Leipzig

Leipzig (/ˈlpsɪɡ/, also /-(t)sɪx/, /-(t)sɪk/,[3][4][5] German: [ˈlaɪptsɪç] (listen); Upper Saxon: Leibzsch) is the most populous city in the German state of Saxony. With a population of 600,000 inhabitants as of 2019[6] (1.1 million[7] residents in the larger urban zone),[2] it is Germany's eighth most populous city[8][9] as well as the second most populous city in the area of former East Germany after (East) Berlin. Together with Halle (Saale), the largest city of the neighbouring state of Saxony-Anhalt, the city forms the polycentric conurbation of Leipzig-Halle. Between the two cities (in Schkeuditz) lies Leipzig/Halle Airport.

Leipzig
Location of Leipzig
Leipzig
Leipzig
Coordinates: 51°20′N 12°23′E
CountryGermany
StateSaxony
DistrictUrban districts of Germany
Government
  Lord MayorBurkhard Jung (SPD)
Area
  City297.36 km2 (114.81 sq mi)
Population
 (2018-12-31)[1]
  City587,857
  Density2,000/km2 (5,100/sq mi)
  Metro
1,001,220 (LUZ)[2]
Time zoneCET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Postal codes
04001–04357
Dialling codes0341
Vehicle registrationL
Websitewww.leipzig.de

Leipzig is located about 160 kilometres (99 mi) southwest of Berlin in the Leipzig Bay, which constitutes the southernmost part of the North German Plain, at the confluence of the White Elster River (progression: SaaleElbeNorth Sea) and two of its tributaries: the Pleiße and the Parthe. The name of the city as well as the names of many of its boroughs are of Slavic origin.

Leipzig has been a trade city since at least the time of the Holy Roman Empire.[10] The city sits at the intersection of the Via Regia and the Via Imperii, two important medieval trade routes. Leipzig was once one of the major European centres of learning and culture in fields such as music and publishing.[11] After the Second World War and during the period of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) Leipzig remained a major urban centre in East Germany, but its cultural and economic importance declined.[11] Events in Leipzig in 1989 played a significant role in precipitating the fall of communism in Central and Eastern Europe, mainly through demonstrations starting from St. Nicholas Church. The immediate effects of the reunification of Germany included the collapse of the local economy, which had come to depend on highly polluting heavy industry, severe unemployment, and urban blight. Starting around 2000, however, the decline was first arrested and then reversed and, since then, Leipzig has seen significant changes with the restoration of major historical buildings, the demolition of derelict properties of little historical value, and the development of new industries and a modern transport infrastructure.[12][13]

Leipzig today is an economic centre, is rated as the most livable city in Germany by the GfK marketing research institution, and has the second-best future prospects of all cities in Germany according to HWWI and Berenberg Bank.[14][15] The city is one of two seats of the German National Library, as well as the seat of the German Federal Administrative Court. Leipzig Zoo is one of the most modern zoos in Europe and ranks first in Germany and second in Europe.[16][17] Since the opening of the Leipzig City Tunnel in 2013, Leipzig forms the centrepiece of the S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland public transit system.[18] Leipzig is currently listed as a Gamma World City,[19] Germany's "Boomtown"[20] and was the 2019 European City of the Year.[21][22]

Leipzig has long been a major centre for music, both classical as well as modern "dark alternative music" or darkwave genres. The Oper Leipzig is one of the most prominent opera houses in Germany. Leipzig is also home to the University of Music and Theatre "Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy". The Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, established in 1743, is one of the oldest symphony orchestras in the world. Johann Sebastian Bach is one among many major composers who lived and worked in Leipzig and, during a stay in the city, Friedrich Schiller wrote his poem "Ode to Joy".

History

Name

Leipzig in the 17th century

The name Leipzig is derived from the Slavic word Lipsk, which means "settlement where the linden trees (British English: lime trees; U.S. English: basswood trees) stand".[23] An older spelling of the name in English is Leipsic. The Latin name Lipsia was also used.[24] The name is cognate with Lipetsk (Липецк) in Russia and Liepāja in Latvia.[25]

Leipzig. Altes Rathaus Mit Siegesdenkmal.

In 1937 the Nazi government officially renamed the city Reichsmessestadt Leipzig (Imperial Trade Fair City Leipzig).[26]

Since 1989 Leipzig has been informally dubbed "Hero City" (Heldenstadt), in recognition of the role that the Monday demonstrations there played in the fall of the East German regime – the name alludes to the honorary title awarded in the former Soviet Union to certain cities that played a key role in the victory of the Allies during the Second World War.[27] The common usage of this nickname for Leipzig up until the present is reflected, for example, in the name of a blog for local arts and culture, Heldenstadt.de.[28]

More recently, the city has sometimes been nicknamed the "Boomtown of eastern Germany", "Hypezig" or "The better Berlin" and is celebrated by the media as a hip urban centre for its vital lifestyle and for its creative scene with many startups.[29][30][31][32]

Origins

Leipzig was first documented in 1015 in the chronicles of Bishop Thietmar of Merseburg as urbs Libzi (Chronikon VII, 25) and endowed with city and market privileges in 1165 by Otto the Rich. Leipzig Trade Fair, started in the Middle Ages, has become an event of international importance and is the oldest surviving trade fair in the world.

There are records of commercial fishing operations on the river Pleiße that, most likely, refer to Leipzig dating back to 1305, when the Margrave Dietrich the Younger granted the fishing rights to the church and convent of St Thomas.[33]

There were a number of monasteries in and around the city, including a Franciscan monastery after which the Barfußgäßchen (Barefoot Alley) is named and a monastery of Irish monks (Jacobskirche, destroyed in 1544) near the present day Ranstädter Steinweg (the old Via Regia).

The University of Leipzig was founded in 1409 and Leipzig developed into an important centre of German law and of the publishing industry in Germany, resulting, in the 19th and 20th centuries, with the Reichsgericht (Imperial Court of Justice) and the German National Library being located here.

During the Thirty Years' War, two battles took place in Breitenfeld, about 8 kilometres (5.0 miles) outside Leipzig city walls. The first Battle of Breitenfeld took place in 1631 and the second in 1642. Both battles resulted in victories for the Swedish-led side.

On 24 December 1701, an oil-fueled street lighting system was introduced. The city employed light guards who had to follow a specific schedule to ensure the punctual lighting of the 700 lanterns.

19th century

Battle of Leipzig, 1813

The Leipzig region was the arena of the 1813 Battle of Leipzig between Napoleonic France and an allied coalition of Prussia, Russia, Austria and Sweden. It was the largest battle in Europe before the First World War and the coalition victory ended Napoleon's presence in Germany and would ultimately lead to his first exile on Elba. The Monument to the Battle of the Nations celebrating the centenary of this event was completed in 1913. In addition to stimulating German nationalism, the war had a major impact in mobilizing a civic spirit in numerous volunteer activities. Many volunteer militias and civic associations were formed, and collaborated with churches and the press to support local and state militias, patriotic wartime mobilization, humanitarian relief and postwar commemorative practices and rituals.[34]

When it was made a terminus of the first German long-distance railway to Dresden (the capital of Saxony) in 1839, Leipzig became a hub of Central European railway traffic, with Leipzig Hauptbahnhof the largest terminal station by area in Europe. The railway station has two grand entrance halls, the eastern one for the Royal Saxon State Railways and the western one for the Prussian state railways.

In the 19th century, Leipzig was a centre of the German and Saxon liberal movements. The first German labor party, the General German Workers' Association (Allgemeiner Deutscher Arbeiterverein, ADAV) was founded in Leipzig on 23 May 1863 by Ferdinand Lassalle; about 600 workers from across Germany travelled to the foundation on the new railway. Leipzig expanded rapidly to more than 700,000 inhabitants. Huge Gründerzeit areas were built, which mostly survived both war and post-war demolition.

Augustusplatz with Leipzig Opera House, c. 1900

20th century

New City Hall of Leipzig, built in 1905

With the opening of a fifth production hall in 1907, the Leipziger Baumwollspinnerei became the largest cotton mill company on the continent, housing over 240,000 spindles. Daily production surpassed 5 million kilograms of yarn.[35]

During the 1930s and 1940s, music was prominent throughout Leipzig. Many students attended Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy College of Music and Theatre (then named Landeskonservatorium.) However, in 1944, it was closed due to World War II. It re-opened soon after the war ended in 1945.

On 22 May 1930, Carl Friedrich Goerdeler was elected mayor of Leipzig. He was well known as an opponent of the Nazi regime.[36] He resigned in 1937 when, in his absence, his Nazi deputy ordered the destruction of the city's statue of Felix Mendelssohn. On Kristallnacht in 1938, the 1855 Moorish Revival Leipzig synagogue, one of the city's most architecturally significant buildings, was deliberately destroyed. Goerdeler was later executed by the Nazis on 2 February 1945.

Several thousand forced labourers were stationed in Leipzig during the Second World War.

