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Timeline of Leipzig

The following is a timeline of the history of the German city of Leipzig.

Prior to 18th century edit

  • 920 AD - Emperor Henry the Fowler "built a castle here about 920." [1]
  • 1082 - Leipzig sacked by forces of Vratislaus II of Bohemia.[2][3]
  • 1134 - Leipzig "came into the possession of Conrad, Margrave of Meissen".[1]
  • 1165
  • 1170 - Easter and Michaelmas fairs begin (approximate date).[1]
  • 1212 - Thomasschule zu Leipzig and Thomanerchor founded.
  • 1231 - Klosterkirche St. Pauli built.[1]
  • 1409 - University of Leipzig founded.[2][1]
  • 1420 - Fire.[2]
  • 1458 - New year's fair begins.[1]
  • 1479 - Printing press in operation.[4]
  • 1485 - Treaty of Leipzig.[5]
  • 1496 - St. Thomas Church consecrated.[1]
  • 1519 - June: Martin Luther and Andreas Karlstadt debate John Eck.[2][1]
  • 1530 - Auerbachs Keller built (approximate date).[1]
  • 1539 - "Leipsic formally espoused the Protestant cause."[1]
  • 1542 - Leipzig Botanical Garden first established.[5]
  • 1543 - Leipzig University Library established.[1]
  • 1547
  • 1554 - Moritzbastei constructed.
  • 1556 - Old City Hall built.[2]
  • 1631 - Battle of Breitenfeld (1631).[1]
  • 1642 - Battle of Breitenfeld (1642).
  • 1650 - Einkommende Zeitungen (newspaper) begins publication.[6]
  • 1680 - Plague.[2]
  • 1681 - Weidmannsche Buchhandlung relocates to Leipzig.
  • 1687 - Alte Handelsbörse (trade exchange) was built.
  • 1693 - Opera house opens.[7]
  • 1699 - Population: 15,653.[8]
  • 18th century edit

    19th century edit

     
    Battle of the Nations
     
    Market Square in the 1890s

    20th century edit

     
    Polish armaments seized during the invasion of Poland on display at the 1939 Leipzig Trade Fair
    • 1938 - Expulsion of Polish Jews by Nazi Germany. 1,300 Polish Jews sheltered in the Polish Consulate and saved from deportation.[33]
    • 1939
    • 1941 - German-ordered closure of the American Consulate.[17]
    • 1943
    • 1944
      • Bombing.
      • 11 May: Leipzig-Engelsdorf subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp established. Over 250 men, mostly Polish, Russian, Czech and Ukrainian, were held there.[36]
      • 9 June: HASAG Leipzig subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp established. Over 5,000 women and children, mostly Polish, Soviet, French and Jewish, were held there.[37]
      • 22 August: Leipzig-Schönau subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp established. Over 500 Jewish women were held there.[38]
      • 15 November: Subcamp of Buchenwald for men established at the HASAG factory. Around 700 men, mostly Jewish, French and Italian, were held there.[39]
      • 24 November: Leipzig-Engelsdorf subcamp dissolved. Prisoners deported to Wansleben am See and Rothenburg.[36]
     
    Abtnaundorf massacre site a day later, 1945
     
    Leipzig in 1971

    21st century edit

    See also edit

    Other cities in the state of Saxony:

