Timeline Of Dresden
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Dresden, Saxony, Germany.
Prior to 18th century
History of Germany |
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- 1206 – First documentation of Dražďany.
- 1215 – Nikolaikirche founded.
- 1272 – Franziskanerkloster founded.
- 1309 – City seal incorporates coat of arms of Dresden.
- 1350 – first documentation of Altendresden (today Innere Neustadt) at the northern side of the Elbe.
- 1351 – Sophienkirche built.
- 1388 – Kreuzkirche consecrated.
- 1400 – Busmannkapelle built.
- 1409 – Armory established.
- 1434 – Striezelmarkt occurring.
- 1524 - Printing press in operation.
- 1530 – City expands.
- 1548 – Orchestra founded.
- 1563 – Dresdner Zeughaus built.
- 1589 – Johanneum built.
- 1666 – Premiere of Schütz's St Matthew Passion.
- 1667 – Opera house opens.
- 1678 - "Elector of Saxony's Players" dramatic troupe headquartered in Dresden (approximate date).
- 1695 – Parade of Frederick Augustus I.
- 1697 – Population: 40,000 (approximate).
- 1700 – Von Tschirnhaus glassworks set up.
18th century
- 1704 - Palais Flemming-Sulkowski built.
- 1708 – Porcelain developed by Johann Friedrich Böttger.
- 1710 – Meissen porcelain manufactory begins operating near city.
- 1717 – Japanisches Palais built.
- 1718 – Royal Palace rebuilt.
- 1719 – Wedding reception of Polish Prince Frederick Augustus and Maria Josepha of Austria.
- 1720 – Catholic Cemetery opens by decree of King Augustus II the Strong.
- 1722
- Zwinger built.
- Picture Gallery founded.
- 1723
- Grünes Gewölbe founded.
- Pillnitz Castle built.
- 1724 – Royal Cabinet of Mathematical and Physical Instruments established.
- 1726 – Übigau Palace completed.
- 1729 – Wackerbarth-Palais built.
- 1733 – Villages of Gorbitz and Übigau (present-day districts) granted to Aleksander Józef Sułkowski by Augustus III of Poland.
- 1736 – Equestrian sculpture of Polish King August the Strong unveiled.
- 1743 – Frauenkirche built.
- 1745 - City "taken by the Russians."
- 1748 – Collegium Medico Chirurgicum established.
- 1755 – Population: 63,000 (approximate).
- 1756 – Catholic Church of the Royal Court built.
- 1759 - September: "Dresden liberated from Prussians."
- 1760 – July: Siege of Dresden.
- 1763 – Death and burial of King Augustus III of Poland at the Catholic Church of the Royal Court.
- 1764 – Dresden Art Academy founded.
- 1776 – Landhaus built.
- 1784 – Observatory established.
- 1788 – Saxon Library opens.
- 1793 – Tadeusz Kościuszko begins preparations for the Kościuszko Uprising in the city in response to the Second Partition of Poland.
19th century
- 1807 – Constitution of the Duchy of Warsaw promulgated.
- 1809 – Austrians in power.
- 1813 – 26–27 August: Battle of Dresden.
- 1814 – Großer Garten opens to the public.
- 1818 – Ernst Arnold gallery established.
- 1823 – Jordan & Timaeus chocolate manufactury established.
- 1828 – Saxon Technical School founded.
- 1831 – Many Polish insurgents of the November Uprising fled from the Russian Partition of Poland to the city.
- 1833 – Isis Society (natural history) founded.
- 1835 – Polish composer Fryderyk Chopin met his future fiancée Maria Wodzinska in the city.
- 1838 - Dresden Coinage Convention held in city.
- 1839 – Leipzig–Dresden railway begins operating.
- 1843 - Jam factory begins operating.
- 1845 – Flood.
- 1841 – Opera house built.
- 1845 - 19 October: Premiere of Wagner's opera Tannhäuser.
- 1849 – May Uprising in Dresden.
- 1852
- Marien Brucke (bridge) constructed.
- Population: 100,000.
- 1854 – Semper Gallery and Schloss Albrechtsberg built.
- 1855 – September: Royal Gallery opens.
- 1856 – Dresden Conservatory established.
- 1858 - Population: 128,152.
- 1861 – Dresden Zoo opens.
- 1866 – Prussians in power.
- 1870 – Gewerbehausorchester founded.
- 1871 – Military facility built in Albertstadt.
- 1874 - Dresden English Football Club confirmed
- 1875 – Dresden Museum of Ethnology founded.
- 1876 – Fürstenzug created.
