Talk:Kassel

Source
This entry is based on an article from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.

Kassel was the capital of the former electorate of Hesse-Cassel. Since the annexation by Prussia in 1866, Kassel was the capital of the province of Hesse-Nassau. Pop. (18x5) 64,083; (1905) 120,446.

It is pleasantly situated, in a hilly and well-wooded country, on both sides of the river Fulda, over which a stone bridge leads to the lower new town, 124 m. by rail N.N.E. from Frankfort-on-Main. The river is navigable for barges, and railways connect the town with all parts of Germany. The streets of the old town are narrow and crooked, and contain many picturesque gabled houses, generally of the 17th century, but those of the upper and lower new town; and the three suburbs, are not surpassed by any in Germany. The principal streets are the Königs-strasse (5100 ft. long and 60 broad), the Schöne Aussicht, and the Stände-platz (180 ft. broad with four rows of linden trees). The large Friedrichs-platz is 1000 by 450 ft. in area. In it stands a marble statue of the landgrave Frederick II. There is a fine view from the open side. The former residence of the electors (Residenzschloss) fronts this square, as well as the Museum Fridericianum, with a façade of Roman-Ionic columns. The museum contains various valuable collections of curiosities, interesting mosaics, coins, casts, a library of 230,000 volumes, and valuable manuscripts. In the cabinet of curiosities there is a complete collection of clocks and watches from the earliest to the present time. Among these is the so-called Egg of Nuremberg, a watch made about 1500 by Peter Henlein. Among other public places and buildings worthy of notice are the Roman Catholic church, with a splendid interior; the Königs-platz, with a remarkable echo; the Karls-platz, with the statue of the landgrave Charles; and the Martins-platz, with a large church St. Martins with twin towers, containing the burial-vaults of the Hessian princes. The gallery of paintings, housed in a handsome building erected in 1880 on the Schöne Aussicht, contains one of the finest small collections in Europe, especially rich in the works of Rembrandt, Frans Hals and Van Dyck.

The town contains numerous educational institutions, including a technical college, a school of painting, a celebrated classical school, which the emperor William II. attended, and a military academy. The descendants of the French refugees who founded the upper new town have a church and hospital of their own. There are three Roman Catholic churches, an English church, and two synagogues. Music is much cultivated, and there is an opera with a first-rate orchestra, of which Ludwig Spohr was at one time conductor. The opera-house or theatre was built by Jerome Napoleon, but in 1906 money was voted for a new building on the Auetor. A new Rathaus (town-hall) has been erected. There are also the Bose Museum, containing collections of pictures and antiquities of Hessian origin, museums of natural history and ethnography, an industrial exhibition hall, and an industrial art school. A handsome Gothic Lutheran church was erected in 1892-1897, a post office (Renaissance) in 1881, and new administrative offices and law courts in 1876-1880. The municipal (or Murhard) library, in the Hanau park, contains 118,000 volumes. The most noticeable of the modern public monuments are those to the emperor William I. (1898), to the musician Spohr (1883), and the Löwenbrunnen (1881). In the Karlsaue, a favourite public promenade lying just below the Schöne Aussicht, are the Orangerie and the marble baths. Cassel is the headquarters of the XI. German army corps, and has a large garrison. It is a favourite residence for foreigners and retired officers and government officials. The industries embrace engine-building, the manufacture of railway carriages and plant, scientific instruments, porcelain, tobacco and cigars, lithography, jute-spinning, iron-founding, brewing and gardering(?).

On a slope of the Habichtswald Mountains, 3 m. W. of Cassel, and approached by an avenue, is the summer palace of Wilhelmshöhe, erected in 1787-1794. Napoleon III. resided here, as a prisoner of war, after the battle of Sedan. The surrounding gardens are adorned with fountains, cascades, lakes and grottos, the principal fountain sending up a jet of water 180 ft. high and 12 in. in diameter. Here also is an interesting building called the Löwenburg, erected in 1793-1796 in the style of a fortified castle, and containing among other things portraits of Tudors and Stuarts. The principal curiosity is the Karlsburg cascade, which is placed in a broad ravine, thickly wooded on both sides. A staircase of 900 steps leads to the top. On one of the landings is a huge rudely-carved stone figure of the giant Enceladus, and at the top is an octagon building called the Riesenschloss, surmounted by a colossal copper figure of the Farnese Hercules, 31 ft. high, whose club alone is sufficiently capacious to accommodate from eight to ten persons. In different parts of the park, and especially from the Octagon, charming views are obtained. The park was first formed by the landgrave Frederick II., the husband of Mary, daughter of George II. of England, and was finished by his successor the landgrave William, after whom it was named.