    References edit

    1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Britannica 1882.
    2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Haydn 1910.
    3. ^ Richter 1863.
    4. ^ Henri Bouchot (1890). "Topographical index of the principal towns where early printing presses were established". In H. Grevel (ed.). The book: its printers, illustrators, and binders, from Gutenberg to the present time. London: H. Grevel & Co.
    5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Britannica 1910.
    6. ^ a b Patrick Robertson (2011). Robertson's Book of Firsts. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-60819-738-5.
    7. ^ Stephen Rose (2005). "Chronology". In Tim Carter and John Butt (ed.). Cambridge History of Seventeenth-Century Music. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-79273-8.
    8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Bevolkerungsbestand 2015.
    9. ^ a b Matyniak, Alojzy S. (1968). "Kontakty kulturalne polsko-serbołużyckie w XVIII w.". Śląski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobótka (in Polish). XXIII (2). Wrocław: Zakład Narodowy im. Ossolińskich: 241.
    10. ^ . stadtgeschichtliches Museum Leipzig (in German). Archived from the original on 5 June 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    11. ^ a b c d e f Claude Egerton Lowe (1896). "Chronological Summary of the Chief Events in the History of Music". Chronological Cyclopædia of Musicians and Musical Events. London: Weekes & Co.
    12. ^ "Chronik der Leipziger Städtischen Bibliotheken" (in German). Stadt Leipzig. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
    13. ^ a b c Franz A.J. Szabo (2013). "Chronology of Major Events". The Seven Years War in Europe: 1756-1763. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-88697-6.
    14. ^ a b c d e Jim Parrott (ed.). . Scholarly Societies Project. Canada: University of Waterloo. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
    15. ^ William Grange (2006). "Chronology". Historical Dictionary of German Theater. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6489-4.
    16. ^ Donna M. Di Grazia, ed. (2013). Nineteenth-Century Choral Music. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-98852-0.
    17. ^ a b c d e "Brief history". U.S. Embassy & Consulates in Germany. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    18. ^ a b c d e "Hôtel de Pologne". Leipzig-Lexikon (in German). Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    19. ^ Willaume, Juliusz (1957). "Lipski komitet pomocy wychodźcom polskim (1831/32)". Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie-Skłodowska (in Polish). XII, 7: 184–185.
    20. ^ a b Willaume, p. 186
    21. ^ Willaume, pp. 187–188
    22. ^ Willaume, p. 191
    23. ^ Georg Friedrich Kolb (1862). "Deutschland: Sachsen". Grundriss der Statistik der Völkerzustands- und Staatenkunde (in German). Leipzig: A. Förstnersche Buchhandlung.
    24. ^ Ursula Heinzelmann (2008). "Timeline". Food Culture in Germany. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-34495-4.
    25. ^ A.J. Mackintosh (1907). "Mountaineering Clubs, 1857-1907". Alpine Journal (177). UK. hdl:2027/njp.32101076197365.
    26. ^ Chester L. Alwes (2012). "Choral Music in the Culture of the 19th Century". In André de Quadros (ed.). Cambridge Companion to Choral Music. Cambridge Companions to Music. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-11173-7. Music publishers of the 18th to the early 20th c. (chronological list)
    27. ^ Vernon N. Kisling, ed. (2000). "Zoological Gardens of Germany (chronological list)". Zoo and Aquarium History. US: CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4200-3924-5.
    28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Stadtgebiet 2015.
    29. ^ Naturkundemuseums Leipzig. "Geschichte des Hauses" (in German). Retrieved 24 July 2012.
    30. ^ Tillack-Graf, Anne-Kathleen (2019), "Institute of Communication and Media Studies (University of Leipzig)". The SAGE International Encyclopedia of Mass Media and Society. SAGE Publications.
    31. ^ "Germany: Area and Population: Principal Towns". Statesman's Year-Book. London: Macmillan and Co. 1921. hdl:2027/njp.32101072368440 – via HathiTrust.
    32. ^ Chałupczak, Henryk (2004). "Powstanie i działalność polskich placówek konsularnych w okresie międzywojennym (ze szczególnym uwzględnieniem pogranicza polsko-niemiecko-czechosłowackiego)". In Kaczmarek, Ryszard; Masnyk, Marek (eds.). Konsulaty na pograniczu polsko-niemieckim i polsko-czechosłowackim w 1918–1939 (in Polish). Katowice: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego. p. 21.
    33. ^ a b "70 lat temu polski konsul pokrzyżował plany nazistów". dw.com (in Polish). Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    34. ^ Cygański, Mirosław (1984). "Hitlerowskie prześladowania przywódców i aktywu Związków Polaków w Niemczech w latach 1939–1945". Przegląd Zachodni (in Polish) (4): 54.
    35. ^ a b c d "Leipzig-Thekla". aussenlager-buchenwald.de (in German). Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    36. ^ a b "Leipzig-Engelsdorf". aussenlager-buchenwald.de (in German). Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    37. ^ a b ""HASAG Leipzig" Concentration Camp Subcamp". Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    38. ^ a b "Leipzig-Schönau". aussenlager-buchenwald.de (in German). Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    39. ^ a b "Leipzig-Schönefeld (Männer)". aussenlager-buchenwald.de (in German). Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    40. ^ "The Abtnaundorf Massacre". Retrieved 11 December 2023.
    41. ^ "50 Jahre Polnisches Institut in Leipzig". Instytut Polski w Lipsku (in German). Retrieved 8 August 2022.
    42. ^ Sportmuseum Leipzig. "Chronik des Sportmuseum" (in German). Retrieved 24 July 2012.
    43. ^ "100,000 Protest in Leipzig In Largest Rally in Decades", New York Times, 17 October 1989
    44. ^ "Leipzig Journal; A City of Two Tales: The Robust and the Bleak", New York Times, 6 April 1993
    45. ^ "Leipzig, the City of Bach, Falls on Hard Times", New York Times, 28 February 1991
    46. ^ Spinnerei. "History: From Cotton to Culture". Retrieved 24 July 2012.
    47. ^ "The big grey box in Leipzig where Amazon staff have found their voice", The Guardian, 19 October 1993
    48. ^ "German medicine rocked by Leipzig organ donor scandal", BBC News, 3 January 2013
    49. ^ "Deutschlands beliebteste Städte: Sicher, sauber, grün: Diese Stadt läuft sogar München den Rang ab". FOCUS Online. 11 December 2013.
    50. ^ Leipzig in Figures, City of Leipzig, retrieved 30 September 2015
    51. ^ "Germany Pegida: Leipzig rally held as protest leader resigns", BBC News, 22 January 2015
    52. ^ "Leipzig gewinnt als einzige ostdeutsche Stadt wichtigen Preis in Cannes".
    53. ^ "Leipzig wins European City of the Year at 2019 Urbanism Awards | the Academy of Urbanism".

