Geldern

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Coordinates: 51°31′N, 6°20′E

Geldern
Coat of arms of Geldern Location of Geldern in Germany

Country Germany
State North Rhine-Westphalia
Administrative region Düsseldorf
District Cleves
Population 34,000 source (2005)
Area 96.91 km²
Population density 351 /km²
Elevation 27 m
Coordinates 51°31′ N 6°20′ E
Postal code 47591-47608
Area code 02831
Licence plate code KLE
Mayor Ulrich Janssen (CDU)
Website geldern.de

Geldern (Dutch: Gelderen) is a city in the northwest of the federal state North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is part of the district of Cleves, which is part of the administrative region Düsseldorf.

Contents

Geldern lies in the plains of the lower, northern Rhineland, west of the Rhine. Its average elevation is 27 m AMSL. The river Niers, a tributary of the Meuse, flows through Geldern. The stream Gelderner Fleuth flows into the Niers in Geldern.

Geldern is subdivided into the following boroughs:

  • Geldern
  • Hartefeld
  • Kapellen
  • Lüllingen
  • Pont
  • Veert
  • Vernum
  • Walbeck

Geldern shares borders with Kevelaer and Sonsbeck to the north, Issum to the east, Kerken and Straelen to the south, and the Dutch municipalities Arcen en Velden and Bergen to the west.

The first coat of arms of the city of Geldern was a shield with three medlars, referring to an event in the dragon legend, see below. The lion of Guelders, recognizable in the present coat of arms, has been used since the Middle Ages.

According to folk legend, local noblemen Wichard and Lupold of Pont fought a fire-breathing dragon around 878. They found it under a medlar trea, and one of them stabbed it with his spear. The dying dragon rattled two or three times: Gelre! Gelre!. In commemoration of this heroic feat, the Lords of Pont founded the city of Geldern at the confluence of the Niers and the Fleuth.

The city of Geldern was first documented in 812. Several versions of the name have been used: Gelre, Gielra, Gellero, Gelera and similar. The probable ancestor of the Counts of Guelders was Gerhard Flamens, who received Wassenberg as a fief from Emperor Henry II in 1020. His great-grandson Gerhard IV of Wassenberg was the first to call himself Count of Guelders (as Gerhard I), from 1096. The title "count" came from other properties, probably in Teisterbant. From 1125 only the title of Guelders was used. Wassenberg itself was given to the Duke of Limburg (and later to Jülich) as a wedding gift in 1107. The counts of Guelders moved their residence to the castle in Geldern, that was built probably around this date at the crossing of the Niers. The castle and the accompanying medieval settlement were the origin of the present city, and also gave its name to the county and later duchy of Guelders.

The settlement was fortified in the 13th century with earth and stone walls and moats. The walls were named after the four cardinal directions and had three gates. Geldern received city rights in 1229. It was the residence of the counts and dukes of Guelders until 1343, and capital of the Upper Quarter of Guelders until 1347. The monastery of the Carmelites was built in the early 14th century. The Late Gothic parish church of Mary Magdalene was built between 1400 and 1418.

Often in its history, Geldern lay in the battlefield of territorial disputes. It was subordinate to Spanish rule from 1543 until 1578, when it was occupied by the Dutch. By treason Geldern returned to Spanish control in 1587, which lasted until 1703. During this period (more exactly between 1662 and 1664) the castle Haag (first documented in 1337, located 1 km north of Geldern) was expanded. Since World War II only the outer castle remains.

From 1701 until 1714 the War of the Spanish Succession took place. The city was under Prussian siege since February 1703, but only surrendered on 21 December. At the end of the war, at the 1713 Treaty of Utrecht, the previously Spanish Upper Quarter of Guelders was divided over four powers: Austria, the United Provinces, Prussia and the Duchy of Jülich. With the larger part of the forler Upper Quarter, Geldern fell to Prussia and became the seat of administration of Prussian Guelders. King Frederick II of Prussia visited Geldern in August 1740. He ordered the demolition of the city fortifications in 1764.

