- Krefeld
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Krefeld City Hall Coordinates 51°20′0″N 6°34′0″E / 51.333333°N 6.566667°ECoordinates: 51°20′0″N 6°34′0″E / 51.333333°N 6.566667°E Administration Country Germany State North Rhine-Westphalia Admin. region Düsseldorf District Urban district Lord Mayor Gregor Kathstede (CDU) Basic statistics Area 137.68 km2 (53.16 sq mi) Elevation 39 m (128 ft) Population 235,076 (31 December 2010)[1] - Density 1,707 /km2 (4,422 /sq mi) Other information Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) Licence plate KR Postal codes 47701-47839 Area code 02151 Website www.krefeld.de Krefeld (German pronunciation: [ˈkʁeːfɛlt]), also known as Crefeld until 1929, is a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is located northwest of Düsseldorf, its centre lying just a few kilometres to the west of the River Rhine; the borough of Uerdingen is situated directly on the Rhine. Krefeld is accessed by the autobahns A57 (Cologne - Nijmegen) and the A44 (Aachen - Düsseldorf - Dortmund - Kassel)
Krefeld is also called the "Velvet and Silk City".
Since 1962, the city hosted an "honors program in foreign language (German) studies" for high school students from Indiana/USA. The program annually places approximately thirty carefully selected high school juniors with families in and around Krefeld for intensive German language training.[2]
Krefeld's residents speak Hochdeutsch, the standard German taught to all people in Germany. However, the native dialect is a Low German variety, sometimes locally called Krefelder Plattdeutsch, Krieewelsch Platt, Plattdeutsch, or sometimes simply Platt. The Uerdingen line isogloss, separating general dialectical areas in Germany and neighbouring Germanic-speaking countries, runs through and is named after Krefeld's Uerdingen district, originally an independent municipality. And also, Class 380 are built here.[3]
Contents
History
The origins of the town were in Roman times, when the legions founded the military camp of Gelduba (today the borough of Gellep). Krefeld itself was first mentioned in 1105 under the name of Krinvelde. Uerdingen was originally an independent town east of Krefeld, founded in 1255. In medieval times it was larger and more important than Krefeld.
The growth of the town began in the 17th century, when Krefeld was one of few towns spared the horrors of the Thirty Years' War. Because the town was quickly overpopulated, in 1683 a group of thirteen families (Mennonites) left Krefeld, crossed the Atlantic and founded the settlement of Germantown (now incorporated in Philadelphia), thus beginning the Pennsylvania German ethnic identity. The town of Uerdingen was less fortunate; it was completely destroyed in the Thirty Years' War by troops from Hesse and almost ceased to exist.
After the 1702 death of William III of Orange, Krefeld passed to the Kingdom of Prussia. The Battle of Krefeld occurred nearby in 1758 during the Seven Years' War. Krefeld and Uerdingen were included within the Prussian Province of Jülich-Cleves-Berg in 1815 (after 1822 the Rhine Province. In 1872 Krefeld became an independent city within Rhenish Prussia. In 1918 it became the base of the Belgian Army during the occupation of the Rhineland. In 1929 Krefeld and Uerdingen merged to form Krefeld-Uerdingen; in 1940 the name was shortened to simply Krefeld. The town became part of the new state of North Rhine-Westphalia after World War II.