    This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia.

    Bibliography edit

    in English edit

    in German edit

    • "Leipzig". Biblioteca geographica: Verzeichniss der seit der Mitte des vorigen Jahrhunderts bis zu Ende des Jahres 1856 in Deutschland (in German). Leipzig: Wilhelm Engelmann. 1858. (bibliography)
    • F. Th. Richter, ed. (1863). Jahrbüchlein zur Geschichte Leipzigs (in German). Verlag Julius Klinkhardt. (includes city timeline)
    • "Leipzig". Brockhaus' Konversations-Lexikon (in German) (14th ed.). Leipzig: Brockhaus. 1896. hdl:2027/njp.32101064064551.
    • P. Krauss und E. Uetrecht, ed. (1913). "Leipzig". Meyers Deutscher Städteatlas [Meyer's Atlas of German Cities] (in German). Leipzig: Bibliographisches Institut.
    • "Stadtgebiet und Witterung", Statistisches Jahrbuch 2015 (in German), Stadt Leipzig, Chronologie der Eingemeindungen
    • "Bevölkerungsbestand", Statistisches Jahrbuch 2015 (in German), Stadt Leipzig, Amtliche Bevölkerung, Fläche und Bevölkerungsdichte seit 1699
    • Wolfgang Adam; Siegrid Westphal, eds. (2012). "Leipzig". Handbuch kultureller Zentren der Frühen Neuzeit: Städte und Residenzen im alten deutschen Sprachraum (in German). De Gruyter. pp. 1253–1298. ISBN 978-3-11-029555-9.

    External links edit

    • "Stadt Geschichte" [Leipzig City History]. Stadt Leipzig.
    • André Loh-Kliesch. "Gesamtchronik". Leipzig-Lexikon.
    • Links to fulltext city directories for Leipzig via Wikisource
    • Europeana. Items related to Leipzig, various dates.
    • Digital Public Library of America. Items related to Leipzig, various dates