Beginning in 1933, many Jewish citizens of Leipzig were members of the Gemeinde, a large Jewish religious community spread throughout Germany, Austria and Switzerland. In October 1935, the Gemeinde helped found the Lehrhaus (English: a house of study) in Leipzig to provide different forms of studies to Jewish students who were prohibited from attending any institutions in Germany. Jewish studies were emphasized and much of the Jewish community of Leipzig became involved.[37]

Like all other cities claimed by the Nazis, Leipzig was subject to aryanisation. Beginning in 1933 and increasing in 1939, Jewish business owners were forced to give up their possessions and stores. This eventually intensified to the point where Nazi officials were strong enough to evict the Jews from their own homes. They also had the power to force many of the Jews living in the city to sell their houses. Many people who sold their homes emigrated elsewhere, outside of Leipzig. Others moved to Judenhäuser, which were smaller houses that acted as ghettos, housing large groups of people.[37]

As with other cities in Europe during the Holocaust, the Jews of Leipzig were greatly affected by the Nuremberg Laws. However, due to the Leipzig Trade Fair and the international attention it garnered, Leipzig was especially cautious about its public image. Despite this, the Leipzig authorities were not afraid to strictly apply and enforce anti-semitic measures.[37] Shortly before Kristallnacht, Polish Jews living in the city were expelled.[37]

On 20 December 1937, after the Nazis took control of the city, they renamed it Reichsmessestadt Leipzig, meaning the "Imperial Trade Fair City Leipzig".[38] In early 1938, Leipzig saw an increase in Zionism through Jewish citizens. Many of these Zionists attempted to flee before deportations began.[37] On 28 October 1938, Heinrich Himmler ordered the deportation of Polish Jews from Leipzig to Poland.[37][39]

On 9 November 1938, as part of Kristallnacht, in Gottschedstrasse (German: Gottschedstraße), now a popular dining and nightlife area in Leipzig, synagogues and businesses were set on fire.[37] Only a couple of days later, on 11 November 1938, many Jews in the Leipzig area were deported to the Buchenwald Concentration Camp.[40] As World War II came to an end, much of Leipzig was destroyed. Following the war, the Communist Party of Germany (German: Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands, KPD) provided aid for the reconstruction of the city.[41]

Leipzig after bombing in the Second World War

In 1933, a census recorded that over 11,000 Jews were living in Leipzig. In the 1939 census, the number had fallen to roughly 4,500, and by January 1942 only 2,000 remained. In that month, these 2,000 Jews began to be deported.[37] On 13 July 1942, 170 Jews were deported from Leipzig to Auschwitz Concentration Camp. On 19 September 1942, 440 Jews were deported from Leipzig to Theresienstadt Concentration Camp. On 18 June 1943, the remaining 18 Jews still in Leipzig were deported from Leipzig to Auschwitz Concentration Camp. According to records of the two waves of deportations to Auschwitz there were no survivors. According to records of the Theresienstadt deportation, only 53 Jews survived.[37][42]

Until late 1943, there was little threat of aerial bombings to the city. However, on the morning of 4 December 1943, the British Royal Air Force dropped over 1,000 tons of explosives, resulting in the death of nearly 1,000 civilians.[43] This bombing was the largest up to that time. Due to the close proximity of many of the buildings hit, a firestorm occurred. This prompted firefighters to rush to the city; however, they were unable to control the fires. Unlike the neighbouring city of Dresden, this was a largely conventional bombing with high explosives rather than incendiaries. The resultant pattern of loss was a patchwork, rather than wholesale loss of its centre, but was nevertheless extensive.

The Allied ground advance into Germany reached Leipzig in late April 1945. The U.S. 2nd Infantry Division and U.S. 69th Infantry Division fought their way into the city on 18 April and completed its capture after fierce urban action, in which fighting was often house-to-house and block-to-block, on 19 April 1945.[44] In April 1945 the SS Gruppehfuhrer/Mayor of Leipzig Bruno Erich Alfred Freyberg, his wife and daughter; the Deputy Mayor/Treasurer of Leipzig, Ernest Kurt Lisso, his wife, daughter, and a Volkssturm Major Walter Dönicke committed suicide in Leipzig City Hall.

The United States turned the city over to the Red Army as it pulled back from the line of contact with Soviet forces in July 1945 to the designated occupation zone boundaries. Leipzig became one of the major cities of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany).

Following the end of World War II in 1945, Leipzig saw a slow return of Jews to the city.[37][45]

In the mid-20th century, the city's trade fair assumed renewed importance as a point of contact with the Comecon Eastern Europe economic bloc, of which East Germany was a member. At this time, trade fairs were held at a site in the south of the city, near the Monument to the Battle of the Nations.

The planned economy of the German Democratic Republic, however, was not kind to Leipzig. Before the Second World War, Leipzig had developed a mixture of industry, creative business (notably publishing), and services (including legal services). During the period of the German Democratic Republic, services became the concern of the state, concentrated in (East) Berlin; creative business moved to West Germany; and Leipzig was left only with heavy industry. To make bad worse, this industry was extremely polluting, making Leipzig an even less attractive city to live in.[46] Between 1950 and the end of the German Democratic Republic, the population of Leipzig fell from 600,000 to 500,000.[13]

In October 1989, after prayers for peace at St. Nicholas Church, established in 1983 as part of the peace movement, the Monday demonstrations started as the most prominent mass protest against the East German government.[47][48] The reunification of Germany, however, was at first not good for Leipzig. The centrally planned heavy industry that had become the city's speciality was, in terms of the advanced economy of reunited Germany, almost completely unviable, and closed. Within only six years, 90% of jobs in industry had vanished.[13] As unemployment rocketed, the population fell dramatically; some 100,000 people left Leipzig in the ten years after reunification, and vacant and derelict housing became an urgent problem.[13]

Starting in 2000, an ambitious (and subsequently much-praised) urban-renewal plan first stopped Leipzig's decline and then reversed it. The plan focused on saving and improving as much as possible of the city's urban structure, especially its attractive historic center and various architectural gems, and attracting new industries, partly through infrastructure improvement.[46][13]

21st century

Federal Administrative Court of Germany
The 153-metre-high City-Hochhaus Leipzig and the Augusteum of the University of Leipzig

Nowadays, Leipzig is an important economic center in Germany. Since the 2010s, the city has been celebrated by the media as a hip urban center with a very high quality of living.[49][50][51] It is often called "The new Berlin".[52] Leipzig is also Germany's fastest growing city.[53] Leipzig was the German candidate for the 2012 Summer Olympics, but was unsuccessful. After ten years of construction, the Leipzig City Tunnel opened on 14 December 2013.[54] Leipzig forms the centerpiece of the S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland public transit system, which operates in the four German states of Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Thuringia and Brandenburg.

Geography

White Elster in the Plagwitz district of Leipzig

Location

Leipzig lies at the confluence of the rivers White Elster, Pleiße and Parthe, in the Leipzig Bay, on the most southerly part of the North German Plain, which is the part of the North European Plain in Germany. The site is characterized by swampy areas such as the Leipzig Riverside Forest, though there are also some limestone areas to the north of the city. The landscape is mostly flat though there is also some evidence of moraine and drumlins.

Although there are some forest parks within the city limits, the area surrounding Leipzig is relatively unforested. During the 20th century, there were several open-cast mines in the region, many of which are being converted to use as lakes.[55] Also see: Neuseenland

Leipzig is also situated at the intersection of the ancient roads known as the Via Regia (King's highway), which traversed Germany in an east–west direction, and the Via Imperii (Imperial Highway), a north–south road.

Leipzig was a walled city in the Middle Ages and the current "ring" road around the historic centre of the city follows the line of the old city walls.

Subdivision

Since 1992 Leipzig has been divided administratively into ten districts, which in turn contain a total of 63 subdistricts. Some of these correspond to outlying villages which have been annexed by Leipzig.

Stadtteile and regions
Stadtteile of Leipzig[56]
DistrictPop.Area
km2
Pop.
per km2
Center49,56213,883,570
Northeast41,18626.291.566
East69,66640.741,710
Southeast51,13934.651,476
South57,43416.923,394
Southwest45,88646.67983
West51,27614.693,491
Old West46,00926.091,764
Northwest28,03639.09717
North57,55938.351,501

Neighbouring communities

Delitzsch Jesewitz
Schkeuditz Rackwitz Taucha
Borsdorf Brandis
Markranstädt Markkleeberg Naunhof
Kitzen Zwenkau Grosspoesna

Climate

Like many places located in Eastern parts of Germany, Leipzig has an oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb close to a Dfb [0 °C US isotherm]) with significant continental influences due to inland location. Winters are cool to cold, with an average of around 1 °C (34 °F). Summers are generally warm, averaging at 19 °C (66 °F) with daytime temperatures of 24 °C (75 °F). Precipitation in winter is about half that of the summer. The amount of sunshine differs significantly between winter and summer, with an average of around 51 hours of sunshine in December (1.7 hours a day) compared with 229 hours of sunshine in July (7.4 hours a day).[57]

Climate data for Leipzig/Halle, Germany for 1981–2010, temperature records for 1973–2013 (Source: DWD)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 15.9
(60.6)
18.6
(65.5)
23.0
(73.4)
29.5
(85.1)
31.9
(89.4)
34.8
(94.6)
36.6
(97.9)
37.2
(99.0)
32.9
(91.2)
28.2
(82.8)
18.7
(65.7)
16.5
(61.7)
37.2
(99.0)
Average high °C (°F) 3.2
(37.8)
4.3
(39.7)
8.7
(47.7)
13.9
(57.0)
19.0
(66.2)
21.7
(71.1)
24.5
(76.1)
24.1
(75.4)
19.3
(66.7)
14.0
(57.2)
7.6
(45.7)
3.6
(38.5)
13.67
(56.61)
Daily mean °C (°F) 0.5
(32.9)
1.1
(34.0)
4.7
(40.5)
8.9
(48.0)
13.8
(56.8)
16.5
(61.7)
19.0
(66.2)
18.6
(65.5)
14.4
(57.9)
9.8
(49.6)
4.7
(40.5)
1.3
(34.3)
9.45
(49.01)
Average low °C (°F) −2.2
(28.0)
−2.0
(28.4)
1.1
(34.0)
4.1
(39.4)
8.5
(47.3)
11.5
(52.7)
13.8
(56.8)
13.6
(56.5)
10.1
(50.2)
6.2
(43.2)
2.0
(35.6)
−1.2
(29.8)
5.47
(41.85)
Record low °C (°F) −27.6
(−17.7)
−21.6
(−6.9)
−16.6
(2.1)
−6.5
(20.3)
−2.6
(27.3)
1.8
(35.2)
5.7
(42.3)
5.5
(41.9)
0.5
(32.9)
−6.7
(19.9)
−12.9
(8.8)
−20.2
(−4.4)
−27.6
(−17.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 31.9
(1.26)
26.3
(1.04)
38.8
(1.53)
39.6
(1.56)
46.9
(1.85)
54.8
(2.16)
68.9
(2.71)
63.1
(2.48)
49.9
(1.96)
31.0
(1.22)
43.4
(1.71)
39.8
(1.57)
534.10
(21.03)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 62.8 77.8 124.5 181.7 227.4 224.8 229.0 213.1 160.9 122.9 61.5 51.1 1,737.3
Source: Data derived from Deutscher Wetterdienst, note: sunshine hours are from 1991–2013[58]