- 1878 – Opera house rebuilt.
- 1889
- Albertinum built.
- Dresden Botanical Garden created.
- 1891 – Dresden City Museum founded.
- 1893 – Blue Wonder bridge constructed.
- 1895 – Dresden Funicular Railway begins operating.
- 1897 – Dresden Central Station built.
- 1898
- Ernemann-Werke camera factory in operation.
- Dresdner SC football club formed.
20th century
1900-1945
- 1901
- Dresden-Neustadt station opens.
- Schwebebahn Dresden begins operating.
- 1903
- German City Exhibit held.
- Simmel delivers The Metropolis and Mental Life lecture.
- 1904 – Ministry building constructed.
- 1905 - 9 December: Premiere of Strauss' opera Salome.
- 1910
- Städtische Zentralbibliothek, Dresden (city library) formed.
- Augustus Bridge constructed.
- 1911
- Dresden Museums Association formed.
- Premiere of Strauss' opera Der Rosenkavalier.
- 1912 – Ihagee camera company and German Hygiene Museum founded.
- 1914 – Saxon army museum established.
- 1919
- Stadion am Ostragehege des Dresdner SC opens.
- Population: 529,326.
- 1923 – Glücksgas Stadium built.
- 1932 – Polish-language church services cancelled.
- 1933 – Population: 649,252.
- 1935 – Dresden-Klotzsche Airport opens.
- 1939
- September: Mass arrests of local Polish activists (see also Nazi crimes against the Polish nation).
- Population: 625,174.
- 1940 – Hans Nieland becomes mayor.
- 1942
- June: Subcamp of the Flossenbürg concentration camp founded at the SS Engineer's Barracks.
- 23–24 August: Twelve young Polish men, members of the Czarny Legion resistance organization, executed.
- 24 August: Five Polish students of the Salesian oratory in Poznań, known as the "Poznań Five" (Poznańska Piątka), later beatified martyrs of World War II of the Catholic Church, executed.
- 1944
- 15 September: Subcamp of the Flossenbürg concentration camp founded at the Railway Repair Works. Its prisoners were mostly Poles and Russians.
- 9 October: Two women subcamps of Flossenbürg founded at the Goehle-Werk and Universelle factories. Its prisoners were mostly Poles, Russians and Germans.
- 22 October: Dresden-Reick subcamp of Flossenbürg founded. Its prisoners were mostly Polish, Russian and Jewish women.
- 24 November: Dresden-Bernsdorf subcamp of Flossenbürg founded. Its prisoners were mostly Polish-Jewish men, women and children.
- 1945
- 13–14 February: Aerial bombing by Allied forces.
- 19 February: Subcamp of Flossenbürg at the Railway Repair Works dissolved. Prisoners deported to the main Flossenbürg camp.
- 24 March: Dresden-Reichsbahn subcamp of Flossenbürg founded. Its prisoners were mostly Polish, Jewish and Russian men.
- April: Goehle-Werk, Bernsdorf, Reichsbahn, Universelle and SS Engineer's Barracks subcamps of Flossenbürg dissolved. Prisoners either deported or mostly sent on death marches to various other locations.
- 22–27 April: Battle of Dresden
- April: Reick subcamp of Flossenbürg dissolved. Prisoners sent on a death march to the Ore Mountains.
- 8 May: Russians take city.
1946-1990s
- 1946
- Sächsische Zeitung begins publication.
- Population: 450,000.
- 1950
- SG Deutsche Volkspolizei Dresden football club founded.
- Botanical Garden restored.
- Hellerau and Pillnitz incorporated into city.
- 1956 – Dresden Transport Museum opens.
- 1959 – Galerie Neue Meister formed.
- 1960 – Józef Ignacy Kraszewski Museum opens at his former house.
- 1961 – Dresden University of Technology formed.
- 1972 – Filmtheater Prager Strasse opens.
- 1973 – Dresden S-Bahn established.
- 1983
- Staatsschauspiel Dresden formed.
- Population: 522,532.
- 1986 - Pinova apple created.
- 1989
- protests stop the planned high-purity silicon factory
- trains with East German embassy refugees from Prague pass Dresden main station with demonstrations and clashes with the police
- Monday demonstrations
- 1990 - Dresdner Neueste Nachrichten begins publication.
- 1991
- Bunte Republik Neustadt festival begins.
- Fußballverein Dresden-Nord formed.
- 1992
- Soviet forces withdrawn.
- Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf established.
- 1996 – Dresdner Sinfoniker founded.