    timeline, leipzig, following, timeline, history, german, city, leipzig, this, dynamic, list, never, able, satisfy, particular, standards, completeness, help, adding, missing, items, with, reliable, sources, contents, prior, 18th, century, 18th, century, 19th, . The following is a timeline of the history of the German city of Leipzig This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources Contents 1 Prior to 18th century 2 18th century 3 19th century 4 20th century 5 21st century 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 8 1 in English 8 2 in German 9 External linksPrior to 18th century edit920 AD Emperor Henry the Fowler built a castle here about 920 1 1082 Leipzig sacked by forces of Vratislaus II of Bohemia 2 3 1134 Leipzig came into the possession of Conrad Margrave of Meissen 1 1165 Leipzig granted market and city privileges St Nicholas Church built approximate date 1170 Easter and Michaelmas fairs begin approximate date 1 1212 Thomasschule zu Leipzig and Thomanerchor founded 1231 Klosterkirche St Pauli built 1 1409 University of Leipzig founded 2 1 1420 Fire 2 1458 New year s fair begins 1 1479 Printing press in operation 4 1485 Treaty of Leipzig 5 1496 St Thomas Church consecrated 1 1519 June Martin Luther and Andreas Karlstadt debate John Eck 2 1 1530 Auerbachs Keller built approximate date 1 1539 Leipsic formally espoused the Protestant cause 1 1542 Leipzig Botanical Garden first established 5 1543 Leipzig University Library established 1 1547 City besieged by John Frederick I of Saxony 1 Pleissenburg re built replaced in 1905 by the New Town Hall 1 1554 Moritzbastei constructed 1556 Old City Hall built 2 1631 Battle of Breitenfeld 1631 1 1642 Battle of Breitenfeld 1642 1650 Einkommende Zeitungen newspaper begins publication 6 1680 Plague 2 1681 Weidmannsche Buchhandlung relocates to Leipzig 1687 Alte Handelsborse trade exchange was built 1693 Opera house opens 7 1699 Population 15 653 8 18th century edit1701 Oil fuelled street lighting introduced 1702 Collegium Musicum founded 1704 Romanus house built 1706 Polish Preaching Society established 9 1710 King Augustus II the Strong first presented Meissen porcelain at the local fair 10 1716 Sorbian Lusatian Preaching Society established 9 1717 What became Schillerhaus first built 1723 Breitkopf publishing established Johann Sebastian Bach begins as Kapellmeister music director at St Thomas Church 1724 Premiere performance of Bach s St John Passion 11 1729 Premiere of Bach s St Matthew Passion 11 1731 Zedler s Universal Lexicon encyclopedia published 6 1745 City taken by the Prussians 2 1750 Death of Johann Sebastian Bach Kapellmeister of St Thomas Church 1755 Stadtbibliothek Leipzig de municipal library opens 12 1756 City occupied by Prussian forces during the Seven Years War 2 1759 August Prussians withdraw from Leipzig 13 September Prussians recapture Leipzig 13 1760 October Prussians withdraw from Leipzig 13 1764 Academy of Visual Arts and Leipzig Economic Society de 14 founded 1766 Theater auf der Rannischen Bastei opens 15 1768 Societas Jablonoviana pl founded by Jozef Aleksander Jablonowski 1777 April Premiere of Klinger s play Sturm und Drang 1781 Gewandhaus built 11 1 Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra formed 1784 City fortifications dismantled 5 Philological Society founded 14 1785 Augustusplatz laid out 5 1789 Linnean Society founded 14 1790 Observatory set up in Pleissenburg 1797 Population 31 847 8 1798 Tauchnitz publishers established Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung music magazine begins publication 19th century edit1800 Edition Peters and Leipzig Singakademie chorus 16 established 1801 Population 31 887 1 1807 Friedrich Hofmeister Musikverlag publisher founded Leipziger Tageblatt de newspaper begins publication 1810 Westermann Verlag founded nbsp Battle of the Nations 1813 22 May Richard Wagner born October Battle of Leipzig 1 1825 Borsenverein der Deutschen Buchhandler de formed 1826 Consulate of the United States established 17 Wool market active 2 1828 Reclam Verlag established Hotel de Pologne de founded 18 1829 Medical Society founded 14 1830 Political disturbance 2 1831 November Establishment of a committee to help Polish insurgents fleeing the Russian Partition of Poland after the unsuccessful Polish November Uprising Collection of funds to help Poles mainly among guilds and city guards 19 Flight of Polish insurgents from the Russian Partition of Poland to the Great Emigration through the city begins 20 1832 January Mass escape of Polish insurgents from the Russian Partition of Poland through the city 20 January Polish national hero Jozef Bem expelled