Politics

The first freely elected mayor after German reunification was Hinrich Lehmann-Grube of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), who served from 1990 to 1998. The mayor was originally chosen by the city council, but since 1994 has been directly elected. Wolfgang Tiefensee, also of the SPD, served from 1998 until his resignation in 2005 to become federal Minister of Transport. He was succeeded by fellow SPD politician Burkhard Jung, who was elected in January 2006 and re-elected in 2013 and 2020. The most recent mayoral election was held on 2 February 2020, with a runoff held on 1 March, and the results were as follows:

Candidate Party First round Second round
Votes % Votes %
Sebastian Gemkow Christian Democratic Union 72,427 31.6 107,611 47.6
Burkhard Jung Social Democratic Party 68,286 29.8 110,965 49.1
Franziska Riekewald The Left 31,036 13.5
Katharina Krefft Alliance 90/The Greens 27,481 12.0
Christoph Neumann Alternative for Germany 19,854 8.7
Katharina Subat Die PARTEI 5,467 2.4
Marcus Viefeld Free Democratic Party 2,739 1.2
Ute Elisabeth Gabelmann Pirate Party Germany 2,089 0.9 7,542 3.3
Valid votes 229,379 99.6 226,118 99.5
Invalid votes 822 0.4 1,235 0.5
Total 230,201 100.0 227,353 100.0
Electorate/voter turnout 469,225 49.1 469,269 48.4
Source: Wahlen in Sachsen

The most recent city council election was held on 26 May 2019, and the results were as follows:

Party Votes % +/- Seats +/-
The Left (Die Linke) 171,423 21.4 2.8 15 3
Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne) 165,683 20.7 5.7 15 4
Christian Democratic Union (CDU) 140,585 17.5 7.5 13 6
Alternative for Germany (AfD) 119,616 14.9 8.5 11 7
Social Democratic Party (SPD) 99,022 12.4 5.9 9 4
Free Democratic Party (FDP) 38,481 4.8 1.9 3 1
Die PARTEI (PARTEI) 30,764 3.8 2.7 2 2
Voters Association Leipzig (WVL) 20,369 2.5 0.7 1 ±0
Pirate Party Germany (Piraten) 11,512 1.4 0.5 1 ±0
Leipzigers for Basic Income 4,297 0.5 New 0 New
Valid votes 274,916 98.7
Invalid votes 3,751 1.3
Total 278,667 100.0 70 ±0
Electorate/voter turnout 466,442 59.7 17.9
Source: Wahlen in Sachsen

Demographics

Population development since 1200
Typically dense cityscape of Leipzig old town, view from Neues Rathaus. Buildings from left to right: Gondwanaland of Leipzig Zoo, St. Thomas Church, Highrise of Sparkasse Leipzig Bank, Hotel The Westin Leipzig and Museum of Fine Arts to the right.

Leipzig has a population of about 570,000. In 1930, the population reached its historical peak of over 700,000. It decreased steadily from 1950 to about 530,000 in 1989. In the 1990s, the population decreased rather rapidly to 437,000 in 1998. This reduction was mostly due to outward migration and suburbanisation. After almost doubling the city area by incorporation of surrounding towns in 1999, the number stabilised and started to rise again, with an increase of 1,000 in 2000.[59] As of 2015, Leipzig is the fastest-growing city in Germany with over 500,000 inhabitants.[60] The growth of the past 10–15 years has mostly been due to inward migration. In recent years, inward migration accelerated, reaching an increase of 12,917 in 2014.[61]

In the years following German reunification, many people of working age took the opportunity to move to the states of the former West Germany to seek employment opportunities. This was a contributory factor to falling birth rates. Births dropped from 7,000 in 1988 to less than 3,000 in 1994.[62] However, the number of children born in Leipzig has risen since the late 1990s. In 2011, it reached 5,490 births resulting in a RNI of −17.7 (−393.7 in 1995).[63]

The unemployment rate decreased from 18.2% in 2003 to 9.8% in 2014 and 7.6% in June 2017.[64][65][66]

The percentage of the population from an immigrant background is low compared with other German cities. As of 2012, only 5.6% of the population were foreigners, compared to the German national average of 7.7%.[67]

The number of people with an immigrant background (immigrants and their children) grew from 49,323 in 2012 to 77,559 in 2016, making them 13.3% of the city's population (Leipzig's population 579,530 in 2016).[68]

The largest minorities (first and second generation) in Leipzig by country of origin as of 31.12.2018 are:[69]

Rank Ancestry Total Foreigners Germans
1 Syria9,0598,523536
2 Russia8,7733,2145,559
3 Poland5,0193,0062,013
4 Romania4,1613,675486
5 Ukraine3,4912,2451,246
6 Vietnam3,4302,4031,027
7 Iraq2,8162,104712
8 Turkey2,4671,549218
9 Kazakhstan2,2442461,998
10 Afghanistan2,1711,916255
11 Italy1,9831,564419
12 Hungary1,8141,349465
13 Bulgaria1,6151,238377
14 France1,5441,016528
15 China1,4651,254211

Culture, sights and cityscape

Architecture

Palais Roßbach, one of the many Gründerzeit buildings in Leipzig
Mädler Passage, one of 24 covered passages in Leipzig city centre

The historic central area of Leipzig features a Renaissance-style ensemble of buildings from the sixteenth century, including the old city hall in the marketplace. There are also several baroque period trading houses and former residences of rich merchants. As Leipzig grew considerably during the economic boom of the late-nineteenth century, the town has many buildings in the historicist style representative of the Gründerzeit era. Approximately 35% of Leipzig's flats are in buildings of this type. The new city hall, completed in 1905, is built in the same style.

Some 64,000 apartments in Leipzig were built in Plattenbau buildings during Communist rule in East Germany.[70] and although some of these have been demolished and the numbers living in this type of accommodation have declined in recent years, at least 10% of Leipzig's population (50,000 people) are still living in Plattenbau accommodation.[71] Grünau, for example, has approximately 40,000 people living in this sort of accommodation.[72]

The St. Paul's Church was destroyed by the Communist government in 1968 to make room for a new main building for the university. After some debate, the city decided to establish a new, mainly secular building at the same location, called Paulinum, which was completed in 2012. Its architecture alludes to the look of the former church and it includes space for religious use by the faculty of theology, including the original altar from the old church and two newly built organs.

Many commercial buildings were built in the 1990s as a result of tax breaks after German reunification.

Tallest buildings and structures

The tallest structure in Leipzig is the chimney of the Stahl- und Hartgusswerk Bösdorf GmbH with a height of 205 metres (673 feet). With 142 metres (466 feet), the City-Hochhaus Leipzig is the tallest high-rise building in Leipzig. From 1972 to 1973 it was Germany's tallest building.

Buildings and structures Image Height in metres Year Notes
Chimney of Stahl- und Hartgusswerk Bösdorf GmbH 205 1984
Funkturm Leipzig 191 2015
DVB-T-Sendeturm 190 1986
City-Hochhaus Leipzig 142 1972 Total height 153 m, tallest building in Germany 1972–1973. Headquarter of European Energy Exchange.
Fernmeldeturm Leipzig 132 1995
Tower of New Town Hall 115 1905 Tallest Town Hall in Germany
Wintergartenhochhaus 106,8 1972 Used as residential tower
Hotel The Westin Leipzig 95 1972 Hotel with skybar and restaurant
Monument to the Battle of the Nations 91 1913 Tallest monument in Europe.
St. Peters' 88,5 1885 Leipzig's tallest church.
MDR-Hochhaus 65 2000 MDR is one of Germany's public broadcasters.
Hochhaus Löhr's Carree 65 1997 Headquarters of Sachsen Bank and Sparkasse Leipzig.
Center Torgauer Platz 63 1995
Europahaus 56 1929 Headquarters of Stadtwerke Leipzig

Museums and the arts

One of the highlights of the city's contemporary arts was the Neo Rauch retrospective opening in April 2010 at the Leipzig Museum of Fine Arts. This is a show devoted to the father of the New Leipzig School[73][74] of artists. According to The New York Times,[75] this scene "has been the toast of the contemporary art world" for the past decade. In addition, there are eleven galleries in the so-called Spinnerei.[76]

The Grassi Museum complex contains three more of Leipzig's major collections:[77] the Ethnography Museum, Applied Arts Museum and Musical Instrument Museum (the last of which is run by the University of Leipzig). The university also runs the Museum of Antiquities.[78]

Founded in March 2015, the G2 Kunsthalle houses the Hildebrand Collection.[79] This private collection focuses on the so-called New Leipzig School. Leipzig's first private museum dedicated to contemporary art in Leipzig after the turn of the millennium is located in the city centre close to the famous St. Thomas Church on the third floor of the former GDR processing centre.[80]

Other museums in Leipzig include the following:

  • The German Museum of Books and Writing is the world's oldest museum of its kind, founded in 1884.
  • The Egyptian Museum of the University of Leipzig comprises a collection of about 7,000 artefacts from several millennia.
  • The Schillerhaus is the house where Schiller lived in summer 1785.
  • The Zeitgeschichtliches Forum Leipzig (Forum of Contemporary History) shows the history of the German division and the everyday life in the socialist German Democratic Republic.
  • Naturkundemuseum Leipzig is the city's natural history museum.
  • The Leipzig Panometer is a visual panorama displayed inside a former gasometer, accompanied by a thematic exhibition.
  • The "Museum in der Runden Ecke" is the best known museum in the city. It deals with the operation of the Stasi State Security of former East Germany.
  • Johann Sebastian Bach lived from 1723 until his death in Leipzig. The Bach Archive is an institution for the documentation and research of his life and work.
  • Mendelssohn House, home of Felix Mendelssohn from 1845 until his death in 1847.
  • Schumann House, home of Robert and Clara Schumann from 1840 to 1844.

