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Hameln

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Hameln

Town in Lower Saxony, Germany, on the Rver Weser, 40 km/25 mi southwest of Hannover; population (1995) 58,800. Industries include electrical and mechanical engineering, and the manufacture of furniture and fabrics. Old buildings include the Rattenfängerhaus (Rat-catcher's House). Hameln is the setting for the Pied Piper legend.

There are many half-timbered buildings and a number of structures in the Weser Renaissance style, including the Hochzeitshaus (Marriage House), built between 1610 and 1617; and the Rattenfängerhaus (1603). The Minster of St Boniface (11th–14th century) is a mixture of Romanesque and baroque architecture. Museums include the Dorf Museum, housing exhibits of prehistory, farming, and local crafts; and the Hameln Museum of Country Life

Hameln features in the poem The Pied Piper of Hamelin by Robert Browning.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
To quote the review of the hardcover in KLIATT, November 2003: Young Salz, who suffers from terrible coughs and often cannot catch his breath, lives in the medieval German town of Hameln.
In Hameln, each family endures the effects of this twin devastation in ignorance and confusion.
The reasoning is reminiscent of a tale Gluckel of Hameln related to her progeny.
 
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