from the city by authorities fearful of stirring up a revolution 21 July The committee to help Poles officially closed although its members continued their activities in the following years 22 1833 Accession to the Zollverein 1 1835 Felix Mendelssohn becomes music director of Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra 1 1836 Augusteum built 1 1837 Leipziger Kunstverein de art association established 1839 Leipzig Dresden railway opened 5 1842 Leipzig Bayerischer Bahnhof built 1843 Illustrirte Zeitung newspaper begins publication Conservatory of Music founded 1 Bach monument Leipzig de erected 1844 Museum of Antiquities of Leipzig University on display 1846 1 July Saxonian Academy of Sciences and Humanities founded 14 29 August Hotel de Pologne fire 18 1848 Museum of Fine Arts founded Hotel de Pologne rebuilt as the city s largest hotel 18 Political disturbance 2 1850 Bach Gesellschaft organized 11 1853 Bluthner piano manufacturer in business 11 1855 Leipzig synagogue built on Gottschedstrasse 1856 Handel Gesellschaft organized 11 1858 Municipal museum inaugurated 1861 Population 78 495 23 1863 General German Workers Association founded in Leipzig 1864 Schrebergarten community garden association formed 24 1866 Austro Prussian War leads to Prussian occupation in 1866 67 1 1868 Opera house built 1869 Leipzig Museum of Ethnography founded 1 Leipzig Alpine Club founded 25 1872 Harrassowitz publishing firm established Verlag Karl Baedeker relocates to Leipzig Trams in Leipzig start 5 1874 Museum of Arts and Crafts founded 1 Ernst Eulenburg musical editions 26 established Bibliographisches Institut relocates to Leipzig 1878 Leipzig Zoo opens 27 Leipzig is growing into an industrial town of the first rank 5 1879 Reichsgericht headquartered in Leipzig 5 Sudfriedhof established 1880 Population 149 081 8 1884 Leipziger Baumwollspinnerei founded 1886 Georg Thieme Verlag established Lutherkirche Leipzig de 5 and Neue Borse Leipzig de stock exchange built 1889 Anger Crottendorf de and Reudnitz Leipzig de become part of city 28 1890 Eutritzsch Gohlis Neureudnitz Neuschonefeld Neustadt Sellerhausen Thonberg and Volkmarsdorf become part of city 28 Population 295 025 8 1891 Leipzig University Library opens in relocation 5 Connewitz Kleinzschocher de Lindenau Lossnig de Plagwitz de and Schleussig de become part of city 28 1892 Neusellerhausen de becomes part of city 28 SSV Stotteritz football club founded Mendelssohn monument erected 5 nbsp Market Square in the 1890s 1894 Leipziger Volkszeitung newspaper begins publication 1895 Reichsgericht supreme court established 5 Altes Grassimuseum de built Muster Messe fair begins Population 399 995 8 1898 Handelshochschule Leipzig founded 1900 Population 456 156 8 20th century editSee also History of Leipzig from 1933 1939 1901 Stadtisches Kaufhaus built Insel Verlag de publisher in business 1904 Bachfest begins 1905 Reudnitz Volkmarsdorf Gohlis Eutritzsch Plagwitz and Lindenau were incorporated with the city 5 New Town Hall opens The Old Town Hall is going to house the Museum of the History of the City of Leipzig Population 503 672 8 1906 Naturkundemuseum Leipzig established 29 Leipzig Prison built 1907 Edeka founded at Hotel de Pologne 18 1908 Rowohlt Verlag founded 1912 German National Library established 1913 Kurt Wolff Verlag publisher in business Monument to the Battle of the Nations erected 1915 Leipzig Hauptbahnhof and Alfred Kunze Sportpark open Mockau de and Schonefeld become part of city 28 1916 German National Library building opened Institute for Newspaper Research Institut fur Zeitungskunde was founded at the University of Leipzig 30 1917 January Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe city transport company formed February American Consulate closed Its building became a temporary residence for Americans and Allied refugees from Serbia Romania and Japan 17 Hotel de Pologne closed 18 1918 Karl Rothe de becomes mayor 1919 Church Music Institute founded Der Drache de begins publication Population 604 397 8 31 1921 Leipzig War Crimes Trials held December American Consulate reopened 17 1922 Grosszschocher de Leutzsch Paunsdorf de and Wahren de become part of city 28 Bruno Plache Stadion opens Goldmann publisher founded 1923 1 January Consulate of Poland opened 32 MDR Symphony Orchestra founded 1927 Leipzig Halle Airport opened 1929 Museum of Musical Instruments of the University of Leipzig opens 1930 Abtnaundorf Knautkleeberg Schonau and Thekla become part of city 28 1933 Population 713 470 8 1935 Portitz de becomes part of city 28 1936 Knauthain de and Lauer de become part of city 28 nbsp Polish armaments seized during the invasion