Main sights

  • Leipzig Zoological Garden is one of the most modern zoos in Europe, with approximately 850 different animal species. It houses the world's largest zoological facilities for primates (Pongoland). Gondwanaland is the world's largest indoor rainforest hall.
  • Monument to the Battle of the Nations (Völkerschlachtdenkmal) (Battle of the Nations Monument): one of the largest monuments in Europe, built to commemorate the victorious battle against Napoleonic troops.
  • Bundesverwaltungsgericht: Germany's federal administrative court was the site of the Reichsgericht, the highest state court between 1888 and 1945.
  • New City Hall: the city's administrative building was built upon the remains of the Pleissenburg, a castle that was the site of the 1519 debate between Johann Eck and Martin Luther. It is also Germany's tallest town hall.
  • Old City Hall on Marktplatz: the old city hall was built in 1556 and houses a museum of the city's history.
  • City-Hochhaus Leipzig: built in 1972, the city's tallest building is one of the top 25 tallest buildings in Germany.[81]
  • The Augusteum and Paulinum at Augustusplatz form the new main campus of the University of Leipzig.
  • Leipzig Trade Fair centre in the north of the city is home to the world's largest levitated glass hall.[82]
  • Leipzig Hauptbahnhof is the world's largest railway station by floor area and a shopping destination.
  • Auerbach's Cellar: a young Goethe ate and drank in this basement-level restaurant while studying in Leipzig; it is the venue of a scene from his play Faust.
  • The Old Leipzig bourse at Naschmarkt with a monument of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
  • South Cemetery (Südfriedhof) is, with an area of 82 hectares, the largest cemetery in Leipzig.
  • The German National Library has two locations, one of them in Leipzig.
  • Leipzig Bayerischer Bahnhof is Germany's oldest preserved railway station.
  • Gohliser Schlösschen
  • Leipzig Synagogue was destroyed in 1938. Now a memorial stands on the same spot. Where the pews once were, 140 bronze chairs now take their place.

Churches

  • St. Thomas's Church (Thomaskirche): Most famous as the place where Johann Sebastian Bach worked as a cantor and home to the renowned boys choir Thomanerchor. A monument to Felix Mendelssohn stands in front of this church. Destroyed by the Nazis in 1936, the statue was re-erected on 18 October 2008.
  • St. Nicholas's Church (Nikolaikirche), for which Bach was also responsible. The weekly Montagsgebet (Monday prayer) held here became the starting point of peaceful Monday demonstrations against the DDR regime in the 1980s.
  • St. Peter's has the highest tower of any church in Leipzig, at 87 metres (285 feet).
  • The new Propsteikirche, opened in 2015.
  • The Continental Reformed Church of Leipzig (Evangelisch-reformierte Kirche) is one of the most prominent buildings on the Leipzig Innercity ring.
  • The Russian Church of Leipzig is the Russian Orthodox church of Leipzig.
  • St. Michael's Church is one of the landmarks of Gohlis district.

Parks and lakes

Leipzig is well known for its large parks. The Leipziger Auwald (riparian forest) lies mostly within the city limits. Neuseenland is an area south of Leipzig where old open-cast mines are being converted into a huge lake district. It is planned to be finished in 2060.

  • Leipzig Botanical Garden is the oldest of its kind in Germany. It contains a total of some 7,000 plant species, of which nearly 3,000 species comprise ten special collections.
  • Johannapark and Clara-Zetkin-Park are the most prominent parks in the Leipzig city centre.
  • Leipziger Auwald covers a total area of approx. 2,500 hectares. The Rosental is a park in the north of the forest and borders Leipzig Zoo.
  • Wildpark in Connewitz, showing 25 species.

Music

Johann Sebastian Bach worked in Leipzig from 1723–50, conducting the Thomanerchor (St. Thomas Church Choir), at the St. Thomas Church, the St. Nicholas Church and the Paulinerkirche, the university church of Leipzig (destroyed in 1968). The composer Richard Wagner was born in Leipzig in 1813, in the Brühl. Robert Schumann was also active in Leipzig music, having been invited by Felix Mendelssohn when the latter established Germany's first musical conservatoire in the city in 1843. Gustav Mahler was second conductor (working under Artur Nikisch) at the Leipzig Opera from June 1886 until May 1888, and achieved his first significant recognition while there by completing and publishing Carl Maria von Weber's opera Die Drei Pintos. Mahler also completed his own 1st Symphony while living in Leipzig.

Today the conservatory is the University of Music and Theatre Leipzig.[83] A broad range of subjects are taught, including artistic and teacher training in all orchestral instruments, voice, interpretation, coaching, piano chamber music, orchestral conducting, choir conducting and musical composition in various musical styles. The drama departments teach acting and scriptwriting.

The Bach-Archiv Leipzig, an institution for the documentation and research of the life and work of Bach (and also of the Bach family), was founded in Leipzig in 1950 by Werner Neumann. The Bach-Archiv organizes the prestigious International Johann Sebastian Bach Competition, initiated in 1950 as part of a music festival marking the bicentennial of Bach's death. The competition is now held every two years in three changing categories. The Bach-Archiv also organizes performances, especially the international festival Bachfest Leipzig (de) and runs the Bach-Museum.

The city's musical tradition is also reflected in the worldwide fame of the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, under its chief conductor Andris Nelsons, and the Thomanerchor.

The MDR Leipzig Radio Symphony Orchestra is Leipzig's second largest symphony orchestra. Its current chief conductor is Kristjan Järvi. Both the Gewandhausorchester and the MDR Leipzig Radio Symphony Orchestra make use of in the Gewandhaus concert hall.

For over sixty years Leipzig has been offering a "school concert"[84] programme for children in Germany, with over 140 concerts every year in venues such as the Gewandhaus and over 40,000 children attending.

As for contemporary music, Leipzig is known for its independent music scene and subcultural events. Leipzig has for twenty years been home to the world's largest Gothic festival, the annual Wave-Gotik-Treffen (WGT), where thousands of fans of gothic and dark styled music from across Europe and the world gather in the early summer. The first Wave Gotik Treffen was held at the Eiskeller club, today known as Conne Island, in the Connewitz district. Mayhem's notorious album Live in Leipzig was also recorded at the Eiskeller club.[85] Leipzig Pop Up is an annual music trade fair for the independent music scene as well as a music festival taking place on Pentecost weekend.[86] Its most famous indie-labels are Moon Harbour Recordings (House) and Kann Records (House/Techno/Psychedelic). Several venues offer live music on a daily basis, including the Moritzbastei[87] which was once part of the city's fortifications, and is one of the oldest student clubs in Europe with concerts in various styles. For over 15 years "Tonelli's"[88] has been offering free weekly concerts every day of the week, though door charges may apply Saturdays.

The cover photo for the Beirut band's 2005 album Gulag Orkestar, according to the sleeve notes, was stolen from a Leipzig library by Zach Condon.

The city of Leipzig is also the birthplace of Till Lindemann, best known as the lead vocalist of Rammstein, a band formed in 1994.

Annual events

  • Auto Mobil International (AMI) motor show[89]
  • AMITEC, trade fair for vehicle maintenance, care, servicing and repairs in Germany and Central Europe[90]
  • A cappella: vocal music festival, organized by the Ensemble amarcord
  • Bach-Fest: Johann Sebastian Bach-festival
  • Christmas market (since 1767)
  • Dok Leipzig: international festival for documentary and animated film
  • Jazztage,[91] contemporary jazz festival
  • Ladyfest Leipzig[92] (August) Emancipatoric, feminist punk and electro festival
  • Leipzig Book Fair: the second largest German book fair after Frankfurt
  • Lichtfest Leipzig, festival celebrating the demonstrations leading up to the collapse of the East German regime
  • OPER unplugged with Music Dance Theatre by Heike Hennig & Co[93]
  • Stadtfest: city festival
  • Wave-Gotik-Treffen at Pentecost: world's largest goth or "dark culture" festival
  • Leipzig Pop Up[94]
  • Chaos Communication Congress

Sports

More than 300 sport clubs in the city represent 78 different disciplines. Over 400 athletic facilities are available to citizens and club members.[95]

Football

The Red Bull Arena from above. Home of RB Leipzig.

The German Football Association (DFB) was founded in Leipzig in 1900. The city was the venue for the 2006 FIFA World Cup draw, and hosted four first-round matches and one match in the round of 16 in the central stadium.

VfB Leipzig won the first national Association football championship in 1903. The club was reformed as 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig in 1966 and has had a glorious past in international competition as well, having been champions of the 1965–66 Intertoto Cup, semi-finalists in the 1973–74 UEFA Cup, and runners-up in the 1986–87 European Cup Winners' Cup.

Red Bull entered the local football in May 2009, after having previously been denied the right to buy into FC Sachsen Leipzig in 2006. The newly founded RB Leipzig declared the intention to come up through the ranks of German football and to bring Bundesliga football back to the region.[96] RB Leipzig was finally promoted to the top level of the Bundesliga after finishing the 2015–16 2. Bundesliga season as runners-up. The club finished runners-up in its first ever Bundesliga season and made its debut in the UEFA Champions League in 2017 and the Semi-Final in 2020.

