|
EUR 45 - 75 Land-gut-Hotel Weinrich
This 3-star spa hotel is located in the Kneipp spa town of Naumburg, in Northern Hesse, and provides free parking for guests.
Land-gut-Hotel Weinric… More | ||||||
:This article is about the town in Saxony-Anhalt; for Naumburg in Hesse, see Naumburg, Hesse.
Naumburg is a town in Germany, on the Saale River. It is in the district Burgenlandkreis in the States of Germany|Bundesland of Saxony-Anhalt, formerly a part of East Germany. It is approximately 60 km southwest of Leipzig, 50 km south-southwest of Halle, Saxony-Anhalt|Halle, and 40 km north-northeast of Jena.
Industries of the city include manufacture of foodstuffs, textiles, machinery and toys.
The town is in a wine-growing region, with numerous vineyards in the surrounding area.
Naumburg was founded by the margraves of Meissen around 1000 CE. Later it was ceded to the bishops of Zeitz, when the diocese seat was moved here in 1028. In 1142 it received town rights.
In the 15th century Naumburg was a free member of the Hanseatic League but, in 1564, it was conquered by Saxony, to which remained until 1815, when became part of Prussia.
The most important architectural landmark of the town is the Romanesque and Gothic architecture|Gothic Cathedral, built between the 13th and 15th centuries. Its interior includes glass windows from the Middle Ages, as well as the famous 13th century statues of the founders of the cathedral, Margrave Ekkehard and his wife Uta, with other local noblemen and women.
Other attractions include:
Some parts of the medieval town fortifications survive, including the old town gate Marientor.
German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche spent his childhood in Naumburg in the family house, now a museum.
One of the most significant composers for the organ (music)|organ in Renaissance Germany, Elias Ammerbach, was born in Naumburg in 1530.
Johann Heinrich Acker
----
Naumburg was born in Bavaria in 1835, and emigrated to the United States at age 15. He settled first in Baltimore, where he took a liking to chamber music. An amateur pianist with no formal training, he was too poor to attend local concerts by the likes of Vieuxtemps and Thalberg until he became a successful merchant.
In 1866, at age 31, he moved to New York City, where he took up banking. The parlor of his Manhattan townhouse hosted pianists, opera singers and string quartets, and soon became a forum for celebrities of the music field. In 1873, Naumburg founded a group of supporters and lovers of classical music, named the Oratorio Society by his wife, Bertha. Richard Arnold, Leopold Damrosch, Marcella Sembrich, Theodore Thomas and others performed weekly in the Naumburg family parlor during the 1870s, 80s and 90s, entertaining such Gilded Age critics and artists as Henry Theophilus Finck and Albert Henry Krehbiel.
In 1890, Elkan Naumburg founded the New York Philharmonic's first pension fund, and later helped introduce renowned conductors like Vassily Ilich Safonof and Willem Mengelberg to that orchestra. He soon got the idea of presenting free symphony concerts in Central Park.
Patterned after concerts conducted by Theodore Thomas in Central Park Garden, the Naumburg Concerts commenced in 1905, and have continued without interruption ever since, almost always in Central Park. Originally performed in the Central Park Mall in an octagonal, pagoda-shaped bandstand designed by Jacob Wrey Mould, the programs featured popular waltzes, abbreviated operas, one or two movements of a symphony, or short arias, performed for audiences of strolling or picnicking Manhattanites, many of whom took to dancing as dusk fell and the gas lights came on.
In 1912, the old wood and cast iron bandstand was deemed inadequate, so Naumburg offered the city $100,000 to build a new bandshell of Indiana limestone. His nephew, architect William G. Tachau, designed the structure -- an innovative half-sphere which later came into frequent use -- in 1916. Building began in 1921, and it opened on September 29th, 1923, with a 60-piece orchestra playing selections from "Aida" and "Carmen", the William Tell Overture, the Blue Danube Waltz, and movements from Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony and Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture. The concert closed with a new march, "On the Mall," by Edwin Franko Goldman, dedicated to 88-year-old Elkan Naumburg, who was in attendance.
Elkan Naumburg died the next year, in 1924, but his sons Walter W. and George W. continued the free concerts in Central Park into the 1960s. See the Naumburg Orchestral Concerts History - His son Walter W. Naumburg continued the family tradition of supporting classical music by establishing the Walter W. Naumburg Prize in 1926, and when he died in 1959, his will provided for the perpetuation of the free Naumburg Orchestral Concerts in Central Park. Elkan's grand-niece, Eleanor Naumburg Sanger, later co-founded WQXR, New York's classical music radio station, and Elkan's grandson Philip H. Naumburg helped found the Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival.
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Naumburg". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
The late Gothic town hall (Rathaus).
The late Renaissance architecture|Renaissance residence of the Duke Moritz of Saxony-Zeitz.
The Gothic St. Wenceslas Church, which displays paintings by Lucas Cranach the Elder and the Zacharias Hildebrandt|Hildebrandt organ that Johann Sebastian Bach played on.
The former bishop's castle Schönburg, which overlooks the town and the Saale River.
People
Johann Gottfried Gruber
Christian Lobeck
Johann Georg Graevius
Botho Strauß
Bishops of Naumburg
Johannes Agricola
Johannes Ambundii
Nicolaus von Amsdorf
Bishop of Naumburg, Engelhard (1206-1242), see List of religious leaders in 1220
Volquin (von Naumburg) 1209–1236, see Livonian Brothers of the Sword
:pedigree of "Naumburg"
Walter M. Naumburg, see Dawn Upshaw
Samuel Naumbourg, cantor, synagogal composer External links
Elkan Naumburg
Naumburg Music
(1835-1924) was a New York City merchant, banker, philanthropist and musicologist, best remembered for his sponsorship of the arts in Manhattan. From the last quarter of the nineteenth century, he used his wealth to promote public interest in symphonic and "semi-classical" music by founding the Oratorio Society of New York and funding construction of the Naumburg Bandshell, on the Concert Ground of Central Park which honors his name. (The New York Times, February 19, 1989)
[www.naumburg.org
]