Koblenz

Koblenz
/koh"blents/, n.
Coblenz.

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or Coblenz ancient Confluentes

City (pop., 2002 est.: 107,730), western Germany.

Situated at the junction of the Rhine and Moselle rivers, it was founded by the Romans in 9 BC. It was a Frankish royal seat in the 6th century AD and was chartered as a city in 1214. The French occupied the city in 1794, and it passed to Prussia in 1815. After World War I, Koblenz was the seat of the Inter-Allied Control Commission for the Rhineland (1919–29). Devastated in World War II, it has since been restored. It is a centre for the German wine trade; other industries include tourism and the manufacture of furniture, clothing, and chemicals.

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also spelled  Coblenz 
 city, Rhineland-Palatinate Land (state), western Germany. It lies at the junction of the Rhine (Rhine River) and Moselle (Moselle River) (Mosel) rivers (hence its Roman name, Confluentes) and is surrounded by spurs from the Eifel, Hunsrück, Westerwald, and Taunus mountains. A Roman town founded in 9 BC, it was a Frankish royal seat in the 6th century and was given to the archbishops of Trier in 1018 by the Holy Roman emperor Henry II. It was chartered in 1214. After passing to Prussia in 1815, it was the capital (1824–1945) of the Prussian Rhine Province. After World War I it was the seat of the Inter-Allied Control Commission for the Rhineland (1919–29). Although most of Koblenz was destroyed in World War II, many of its historic buildings have been restored, the reconstruction giving the city a spacious, modern appearance.

      Koblenz has long been a major commercial centre, and it is also an important military post and administrative centre. Its diverse industries include the manufacture of aluminum products, data-processing equipment, screws, shock absorbers, brakes, and paper products and the brewing of beer. Printing is also important. Other industries are clustered on the city's outskirts, and the rebuilt harbour on the Moselle is one of the larger mid-Rhine petroleum ports. The surrounding countryside, rich in woods and lakes, makes the city a hub of river traffic and a popular base for conferences and tourists. Weindorf (“Wine Village”), on the banks of the Rhine, is a focal point for the promotion of the German wine trade.

      The Ehrenbreitstein Fortress and suburb across the Rhine were incorporated into Koblenz in 1937. A castle, first built on the site in the 11th century, passed to the archbishops of Trier in the 12th century; destroyed by the French in 1801 after a four-year siege, it was rebuilt (1816–32) into one of the strongest fortresses in Europe. Ehrenbreitstein now houses a history and folklore museum. The old fortress on the Moselle (1280–87) and the rebuilt Electoral Palace (1780–86) formerly belonged to the electors of Trier. Medieval churches include St. Castor's (836) and the Liebfrauenkirche (Church of Our Lady) and St. Florin's (both 12th century). The town hall (1690–1700) was once a Jesuit college. Other notable buildings include the rebuilt Deutschherrenhaus (1216), the Metternich house, where Austrian statesman Prince Klemens von Metternich (Metternich, Klemens, Fürst von) (1773–1859) was born, and the municipal theatre (1787).

      The Moselle is crossed by the Baldwin Bridge (built by the elector Baldwin in 1343), and the point of land at the junction of the Rhine and Moselle, the Deutsches Eck (German Corner), was dedicated to German reunification in 1953. Koblenz has several educational establishments, including the University of Koblenz-Landau and a number of technical institutes and federal and state administrative institutions. The Middle Rhine Museum contains an important collection of art and historical artifacts. Pop. (2003 est.) 107,608.

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Universalium. 2010.

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