COBURG


Meaning of COBURG in English

also spelled Koburg, city, northern Bavaria Land (state), central Germany, situated on the Itz River, in the foothills of the Thuringian Forest, some 80 miles (130 km) west of the Czech border. Coburg was an imperial possession in the 10th century, and it was first mentioned in a document of 1056. The counts of Henneberg inherited the city in 1248, and it was chartered in 1331. From 1353 to 1918 it belonged to the margraves of Meissen, members of the Wettin family, who, after 1826, took the title of dukes of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha; their line has supplied Europe with many of its crowned heads. Coburg was of considerable importance in the 15th and 16th centuries, largely because of its strongly fortified Veste, or castle, situated on a busy trade route. Martin Luther resided there in 1530, and during the 17th century the castle successfully withstood several sieges in the Thirty Years' War. The castle was completely renovated in 190924; it houses art collections formed by the dukes and has a natural-history museum on its grounds. The ducal residence, the Ehrenburg, was converted in 1543 from a monastery proscribed during the Protestant Reformation; it houses a library and several collections. The 16th-century town hall is a notable landmark. Neighbourhood castles include Rosenau, the ducal country seat where Prince Albert, the consort of Queen Victoria of Great Britain, was born. Coburg's industries include lumber and paper milling, breweries, and the manufacture of glass, machinery, electrotechnical equipment, textiles, and toys. Pop. (1991 est.) 44,246.

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