List of Leipzig men and women's football clubs playing at state level and above:

Club Founded League Level Home ground Capacity
RB Leipzig2009Bundesliga1Red Bull Arena42,959
RB Leipzig (women)201612. Frauen-Bundesliga2Sportanlage Gontardweg1,300
1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig2003Regionalliga Nordost4Bruno-Plache-Stadion7,000
BSG Chemie Leipzig19972Regionalliga Nordost4Alfred-Kunze-Sportpark4,999
FC International Leipzig2013NOFV-Oberliga Süd5Sportpark Tresenwald1,500
Roter Stern Leipzig (de)1999Landesklasse Sachsen Nord7Sportpark Dölitz1,200

Note 1: The RB Leipzig women's football team was formed in 2016 and began play in the 2016–17 season.
Note 2: The club began play in the 2008–09 season.

Ice hockey

Since the beginning of the 20th century, ice hockey gained popularity, and several local clubs established departments dedicated to that sport.[97]

Handball

SC DHfK Leipzig is the men's handball club in Leipzig and were six times (1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1965 and 1966) the champion of East Germany handball league and was winner of EHF Champions League in 1966. They finally promoted to Handball-Bundesliga as champions of 2. Bundesliga in 2014–15 season. They play in the Arena Leipzig which has a capacity of 6,327 spectators in HBL games but can take up to 7,532 spectators for handball in maximum capacity.

Handball-Club Leipzig is one of the most successful women's handball clubs in Germany, winning 20 domestic championships since 1956 and 3 Champions League titles. The team was however relegated to the third tier league in 2017 due to failing to achieve the economic standard demanded by the league licence.

Other sports

The artificial whitewater course Kanupark Markkleeberg at Markkleeberger See

From 1950 to 1990 Leipzig was host of the Deutsche Hochschule für Körperkultur (DHfK, German College of Physical Culture), the national sports college of the GDR.

Leipzig also hosted the Fencing World Cup in 2005 and hosts a number of international competitions in a variety of sports each year.

Leipzig made a bid to host the 2012 Summer Olympics. The bid did not make the shortlist after the International Olympic Committee pared the bids down to 5.

Markkleeberger See is a new lake next to Markkleeberg, a suburb on the south side of Leipzig. A former open-pit coal mine, it was flooded in 1999 with groundwater and developed in 2006 as a tourist area. On its southeastern shore is Germany's only pump-powered artificial whitewater slalom course, Markkleeberg Canoe Park (Kanupark Markkleeberg), a venue which rivals the Eiskanal in Augsburg for training and international canoe/kayak competition.

Leipzig Rugby Club competes in the German Rugby Bundesliga but finished at the bottom of their group in 2013.[98]

Food and drink

  • An all-season local dish is Leipziger Allerlei, a stew consisting of seasonal vegetables and crayfish.
  • Leipziger Lerche is a shortcrust pastry dish filled with crushed almonds, nuts and strawberry jam; the name ("Leipzig lark") comes from a lark pâté which was a Leipzig speciality until the banning of songbird hunting in Saxony in 1876.
  • Gose is a locally brewed top-fermenting sour beer that originated in the Goslar region and in the 18th century became popular in Leipzig.

Education

University

Leipzig University, founded 1409, is one of Europe's oldest universities. The philosopher and mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was born in Leipzig in 1646, and attended the university from 1661 to 1666. Nobel Prize laureate Werner Heisenberg worked here as a physics professor (from 1927 to 1942), as did Nobel Prize laureates Gustav Ludwig Hertz (physics), Wilhelm Ostwald (chemistry) and Theodor Mommsen (Nobel Prize in literature). Other former staff of faculty include mineralogist Georg Agricola, writer Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, philosopher Ernst Bloch, eccentric founder of psychophysics Gustav Theodor Fechner, and psychologist Wilhelm Wundt. Among the university's many noteworthy students were writers Johann Wolfgang Goethe and Erich Kästner, and philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, political activist Karl Liebknecht, and composer Richard Wagner. Germany's chancellor since 2006, Angela Merkel, studied physics at Leipzig University.[99] The university has about 30,000 students.

A part of Leipzig University is the German Institute for Literature which was founded in 1955 under the name "Johannes R. Becher-Institut". Many noted writers have graduated from this school, including Heinz Czechowski, Kurt Drawert, Adolf Endler, Ralph Giordano, Kerstin Hensel, Sarah and Rainer Kirsch, Angela Krauß, Erich Loest, Fred Wander. After its closure in 1990 the institute was refounded in 1995 with new teachers.

Visual arts and theatre

The Academy of Visual Arts (Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst) was established in 1764. Its 530 students (as of 2006) are enrolled in courses in painting and graphics, book design/graphic design, photography and media art. The school also houses an Institute for Theory.

The University of Music and Theatre offers a broad range of subjects ranging from training in orchestral instruments, voice, interpretation, coaching, piano chamber music, orchestral conducting, choir conducting and musical composition to acting and scriptwriting.

University of Applied Science

The Leipzig University of Applied Sciences (HTWK)[100] has approximately 6,200 students (as of 2007) and is (as of 2007) the second biggest institution of higher education in Leipzig. It was founded in 1992, merging several older schools. As a university of applied sciences (German: Fachhochschule) its status is slightly below that of a university, with more emphasis on the practical part of the education. The HTWK offers many engineering courses, as well as courses in computer science, mathematics, business administration, librarianship, museum studies and social work. It is mainly located in the south of the city.

Leipzig Graduate School

The private Leipzig Graduate School of Management, (in German Handelshochschule Leipzig (HHL)), is the oldest business school in Germany. According to The Economist, HHL is one of the best schools in the world, ranked at number six overall.[101][102]

Research Institutes

Leipzig is currently the home of twelve research institutes and the Saxon Academy of Sciences and Humanities.

Max Planck Society: Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, and Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.

Fraunhofer Society institutes: Fraunhofer IZI and Fraunhofer IMW.

Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres: Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research

Deutsches Biomasseforschungszentrum – DBFZ

Leibniz Association: Leibniz-Institute for Tropospheric Research, Leibniz-Institute IOM, Leibniz-Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe, Leibniz-Institute IfL, Leibniz-Institute Jewish history.

Others

Leipzig is home to one of the world's oldest schools Thomasschule zu Leipzig (St. Thomas' School, Leipzig), which gained fame for its long association with the Bach family of musicians and composers.

The Lutheran Theological Seminary is a seminary of the Evangelical Lutheran Free Church in Leipzig.[103][104] The seminary trains students to become pastors for the Evangelical Lutheran Free Church or for member church bodies of the Confessional Evangelical Lutheran Conference.[105]

Economy

The city is a location for automobile manufacturing by BMW and Porsche in large plants north of the city. In 2011 and 2012 DHL transferred the bulk of its European air operations from Brussels Airport to Leipzig/Halle Airport. Kirow Ardelt AG, the world market leader in breakdown cranes, is based in Leipzig. The city also houses the European Energy Exchange, the leading energy exchange in Central Europe. With VNG – Verbundnetz Gas AG, one of Germany's large natural gas suppliers is headquartered at Leipzig. In addition, inside its larger metropolitan area, Leipzig has developed an important petrochemical center.

Some of the largest employers in the area (outside of manufacturing) include software companies such as Spreadshirt and the various schools and universities in and around the Leipzig/Halle region. The University of Leipzig attracts millions of euros of investment yearly and is in the middle of a massive construction and refurbishment to celebrate its 600th anniversary.

Leipzig also benefits from world leading medical research (Leipzig Heart Centre) and a growing biotechnology industry.[106]

Many bars, restaurants and stores found in the downtown area are patronized by German and foreign tourists. Leipzig Hauptbahnhof itself is the location of a shopping mall.[107] Leipzig is one of Germany's most visited cities with over 3 million overnight stays in 2017.[108]

In 2010, Leipzig was included in the top 10 cities to visit by The New York Times,[75] and ranked 39th globally out of 289 cities for innovation in the 4th Innovation Cities Index published by Australian agency 2thinknow.[109] In 2015, Leipzig have among the 30 largest German cities the third best prospects for the future.[110] In recent years Leipzig has often been nicknamed the "Boomtown of eastern Germany" or "Hypezig".[30] As of 2013 it had the highest rate of population growth of any German city.[31]

Companies with operations in or around Leipzig include:

Media

MDR, one of Germany's public broadcasters
  • MDR, one of Germany's public broadcasters, has its headquarters and main television studios in the city. It provides programmes to various TV and radio networks and has its own symphony orchestra, choir and a ballet.
  • Leipziger Volkszeitung (LVZ) is the city's only daily newspaper. Founded in 1894, it has published under several different forms of government. The monthly magazine Kreuzer specializes in culture, festivities and the arts in Leipzig. Leipzig was also home to the world's first daily newspaper in modern times. The "Einkommende Zeitungen" were first published in 1650.[111]
  • Leipzig has one daily or semi-daily English-language publication, The Leipzig Glocal. It is an online-based magazine and blog that caters to an international as well as local audience.[112] Besides publishing pages on jobs, doctors and movies available in English and other languages, the site's team of authors writes articles about lifestyle, arts & culture, politics, entertainment, Leipzig events, etc.[113]
  • Once known for its large number of publishing houses, Leipzig had been called Buch-Stadt (book city),[114] the most notable of them being branches of Brockhaus and Insel Verlag. Few are left after the years of economic decline during the German Democratic Republic, during which time Frankfurt developed as a much more important publishing center. Reclam, founded in 1828, was one of the large publishing houses to move away. Leipzig still has a book fair, but Frankfurt's is far bigger.
  • The German Library (Deutsche Bücherei) in Leipzig is part of Germany's National Library. Its task is to collect a copy of every book published in German.[115]

Quality of life

Leipzig has the most attractive inner city of all large German cities.

