Heidelberg

Heidelberg, a celebrated German city, in Baden, situated amid beautiful surroundings, on the Neckar, 13 m. SE. of Mannheim; has many interesting buildings, including ruins of a splendid 13th-century castle, but is chiefly celebrated for its flourishing university (student roll, 800; professors, 100; library, 500,000), whose professoriate has included many of the most distinguished German scholars; it was long the centre of Calvinism; its chief trade is in books, tobacco, wine, and beer.

Population (circa 1900) given as 35,000.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Hegesippus * Heijn
[wait for the fun]
Hector
Hecuba
Hedonism
Heem, Jan Davidsz van
Heeren, Ludwig
Hefele, Karl Joseph von
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich
Hegelianism
Hege`sias
Hegesippus
Heidelberg
Heijn
Heilbronn
Heilsbronn
Heine, Heinrich
Heineccius, Johann Gottlieb
Heinsius, Anthony
Heir Apparent
Heir Presumptive
Hejaz, El
Hejira

Nearby

Links here from Chalmers

Adam, Melchior
Agricola, Rodolphus
Alting, Henry
Alting, James
Andreas, James
Apuleius, Lucius
Athanasius, St.
Bachovius, Reiner
Bachovius, Reiner [No. 3]
Baudouin, Francis
[showing first 10 entries of 109]