Leipzig-Mitte
Leipzig-Mitte is one of ten boroughs of Leipzig, located in the center of the city. It includes numerous architectural monuments. Most of them are located in the subdivision "Zentrum", which is sited inside the Inner City Ring Road and the Promenadenring:
- the Opera,
- the Europahaus,
- the Gewandhaus,
- the City-Hochhaus at the Augustusplatz,
- the Wintergartenhochhaus,
- the St. Thomas Church,
- the St. Nicholas Church,
- the New Town Hall,
- the Old Town Hall at the Markt square,
- the Leipzig University.
The exit Leipzig-Mitte of the Bundesautobahn 14 is situated about away in the north of Leipzig.
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Localities
In Leipzig, the subdivisions of the boroughs are called Ortsteil. In the borough Leipzig-Mitte, there are these 7 Ortsteile:The locality of Zentrum-Nordwest includes the quarter Waldstraßenviertel. The locality of Zentrum-West includes the quarters of Bachviertel and Innere Westvorstadt. The locality of Zentrum-Süd includes the Musikviertel.
Population
On 30 June 2022, the borough Leipzig-Mitte had a population of 69,214.History and urban development
The development of today's Leipzig began in the area of today's Mitte borough. In the Brühl area, there was in the 7th/8th century a Slavic settlement, while the urban nucleus was in the area of the German castle . It was in the area of today's Matthäikirchhof. Not far from there, the long-distance trade routes Via regia and Via imperii crossed in the Middle Ages, with the latter still being present in today's street name Reichsstraße.In the 13th century, the city of Leipzig extended only to the north beyond today's subdivision Zentrum and was limited to by the mighty city walls. Today's Mitte borough, on the other hand, also includes the suburbs, which essentially only developed after the gradual removal of the walls and ditches after the Seven Years' War. Previously, these were due to war events almost completely destroyed twice. Until the 1830s, only small areas outside of today's Zentrum were developed. These were limited to the trade routes accompanying the road, which were referred to as Steinweg. The city limits were pushed outwards and new gatehouses were built.
The area later called Alt-Leipzig corresponds roughly, but not exactly, with today's Mitte borough. An important prerequisite for the development of its northwestern, western and southwestern areas were the plans of the hydraulic engineers Kohl and Georgi in the years 1852 to 1854 and the subsequent redesign of the Leipzig River Network. In the course of the 19th century, the extensive public gardens that surrounded the inner city on all sides were gradually subdivided and built on. This led to a strong structural expansion of the suburbs, whereby Leipzig exceeded the 100,000-inhabitant mark in 1870 and became a big city. Due to incorporations, the urban area was soon no longer limited to Alt-Leipzig. In the census of 1895, a distinction was made between Alt-Leipzig with 183,000 people and Neu-Leipzig with 207,000 people. The population density was three times as high as it is today in the borough of Mitte, whose developed structure around 1900 was roughly as it is today.
However, this does not change the fact that, as Sebastian Ringel proves, hardly one stone has been left unturned and many buildings have been replaced by new ones over the course of time. Starting with the construction of the main train station, through the bombing of Leipzig in World War II and the changing reconstruction in the GDR, entire squares and streets disappeared. The increasing number of vehicles per capita in the 20th century and the expansion of roads also led to major changes in the cityscape.
Towards the end of the 20th century, the concept of a city center with few cars prevailed, while the inner city ring road has the highest traffic occupancy in Leipzig after the motorways. With the S-Bahn city tunnel opened in 2013, the Mitte borough has received a total of 4 underground train stations.
In 1989, the Mitte district made its place in world history with the Leipzig Monday demonstrations, which accelerated the end of the GDR and the Eastern bloc.
