Gdańsk
Gdańsk , formerly Danzig , city (1993 est. pop. 466,700), capital of Pomorskie prov., N Poland, on a branch of the Vistula and on the Gulf of Gdańsk. One of the chief Polish ports on the Baltic Sea, it is a leading industrial and communications center. It has important mechanical-engineering, machine-building, chemical, and metallurgical industries. Sawmilling, food processing, and light manufacturing are also important. Its once-famous shipyard is no longer state-owned and was nearly closed in 1996; it continues shipbuilding on a smaller scale. There are two port areas; one is at Nowy Port (Neufahrwasser), a northern suburb, and the other, Port Połnocny, was completed in 1975. The port cities of Gdańsk and Gdynia and the nearby resort of Sopot are administered as a single city. Gdańsk has numerous educational and cultural facilities. Historic landmarks include the Gothic Church of St. Mary (1343).
A Slavic settlement, Gdańsk was first mentioned in 997. It soon became the capital of Pomerelia (see Pomerania ). After its settlement by German merchants, it joined (13th cent.) the Hanseatic League and developed as an important Baltic trading port. In 1308 it was conquered by the Teutonic Knights and became an object of struggle between them and Poland. Pomerelia and Gdańsk passed to Poland in 1466. Gdańsk was granted local autonomy under the Polish crown. In 1576, Gdańsk withstood a siege by Stephen Báthory and thus preserved its established privileges against domination by the Polish crown.
After the Thirty Years War the city began to decline. In the War of the Polish Succession , King Stanislaus I took refuge in Gdańsk until it fell (1734) after a heroic defense. The first partition of Poland in 1772 made Gdańsk a free city; the second partition (1793) gave it to Prussia .
Napoleon I restored its status as a free city (1807). Reverting to Prussia in 1814, it was fortified and, as Danzig, was the provincial capital of West Prussia until 1919, when by the Treaty of Versailles it once more became a free city with its own legislature. In order to give the newly reestablished nation of Poland a seaport, Danzig was included in the Polish customs territory and was placed under a high commissioner appointed by the League of Nations.
As the League's authority waned after 1935, Gdańsk came under Nazi control. Hitler's demand (1939) for the city's return to Germany was the principal immediate excuse for the German invasion of Poland and thus of World War II. Gdańsk was annexed to Germany from Sept. 1, 1939, until its fall to the Soviet army early in 1945. The Allies returned the city to Poland, which restored the name Gdańsk. In 1970 workers' grievances sparked riots in Gdańsk that spread to other cities and led to changes in Poland's national leadership. Further labor unrest in the Gdańsk shipyard led to the formation of the Solidarity union in 1980.
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Twentieth-Century Music.(Alban Berg and Hanna Fuchs: The Story of a Love in Letters)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Notes; 3/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; Alban Berg and Hanna Fuchs: The Story...index. Constantin Floros's Alban Berg and Hanna Fuchs is an...passionate and rambling letters that Berg wrote privately to Hanna between...republished in 2001 in Floros's Alban Berg und Hanna Fuchs: Die...
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Die Musiksoziologie Theodor W. Adornos: Ein Modell ihrer Interpretation am Beispiel Alban Bergs.
Magazine article from: Notes; 6/1/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...and composer (he was a pupil of Eduard Steuermann and Alban Berg), so it is hardly surprising that music occupies a...primarily on composers: Gustav Mahler, Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg, Alexander Zemlinsky, Franz Schreker, and Igor Stravinsky...
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The Music of Alban Berg.(Review)
Magazine article from: Notes; 12/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...06400-4. $45.] Dave Headlam's Music of Alban Berg is the first comprehensive study of Berg's oeuvre since the publication of Douglas...The Berg Companion, ed. Douglas Jarman, and Alban Berg: "Wozzeck," by Douglas Jarman, Notes...
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Sweet Berg. (Alban Berg)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 1/25/1992; 700+ words
; ...A who was his teacher, Alban Berg usually shares the blame...would soon vanish forever. Berg was a slow and meticulous...Yvonne Kenny, a soprano, of Berg's Opus 4, a sequence of...survived-as has the music of Alban Berg.
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Alban Berg Quartet returns to Hong Kong with rich repertoire
News Wire article from: Xinhua News Agency; 4/12/2007; 391 words
; Alban Berg Quartet returns to Hong Kong with rich repertoire...great chamber ensembles of the world, the Alban Berg Quartet will give its first concert...at the Alte Oper Frankfurt. Concert by Alban Berg Quartet is one of the programs in...
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Lyric gift; Alban Berg.(Critical Essay)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US); 3/1/2003; 700+ words
; Berg spoke to the heart He refused to let modernism...and his devoted students, Anton Webern and Alban Berg, as the true music of their time, in the...with the striking exception of the operas of Berg, which have achieved and maintained repertoire...
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Encrypted Messages in Alban Berg's Music.(Review)
Magazine article from: Notes; 3/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...decade ago. As Bruhn points out, "Alban Berg would have been most surprised by...particularly radical in the case of Berg, a composer whose entire output can...as metatextually based. Indeed, Berg is an obvious choice for a musical...
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The NSO and Alban Berg's Transporting Sorrow
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 6/2/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...season. It also marked the return of Alban Berg's sumptuous essay in grief and nihilism...Arnold Schoenberg and his disciples Berg and Anton Webern. Bach is more than just a background inspiration to Berg's most loved and perhaps most accessible...
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Alban Berg Quartet's Passionate and Bittersweet Farewell
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 2/25/2008; ; 600 words
; The Alban Berg Quartet preserves a bygone style of playing: the rich full string sound...and the inward intensity of Beethoven's Op. 132 with an early work by Alban Berg, the String Quartet, Op. 3. It is a piece that, though early for...
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Alban Berg Quartet: Beethoven: Complete String Quartets
Magazine article from: Strings; 5/1/2006; ; 376 words
; Alban Berg Quartet: Beethoven: Complete String Quartets...EMI 009463 38595 9 3). Germany's Alban Berg String Quartet has long been admired for...5.0 DTS surround sound) captures the Bergs in concert at the Konzerthaus in Vienna...
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Alban Berg
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Alban Berg The Austrian composer Alban Berg (1885-1935) adopted the revolutionary twelve-tone method, but he frequently combined it with tonality. Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenberg, and Anton Webern have often been called...
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Alban Berg Quartet
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
Alban Berg Quartet. Austrian str. qt. founded in 1971. Gives annual series of concerts in Vienna. Salzburg Fest. début 1978. Present membership Gunter Pichler (vn.), Gerhard Schulz (vn.), Thomas Kaskuda (va.), Valentin Erben (vc.).
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Berg, Alban (Maria Johannes)
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
Berg, Alban (Maria Johannes) ( b Vienna, 1885; d...interrupted and eventually abandoned. In May 1914 Berg attended a perf. of Büchner...despite critical polemics. In the next decade Berg's powers were at their height and he comp...
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Berg, Alban
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Berg, Alban (1885–1935) Austrian composer. A student of Arnold Schoenberg , he composed his later works in a complex, highly...
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Perle, George
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
...1989–91. Authority on music and life of Alban Berg. Author of Serial Composition and Atonality (1962...1991), Twelve-Tone Tonality (1977), The Operas of Alban Berg, Wozzeck (1980), Lulu (1985). As a composer evolved...
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