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・ Leipziger Internet Zeitung
・ Leipziger Jazztage
・ Leipziger Land
・ Leipziger Lerche
・ Leipziger Parkeisenbahn
・ Leipziger Platz
・ Leipziger Platz 12
・ Leipziger Straße
・ Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe
・ Leipziger Volkszeitung
・ Leipziger Weltchronik
・ Leipzig–Altenburg Airport
・ Leipzig–Dresden railway
・ Leipzig–Dresden Railway Company
・ Leipzig–Eilenburg railway
Leipzig–Großkorbetha railway
・ Leipzig–Hof railway
・ Leipzig–Jakarta list
・ Leipzig–Probstzella railway
・ Leipäjuusto
・ Leiqin
・ Leir (Marvel Comics)
・ Leir of Britain
・ Leira
・ Leira (Forgotten Realms)
・ Leira (river)
・ Leira, Oppland
・ Leira, Sør-Trøndelag
・ Leira, Ørsta
・ Leiradira


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Leipzig–Großkorbetha railway : ウィキペディア英語版
Leipzig–Großkorbetha railway

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The Leipzig–Großkorbetha railway is a double track electrified in the German states of Saxony-Anhalt and Saxony, which connects the city of Leipzig and the Thuringian Railway. It runs from Leipzig via Markranstädt and Bad Dürrenberg to Großkorbetha.
==History ==

The line was opened on 22 March 1856 by the Thuringian Railway Company ((ドイツ語:Thüringische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft)) and is one of the oldest railways in Germany. At that time it started in the Thüringer Bahnhof (Thuringian station) in Leipzig, which was on the eastern edge of the site of the Leipzig Hauptbahnhof (central station), which opened in 1913. The line quickly developed into one of the busiest lines in central Germany.
The line was electrified on 2 November 1942, but four years later in 1946 the electrical equipment was taken down and moved to the Soviet Union as reparations for World War II. In 1964 it was re-electrified.

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