Southern Germany, including Wurtemberg and Bavaria: handbook for travellers . &^lgeithof / «%jss, rfCSTttT- Xccus. 2. Gtmsemcf7m£heji> . . ) . 6. Pe#w (Hjssa-)Bims D. 1 7. PeruuulJSiijistaivsst. d&s Biirer-VereaLS. 8. Feters&Csche. Mans. D. .Wb/utAfSems Sadis. Wagner A GERMANISCHES MUS E UERSTER STOCK o 5 10 30 40 Geogr. von Wagner &.Debes, Xeipzig. History of AH. NUREMBERG. 20. Route. 97 There is probably no town in Germany still so mediaeval in


Southern Germany, including Wurtemberg and Bavaria: handbook for travellers . &^lgeithof / «%jss, rfCSTttT- Xccus. 2. Gtmsemcf7m£heji> . . ) . 6. Pe#w (Hjssa-)Bims D. 1 7. PeruuulJSiijistaivsst. d&s Biirer-VereaLS. 8. Feters&Csche. Mans. D. .Wb/utAfSems Sadis. Wagner A GERMANISCHES MUS E UERSTER STOCK o 5 10 30 40 Geogr. von Wagner &.Debes, Xeipzig. History of AH. NUREMBERG. 20. Route. 97 There is probably no town in Germany still so mediaeval in appear-ance , or so suggestive of the wealth, importance , and artistictaste of a City of the Empire. Nuremberg is first mentioned in history in 1050. The establishment ofa market, the miracles wrought by the relics of St. Sebaldus, and the fre-quent visits of the emperors rapidly attracted new inhabitants, who at firstsettled between the castle and the river. The city thus sprang up underthe Hohenstaufen dynasty, and the castle was frequently occupied by Con-rad III. and Frederick Barbarossa, two illustrious members of that progress of the city was greatly promoted by the high privileges ac-corded to it by these and other emperors. The government was originallyvested in the patrician families. These were expelled by the civic guildsin 1349, but only to return and obtain a firmer grasp of power the sameyear. The office of Burggr


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookid152022845282, bookyear1895