Executive summary by Darmansjah
Graz is the second-largest city in Austria after Vienna and
the capital of the federal state of Styria (Steiermark). On 9. January 2014 it
had a population of 303.731 (of which 271.998 had principal residence status).
Graz has a long tradition as a student city: its six
universities have more than 44,000 students. Its "Old Town" is one of
the best-preserved city centres in Central Europe.[citation needed]
Politically and culturally, Graz was for centuries more
important for Slovenes than Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, and still
remains influential.
In 1999, Graz was added to the UNESCO list of World Cultural
Heritage Sites, and the site was extended in 2010 by Schloss Eggenberg. Graz
was sole Cultural Capital of Europe for 2003 and got the title of a City of
Culinary Delights in 2008.
The oldest settlement on the ground of the modern city of
Graz dates back to the Copper Age. However, there is no historical continuity
of a settlement before the Middle Ages.
During the 12th century dukes under Babenberg rule made the
town into an important commercial center. Later Graz came under the rule of the
Habsburgs, and in 1281 gained special privileges from King Rudolph I.
In the 14th century Graz became the city of residence of the
Inner Austrian line of the Habsburgs. The royalty lived in the Schloßberg
castle and from there ruled Styria, Carinthia, most of today's Slovenia and
parts of Italy (Carniola, Gorizia and Gradisca, Trieste).
In the 16th century, the city's design and planning were
primarily controlled by Italian Renaissance architects and artists. One of the
most famous buildings built in this style is the Landhaus, designed by Domenico
dell'Allio, and used by the local rulers as a governmental headquarters.
The astronomer Johannes Kepler lived in Graz for a short
period. There, he worked as a math teacher, but found time to study astronomy.
He left Graz to go to Prague when Lutherans were banned from the city.
Karl-Franzens Universität, also called the University of
Graz, is the city's oldest university, founded in 1585 by Archduke Charles II.
For most of its existence it was controlled by the Catholic church, and was
closed in 1782 by Joseph II in an attempt to gain state control over
educational institutions. Joseph II transformed it into a lyceum where civil
servants and medical personnel were trained. In 1827 it was re-instituted as a
university by Emperor Franz I, thus gaining the name 'Karl-Franzens Universität,'
meaning 'Charles-Francis University.' Over 30,000 students currently study at
this university.
Nikola Tesla studied electrical engineering at the
Polytechnic in Graz in 1875. Nobel Laureate Otto Loewi taught at the University
of Graz from 1909 until 1938. Ivo Andric, the 1961 Nobel Prize for Literature
Laureate obtained his doctorate at the University of Graz. Johannes Kepler was
a professor of mathematics at the University of Graz. Erwin Schrödinger was
briefly chancellor of the University of Graz in 1936.
Adolf Hitler was given a warm welcome when he visited in
1938, the year Austria was annexed by Nazi Germany. The thriving Jewish
community was destroyed by the Nazis, and their grand synagogue was burnt. A
small group of Graz Jews returned despite everything after the war. In 2000, on
the anniversary of the Reichskristallnacht, Graz city council presented the
Jewish community with a new synagogue as a gesture of reconciliation. Hitler
promised the people of Graz 1,000 years of prosperity and an end to mass
unemployment: only seven years later the Graz resistance surrendered the city
to Soviet troops, sparing Graz any further destruction. By then about 16% of
buildings had been destroyed by Allied bombing - luckily the Old Town was not
seriously hit.
Graz lies in Styria, or Steiermark in German. Mark is an old
German word indicating a large area of land used as a defensive border, in
which the peasantry are taught how to organize and fight in the case of an
invasion. With a strategic location at the head of the open and fertile Mur
valley, Graz was often assaulted (unsuccessfully), e.g. by the Hungarians under
Matthias Corvinus in 1481, and by the Ottoman Turks in 1529 and 1532. Apart
from the Riegersburg, the Schloßberg was the only fortification in the region
that never fell to the Ottoman Turks. Graz is home to the region's provincial
armory, which is the world's largest historical collection of Baroque weaponry.
It has been preserved since 1551, and displays over 30,000 items.
From the earlier part of the 15th century Graz was the
residence of the younger branch of the Habsburgs, which succeeded to the
imperial throne in 1619 in the person of Emperor Ferdinand II, who moved the
capital to Vienna. New fortifications were built on the Schlossberg at the end
of the 16th century. Napoleon's army occupied Graz in 1797. In 1809 the city
withstood another assault by the French army. During this attack, the
commanding officer in the fortress was ordered to defend it with about 900 men against
Napoleon's army of about 3,000. He successfully defended the Schloßberg against
eight attacks, but they were forced to give up after the Grande Armée occupied
Vienna and the Emperor ordered to surrender. Following the defeat of Austria by
Napoleonic forces at the Battle of Wagram in 1809, the fortifications were
demolished using explosives, as stipulated in the Peace of Schönbrunn of the
same year. The belltower and the civic clock tower, often used as the symbol of
Graz, were spared after the people of Graz paid a ransom for their
preservation.
Archduke Charles II of Inner Austria had 20,000 Protestant
books burned in the square of what is now a mental hospital, and succeeded in
returning Styria to the authority of the Holy See. Archduke Franz Ferdinand was
born in Graz, in what is now the Stadtmuseum (city museum).
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