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Nuremberg

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Nuremberg

a city in S Germany, in N Bavaria: scene of annual Nazi rallies (1933--38), the anti-Semitic Nuremberg decrees (1935), and the trials of Nazi leaders for their war crimes (1945--46); important metalworking and electrical industries. Pop.: 493 553 (2003 est.)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Nuremberg

 

a city in Bavaria, the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG). Population, 478,200 (1971). Nuremberg is situated on the unnavigable Pegnitz River, along the obsolete Ludwigs Canal and the Rhine-Main-Danube shipping canal, which is now under construction. An important railroad and highway junction, the city also has an airport. Nuremberg is one of the major industrial centers of the FRG. It has industries producing electrotechnic equipment (33 percent of all industrial workers are in this sector), machine tools, precision instruments, metal products, motorcycles, bicycles, pencils, and toys. There also are chemical, textile, garment, shoe, food and condiment, wood-products, and printing industries. Handicraft industries and small and medium-size industrial enterprises play a significant role. Educational institutions in Nuremberg include the Academy of Applied Technology, the Academy of Fine Arts, the Pedagogical Hochschule, and the departments of economics and social sciences of the University of Erlangen. The city has an opera house and a dramatic theater and is the site of the German National Museum and museums of transport, crafts, and toys.

The earliest record of Nuremberg dates to 1050. In 1219 the city was made a free imperial city. In the 14th and 15th centuries it was a major artisan and trade center and played an important role in the trade between southern Germany and Italy. In the 16th century, Nuremberg was one of the centers of German humanism. It was the birthplace of A. Dürer and H. Sachs; the humanists W. Pirkheimer and P. Melanchthon worked in the city. Nuremberg was the first imperial city to be affected by the Reformation (in 1524). In the 16th century, economic decline set in with the changing of trade routes. In 1806, Nuremberg became part of the Kingdom of Bavaria. In the 19th century, especially after the building of the Nuremberg-Furth railroad line, Germany’s first railroad, the city became one of the principal economic centers of Bavaria. During the fascist period, the congresses of the Nazi Party were held in Nuremberg. In 1945 and 1946, after the defeat of fascism, the city was the site of the trial of a group of leading Nazi war criminals.

The center of the city has narrow, winding streets and many noteworthy centuries-old architectural monuments, including the castle (begun in the 11th century), the late Gothic Church of St. Sebaldus (c. 1240–73; hall choir, 1361–72), the Church of St. Lorenz (finished after 1350; choir, 1439–77), the Church of Our Lady (1352–61), City Hall (14th to 17th centuries), residential buildings from the 15th to 17th centuries with high pointed facades and abundant decoration (including A. Dürer’s house), and the Gothic “Beautiful Fountain” (14th century). All the churches mentioned above are adorned with sculptures by A. Kraft, P. Vischer, and V. Stoss. Around the center there are new residential districts with a regular layout (Sankt-Johannis, Galgenhof, Sankt-Jobst). In the 1950’s and 1960’s the satellite town of Langwasser was constructed.

REFERENCES

Fehring, G. P., and A. Ress. Die Stadt Nürnberg. [Nuremberg] 1961.
Nürnberg—Geschichte einer europäischen Stadt, vols. 1–2. Edited by G. Pfeiffer. [Munich] 1970–71.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Nuremberg Code. https://http://www.ushmm.org/information/exhibitions/onlinefeatures/special-focus/doctors-trial/nuremberg-code (accessed July 2017).
[2] Some aspects that involved contentious issues such as voluntary informed consent, therapeutic research, non-therapeutic research and benefits were much more structured and detailed compared with the principles in the Nuremberg Code. It was stressed that the rights and dignity of subjects had to be protected at all times, and on the issue of non-therapeutic research it underscored the prohibition of experimentation in all cases where consent had not been given.
US medical researchers, the Nuremberg Doctors trial, and the Nuremberg Code. A review of findings of the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments.
The Nuremberg Code of 1947 did not refer to this, so it became urgent to search for a procedure that would satisfy these new requirements.
Nuremberg Code "remains the most authoritative legal and ethical
From the inception of medical ethics with the post-Nazi trial Nuremberg Code, the principles of informed consent have been reiterated in numerous federal statutes and regulations, as well as in international professional codes and human rights instruments.
During the Nuremberg trials after the Second World War, an official ethical code for medical experiments regarding humans was drafted for the first time, the Nuremberg Code of 1947.
The Committee writes simply that "[t]he commission's [National Commission] deliberations took place against a background that included the Nazi experiments with concentration camp prisoners followed by the adoption of a stringent standard of voluntary consent in the Nuremberg Code." (31) There is no discussion of what research was actually conducted by Nazi physicians in the concentration camps, of the prosecution of these physicians by American prosecutors to a court composed of American judges, or of the rationale for the Nuremberg Code and its direct application to the American military, American prisoners, and American researchers.
Historically, documents meant to address the ethical treatment of human subjects and research began with the Nuremberg Code, a 1947 landmark post-Nuremberg trial document that was developed by two American physicians who worked with the prosecution.
An outcome of the trials was the creation of the Nuremberg Code in 1947, the first of a number of regulatory documents meant to protect human subjects from abuses in research (Grigsby & Roof, 1993; Hamilton, 2005).
Even after the Nuremberg trials exposed the Nazi war crimes and the Nuremberg Code provided a clear statement of standards for research on human subjects, unethical research programs continued to be designed and conducted.
International ethical guidelines, such as the Nuremberg Code (1949), the Helsinki Declaration (World Medical Association 2008), and guidelines of the Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences (2002), require that risks be reasonable, minimized, and disclosed, but again these guidelines apply only to the risks directly related to research (Amdur and Bankert 2005).
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