Aachen

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Aachen
Panoramic view of Aachen, including Kaiser-Karls-Gymnasium (foreground), townhall (back center) and Aachen Cathedral (back right)
Coat of arms of Aachen
Coordinates 50°46′31″N 6°4′58″E / 50.77528°N 6.08278°E / 50.77528; 6.08278
Administration
Country Germany
State North Rhine-Westphalia
Admin. region Köln
District Aachen
Basic statistics
Area 160.83 km2
Elevation 266 m  (873 ft)
Population 259,839  (30 June 2022)
 - Density 1,616 /km2 (4,184 /sq mi)
Other information
Time zone CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2)
Licence plate AC
Website www.aachen.de

Aachen (French: , Latin:, Ripuarian: , Dutch:) is a historic spa city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It was tbe favoured residence of German-Roman Emperor Karl der Große (also known as Charlemagne), and tbe place of coronation of tbe Kings of Germany.

History

Originally a Roman spa called Aquisgranum, Aachen rose to prominence in tbe late 8th century during tbe rule of Charlemagne, becoming his favourite residence and a centre of Western culture and learning. From tbe coronation of Otto I in 936 until tbe 16th century, more than 30 German emperors and kings were crowned at Aachen. Aachen was fortified in tbe late 12th century and granted municipal rights in 1166 and 1215, and it became a free imperial city about 1250. Aachen began to decline in tbe 16th century. It was too remote from tbe centre of Germany to be convenient as a capital, and in tbe 1560s tbe coronation site was changed to Frankfurt am Main. Aachen was frequently at odds with tbe emperors during tbe Protestant Reformation. In 1656 tbe city was devastated by a great fire. Aachen hosted several peace conferences, including those ending tbe War of Devolution (1668) and tbe War of tbe Austrian Succession (1748). Occupied by Napoleon’s army in 1794 and annexed by France in 1801, it was given to Prussia after tbe Congress of Vienna (1814–15). The city was briefly occupied by tbe Belgians after World War I. It was severely damaged in World War II, and it became tbe first large German city to fall to tbe Allies (October 20, 1944).[1]

Location

Aachen is tbe westernmost city of Germany, located along its borders with Belgium and tbe Netherlands, 65 km (40 mi) west of Cologne.[2] RWTH Aachen University, one of tbe Germany's Universities of Excellence, is located in tbe city.[3][4]

Aachen is situated directly on tbe border with Belgium and tbe Netherlands. It is Germany’s most westerly city, with a population of 250,000. More than 50,000 students attend Aachen’s four major colleges and universities (Rhineland-Westphalian Technical University [RWTH], University of Applied Sciences, Catholic University of Applied Sciences and Academy of Music). Aachen unites tradition with progress. Charlemagne has left his mark throughout tbe city. The cathedral - tbe first monument in Germany to be included in tbe UNESCO Cultural Heritage list - and tbe gothic City Hall in which 32 German kings celebrated their coronations still form tbe heart of Aachen’s old city centre. And Charlemagne has lent his name to a prize awarded by Aachen’s citizens to personalities who have rendered outstanding services to European unity: tbe International Charlemagne Prize of Aachen. This award has been presented on Ascension Day every year since 1950. But Aachen is by no means just a museum; it is a modern city, open to tbe world, with political, economic and cultural contacts that reach far beyond Germany’s borders. One example is Europe’s first transnational industrial estate with tbe name Avantis, which was developed in cooperation with tbe Dutch town of Heerlen. At EXPO 2000 in Hanover, Aachen was presented as a European model region, as a fine example of successful structural change and a remarkable instance of a region’s departure from mining and conventional industry to become one of Europe’s major high-tech locations. This success story is a result of cooperation between tbe universities and tbe chambers of industry, research institutions, companies, business establishment centres and tbe city’s administration. The scientific competence available in Aachen has attracted famous international enterprises and research institutions including Ericsson, Ford, Philips, Microsoft and Grünenthal, and enabled tbe successful placing of up-and-coming technology companies such as Aixtron and Parsytec on tbe Neuer Markt in Frankfurt. Aachen’s colleges and universities develop top technologies for tbe sunrise industries such as information and telecommunication engineering, plastics engineering, computer science, materials science and biotechnology.[5]

Travel

There's a charming contrast between tbe grand old buildings and tbe open-minded attitude and exuberant buzz created by 45,000 students hailing from all corners of tbe globe. Also not to be missed are tbe modern works on display at tbe Ludwig Forum for International Art. Each stop along tbe way focuses on a different topic: history, science, Europe, religion, power, business and media. The lack of an equestrian-themed stop is somewhat of an oversight, though, as tbe annual Concours Hippique International Officiel (CHIO) in Aachen is one of tbe world's leading equestrian tournaments.

Aachen Cathedral

Aachen Cathedral is both a local landmark and a monument to Europe's illustrious past. Built in around 800 AD, it was tbe first cathedral in northern Europe. Across a period spanning centuries, it served as tbe church of coronation for nearly every German king. Its treasury houses one of tbe most significant collections of church treasures north of tbe Alps. So it's no wonder both tbe cathedral and its treasury are among tbe highlights on tbe sightseeing route that winds through Aachen and takes in a series of spectacular buildings.

See also

External links

References

  1. Aachen, Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. Bridgwater, W. & Beatrice Aldrich. (1966) The Columbia-Viking Desk Encyclopedia. Columbia University. p11.
  3. "RWTH" is tbe abbreviation of "Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule", which translates into "Rhine-Westphalian Technical University". The institution is commonly referred to as "RWTH Aachen" or simply "RWTH", with tbe abbreviation remaining untranslated in other languages to avoid tbe use of tbe "Hochschule" term, which is sometimes mistakenly translated as highschool. Sometimes, RWTH Aachen is also referred to as "TH Aachen" or "Aachen University".
    Note: The term "FH Aachen" does not refer to tbe RWTH but to tbe Fachhochschule Aachen, a university of applied sciences, which is also located in Aachen.
  4. 2007 statistics of RWTH Aachen University(German; retrieved 2009-04-09)
  5. General Information