The earliest mention of Cassel is in 913, when it is referred to as Cassala. The town passed from the landgraves of Thuringia to the landgraves of Hesse in the 13th century, becoming one of the principal residences of the latter house in the 15th century. The burghers accepted the reformed doctrines in 1527. The fortifications of the town were restored by the landgrave Philip the Magnanimous and his son William IV. during the 16th century, and it was greatly improved by the landgrave Charles (1654-1730), who welcomed many Huguenots who founded the upper new town. In 1762 Cassel was captured by the Germans from the French; after this the fortifications were dismantled and New Cassel was laid out by the landgrave Frederick II. In 1807 it became the capital of the kingdom of Westphalia; in 1813 it was bombarded and captured by the Russian general Chernichev; in 1830, 1831 and 1848 it was the scene of violent commotions; from 1850 to 1851 it was occupied by the Prussians, the Bavarians and the Austrians; in 1866 it was occupied by the Prussians, and in 1867 was made the capital of the newly formed Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau.

Literature
See Piderit, Geschichte der Haupt- und Residenzstadt Kassel (Kassel, 1882); Fr. Müller, Kassel seit 70 Jahren (2 vols., 2nd ed., Kassel, 1893); and Hessler, Die Residenzstadt Kassel und ihre Umgebung (Kassel, 1902). --Keichwa 17:10 Apr 26, 2003 (UTC)

Catchphrase?
I have vague memories from a German exchange in this part of the world many years ago of a local catchphrase, possibly done as a call and response thing, along the lines of "Fulle wasser, Fulle wasser! Hoi, hoi, hoi!" I have no idea whether that's spelt correctly, or whether it's widely used, but I thought I might as well mention it. Loganberry (Talk) 17:37, 3 April 2009 (UTC)

It's used during the "Zissel" as you can see here. BTW: Your spelling is correct. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 88.68.179.139 (talk) 17:07, 10 April 2009 (UTC)

mercenaries (Hessians
This is historical propaganda and since that as often wrong as it is quoted: Hesse-Kassel became infamous for selling mercenaries (Hessians) to the British crown to help suppress the American Revolution and to finance the construction of palaces and the landgrave's opulent lifestyle. 1. The Hessians were very well trained professional soldiers - among the best of its time - and they were no foreing mercenaries. 2. At that time smaller middle states and also the democratic swiss republic lease their troops because of the need to maintainin such powerfull troops between the powerfull states of Prussia, France, Habsburg, Britain and Russia. 3. the money was earned by the real Hessians from Hessen-Kassel as professional soldiers was spend for guerdon and social welfare foundations. For example the Waisenhaussitftung zu Kassel was closed in the 1920 years because of inflation and not because the landgraves opulent lifestyle. Greets from Kassel

Demographics
The paragraph Demographics displays only one table, ranking top 5 largest nationalities of immigrants. Without any context or explanations, it reads like there was no German inhabitants. I'd suggest to delete this section until it is fed with background informations. --77.8.225.24 (talk) 21:39, 2 May 2015 (UTC)
 * After someone deleted the table mentioned above, I've added a Template:Expand section, hoping to use this talk page section to figure out how to improve the demographics section in the article. I know nothing about Kassel, so we could use some locals. Benica11 (talk) 01:44, 23 April 2020 (UTC)

External links modified
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Name change
The article currently claims that the name was changed from Cassel to Kassel in 1928; the German article says 1926. In neither case is there a source, or any explanation as to why this happened. Cassel (disambiguation) also says 1926. I know nothing about this, but I'm changing this article to 1926 on the basis that the German article is more likely to be correct, and adding a cn tag. I'd have thought this was a fairly significant change, which should be properly documented and explained. GrindtXX (talk) 13:20, 12 July 2020 (UTC)