Between 1794 and 1814 Geldern was occupied by the French. They disbanded the old structures and created a new, more strict administration. The canton of Geldern was part of the arrondissement of Cleves, which was a part of the département of the Roer. In 1802 the monastery of the Carmelites was secularized.

In the course of the Prussian reorganization of administration, the district of Geldern was formed on 23 April 1816. It was one of over 40 rural districts of the province Jülich-Kleve-Berg, the northern half of the later Rhine Province. In 1863 the railway line Cologne - Krefeld - Geldern - Cleves was opened, and a narrow-gauge local line in 1902 (closed in 1932).

In World War II Geldern was bombed several times, at the end of 1944 and on 14 February 1945, which led to severe devastations in the city centre. Only a few houses were saved, about 82 % was destroyed. The parish church was also severely damaged, and the main building of castle Haag was completely destroyed. The parish church of Mary Magdalene was rebuilt in 1952, and redecorated in 2003/2004.

The population of Geldern is mostly catholic. There are several catholic churches, including the historically important parish church of Mary Magdalene at the market square. There are two protestant churches: the Holy Spirit church near the market, and one in the borough Walbeck.

The present composition of the city of Geldern was created at the territorial reorganization of North Rhine-Westphalia, on 1 July 1969. The municipalities of Kapellen, Vernum, Pont, Veert and Walbeck were incorporated into Geldern.

On 1 January 1975 the former districts of Cleves and Geldern and parts of the districts of Moers and Rees were merged to form the new district of Cleves.

Year Population
1885 5.690
1885 5.690
1905 6.551
1937 7.228
1946 5.288
31 May 2003 33.314

There is an approx. 60 km long cycle path along the Fossa Eugeniana, a never completed canal from the Rhine near Rheinberg to the Meuse near Venlo. Hiking is possible around the former castle Haag, part of which still remains, and is home to a.o. a golf club. A mill tower and the refectory of the 16th century former monastery of Augustinian nuns. There are some wind mills in the vicinity.

Every summer Geldern hosts a street art contest, which attracts international artists. Geldern has the largest Whitsun funfair of the lower Rhine, a street party in summer, and a Christmas Market. Several other events are organized in summer.

Geldern is twinned with Fürstenberg in Brandenburg (Germany), and with Bree in Belgium.

Geldern is served by the airports Weeze Airport (20 km) and Düsseldorf International Airport (55 km).

The Deutsche Bahn railway station of Geldern lies on the line from Cleves to Düsseldorf via Krefeld. There are two trains per hour. Buses are used for public transport in the city and the surrounding area.

Geldern is connected to the German motorways 40 (E 34) and 57 (E 31) by the federal roads B9 and B58.

  • Lydia Hüskens, deutsche Politikerin
  • Dominic Saleh-Zaki, deutscher Schauspieler und Sänger
  • Xenia Seeberg, deutsche Schauspielerin
  • Thomas Struth, deutscher Fotograf

  • Geldrischer Heimatkalender, Historischer Verein für Geldern und Umgegend (Herausgeber), erscheint jährlich
  • Irmgard Hantsche, Geldern Atlas - Karten und Texte zur Geschichte eines Territoriums, Geldern 2003, ISBN 3-921760-39-9
  • Johannes Stinner und Karl-Heinz Tekath, Gelre -- Geldern -- Gelderland - Geschichte und Kultur des Herzogtums Geldern, Geldern 2001, Verlag des Historischen Vereins für Geldern und Umgegend, ISBN 3-921760-31-3
  • Heinz Bosch, Illustrierte Geschichte der Stadt Geldern 1848-1969, Band I: Von den revolutionären Ereignissen 1848 bis zum Ausbruch des ersten Weltkriegs 1914, Geldern 1994
  • Gregor Hövelmann, Geschichte des Kreises Geldern. Eine Skizze. Erster Teil: 1816-1866, Geldern 1974


Geldern is the material pedigree of (Heinrich) Heine

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