of Poland on display at the 1939 Leipzig Trade Fair 1938 Expulsion of Polish Jews by Nazi Germany 1 300 Polish Jews sheltered in the Polish Consulate and saved from deportation 33 1939 September Mass arrests of local Polish activists see also Nazi crimes against the Polish nation 34 September Polish Consulate seized by Germany during the invasion of Poland at the start of World War II Confiscation of the Polish Consulate s library 33 1941 German ordered closure of the American Consulate 17 1943 6 March Leipzig Thekla subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp established Over 1 800 men mostly Soviet Polish French Belgian and Czechoslovak were held there as slave labour 35 December Bombing of city by British 1944 Bombing 11 May Leipzig Engelsdorf subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp established Over 250 men mostly Polish Russian Czech and Ukrainian were held there 36 9 June HASAG Leipzig subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp established Over 5 000 women and children mostly Polish Soviet French and Jewish were held there 37 22 August Leipzig Schonau subcamp of the Buchenwald concentration camp established Over 500 Jewish women were held there 38 15 November Subcamp of Buchenwald for men established at the HASAG factory Around 700 men mostly Jewish French and Italian were held there 39 24 November Leipzig Engelsdorf subcamp dissolved Prisoners deported to Wansleben am See and Rothenburg 36 nbsp Abtnaundorf massacre site a day later 1945 1945 17 February 600 prisoners brought to the Leipzig Thekla subcamp from a subcamp of the Gross Rosen concentration camp in Jasien 35 13 April Leipzig Thekla Leipzig Schonau and both HASAG subcamps dissolved Most prisoners sent on death marches 37 39 35 38 18 April Abtnaundorf massacre Prisoners of the Leipzig Thekla subcamp who were ill or unable to march mostly Poles and Soviets were massacred by the Gestapo SS Volkssturm and German civilians Some prisoners were saved by Polish prisoners of another camp 35 40 19 April City captured by American troops July City under Soviet control Population 584 593 8 1950 International Johann Sebastian Bach Competition begins Bach Archiv founded Population 617 574 8 1951 Erich Uhlich de becomes mayor 1953 Theaterhochschule Leipzig established later named after Hans Otto 1954 Staatsarchiv Leipzig de archives founded Zentralstadion built 1955 Festival of Cultural and Documentary Films begins 1956 Zentralstadion opens 1959 Walter Kresse de becomes mayor 1960 Opera house built Chess Olympiad held Population 589 632 8 1969 6 February Polish Institute founded 41 Leipzig Halle S Bahn established 1970 Karl Heinz Muller politician de becomes mayor nbsp Leipzig in 1971 1972 Polish Consulate reopened City Hochhaus Leipzig built 1974 Moritzbastei rebuilt 1977 Sportmuseum founded 42 1983 Wagner monument Leipzig de erected 1989 Monday demonstrations 43 44 1990 Neuer Leipziger Kunstverein de art association founded Hinrich Lehmann Grube becomes mayor 45 1991 Euro scene Leipzig theatre festival begins Mendelssohn House Leipzig opens 1992 Technischen Hochschule founded Wave Gotik Treffen begins Leipzig Altenburg Airport opens American Consulate reopened 17 1993 Hartmannsdorf becomes part of city 28 1994 Museum of Antiquities of the University of Leipzig opens 1995 Lausen and Plaussig become part of city 28 Population 471 409 8 1996 Leipzig Trade Fair building opens Saxonia International Balloon Fiesta begins 1997 Gottscheina de Hohenheida de and Seehausen become part of city 28 Leipziger Versorgungs und Verkehrsgesellschaft de city utility company established Federal Administrative Court of Germany headquartered in Leipzig citation needed 1998 Podelwitz Sud becomes part of city 28 Wolfgang Tiefensee becomes mayor 1999 Bohlitz Ehrenberg Engelsdorf Holzhausen Liebertwolkwitz Lindenthal Miltitz and Molkau become part of city 28 21st century edit2000 Burghausen und Ruckmarsdorf become part of city 28 2002 Arena Leipzig built Games Convention begins 2004 Leipziger Internet Zeitung begins publication Museum der bildenden Kunste opens Leipzig Botanical Garden renovated Leipzig is the German candidate city for the 2012 Summer Olympics 2005 Art galleries open in Leipziger Baumwollspinnerei 46 BMW Central Building constructed City hosts the 2005 World Fencing Championships Population 502 651 8 2006 Amazon com distribution centre begins operating 47 Burkhard Jung becomes mayor 2007 Paulinum reconstruction begins July City hosts the 2007 World Archery Championships 2010 Haus der Computerspiele de museum active German Music Archive relocates to Leipzig 2012 German organ donor scandal de reported 48 