Aus der Provinz in die Moderne - Der Bau des Kanalisationssystems in Danzig.
Deutsches Institut für Urbanistik
item.page.uri.label
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Deutsches Institut für Urbanistik
item.page.orlis-pc
DE
item.page.orlis-pl
Berlin
item.page.issn
2567-1405
item.page.zdb
item.page.orlis-av
ZLB: Kws 118 ZA 3487
item.page.type
item.page.type-orlis
relationships.isAuthorOf
Abstract
In the second half of the 19th century Gdansk was the first city in Germany that set up a complete system of water supply including drainage channels and sprinkler areas. This important step in the urban modernisation process is mainly associated with Leopold von Winter and his term as Lord Mayor (1863-1890). But taking a closer look, it becomes obvious that the issue of environmental hygiene arose much earlier in Gdansk. Since the beginnings of a discourse can be traced back to the 18th century, there it had been noticeably intensified in face of the cholera that plagued the city from 1830/31 for several decades. By shifting the issue from theory to practice, the engineer Julius Albert Gottlieb Licht had played a crucial role, before experts from Great Britain and Berlin helped to complete a pioneering urban project in the Germany Empire.
Description
Keywords
Journal
Moderne Stadtgeschichte : MSG
item.page.issue
Nr. 1
item.page.dc-source
item.page.pageinfo
S. 120-142