Points of interest
- Castle of Linn
- Botanischer Garten Krefeld, a municipal botanical garden
- Lange and Esters Houses, a couple of neighbouring houses by early Mies van der Rohe, nowadays serving as local contemporary art museum venues.[4]
- Zoo Krefeld
Districts
There are a number of districts in Krefeld. Each has a municipal representative, with representatives chosen by local elections. The districts are:
- Benrad-Nord
- Benrad-Süd
- Bockum, pop: about 21.903, elevation: 35 m, postal code: 47800 (old: 4150 Krefeld 1)
- Cracau
- Dießem/Lehmheide
- Fischeln
- Königshof, a part of Fischeln
- Forstwald
- Gartenstadt
- Gellep-Stratum
- Hüls
- Hülser Berg
- Inrath/Kliedbruch
- Kempener Feld/Baackeshof
- Linn
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- Linn, with its own history reaching to between 1090 and 1120, was situated on the banks of the Rhine. There is in Linn a park built around a Wasserburg, a castle built at the water's edge, and with a water-filled moat. The Burg Linn, as the castle is known, has been preserved for the city's residents as a park and museum.[5]
- Oppum
- Stadtmitte
- Traar, pop: about 5,000, postal code: 47802
- Uerdingen, pop: about 18,507, elevation: 31 m, postal code: 47829
- Verberg
Annexations
Here are the old cities and places that were incorporated into Krefeld:
- 1901: Linn (Stadtrecht since 1314)
- 1907: Bockum, Verberg und Oppum (all mayoralty Bockum)
- 1929:
- Krefeld became an independent city
- Uerdingen, Krefeld (received municipal law in 1255/1344, added Hohenbudberg in today's Duisburg district Friemersheim)
- Fischeln, Krefeld district
- Traar, Krefeld district
- Gellep and Stratum (in Lank), Krefeld district
- Forstwald (Vorst), Krefeld district
- Benrad und Hülserberg (Hüls), Kempen
- 1975: Locality of Hüls from Kempen (since 1970 integrated and belonged since 1929 to the Kempen-Krefeld district; in 1936 Orbroich had been independent)
Historical population of Krefeld
Year Population 1604 350 1722 1,499 1787 7,896 1830 18,511 1871 57,105 1875 ¹ 62,905 1880 73,872 1 December 1890 ¹ 105,376 2 December 1895 ¹ 107,245 1 December 1900 ¹ 106,928 1 December 1905 ¹ 110,344 1 December 1910 ¹ 129,406 8 October 1919 ¹ 124,325 Year Population 16 June 1925 ¹ 131,098 16 June 1933 ¹ 165,305 17 May 1939 ¹ 170,968 13 September 1950 ¹ 171,875 6 June 1961 ¹ 213,104 31 December 1970 222,700 30 June 1975 230,500 30 June 1980 223,400 30 June 1985 217,000 1 January 1989 235,423 30 June 1997 246,800 31 December 2003 238,565 31 December 2007 240,548 ¹ Census data
Mayors of Krefeld from 1848
- 1848 - 1872: Ludwig Heinrich Ondereyck
- 1872 - 1881: Friedrich Christian Roos
- 1882 - 1903: Ernst Küper
- 1903 - 1905: Wilhelm Hammerschmidt
- 1905 - 1911: Adalbert Oehler
- 1911 - 1930: Johannes Johansen
- 1945 - 1946: Johannes Stepkes
- 1946 - 1947: Wilhelm Warsch
- 1947 - 1949: Hermann Passen
- 1949 - 1951: Hanns Müller (FDP)
- 1951 - 1956: Johannes Hauser (CDU)
- 1956 - 1961: Josef Hellenbrock (SPD)
- 1961 - 1968: Herbert van Hüllen (CDU)
- 1968 - 1982: Hansheinz Hauser (CDU)
- 1982 - 1989: Dieter Pützhofen, first term in office (CDU)
- 1989 - 1994: Willi Wahl (SPD)
- 1994 - 2004: Dieter Pützhofen, second term in office (CDU)
- 2004–present: Gregor Kathstede (CDU)
City counsellors 1946 until 1999
- 1946 - 1949: Johan Stepkes
- 1949 - 1964: Bernhard Heun
- 1964 - 1986: Hermann Steffens
- 1986 - 1988: Alfred Dahlmann
- 1988 - 1999: Heinz-Josef Vogt
Transport
Krefeld is connected to the Deutsche Bahn network with several stations, including its main station, Krefeld Hauptbahnhof. They are served only by Regional-Express and Regionalbahn trains. The Düsseldorf-based Rheinbahn operates a Stadtbahn service to the centrally located Rheinstraße stop. This line was the first electric inter-city rail line in Europe, established in 1898, and commonly called the K-Bahn because of the letter "K" used to denote the trains to Krefeld. Nowadays, in the VRR notation, it is called U76, with the morning express trains numbered as U70, the line number there being of a red colour, instead of the usual blue used for U-Bahn lines. The term K-Bahn, however, prevails in common usage.
