"Nürnberg." . . "Nürnberg" . "Nuremberg (Allemagne)" . . "Architecture." . . "Staatliche Bildstelle (Berlin)" . . "Bildband Architektur." . . "Denkmäler Länder, Gebiete, Völker // Nürnberg." . . "Germany" . . "Nürnberg Bildbände Kunst, Kunsthandwerk." . . "Nuremberg (Germany)" . . "Architektur." . . "Bildband." . . "Architecture Germany Nuremberg." . . . . . . . . "History" . . "Pictorial works" . . . . . . . "Nürnberg aufgenommen von der staatlichen Bildstelle" . . "Nürnberg" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "A detailed map of Nuremberg begins this impressive book. The pictures were taken in 1935 for an exhibition in the Art Academy in Berlin and then, due to popular demand, made into a book in 1937. The pictures were chosen to show Nuremberg as the architectural unity it was, the best example of a German city of the Middle Ages, a Free City, a proud city of citizens. The text describes the rise of the city from 1025. At first there were two centers of settlement, one on each side of the river Pegnitz. To the north was the castle and its community. The Romanesque St. Sebald was built below the castle in the mid-1200s. The city hall followed in the 1300s directly next to the church. At the same time, a crafts and commerce settlement was developing on the south side of the river. They built their Gothic St. Lorenz church in the late 1200s to 1350. The two parts grew together. The photos include residences and public buildings, the city wall and castle, the churches, above all St. Sebald and St. Lorenz, and the Frauenkirche which looked out on the Adolf-Hitler-Platz at the time." . "Kunstführer" . . . . . . . "Bildband" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Nürnberg : Aufgenommen v. d. Staatl. Bildstelle" . "Nürnberg : aufgenommen von der staatlichen Bildstelle" . . . . . "Geschichte." . . . . "Nürnberg." . .