for the Cologne–Aachen railway line. In 1905, it was moved closer to the city centre. It serves main lines to Cologne, Mönchengladbach and Liège as well as branch lines to Heerlen, Alsdorf, Stolberg and Eschweiler. ICE high speed trains from Brussels via Cologne to Frankfurt am Main and Eurostar trains from Paris to Cologne also stop at Aachen Central Station. Four RE lines and two RB lines connect Aachen with the Ruhrgebiet, Mönchengladbach, Spa (Belgium), Düsseldorf and the Siegerland. The Euregiobahn, a regional railway system, reaches several minor cities in the Aachen region. There are four smaller stations in Aachen: Aachen West, Aachen Schanz, Aachen-Rothe Erde and Eilendorf. Slower trains stop at these. Aachen West has gained in importance with the expansion of RWTH Aachen University.
Aachen
Intercity bus stations
Intercity bus stations There are two stations for intercity bus services in Aachen: Aachen West station, in the north-west of the city, and Aachen Wilmersdorfer Straße, in the north-east.
Aachen
Public transport
Public transport thumb|right|Bi-articulated bus of the city's transit authority ASEAG, at the university hospital bus stop The first horse tram line in Aachen opened in December 1880. After electrification in 1895, it attained a maximum length of in 1915, thus becoming the fourth-longest tram network in Germany. Many tram lines extended to the surrounding towns of Herzogenrath, Stolberg, Alsdorf as well as the Belgian and Dutch communes of Vaals, Kelmis (then Altenberg) and Eupen. The Aachen tram system was linked with the Belgian national interurban tram system. Like many tram systems in Western Europe, the Aachen tram suffered from poorly-maintained infrastructure and was so deemed unnecessary and disrupting for car drivers by local politics. On 28 September 1974, the last line 15 (Vaals–Brand) operated for one last day and was then replaced by buses. A proposal to reinstate a tram/light rail system under the name Campusbahn was dropped after a referendum. Today, the ASEAG (Aachener Straßenbahn und Energieversorgungs-AG, literally "Aachen Tram and Power Supply Company") operates a bus network with 68 bus routes. Because of the location at the border, many bus routes extend to Belgium and the Netherlands. Lines 14 to Eupen, Belgium and 44 to Heerlen, Netherlands are jointly operated with Transport en Commun and Veolia Transport Nederland, respectively. ASEAG is one of the main participants in the Aachener Verkehrsverbund (AVV), a tariff association in the region. Along with ASEAG, city bus routes of Aachen are served by private contractors such as Sadar, Taeter, Schlömer, or DB Regio Bus. Line 350, which runs from Maastricht, also enters Aachen.
Aachen
Roads
Roads Aachen is connected to the Autobahn A4 (west-east), A44 (north-south) and A544 (a smaller motorway from the A4 to the Europaplatz near the city centre). There are plans to eliminate traffic jams at the Aachen road interchange.
Aachen
Airport
Airport Maastricht Aachen Airport is the main airport of Aachen and Maastricht. It is located around northwest of Aachen. There is a shuttle-service between Aachen and the airport. Recreational aviation is served by the (formerly military) Aachen Merzbrück Airfield.
Aachen
Charlemagne Prize
Charlemagne Prize thumb|right|upright=0.8|Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel, wearing the Charlemagne Prize awarded to her in 2008 Since 1950, a committee of Aachen citizens annually awards the Charlemagne Prize () to personalities of outstanding service to the unification of Europe. It is traditionally awarded on Ascension Day at the City Hall. In 2016, the Charlemagne Award was awarded to Pope Francis. The International Charlemagne Prize of Aachen was awarded in the year 2000 to US president Bill Clinton, for his special personal contribution to co-operation with the states of Europe, for the preservation of peace, freedom, democracy and human rights in Europe, and for his support of the enlargement of the European Union. In 2004, Pope John Paul II's efforts to unite Europe were honoured with an "Extraordinary Charlemagne Medal", which was awarded for the only time ever.
Aachen
Literature
Literature Aix is the destination in Robert Browning's poem "How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix", which was published in Dramatic Romances and Lyrics, 1845.James F. Loucks, and Andrew M. Satuffer, eds. Robert Browning's Poetry: Authoritative Texts. Criticism. Norton, 2nd ed. 1979. The poem is a first-person narrative told, in breathless galloping meter, by one of three riders; an urgent midnight errand to deliver "the news which alone could save Aix from her fate".
Aachen
Notable people
Notable people