Paulinum reconstruction finished 2013 New Propsteikirche begins construction Leipzig City Tunnel opened Leipzig is the most livable German city 49 2014 Population 551 871 50 2015 January Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident demonstration 51 Erfurt Leipzig Halle high speed railway opened 2017 July City hosts the 2017 World Fencing Championships December City co hosts the 2017 World Women s Handball Championship 2018 Leipzig wins the European Cities of Future prize in the category of Best Large City for Human Capital amp Lifestyle 52 2019 Leipzig is European City of the Year 53 See also editLeipzig history History of Leipzig de List of mayors of Leipzig List of heritage sites in Leipzig de Other cities in the state of Saxony Timeline of Chemnitz Timeline of DresdenReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Britannica 1882 a b c d e f g h i j k Haydn 1910 Richter 1863 Henri Bouchot 1890 Topographical index of the principal towns where early printing presses were established In H Grevel ed The book its printers illustrators and binders from Gutenberg to the present time London H Grevel amp Co a b c d e f g h i j k l m Britannica 1910 a b Patrick Robertson 2011 Robertson s Book of Firsts Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 60819 738 5 Stephen Rose 2005 Chronology In Tim Carter and John Butt ed Cambridge History of Seventeenth Century Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79273 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Bevolkerungsbestand 2015 a b Matyniak Alojzy S 1968 Kontakty kulturalne polsko serboluzyckie w XVIII w Slaski Kwartalnik Historyczny Sobotka in Polish XXIII 2 Wroclaw Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich 241 Von Leipzig in die Welt Europas erstes Porzellan stadtgeschichtliches Museum Leipzig in German Archived from the original on 5 June 2016 Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b c d e f Claude Egerton Lowe 1896 Chronological Summary of the Chief Events in the History of Music Chronological Cyclopaedia of Musicians and Musical Events London Weekes amp Co Chronik der Leipziger Stadtischen Bibliotheken in German Stadt Leipzig Retrieved 24 July 2012 a b c Franz A J Szabo 2013 Chronology of Major Events The Seven Years War in Europe 1756 1763 Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 88697 6 a b c d e Jim Parrott ed Chronology of Scholarly Societies Scholarly Societies Project Canada University of Waterloo Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 William Grange 2006 Chronology Historical Dictionary of German Theater Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6489 4 Donna M Di Grazia ed 2013 Nineteenth Century Choral Music Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 98852 0 a b c d e Brief history U S Embassy amp Consulates in Germany Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b c d e Hotel de Pologne Leipzig Lexikon in German Retrieved 8 August 2022 Willaume Juliusz 1957 Lipski komitet pomocy wychodzcom polskim 1831 32 Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie Sklodowska in Polish XII 7 184 185 a b Willaume p 186 Willaume pp 187 188 Willaume p 191 Georg Friedrich Kolb 1862 Deutschland Sachsen Grundriss der Statistik der Volkerzustands und Staatenkunde in German Leipzig A Forstnersche Buchhandlung Ursula Heinzelmann 2008 Timeline Food Culture in Germany Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 34495 4 A J Mackintosh 1907 Mountaineering Clubs 1857 1907 Alpine Journal 177 UK hdl 2027 njp 32101076197365 Chester L Alwes 2012 Choral Music in the Culture of the 19th Century In Andre de Quadros ed Cambridge Companion to Choral Music Cambridge Companions to Music Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 11173 7 Music publishers of the 18th to the early 20th c chronological list Vernon N Kisling ed 2000 Zoological Gardens of Germany chronological list Zoo and Aquarium History US CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4200 3924 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Stadtgebiet 2015 Naturkundemuseums Leipzig Geschichte des Hauses in German Retrieved 24 July 2012 Tillack Graf Anne Kathleen 2019 Institute of Communication and Media Studies University of Leipzig The SAGE International Encyclopedia of Mass Media and Society SAGE Publications Germany Area and Population Principal Towns Statesman s Year Book London Macmillan and Co 1921 hdl 2027 njp 32101072368440 via HathiTrust Chalupczak Henryk 2004 Powstanie i dzialalnosc polskich placowek konsularnych w okresie miedzywojennym ze szczegolnym uwzglednieniem pogranicza polsko niemiecko czechoslowackiego In Kaczmarek Ryszard Masnyk