In December 2013, according to a study by GfK, Leipzig was ranked as the most livable city in Germany.[15][116]

In 2015/2016, Leipzig was named the second-best city for students in Germany (after Munich).[117]

In a 2017 study, the Leipzig inner city ranked first among all large cities in Germany due to its urban aesthetics, gastronomy, and shopping opportunities.[118][119]

Since 2018 it also has the second-best future prospects of all cities in Germany, only surpassed by Munich in 2018 and Berlin in 2019.[14][120]

According to the 2017 Global Least & Most Stressful Cities Ranking, Leipzig was one of the least stressful cities in the World. It was ranked 25th out of 150 cities worldwide and above Dortmund, Cologne, Frankfurt, and Berlin.[121]

In 2018, Leipzig won the European Cities of Future prize in the category of "Best Large City for Human Capital & Lifestyle".[122]

Leipzig was named European City of the Year at the 2019 Urbanism Awards.[123]

According to the 2019 study by Forschungsinstitut Prognos, Leipzig is the most dynamic region in Germany. Within 15 years, the city climbed 230 places and occupied in 2019 rank 104 of all 401 German regions.[124][125]

Leipzig is one of 52 places to go in 2020 by The New York Times and the highest-ranking German destination.[126]

Leipzig Hauptbahnhof has been ranked the best railway station in Germany and the third-best in Europe in a consumer organisation poll, surpassed only by St Pancras railway station and Zürich Hauptbahnhof.[127]

Transport

Founded at the crossing of Via Regia and Via Imperii, Leipzig has been a major interchange of inter-European traffic and commerce since medieval times. After the Reunification of Germany, immense efforts to restore and expand the traffic network have been undertaken and left the city area with an excellent infrastructure.

Rail

Leipzig Hauptbahnhof is the main hub of tram and rail network and the world's largest railway station by floor area.
Inside Leipzig Hauptbahnhof

Opened in 1915, Leipzig Hauptbahnhof (lit. main station) is the largest overhead railway station in Europe in terms of its built-up area. At the same time, it is an important supra-regional junction in the Intercity-Express (ICE) and Intercity network of the Deutsche Bahn as well as a connection point for S-Bahn and regional traffic in the Halle/Leipzig area.

In Leipzig, the Intercity Express routes (Hamburg-)Berlin-Leipzig-Nuremberg-Munich and Dresden-Leipzig-Erfurt-Frankfurt am Main-(Wiesbaden/Saarbrücken) intersect. Leipzig is also the starting point for the intercity lines Leipzig-Halle (Saale)-Magdeburg-Braunschweig-Hannover-Dortmund-Köln and -Bremen-Oldenburg(-Norddeich Mole). Both lines complement each other at hourly intervals and also stop at Leipzig/Halle Airport. The only international connection is the daily EuroCity Leipzig-Prague.

Most major and medium-sized towns in Saxony and southern Saxony-Anhalt can be reached without changing trains. There are also direct connections via regional express lines to Falkenberg/Elster-Cottbus, Hoyerswerda and Dessau-Magdeburg as well as Chemnitz. Neighbouring Halle (Saale) can be reached via three S-Bahn lines, two of which run via Leipzig/Halle Airport. The surrounding area of Leipzig is served by numerous regional and S-Bahn lines.

The city's rail connections are currently being greatly improved by major construction projects, particularly within the framework of the German Unity transport projects. The line to Berlin has been extended and has been passable at 200 km/h since 2006. On 13 December 2015, the high-speed line from Leipzig to Erfurt, designed for 300 km/h, was put into operation. Its continuation to Nuremberg followed in December 2017. This integration into the high-speed network considerably reduced the journey times of the ICE from Leipzig to Nuremberg, Munich and Frankfurt am Main. The Leipzig-Dresden railway line, which was the first German long-distance railway to go into operation in 1839, is also undergoing expansion for 200 km/h. The most important construction project in regional transport was the four-kilometer-long City Tunnel, which went into operation in December 2013 as the main line of the S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland.

For freight traffic, there are freight stations in the districts of Wahren and Engelsdorf. In addition, a large freight traffic centre has been set up near the Schkeuditzer Kreuz junction for goods handling between road and rail, as well as a freight station on the site of the DHL hub at Leipzig/Halle Airport.

Suburban train

Trains of S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland at Leipzig Markt station

Leipzig is the core of the S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland line network. Together with the tram, six of the ten lines form the backbone of local public transport and an important link to the region and the neighbouring Halle. The main line of the S-Bahn consists of the underground S-Bahn stations Hauptbahnhof, Markt, Wilhelm-Leuschner-Platz and Bayerischer Bahnhof leading through the City Tunnel as well as the above-ground station Leipzig MDR. There are a total of 30 S-Bahn stations in the Leipzig city area. Endpoints of the S-Bahn lines include Oschatz, Zwickau, Geithain and Bitterfeld. Two lines run to Halle, one of them via Leipzig/Halle Airport. In 2015, the network will be extended to Dessau and Lutherstadt Wittenberg.

With the timetable change in December 2004, the networks of Leipzig and Halle were combined to form the Leipzig-Halle S-Bahn. However, this network only served as a transitional solution and was replaced by the S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland on 15 December 2013. At the same time, the main line tunnel, marketed as the Leipzig City Tunnel, went into operation. The tunnel, which is almost four kilometres long, crosses the entire city centre from the main railway station to the Bavarian railway station. The S-Bahn stations are up to 22 metres underground. This construction was the first to create a continuous north–south axis, which had not existed until now due to the north-facing terminus station. The connection to the south of the city and the federal state will thus be greatly improved.

Tramway and Buses

The Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe, existing since 1 January 1917, operate a total of 13 tram lines and 51 bus lines in the city.

The total length of the tram network is 149.9 km (93.1 mi), making it the largest in Saxony ahead of Dresden (130.2 km (80.9 mi)) and the second largest in Germany after Berlin (193.6 km (120.3 mi)).

The longest line in the Leipzig network is line 11, which connects Schkeuditz with Markkleeberg over 22 kilometres and is the only tram line in Leipzig to run in three tariff zones of the Central German Transport Association.

Night bus lines N1 to N9 and the night tram N17 operate in the night traffic. On Saturdays, Sundays and holidays the tram line N10 and the bus line N60 also operate. The central transfer point between the bus and tram lines as well as to the S-Bahn is Leipzig Central Station.

Bicycle

Like most German cities, Leipzig has a traffic layout designed to be bicycle-friendly. There is an extensive cycle network. In most of the one-way central streets, cyclists are explicitly allowed to cycle both ways. A few cycle paths have been built or declared since 1990.

Since 2004 there is a bicycle-sharing system. Bikes can be borrowed and returned via smartphone app or by telephone. Since 2018, the system has enabled flexible borrowing and returning of bicycles in the inner city; in this zone, bicycles can be handed in and borrowed from almost any street corner. Outside these zones, there are stations where the bikes are waiting. The current locations of the bikes can be seen via the app. There are cooperation offers with the Leipzig public transport companies and car sharing in order to offer as complete a mobility chain as possible.

Road

Leipzig's road network

Several federal motorways pass by Leipzig: the A 14 in the north, the A 9 in the west and the A 38 in the south. The three motorways form a triangular partial ring of the double ring Mitteldeutsche Schleife around Halle and Leipzig. To the south towards Chemnitz, the A 72 is also partly under construction or being planned.

The federal roads B 2, B 6, B 87, B 181, B 184 and B 186 lead through the city area.

The ring, which corresponds to the course of the old city fortification, surrounds the city centre of Leipzig, which today is largely traffic-calmed.

Leipzig has a dense network of carsharing stations. Additionally, since 2018 there is also a stationless car sharing system in Leipzig. Here the cars can be parked and booked anywhere in the inner city without having to define a specific car or period in advance. Finding and booking is done via a smartphone app.

Leipzig is one of the few cities in Germany with vehicle for hire services that can be booked via a mobile app. In contrast to taxicab services, the start and destination must be defined beforehand and other passengers can be taken along at the same time if they share a route.

Long-distance buses

Since March 2018 there has been a central bus station directly east of Leipzig Central Station.

In addition to a large number of national lines, several international lines also serve Leipzig. The cities of Bregenz, Budapest, Milan, Prague, Sofia and Zurich, among others, can be reached without having to change trains. Around 30,000 journeys and 1.5 million passengers a year are expected at the new bus station.

Some lines also use Leipzig/Halle Airport, located at the A 9/A 14 motorway junction, and Leipziger Messe for a stop. Passengers can take the S-Bahn from there to the city centre.

Air

Leipzig/Halle Airport is the international commercial airport of the region. It is located at the Schkeuditzer Kreuz junction northwest of Leipzig, halfway between the two major cities. The easternmost section of the new Erfurt-Leipzig/Halle line under construction gave the airport a long-distance railway station, which was also integrated into the ICE network when the railway line was completed in 2015.

Passenger flights are operated to the major German hub airports, European metropolises and holiday destinations, especially in the Mediterranean region and North Africa. The airport is of international importance in the cargo sector. In Germany, it ranks second behind Frankfurt am Main, fifth in Europe and 26th worldwide (as of 2011). DHL uses the airport as its central European hub. It is also the home base of the freight airlines Aerologic and European Air Transport Leipzig.

The former military airport near Altenburg, Thuringia called Leipzig-Altenburg Airport about a half-hour drive from Leipzig was served by Ryanair until 2010.

Water

Boats at the Elsterflutbett

In the first half of the 20th century, the construction of the Elster-Saale canal, White Elster and Saale was started in Leipzig in order to connect to the network of waterways. The outbreak of the Second World War stopped most of the work, though some may have continued through the use of forced labor. The Lindenauer port was almost completed but not yet connected to the Elster-Saale and Karl-Heine canal respectively. The Leipzig rivers (White Elster, New Luppe, Pleiße, and Parthe) in the city have largely artificial river beds and are supplemented by some channels. These waterways are suitable only for small leisure boat traffic.

Through the renovation and reconstruction of existing mill races and watercourses in the south of the city and flooded disused open cast mines, the city's navigable water network is being expanded. The city commissioned planning for a link between Karl Heine Canal and the disused Lindenauer port in 2008. Still more work was scheduled to complete the Elster-Saale canal. Such a move would allow small boats to reach the Elbe from Leipzig. The intended completion date has been postponed because of an unacceptable cost-benefit ratio.

