Wolfenbüttel
Wolfenbüttel is a town in
Lower Saxony,
Germany. It is located on the
Oker river, about 13 kilometres south of
Brunswick.
It is not known when Wolfenbüttel was founded, but it was first mentioned in
1118 as the water castle
Wulferisbutle. The first settlement was probably restricted to a tiny islet in the Oker river.
Wolfenbüttel became the residence of the
dukes of Brunswick in
1432. Over the following three centuries it grew to be a centre of the arts, and personages such as
Michael Praetorius,
Gottfried Leibniz, and
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing lived there. The ducal court eventually returned to Brunswick in
1753 and Wolfenbüttel subsequently lost in importance.
The
Battle of Wolfenbüttel, part of the
Thirty Years' War, was fought here in June 1641, when the Swedes under
Wrangel and the
Count of Königsmark defeated the Austrians under
Archduke Leopold of Habsburg.
*The
baroque Schloss (castle). Today part of the building is used as a school, and the former state apartments are open to the public as a museum.
*
Herzog August Bibliothek (HAB), the ducal library, has one of the largest and best-known collections of ancient books in the world. It is especially rich in bibles,
incunabula, and books of the Reformation period, with some 10,000 manuscripts. It was founded in
1572 and rehoused in an interpretation of the
Pantheon in 1723, built facing the castle; the present library building was constructed in
1886. Leibniz and Lessing worked in this library, Lessing as librarian. The
Codex Carolinus in the library is one of the few remaining texts in
Gothic.
|
The portal above the entrance to the HAB. |
|
The residence of Gotthold Lessing when he was librarian at the HAB. |
|
Wolfenbüttel's former armory now houses part of the HAB. |
Today Wolfenbüttel is smaller than the neighbouring cities of Brunswick, Salzgitter, and
Wolfsburg, but, because it was largely undamaged by the war, is rich in half-timber buildings, many dating several centuries back, and still retains its historical character.
Wolfenbüttel is home of several departments of the
University of Applied Sciences Brunswick/Wolfenbüttel and the
Lessing-Akademie, an organisation for the study of Lessing's works It is also home to the Niedersächsische Staatsarchiv, the state archives of Lower Saxony.
The herb
liqueur Jägermeister is also a specialty of Wolfenbüttel.
*
-
Sèvres,
France*
-
Kenosha,
USA*
-
Satu Mare,
Romania*
-
Kamienna Góra,
PolandA bridge in Wolfenbüttel is named after each of these cities.