Marek eds Konsulaty na pograniczu polsko niemieckim i polsko czechoslowackim w 1918 1939 in Polish Katowice Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Slaskiego p 21 a b 70 lat temu polski konsul pokrzyzowal plany nazistow dw com in Polish Retrieved 8 August 2022 Cyganski Miroslaw 1984 Hitlerowskie przesladowania przywodcow i aktywu Zwiazkow Polakow w Niemczech w latach 1939 1945 Przeglad Zachodni in Polish 4 54 a b c d Leipzig Thekla aussenlager buchenwald de in German Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b Leipzig Engelsdorf aussenlager buchenwald de in German Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b HASAG Leipzig Concentration Camp Subcamp Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b Leipzig Schonau aussenlager buchenwald de in German Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b Leipzig Schonefeld Manner aussenlager buchenwald de in German Retrieved 8 August 2022 The Abtnaundorf Massacre Retrieved 11 December 2023 50 Jahre Polnisches Institut in Leipzig Instytut Polski w Lipsku in German Retrieved 8 August 2022 Sportmuseum Leipzig Chronik des Sportmuseum in German Retrieved 24 July 2012 100 000 Protest in Leipzig In Largest Rally in Decades New York Times 17 October 1989 Leipzig Journal A City of Two Tales The Robust and the Bleak New York Times 6 April 1993 Leipzig the City of Bach Falls on Hard Times New York Times 28 February 1991 Spinnerei History From Cotton to Culture Retrieved 24 July 2012 The big grey box in Leipzig where Amazon staff have found their voice The Guardian 19 October 1993 German medicine rocked by Leipzig organ donor scandal BBC News 3 January 2013 Deutschlands beliebteste Stadte Sicher sauber grun Diese Stadt lauft sogar Munchen den Rang ab FOCUS Online 11 December 2013 Leipzig in Figures City of Leipzig retrieved 30 September 2015 Germany Pegida Leipzig rally held as protest leader resigns BBC News 22 January 2015 Leipzig gewinnt als einzige ostdeutsche Stadt wichtigen Preis in Cannes Leipzig wins European City of the Year at 2019 Urbanism Awards the Academy of Urbanism This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia Bibliography editin English edit Richard Brookes 1786 Leipsick The General Gazetteer 6th ed London J F C Rivington Abraham Rees 1819 Leipsick The Cyclopaedia London Longman Hurst Rees Orme amp Brown hdl 2027 mdp 39015068382327 Muirhead James Fullarton 1882 Leipsic Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 14 9th ed pp 429 431 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint date and year link Leipzig Handbook for North Germany London J Murray 1886 hdl 2027 hvd hn1imr George Bradshaw 1898 Leipsic Bradshaw s Illustrated Hand book to Germany London Adams amp Sons Leipzig Chambers s Encyclopaedia London W amp R Chambers Limited J B Lippincott Company 1901 hdl 2027 uc2 ark 13960 t7zk5ms79 Leipzig Northern Germany 15th ed Leipzig Karl Baedeker 1910 OCLC 78390379 1873 ed Leipzig Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed 1910 pp 399 402 Benjamin Vincent 1910 Leipsic Haydn s Dictionary of Dates 25th ed London Ward Lock amp Co in German edit Leipzig Biblioteca geographica Verzeichniss der seit der Mitte des vorigen Jahrhunderts bis zu Ende des Jahres 1856 in Deutschland in German Leipzig Wilhelm Engelmann 1858 bibliography F Th Richter ed 1863 Jahrbuchlein zur Geschichte Leipzigs in German Verlag Julius Klinkhardt includes city timeline Leipzig Brockhaus Konversations Lexikon in German 14th ed Leipzig Brockhaus 1896 hdl 2027 njp 32101064064551 P Krauss und E Uetrecht ed 1913 Leipzig Meyers Deutscher Stadteatlas Meyer s Atlas of German Cities in German Leipzig Bibliographisches Institut Stadtgebiet und Witterung Statistisches Jahrbuch 2015 in German Stadt Leipzig Chronologie der Eingemeindungen Bevolkerungsbestand Statistisches Jahrbuch 2015 in German Stadt Leipzig Amtliche Bevolkerung Flache und Bevolkerungsdichte seit 1699 Wolfgang Adam Siegrid Westphal eds 2012 Leipzig Handbuch kultureller Zentren der Fruhen Neuzeit Stadte und Residenzen im alten deutschen Sprachraum in German De Gruyter pp 1253 1298 ISBN 978 3 11 029555 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leipzig by year Stadt Geschichte Leipzig City History Stadt Leipzig Andre Loh Kliesch Gesamtchronik Leipzig Lexikon Links to fulltext city directories for Leipzig via Wikisource Europeana Items related to Leipzig various dates Digital Public Library of America Items related to Leipzig various dates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timeline of Leipzig amp oldid 1218620606, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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