- 2000 - Stadtarchiv Dresden (city archives) relocated to Elisabeth-Boer-Strasse.
21st century
- 2002
- Elbe Flood.
- Volkswagen's Transparent Factory opens.
- 2004
- Dresden High Magnetic Field Laboratory established.
- Dresden Elbe Valley designated an UNESCO World Heritage Site.
- 2005
- Dresden Frauenkirche rebuilt.
- Dresden City Art Gallery opens.
- Neo-Nazi demonstration.
- 2006 – 800th anniversary of founding of Dresden.
- 2007
- Freiberger Arena opens.
- Waldschlösschen Bridge construction begins.
- 2008
- Helma Orosz becomes mayor.
- December: City hosts the 38th Chess Olympiad.
- 2009 - Dresden Elbe Valley's UNESCO World Heritage Site status is revoked.
- 2010 – Anti-fascist demonstration.
- 2011
- Bundeswehr Military History Museum opens.
- Population: 523,058.
- 2013
- Elbe flood.
- September: City co-hosts the 2013 Women's European Volleyball Championship.
- 2014 - PEGIDA begin protesting against Islamism in the city, drawing crowds estimated up to 17,000 in peak
- 2015 - Dirk Hilbert becomes mayor.
See also
Other cities in the state of Saxony:
References
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This article incorporates information from the German Wikipedia.
Bibliography
in English
- John Russell (1828), "Dresden", A Tour in Germany, and Some of the Southern Provinces of the Austrian Empire, in 1820, 1821, 1822, Edinburgh: Constable, OCLC 614379840
- David Brewster, ed. (1830). "Dresden". Edinburgh Encyclopædia. Edinburgh: William Blackwood.
- Mariana Starke (1839), "Dresden", Travels in Europe (9th ed.), Paris: A. and W. Galignani
- William Henry Overall, ed. (1870). "Dresden, Saxony". Dictionary of Chronology. London: William Tegg. hdl:2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t9m32q949.
- "Dresden", Northern Germany (5th ed.), Coblenz: Karl Baedeker, 1873, OCLC 5947482
- Guide to Dresden, its Buildings, Institutions and Environs, Dresden: Herman Burdach, 1880, OCLC 2838150, OL 24467281M
- Guide to the Royal Collections of Dresden, translated by Fox, C.S., Dresden: Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, 1897, OL 7082856M
- Mary Endell (1908), Dresden: History, Stage, Gallery, Dresden: J. Seifert, OCLC 373304, OL 6638502M
- "Dresden", Northern Germany as Far as the Bavarian and Austrian Frontiers (15th ed.), Leipzig: Karl Baedeker, 1910, OCLC 78390379
- G. E. Collier (1910), Collier's New Practical Guide to Dresden, Dresden: A. Tittmann, OL 13523819M
- Dresden. Grieben's Guide Books. Berlin. 1910.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Nathaniel Newnham Davis (1911), "Dresden", The Gourmet's Guide to Europe (3rd ed.), London: Grant Richards
- Denise Phillips (2003). "Friends of Nature: Urban Sociability and Regional Natural History in Dresden, 1800–1850". Osiris. 18: 43–59. doi:10.1086/649376. JSTOR 3655284. S2CID 145497167.
- Susanne Vees-Gulani (2008). "The politics of new beginnings: the continued exclusion of the Nazi past in Dresden's cityscape". In Gavriel David Rosenfeld; Paul B. Jaskot (eds.). Beyond Berlin: Twelve German Cities Confront the Nazi Past. US: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-11611-9 – via HathiTrust. (fulltext)
in German
- "Dresden". Topographia Germaniae (in German). Vol. Topographia Superioris Saxoniae, Thüringiae, Misniae et Lusatiae. Frankfurt. 1650. p. 43+. c. 1650/1690
- "Dresden". Brockhaus' Konversations-Lexikon (in German) (14th ed.). Leipzig: Brockhaus. 1908. pp. 428–439.
- P. Krauss und E. Uetrecht, ed. (1913). "Dresden". Meyers Deutscher Städteatlas [Meyer's Atlas of German Cities] (in German). Leipzig: Bibliographisches Institut.
- Wolfgang Adam; Siegrid Westphal, eds. (2012). "Dresden". Handbuch kultureller Zentren der Frühen Neuzeit: Städte und Residenzen im alten deutschen Sprachraum (in German). De Gruyter. pp. 417+. ISBN 978-3-11-029555-9.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to History of Dresden.
- Links to fulltext city directories for Dresden via Wikisource
- Europeana. Items related to Dresden, various dates.