Attractions
Churches
- Propsteikirche, Leipzig
- St. Peter, Leipzig
Buildings
- Alte Handelsbörse
- Arena Leipzig
- Auerbachs Keller
- Barthels Hof
- Bosehaus
- Bowling Club
- Constitutional Court of Saxony
- Federal Court of Justice
- Höfe am Brühl
- Kongreßhalle Leipzig
- Kroch High-rise
- Moritzbastei
- Old St Nicholas School
- Paulinum
- Red Bull Arena
- Reichsgericht
- Romanus House
- Specks Hof
Lost buildings
- All Saints' Church, Leipzig
- Altes Theater
- Augusteum
- Café Zimmermann
- Leipzig Synagogue
- Paulinerkirche, Leipzig
- Pleissenburg
- Saint John's Church, Leipzig
- Zentralstadion
Underground railway stations
- Leipzig Markt station
- Leipzig Wilhelm-Leuschner-Platz railway station
Streets, squares and bridges
- Barfußgäßchen
- Burgplatz
- Goerdelerring
- Gottschedstrasse
- Grimmaische Strasse
- Hainstrasse
- Katharinenstrasse
- Petersstrasse
- Richard-Wagner-Platz
- St. Nicholas Church Square
- St. Thomas Church Square
- The Saxons' Bridge
- Zeppelin Bridge
Education and science
- St. Thomas School, Leipzig
- University of Music and Theatre Leipzig
- Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe
- Forum Thomanum
- German Central Library for the Blind
- German National Library
- HHL Leipzig Graduate School of Management
- Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig
Museums
- Leipzig City History Museum
- Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst Leipzig
- German Museum of Books and Writing
- Grassi Museum
- Leipzig Museum of Applied Arts
- Leipzig Museum of Ethnography
- Museum der bildenden Künste
- Museum of Antiquities of Leipzig University
- Museum of Musical Instruments of Leipzig University
- Natural History Museum, Leipzig
- Saxon Psychiatric Museum
- Zeitgeschichtliches Forum Leipzig
- Zum Arabischen Coffe Baum
Cemeteries
- Alter Johannisfriedhof
Other attractions
- Johannapark
- Rosental
- Leipzig Botanical Garden
- Racecourse Scheibenholz
- Statue of J. S. Bach
- Richard Wagner Memorial
- Bust of Richard Wagner
- The Step of the Century
Events
- Bachfest Leipzig
- Dok Leipzig
- Leipzig Christmas Market
Literature
- Bürgerverein Waldstraßenviertel e.V., Gründer. Zeit. Geist. Leipzig wird Großstadt 1871, Das Buch zur Ausstellung, o.J., in German
- Heydick, Lutz : Leipzig. Historischer Führer zu Stadt und Land, Urania-Verlag, Leipzig - Jena - Berlin 1990,, in German
- Hocquél, Wolfgang : Leipzig. Architektur von der Romanik bis zur Gegenwart, Passage-Verlag, Leipzig, 2. stark erweiterte Auflage 2004,, in German
- Künnemann, Otto / Güldemann, Martina : Geschichte der Stadt Leipzig, Wartberg Verlag, Gudensberg-Gleichen, 2. Auflage, 2004,, in German
- Leonhardi, Friedrich Gottlob : Leipzig um 1800, kommentierte und mit einem Register versehene Neuausgabe der Geschichte und Beschreibung der Kreis- und Handelsstadt Leipzig, Lehmstedt-Verlag, Leipzig 2010,, in: German
- Ringel, Sebastian : Leipzig! One Thousand Years of History, Edition Leipzig in the Seemann Henschel GmbH Co. KG, Leipzig 2015,, in English
- Ringel, Sebastian : Wie Leipzigs Innenstadt verschwunden ist. 150 verlorene Bauten aus 150 Jahren. edition überland, Leipzig 2019,, in German
- Ringel, Sebastian : Vom Wandel der Leipziger Vorstädte. 300 verlorene Bauten aus 160 Jahren. edition überland, Leipzig 2022,, in German
- Topfstedt, Thomas : Leipzig: Messestadt am Ring, in: Neue Städte aus Ruinen. Deutscher Städtebau der Nachkriegszeit, Prestel Verlag, München 1992,, p. 182–196, in German
- Winkler, Friedemann : Leipzigs Anfänge. Bekanntes, Neues, offene Fragen, ed. by Leipziger Geschichtsverein e.V., Sax-Verlag Beucha, 1998,