The city of Krefeld itself operates four tramway and several bus lines under the umbrella of SWK Mobil, a city-owned company. Since 2010 19 of the oldest trams of the type DUEWAG GT8 were replaced by modern barrier-free trams of the type Bombardier Flexity Outlook. SWK Mobil owns an option to buy another 19 trams of the same type to replace the last 19 DUEWAG M8 trams. The whole tram-fleet will then be barrier-free. Next to that the city plans to extend the line 044 in Krefeld-Hüls to connect the northern district of Hüls with the Krefeld downtown area in.
Economy
The headquarters of Fressnapf, a pet food retailer franchise company, are situated in Krefeld.
Sister Cities
Country City County / District / Region / State Date Netherlands Venlo Venlo 1964 England Leicester Leicestershire 1969 France Dunkirk Nord 1974 Netherlands Leiden South Holland 1974 United States Charlotte North Carolina 1986 Germany Beeskow Brandenburg 1990 Russia Ulyanovsk Ulyanovsk Oblast 1993 Turkey Kayseri Kayseri Province 2009 Notable natives
Scientists:
- Rudi Dornbusch (1 December, 8 June 1942 - 25 July 2002), German economist
- Max Zorn (6 June 1906 - 9 March 1993 in Bloomington, Indiana), German mathematician
- Leopold Löwenheim, logician
Writers, poets and journalists:
- Kurt Feltz (14 April 1910 - 3 August, 1982 in Majorca) - poet
- Werner Ross (1912 in Uerdingen - 2002), German writer
- Otto Brües (1 May 1897 - 18 April 1967) - a journalist
Musicians:
- Blind Guardian, popular German heavy metal
- Everon, German progressive metal
- Ralf Hütter (20 August 1946), Lead Singer of Electronic Music Pioneers Kraftwerk
- Aquagen, popular German trance and techno artists
- Heinrich Band (1821–1860)
- Andrea Berg, popular German singer
- Cosmic Gate, popular German trance duo
Artists:
- Joseph Beuys (12 May 1921 - 1986), German artist
- Heinrich Campendonk (3 November 1889 - 9 May 1957 in Amsterdam)
- Albert Oehlen, German artist
- Markus Oehlen, German artist
- Marc Margielsky, German artist
Aviators:
- Felix Kracht (1912–2002), aerospace engineer, an Airbus pioneer and former Senior Vice President
- Werner Voss (13 April 1897 - 23 September 1917), German World War I aviator
- Emil Schäfer (17 December 1891 – 5 June 1917), German World War I aviator
Sportspeople:
- Martin Hyun, German and U.S. hockey player
- Frank Schwinghammer a German and Canadian hockey player.
References
- ^ "Amtliche Bevölkerungszahlen" (in German). Landesbetrieb Information und Technik NRW. 31 December 2010. http://www.it.nrw.de/statistik/a/daten/amtlichebevoelkerungszahlen/index.html.
- ^ Indiana.edu
- ^ Uerdingen Line
- ^ Kunstmuseenkrefeld.de
- ^ Herzlich willkommen im Museumszentrum Burg Linn! Besuchen Sie unser Museum
External links
- Official city website
- Map of the districts of Krefeld
- Krefeld-Linner Flachsmarkt
- Krefeld Icehockeyteam
- KFC Uerdingen
- Stadttheater Krefeld
- Krefelds Veranstaltungen, Events, Termine
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Categories:- Cities in North Rhine-Westphalia
- Krefeld
- Populated places on the Rhine
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