Quotations

Mein Leipzig lob' ich mir! Es ist ein klein Paris und bildet seine Leute. (I praise my Leipzig! It is a small Paris and educates its people.) – Frosch, a university student in Goethe's Faust, Part One

Ich komme nach Leipzig, an den Ort, wo man die ganze Welt im Kleinen sehen kann. (I'm coming to Leipzig, to the place where one can see the whole world in miniature.) – Gotthold Ephraim Lessing

Extra Lipsiam vivere est miserrime vivere. (To live outside Leipzig is to live miserably.) – Benedikt Carpzov the Younger

Das angenehme Pleis-Athen, Behält den Ruhm vor allen, Auch allen zu gefallen, Denn es ist wunderschön. (The pleasurable Pleiss-Athens, earns its fame above all, appealing to every one, too, for it is mightily beauteous.) – Johann Sigismund Scholze

International relations

Plaque on Leipzig Street in Kiev, one of Leipzig's twin towns

Leipzig is twinned with:[128]

Notable residents

17th century

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (c. 1695)

18th century

19th century

1801–1850

Clara Schumann (1838)

1851–1900

Karl Liebknecht (c. 1911)
  • Hans Meyer; (1858–1929), geographer, Africanist and mountaineer, first European to reach the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro
  • Wilhelm Souchon; (1864–1946), Vice Admiral of the Imperial Navy, commander of the Ottoman and Bulgarian Navy
  • Karl Liebknecht; (1871–1919), socialist politician (co-founder of the Communist Party of Germany)
  • Carl Friedrich Goerdeler; (1884–1945), mayor, one of the leaders of conservative resistance against Hitler
  • Max Beckmann; (1884–1950), Expressionist painter, professor at art academies and schools
  • Wilhelm Backhaus; (1884–1969), pianist
  • Paul Frölich; (1884–1953), politician (KPD co-founder), executor and biographer of Rosa Luxemburg
  • Walter Ulbricht; (1893–1973), Communist politician (SED), GDR Chairman of the Council of State from 1960 to 1973
  • Ruth Fischer; (1895–1961), communist politician and journalist, co-founder of the CPA
  • Hanns Eisler; (1898–1962), composer (inter alia of the national anthem of the GDR.)
  • Bruno Apitz; (1900–1979), writer (Naked among wolves)

20th century

1901–1950

  • Karl Eberhard Schöngarth; (1903–1946), SS officer and war criminal, executed in Hamelin, commander of the state police (Security Office) and the Security Service (SD)
  • Hans Mayer; (1907–2001), literary scholar
  • Annemarie Renger; (1919–2008), politician (SPD), President of the Bundestag from 1972 to 1976
  • Elfriede Rinkel; (1922–2018), former warden of a concentration camp during the Nazi dictatorship
  • Martin Broszat, (1926–1989), historian, head of Institut für Zeitgeschichte in Munich
  • Kurt Masur, (1927–2015), conductor of the Gewandhaus orchestra
  • Herbert Blomstedt, (born 1927), conductor of the Gewandhaus orchestra
  • Werner Tübke, (1929–2004), painter
  • Rita Wilden, (born 1947), athlete (sprinter)
  • Ruth Pfau, (1929–2017), nun, physician, writer( "Pakistan's Mother Teresa")

1951–present

Neo Rauch (2017)
gollark: I want to make something to automatically classify memes as worth adding to my meme collection or not. I have several thousand already in there which are in it and so "good", and could probably crawl tons from Reddit which are probably "bad". Is this practical?
gollark: Is few *really* an adjective?
gollark: Why the [REDACTED] bits in the screenshot in <#610255212745195540>?
gollark: I just run all my bot stuff off a very outdated HP tower server at home.
gollark: That's... surprisingly expensive actually, how high-traffic *is* this bot?

