Griebens Reise-Bibliothek

Griebens Reise-Bibliothek (est.1853) was a series of German-language travel guide books to Europe, founded by Theobald Grieben of Berlin.[1] Some titles occasionally appeared in English or French language editions. Compared with its competitor Baedeker, Griebens was "cheaper and less detailed."[2] A 1914 British reviewer judged it "informative and not bulky, going easily into the coat pocket."[3] Readers included Thomas Wolfe.[4] In 1863 publisher Albert Goldschmidt bought the series and continued it;[5] in the 1890s the Goldschmidt office sat on Köthener Straße in Berlin. By the 1950s Griebens was issued by Jürgen E. Rohde of Munich.[6]

Cover of Die Vulkanische Eifel, 1889
Cover of Schwarzwald, 1890
Cover of Rhein-Reise, 1900
Cover of Norway and Copenhagen, 1910
Cover of Holland, Griebens Reiseführer, 1912

List of titles by geographic coverage

Austria

  • Bayr, Hochland, Salzburg, Salzkammergut. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 1920.
  • Wien (in German). 1903.

Belgium

  • H. T. Luks (1891). Belgien und Holland. Griebens Reise-Bibliothek (in German). 22 (5th ed.). Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt via Google Books. + index
  • Belgium. Grieben's Guide Books. 141. London: Williams & Norgate. 1910. (in English) + index
  • Brussel (in German).

Czech Republic

  • Prag (in German) (5th ed.). 1877.

Great Britain

  • London (in German).

France

Germany

  • Berlin. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt. 1920 via Internet Archive.
    • Berlin. (in English)
  • Berlin, Potsdam und Umgebungen (in German). 6 (37th ed.). 1891.
  • Bremen (in German).
  • Breslau (in German).
  • Cassel und Wilhelmshöhe. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 1919.
  • Deutschland (in German).
  • Dresden (in German) (2nd ed.). 1857.
  • Düsseldorf (in German).
  • Frankfurt a.M. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 1912.
  • Freiburg i. Br (in German).
  • Hamburg. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 1912.
  • Hannover und Hildesheim. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 151 (2nd ed.). Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt. 1914 via HathiTrust.
  • Heidelberg und Neckerthal. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 1918.
  • Kiel. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 1913.
  • Köln und Düsseldorf (in German).
  • Leipzig (in German).
  • Mecklenburg. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 1919.
  • München (in German) (11th ed.). 1867.
  • Nürnberg (in German) (3rd ed.). 1873.
  • Potsdam (in German).
  • Kleiner Führer für die Rhein-Reise von Köln bis Frankfurt. Griebens Reisebücher (in German). 75. Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt. 1900 via Google Books.
  • Die Sächsische Schweiz mit dem angrenzenden Böhmischen Mittelgebirge. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 16. Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt. 1921.
  • Strassburg (in German). 1914.
  • Stuttgart (in German).
  • Thüringen. Griebens Reiseführer (in German). 1919.
  • Die Vulkanische Eifel (in German). 32. 1889 via Europeana.

Greece

  • Athen und Umgebung. Grieben Reisefuhrer. 1937.

Italy

Netherlands

  • Holland. Griebens Reisführer (in German). 98 (13th ed.). 1912–1913. OCLC 249915529.

Poland

Russia

  • Saint-Petersbourg (in French). 27 (11th ed.). Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt. 1887 via HathiTrust.

Scandinavia

  • Finland (in German).
  • Kopenhagen (in German).
  • Schweden, Norwegen und Danemark (in German).
  • Stockholm (in German). 1886.

Switzerland

  • Theodor Stromer, ed. (1891). Die Schweiz. Griebens Reise-Bibliothek (in German). 23 (15th ed.). Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt. + index
    • Theodor Stromer, ed. (1895). Die Schweiz. Griebens Reisebücher (in German). 23 (17th ed.). Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt. + index
    • 1907 ed.
  • Switzerland. Grieben's Guide Books. 123 (2nd ed.). Berlin: Albert Goldschmidt. 1912. (in English) + index

United States

  • Eugen Comely (1893). New York und Chicago (in German). 86. OCLC 258230238.

References

  1. "Carl Leopold Eberhard Theobald Grieben", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), 1966 via Deutsche Biographie
  2. Rudy Koshar (July 1998). "'What Ought to Be Seen': Tourists' Guidebooks and National Identities in Modern Germany and Europe". Journal of Contemporary History. 33 (3): 323–340. JSTOR 261119.
  3. O'Connor, Thomas Power; Jackson, Holbrook (June 26, 1914), "Among the Books", T.P.'s Weekly, London
  4. Ted Mitchell, ed. (2006). Thomas Wolfe: An Illustrated Biography. Pegasus. p. 186. ISBN 978-1-933648-10-1.
  5. Georg Jäger (2001). "Sachbuch- und Ratgeberverlag (Publishers of Nonfiction and Guidebooks)". Geschichte des Deutschen Buchhandels im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert (in German). Frankfurt: Buchhandler-Vereinigung GmbH. ISBN 978-3-11-095617-7.
  6. Johannes Paulmann (2007). "Representation without Emulation: German Cultural Diplomacy in Search of Integration and Self-Assurance during the Adenauer Era". German Politics & Society. 25 (2 (83)): 168–200. doi:10.3167/gps.2007.250210. JSTOR 23742817.


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