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Encyclopedia > Strassburg
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Strasbourg townscape

Strasbourg (German Straßburg, "road to castle", Alsatian Strossburi) is the capital and principal city of the Alsace région of northeastern France. It is the préfecture (capital) of the Bas-Rhin département.


Population: 250,000. Population of the metropolitan area (in French: agglomération) at the 1999 census was 612,104. Including the part of the metropolitan area which is on German territory, population was estimated in 1999 at around 650,000.


Strasbourg is an important centre of manufacturing and engineering, as well as of road, rail and river communications. It is the seat of the Council of Europe and the European Court of Human Rights and it hosts the new seat of the European Parliament (with Brussels) after the asbestos scandal in the 1980s.

Contents

Geography

Strasbourg is situated on the Ill River, where it flows into the Rhine on the frontier with Germany. The German town across the river is Kehl.

West façade of the Strasbourg Cathedral
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West façade of the Strasbourg Cathedral

Sights

The city is known for its sandstone gothic cathedral, and for its medieval cityscape of Rhineland black and white timber-framed buildings, particularly in the Petite-France district alongside the river Ill, which has been declared a World Heritage site by the UNESCO.


History

At the site of Strasbourg, the Romans established a military outpost and named it Argentoratum. It belonged to the Germania Superior Roman province. From the 4th century, Strasbourg was the seat of a bishopric.


The Alamanni fought a battle against Rome in Strasbourg in 357. They were defeated by Julian, later Emperor of Rome, and their king Chonodomarius was taken prisoner. On January 2, 366 the Alamanni crossed the frozen Rhine in large numbers, to invade the Roman Empire. Early in the 5th century the Alamanni appear to have crossed the Rhine, conquered and then settled what is today Alsace and a large part of Switzerland.


The town was occupied successively in the 5th century by Alamanni, Huns and Franks. In 842, Strasbourg was the site of the Oath of Strasbourg.

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1888 German map of Strasbourg

A major commercial centre in the later Middle Ages, it became in 1262 an Imperial Free City of the Holy Roman Empire, with a broad-based city government from 1332. The minster of Strasbourg was completed in 1439, and became the World's Tallest Building, surpassing the Great Pyramid of Giza. During the 1520s the city embraced the religious teachings of Martin Luther, whose adherents established a university in the following century.


Annexing Strasbourg in September 1681, France was confirmed in possession of the city by the Treaty of Ryswick (1697). The official policy of religious intolerance which drove many Protestants from France after the Edict of Fontainebleau (1685) was not applied in Strasbourg, as the Edict of Nantes (1598) had still been in effect in France at the time of the city's annexation. With the growth of industry and commerce, the city's population tripled in the 19th century to 150,000.


Annexed to the newly-established German Empire, as part of Alsace-Lorraine, in 1871 following the Franco-Prussian War (Treaty of Frankfurt), the city was restored to France after World War I, in 1919 by the Treaty of Versailles. It was again part of Germany during World War II, from 1940 to 1945.


Education

There are three universities in Strasbourg:

  • Strasbourg I - Université Louis Pasteur
  • Strasbourg II - Université Marc Bloch
  • Strasbourg III - Université Robert Schuman

The campus of the École nationale d'administration (ENA) is located in Strasbourg (the former one being in Paris). The location of the "new" ENA was meant to give a European vocation to the school.


The permanent campus of the International Space University (ISU) is located in the south of Strasbourg.

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Tram station in Place de l'Homme de Fer in Strasbourg

Transportation

A modern-looking tram system has operated in Strasbourg since 1994.


Two TGV lines are planned to link Strasbourg to the European high-speed train network:

  1. TGV Est (Paris-Strasbourg) (under construction, to open 2007)
  2. TGV Rhin-Rhône (Strasbourg-Lyon)

Miscellaneous

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, the writer, and Johann Gutenberg, the inventor of printing with movable type, were both former residents of Strasbourg.


The city is usually regarded as the capital of Europe as a whole, as the seat of the Council of Europe, and the democratic capital of the European Union, as the very first seat of the European Parliament. Brussels in Belgium, being the Administrative capital is also considered often to be the unofficial capital of the Union.


France and Germany are negotiating the creation of a Eurodistrict straddling the Rhine river combining the Greater Strasbourg and the Ortenau district of Baden-Württemberg, with some common administration. The overall population of this "European Washington DC" would be 860,000.


Twin towns

See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
STRASSBURG - LoveToKnow Article on STRASSBURG (1744 words)
The famous Strassburg oaths between Charles the Bold and Louis the German were taken here in 842, and in 923, through the homage paid by the duke of Lorraine to the German king Henry I., began the connection of the town with the German kingdom which was to last for over seven centuries.
Strassburg soon became one of the most flourishing of the imperial towns, and the names of natives or residents like Sebastian B rant, Johann Tauler and Geiler von Kaisersberg show that its eminence was intellectual as well as material.
The bishopric of Strassburg existed in the days of the Merovingian kings, being probably founded in the 4th century, and embraced a large territory on both banks of the Rhine, which was afterwards diminished by the creation of the bishoprics of Spires ao(l Base!.
WHKMLA : The Reformation in Strassburg (716 words)
Strassburg was a free Imperial city, the seat of a bishopric and the economic center of the central Alsace (Elsass) region, a region which was politically fragmented, even more than usual for regions of the Holy Roman Empire for which political fragmentation was characteristic.
Regarding the church administration, however, Strassburg went her own way, establishing the offices of pastors charged with preaching, of doctors charged with teaching, of presbyters (elders) who, together with the pastors were responsible for public morale, and of deacons in charge of charity.
JAKOB STURM reformed the Strassburg school system, distinguishing pre-school education, elementary and secondary education; the high school founded in 1536, in the former Dominican monastery; it was to be elevated an academy in 1559, a university in 1621.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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