See also

References

  1. "Bevölkerung des Freistaates Sachsen jeweils am Monatsende ausgewählter Berichtsmonate nach Gemeinden" (PDF). Statistisches Landesamt des Freistaates Sachsen (in German). July 2019.
  2. "Population on 1 January by age groups and sex - functional urban areas". Eurostat. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  3. "Leipzig". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  4. "Leipzig". Oxford Dictionaries UK Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  5. "Leipzig". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  6. "Die Marke ist geknackt: Leipzig hat wieder 600.000 Einwohner". www.leipzig.de (in German). Retrieved 28 October 2019.
  7. OECD (2012). Redefining Urban: a new way to measure metropolitan areas. OECD. p. 19. ISBN 9789264174054 via wirtschaftsregion-leipzig-halle.de/index.php/download-publikationen-37.html. Germany Leipzig Metropolitan area DE008 843,619
  8. "Leipzig überholt bei Einwohnerzahl Dortmund – jetzt Platz 8 in Deutschland". LVZ - Leipziger Volkszeitung (in German). Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  9. Sachsen, Statistisches Landesamt des Freistaates. "Statistik – Gebiet, Bevölkerung". www.statistik.sachsen.de.
  10. "Shopping Tipps Leipzig :: Passagen :: Innenstadt :: Hauptbahnhof :: Informationen ::Infos :: Hinweise :: Beiträge :: Tipps :: Einkaufen". City-tourist.de. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  11. "The Frankfurt Fair". idehist.uu.se. Archived from the original on 3 April 2012. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  12. "Infrastruktur". leipzig.de.
  13. Power, Anne and Elineen Herden (May 2016). "Leipzig City Story" (PDF). LSE Housing and Communities.
  14. "Städteranking: Leipzig landet auf Platz zwei". LVZ - Leipziger Volkszeitung.
  15. FOCUS Online (11 December 2013). "Deutschlands beliebteste Städte: Sicher, sauber, grün: Diese Stadt läuft sogar München den Rang ab". FOCUS Online.
  16. "Zoo Leipzig: Auf Entdeckungsreise im Zoo der Zukunft". Zoo-leipzig.de. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  17. mdr.de (13 October 2015). "Zoo Leipzig: Zweiter Platz im europäischen Zooranking – MDR.DE". Archived from the original on 10 December 2015.
  18. eCommerce, Deutsche Bahn AG, Unternehmensbereich Personenverkehr, Marketing. "Die S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland stellt sich vor". www.s-bahn-mitteldeutschland.de.
  19. "GaWC – The World According to GaWC 2012". lboro.ac.uk.
  20. Michael Fabricius (27 May 2015). "Leipzig ist die Boom-Stadt Deutschlands". DIE WELT.
  21. Admin. "Leipzig wins European City of the Year at 2019 Urbanism Awards | The Academy of Urbanism". Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  22. "Leipzig zur "European City of the Year 2019" gewählt". TAG24 (in German). Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  23. Hanswilhelm Haefs. Das 2. Handbuch des nutzlosen Wissens. ISBN 3-8311-3754-4 (in German)
  24. "Lexicum nominum geographicorum latinorum". 14 July 2012. Archived from the original on 14 July 2012.
  25. "Происхождение названий" [Origin of names]. bibliotekar.ru.
  26. Rolf Jehke. "Stadtkreis Leipzig". territorial.de.
  27. "Heldenstadt Leipzig". Chronik der Wende. Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg. Retrieved 23 September 2016.
  28. Reinhardt, Dirk (29 August 2012). "Heldenstadt-Blogger". Die Zeit. Retrieved 23 September 2016.
  29. "Kann Leipzig Hypezig überleben?" [Can Leipzig live up to the Hypezig?]. Die Zeit (in German). 1 October 2013.
  30. "Hypezig – Leipzig mutiert zur Szenemetropole" [Hypezig – Leipzig mutates into a fashionable metropolis]. Handelsblatt (in German). 3 October 2013.
  31. Wiemann, Mareike (5 January 2014). "Mehr Geburten als Sterbefälle: Leipzig boomt entgegen dem Deutschlandtrend" [More births than deaths: Leipzig is booming against the German trend] (in German). Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk. Archived from the original on 22 December 2014. Retrieved 23 September 2016.
  32. Marcel Burkhardt. "Leipzig vs Berlin: "Natürlich ist Leipzig das bessere Berlin"" [Leipzig vs Berlin: Naturally Leipzig is the better Berlin]. Berliner Zeitung.
  33. "Pleißemühlgraben: Geschichte der Fischerei". Neue-ufer.de. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  34. Katherine Aaslestad, "Cities and War: Modern Military Urbanism in Hamburg and Leipzig during the Napoleonic Era." German History 35.3 (2017): 381-402.
  35. Müller-Stahl, Karoline. "The heady early days". spinnerei.de (in German). Archived from the original on 12 June 2019.
  36. Center, German Resistance Memorial. "German Resistance Memorial Center - Biographie". www.gdw-berlin.de. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  37. Willingham, Robert, and Crew, David F. Jews in Leipzig: Nationality and Community in the 20th Century, 2005, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. Pgs. 1-148
  38. Jehke, Rolf. "Stadtkreis Leipzig". www.territorial.de. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  39. "Nazi Germany", Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook, XLII 1997, 167. Fred Grubel and Frank Mecklenburg "Leipzig: Profile of a Jewish Community during the first years of Nazi Germany", Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook, XLII 1997, 167
  40. "Holocaust Survivors and Victims Database -- Leipzig Jewish Community Collection". www.ushmm.org. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  41. "Leipzig | Germany". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  42. Diamont, Adolph. Chronik der Juden in Dresden. pp. 104–106, 109.
  43. "History". english.leipzig.de. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  44. Stanton, Shelby, World War II Order of Battle: An Encyclopedic Reference to U.S. Army Ground Forces from Battalion through Division, 1939–1946 (Revised Edition, 2006), Stackpole Books, p. 78, 139.
  45. Ausschuß der Deutschen Statisker, P 136-142. In Lothar Mertens, Davidstern unter Hammer und Zirkel: Die Jüdischen Gemeinden in der SBZ-DDR und ihre Behandlung durch Partei und Staat 1945- 1990. (Haskala, 18) Hildesheim, 1997.
  46. "Leipzig: Back to Growth, but Not for Everyone". TheProtoCity.com. 25 August 2014. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  47. David Brebis (ed.), Michelin guide to Germany, Greenville (2006), p. 324.
  48. "The day I outflanked the Stasi". BBC. 9 October 2009. + video.
  49. Fabricius, Michael (27 May 2015). "Leipzig ist die Boom-Stadt Deutschlands – WELT". DIE WELT. Archived from the original on 5 May 2018.
  50. ""Hypezig": Leipzig mutiert zur Szenemetropole" (in German). Handelsblatt. 3 October 2013. Archived from the original on 21 September 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  51. LVZ-Online. "Mehr Beschäftigte – Über 18 000 neue Jobs in Sachsen – Leipzig boomt am meisten – LVZ – Leipziger Volkszeitung". www.lvz.de. Archived from the original on 9 April 2016.
  52. Burkhardt, Marcel. "Leipzig vs. Berlin: "Natürlich ist Leipzig das bessere Berlin"".
  53. LVZ-Online. "Wachstum – Prognose zur Bevölkerung: Warum Leipzig früher als gedacht 600.000 Einwohner haben wird – LVZ – Leipziger Volkszeitung". www.lvz.de.
  54. "City-Tunnel eröffnet: Leipzig rast durch die Röhre". BILD.de.
  55. Haase, Dagmar; Rosenberg, Matthias; Mikutta, Robert (1 December 2002). "Untersuchung zum Landschaftswandel im Südraum Leipzig". Standort (in German). 26 (4): 159–165. doi:10.1007/s00548-002-0103-3. ISSN 0174-3635.
  56. Ortsteilkatalog der Stadt Leipzig 2008
  57. "Climatological maps of Germany". DWD: Deutscher Wetterdienst. Deutscher Wetterdienst (German Weather Service). Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  58. "Klima Leipzig, Deutschland" (in German). Archived from the original on 22 March 2019. Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  59. de:Einwohnerentwicklung von Leipzig#Von 1945 bis 1989
  60. "Leipzig wächst: Einwohner-Entwicklung übertrifft selbst optimistischste Prognosen". leipzig.de (in German). 2 March 2015. Archived from the original on 28 June 2018.
  61. "Überschuss der Zu- bzw. Fortzüge im Freistaat Sachsen 1990 bis 2018 nach Kreisfreien Städten und Landkreisen" (PDF). statistik.sachsen.de (in German). Archived (PDF) from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  62. "Geburten je Frau im Freistaat Sachsen 1990 2011" (PDF). Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  63. "Überschuss der Lebendgeborenen bzw. Gestorbenen im Freistaat Sachsen 1990 bis 2018 nach Kreisfreien Städten und Landkreisen" (PDF). statistik.sachsen.de (in German). Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 September 2019. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  64. "Leipzig-Informationssystem". Statistik.leipzig.de. 18 May 2012. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  65. "Leipzig – statistik.arbeitsagentur.de". arbeitsagentur.de.
  66. LVZ-Online. "Arbeitsmarkt – Sommerflaute vorbei – Arbeitslosenquote in Leipzig erreicht Tiefststand – LVZ – Leipziger Volkszeitung". www.lvz.de.
  67. "Zensus 2011 - Bevölkerung Bundesrepublik Deutschland am 9. Mai 2011" (PDF). destatis.de (in German). Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 November 2013. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  68. Stadt Leipzig. "Leipzig-Informationssystem > Kleinräumige Daten > Bevölkerungsbestand > Einwohner mit Migrationshintergund". leipzig.de.
  69. "Statistisches Jahrbuch – Aktuelle Jahrbuch-Ausgabe". Stadt Leipzig. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  70. de:Liste der Plattenbausiedlungen in Sachsen#Leipzig
  71. de:Plattenbauten in Leipzig
  72. "Leipzig-Grünau". leipzig.de.
  73. Neue Leipziger Schule (German Wikipedia entry)
  74. Lubow, Arthur (8 January 2006). "The New Leipzig School". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 April 2010.
  75. "The 31 Places to Go in 2010". The New York Times. 10 January 2010.
  76. "Leipziger Baumwollspinnerei - From Cotton to Culture". Retrieved 21 September 2019.
  77. "Museen at Grassi" (in German). grassimuseum.de. Archived from the original on 10 May 2015.
  78. "Institut für Klassische Archäologie und Antikenmuseum" (in German).
  79. "G2 Kunsthalle". www.bmw-art-guide.com. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  80. "G2 Leipzig". g2-leipzig.de. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  81. Tallest building in Germany
  82. Leipzig Archived 9 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  83. "Welcome to our University of Music & Theatre". Archived from the original on 19 January 2010. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  84. "Schulkonzerte". musikschule-leipzig.de.
  85. "Mayhem – Live in Leipzig – Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives". www.metal-archives.com.
  86. "Pop Up official website".
  87. "Moritzbastei homepage".
  88. "Tonelli's homepage" (in German). Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  89. "AMI – Auto Mobil International, Leipziger Messe". Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  90. "AMITEC – Fachmesse für Fahrzeugteile, Werkstatt und Service, Leipziger Messe". Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  91. "Jazzclug-leipzig.de homepage".
  92. "Ladyfest Leipzigerinnen homepage".
  93. "Oper Unplugger – Musik Tanz Theater" (in German). Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  94. "Leipzig Pop Up independent music trade fair and festival". Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  95. "Das Leipziger Sportangebot aktuell" (in German). leipzig.de. Archived from the original on 28 February 2008. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  96. Ruf, Christoph (19 June 2009). "Buying Its Way to the Bundesliga – Red Bull Wants to Caffeinate Small football Club". Spiegel Online International. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  97. Fritz Rudolph. "Was einst mit dem Krummstab begann ... Zur Geschichte des Eishockeysports in der Region Leipzig". sportmuseum-leipzig.de. Archived from the original on 15 January 2010. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
  98. "Rugby Club Leipzig e.V." leipzig-rugby.de.
  99. "Leipzig University homepage". Archived from the original on 12 September 2008. Retrieved 22 August 2006.
  100. "?". Archived from the original on 21 March 2015.
  101. LVZ-Online. "Management Master – Leipziger HHL-Absolventen erhalten weltweit zweithöchstes Einstiegsgehalt – LVZ – Leipziger Volkszeitung". www.lvz.de.
  102. "Masters in Management 2017". The Economist.
  103. "Lutherisches Theologisches Seminar". Archived from the original on 11 February 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  104. "Lutherisches Theologisches Seminar Leipzig".
  105. "Evangelical Lutheran Free Church – Germany". Archived from the original on 7 February 2016.
  106. Stephan Gasteyger. "Discover Leipzig". Berlin Things to Do. Archived from the original on 14 December 2014.
  107. "Promenaden Hauptbahnhof Leipzig". Archived from the original on 6 April 2008.
  108. "Tourismusboom in Leipzig – erstmals drei Millionen Übernachtungen". Leipziger Volkszeitung. 22 February 2018. Retrieved 13 December 2018.
  109. Date: 1 September 2010 (1 September 2010). "Innovation Cities Global Index 2010 " Innovation Cities Program & Index: Creating Innovative Cities: USA, Canada, Europe, Latin America, Asia, Australia". Innovation-cities.com. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  110. Berliner Zeitung. "Lebensqualität in der Hauptstadt: Berlin erobert Platz 2 im Städteranking". Berliner Zeitung.
  111. de:Einkommende Zeitungen
  112. ""ABOUT US." The Leipzig Glocal". leipglo.com. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
  113. "Leipzig: ein Paradies für kreative Blogs" (in German). Mephisto 97.6. Archived from the original on 3 May 2016. Retrieved 8 February 2017.
  114. "Homepage of the City of Leipzig/Buchstadt". Archived from the original on 23 May 2013.
  115. German National Library
  116. "Deutschlands beliebteste Städte: Leipzig im Ranking ganz vorne – N24.de". N24.de. 9 December 2013.
  117. Heidenfelder, Eva (17 August 2016). "Beliebte Studentenstädte: Wo es sich am besten leben, lernen und feiern lässt" (in German). FAZ.
  118. Trümper, Erik (30 January 2017). "Platz 1 bei bundesweiter Innenstadtumfrage – 5 Gründe, warum Leipzigs City die beste ist" (in German). BILD. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  119. "Bundesweite Städte-Umfrage: Leipzig, Erfurt und Quedlinburg am attraktivsten" (in German). MDR. 31 January 2017. Archived from the original on 3 February 2017. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  120. "Leipzig behauptet 2. Platz im Städteranking für Zukunftsfähigkeit". leipzig.de (in German). 8 November 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  121. "2017 Stressful Cities Ranking | Zipjet". www.zipjet.co.uk. Archived from the original on 3 August 2019. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  122. "Leipzig gewinnt als einzige ostdeutsche Stadt wichtigen Preis in Cannes". TAG24 (in German). Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  123. Admin. "Leipzig wins European City of the Year at 2019 Urbanism Awards | The Academy of Urbanism". Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  124. "Zukunftsatlas: Leipzig ist dynamischste Region Deutschlands". LVZ - Leipziger Volkszeitung (in German). Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  125. "Zukunftsatlas 2019: Das sind die deutschen Regionen mit den besten Zukunftsaussichten". www.handelsblatt.com (in German). Retrieved 20 September 2019.
  126. "52 Places to Go in 2020". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  127. Otterbach, Niklas (20 February 2020). "Hauptbahnhof Leipzig ist Deutschlands bester Bahnhof" (in German). MDR. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  128. "Leipzigs Partnerstädte". leipzig.de (in German). Leipzig. Retrieved 24 November 2019.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.