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Die Textilindustrie sämtlicher Staaten

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fullscreen: Die Textilindustrie sämtlicher Staaten

Monograph

Identifikator:
1031019537
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-60551
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Kertész, Adolf http://d-nb.info/gnd/1013269713
Title:
Die Textilindustrie sämtlicher Staaten
Edition:
Zweite Auflage der "Textilindustrie Deutschlands im Welthandel"
Place of publication:
Braunschweig
Publisher:
Druck und Verlag von Fried. Vieweg & Sohn
Year of publication:
1917
Scope:
1 Online-Ressource (XXVI, 741 Seiten)
Digitisation:
2018
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
C. Die Textilindustrie Asiens und Australiens
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Cost of living in German towns
  • Title page
  • Contents

Full text

PLAUEN. 
Plauen, or, to give the town its full official designation, Plauen-im- 
Vogtlande, is the most southerly as well as the most westerly of the five 
principal towns of ¡Saxony, and the fourth among them in point of population. 
Its geographical position in relation to the other four large towns is perhaps 
best defined by picturing a triangle having at its apex Leipzig on the northern 
frontier of the kingdom, and for its base, a line crossing the southern portion 
of ¡Saxony in a direction parallel with the range of the Erzgebirge, i.e., from 
west by south, to east by north. At the eastern extremity of this line 
would be found Dresden, and at the opposite extremity Plauen, while midway 
between these two, and still on the slopes of the Erzgebirge would be found 
Chemnitz with the colliery town of Zwickau, about 20 miles to the south 
west, or about midway between Chemnitz and Plauen. The town resembles 
Chemnitz and Zwickau in being surrounded by a cluster of industrial villages 
for whose products it is the collecting and distributing centre. It has the same 
advantages of proximity to the Saxon coalfields, and the same lack of facilities 
for water transport, since the small river on which Plauen stands—the White 
Elster, one of the many tributaries of the Elbe—is unnavigable. As regards 
railway communication, however, Plauen occupies a peculiarly favourable 
position ; being the last of the important stations on the main line of the 
Saxon State Railway, running south into Bavaria and linking up the railway 
systems of North and South Germany. A service of trains crossing a portion 
of the Erzgebirge also maintains communication between Plauen and the 
Bohemian town of Eger, although owing to the steepness of the gradients this 
communication is somewhat slow. 
Being the centre of the German lace making and embroidery trade, Plauen 
occupies a position corresponding to that of Nottingham among the manufacturing 
towns of the United Kingdom, Calais among those of France, and St. Gall among 
those of Switzerland. Modernity is the predominant characteristic of the town, 
for the greater part of Plauen, as one sees it now, has been built within the last 
dozen years. From the river, on the western bank of which old Plauen has been 
built, the modern town has extended upwards in a series of long, wide, straight 
streets cf four and five storeyed buildings branching from the right and left of 
the main business thoroughfare and promenade (the Bahnhofstrasse) which 
leads from the old Town up a steep incline to the central railway station—a 
distance of about two-thirds of a mile. Each of these parallel streets is crossed 
by other parallel streets of similar appearance with a regularity which would 
be monotonous in its effect but for the constant change of level due to the steep 
rise in the ground from the river upwards—a rise of 250 feet in two-thirds of a 
mile, with occasional gradients of one foot in ten. In consequence of this rise it 
is possible from almost any street corner to obtain a view over a large 
part of the town and into the "hilly and wooded country beyond. The difficulties 
of horse traffic on such sloping ground account for the entire absence of any 
kind of smooth paving material such as wood, concrete or asphalt, rough setts 
or cobbles. The somewhat exposed situation of the town at a height above the 
sea level varying from 1,066 to 1,480 feet would in some measure account for 
the absence of smoke and grime, a circumstance which is also in part due to the 
extensive use of electricity, gas and benzine as motive power in the lace making 
and embroidering establishments. 
The municipality owns large tracts of land outside the town boundaries. 
Thus, while the total urban area amounts to 7,700 acres, the land owned by 
the municipality amounts to 4,900 acres, of which 2,900 are outside, and 2,000 
inside the urban boundary. Of the total extent of municipally owned land 
3,700 acres consist of forest, of which 86 acres, at the immediate outskirts of 
the town, have been converted into a public park. Other means of public 
recreation with which the municipality is identified are the town theatre 
3 E 2 
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Cost of Living in German Towns. Stat. Off., 1908.
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