AUGSBURG
History
History I
Sightseeing I
Practical I Hotels in Augsburg
(Information hereunder
courtesy of
Historic
Highlights of Germany - an excellent tourist guide for the
Augsburg area)
Augsburg was founded in 15 BC under the
rule of the Roman emperor Augustus. For 400 years the city was the seat
of a provincial government of the Roman empire. Its ideal location made
it a crossroad of all important routes to the south. An advantage from
which the powerful merchants and bankers, the Fugger family and the
seafaring Welsers, likewise profited. They elevated Augsburg to rank
among the world's most powerful cities. Kings and emperors were frequent
guests here.
In the 13th century Augsburg became a Free Imperial City. It grew to be
a creative center of famous painters, sculptors, musicians and
architects. Here the ancestors of the composer Mozart and the painter
Holbein dwelt for centuries.
Numerous churches and the Dom (Cathedral) mark Augsburg as the seat of a
bishopric. It was here that, in 1518, Martin Luther and Cardinal Cajetan
engaged in their famous debate. Down through 20 centuries, there
developed a cityscape shaped by all the great stylistic epochs.
The Renaissance in particular flourished here – and Rococo became known
as "the Augsburg style". It is the fertile interplay of religious and
secular power that gave Augsburg – Bavaria's third-largest commercial
center – its inimitable flair. Great buildings, monumental fountains,
lavishly laid-out streets and ultramodern architecture attest to the
city's cosmopolitan liberality. Concerts in splendid halls, opera and
operetta in open air theaters, art exhibitions, magnificent churches,
the Fuggerei and the Schaezlerpalais in Rococo style draw tourists from
all the world. Because Augsburg is a city with 2000 years of living
history.