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Emden

Emden is a city and seaport in the northwest of Germany, on the river Ems. It is the main city of the region of East Frisia; in 2006, the city had a total population of 51,692.

History
The New Church in Emden (1648).

The exact founding date of Emden is unknown, but it has existed at least since the 8th century. Older names for Emden are Amuthon, Embda, Emda, Embden. Town privilege and the city's coat of arms, the Engelke up de Muer (The Little Angel on the Wall) was granted by Emperor Maximilian II in 1495.

Emden was a very rich city during the 17th century, due to large numbers of Dutch immigrants such as Diederik Jansz. Graeff. It was a centre of reformed Protestantism at that time, producing the first Bible translation in Dutch.

In 1744 Emden was annexed by Prussia. In 1752 Frederick the Great chartered the Emden Company to trade with Canton, but the company was ruined when Emden was captured by French forces in 1757 during the Seven Years' War. The town was recaptured by Anglo-German forces in 1758 and for the rest of the conflict was used as a major supply base by the British to support the ongoing war in Westphalia.

During the Napoleonic French era, Emden and the surrounding lands of East Frisia were part of the short-lived Kingdom of Holland.

Industrialization started at around 1870, with a paper mill and a somewhat bigger shipyard. At the end of the 19th century, a big canal, the Dortmund-Ems Canal was constructed, which connected Emden with the Ruhr area. This made Emden the "seaport of the Ruhr area" - which lasted until the 1970s. Coal from the south was transported to the North Sea port, and imported iron ore was shipped via the canal towards Rhine and the Ruhr. The last iron ore freighter was moored in the port of Emden in 1986.

In 1903, a large shipyard (Nordseewerke, "North Sea Works") was founded which still exists today.
Satellite image of the Ems estuary showing Emden (right bank, center right)
Emden (upper left) is near the North Sea, west of Hamburg, northwest of Bremen and Hannover.

The city centre was almost completely wiped out as a result of allied bombing raids during the Second World War, destroying nearly all historic buildings. The most severe bombing took place on September 6, 1944, when roughly 80 percent of all houses in the inner city were destroyed. In the collective memory of the city, this date still plays an important role. It needs to be noted that the shipyard area was largely untouched: The British apparently targeted the civilian areas, which is believed by the locals to have been in revenge for the bombing of an English city by the Luftwaffe. The reconstructed town was opened on 6 September 1962, exactly 18 years after the bombing.
Economy

The main industries in Emden are automobile production and shipbuilding. Volkswagen runs a large production plant which builds the Volkswagen Passat car and which employs around 10,000 people. Emden is also one of the three main ports for car shipping in Europe (together with Zeebrugge in Belgium and Bremerhaven in Germany). More than 850,000 cars were imported and exported in 2005. The Nordseewerke shipyard, a subsidiary of ThyssenKrupp, employs around 1,400 dockers and specializes in conventional submarines. It also produces different kinds of cargo ships as well as ships for special purposes such as icebreakers, dredgers and other ships of that type.

Another important economic sector is tourism, mainly as a day trip destination for tourists staying in the surrounding villages on the North Sea coastline.

A university of applied sciences (Fachhochschule) was opened in 1973. At present, around 3500 students are enrolled, most of them studying for technical degrees.

The airline Ostfriesische Lufttransport has its headquarters in Emden.[2]
Sports

The highest playing football (soccer) club is BSV Kickers Emden in the Third German League. The capacity of the stadium is 7,200, due to safety objections of the German Football Association. In 1994, some 12,000 spectators followed a match against the reserves squad of Hamburger SV, which still is the record. In that season, Kickers Emden became the champion of the 3rd League, but failed to be promoted to the Second League since the team lost the promotion round.

Since Emden is not only located close to the North Sea, but also to the river Ems and various small rivers and canals, boat sports are very popular among inhabitants and tourists.
Famous people from Emden

Johannes Althusius (1563-1638), Legal scholar, Calvinist political theorist, town counsel and politician
Jacob Emden (1697-1776), rabbi
Henri Nannen, (1913-1996), publisher and publicist
Karl Dall (*1941), presenter, singer and comedian
Wolfgang Petersen (*1941), film director and producer
Otto Waalkes (*1948), comedian, comic artist, singer and actor
Ferydoon Zandi (*1979), football player
Jasper Marz (*1986), musician and singer

Ships and places named after the city
Retired light vessel Amrumbank in front of Emden town hall.
The Town Hall (Rathaus)

Three German light cruisers were named after the city, two of which served in World War I and the third in World War II. Today, the fifth Navy ship named after the city is in service.

SMS Emden (1906), a light cruiser in the Kaiserliche Marine, Bay of Bengal, Battle of Cocos
Emden (1911), schooner, renamed Duhnen, then Brigantine Yankee; made four circumnavigations
SMS Emden (1916), a light cruiser in the Kaiserliche Marine
Emden (1925), a light cruiser in the Kriegsmarine, Operation Weserübung
F210 Emden (1979), Bremen class frigate of the German Navy

A deep sea spot in the Pacific Ocean close to the Philippines is named after the "third" Emden ship, and is therefore called Emdentief in German. The spot (10,400 m deep) was sounded in the 1920s (in 1920, 1923 or 1928 - sources vary).

In addition, the village of Emden, Illinois in the United States was named after Jacob Emden[3] due to the large number of emigrants from Emden to the village in northwestern Logan County, Illinois.
International relations
See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany

Emden is twinned with:

England London Borough of Hillingdon, England
Russia Archangelsk, Russia
Germany Prenzlau, Brandenburg

References

^ "Bevölkerungsdichte der kreisfreien Städte und Landkreise - Stand 31.12.2010" (in German). Landesbetrieb für Statistik und Kommunikationstechnologie Niedersachsen. July 2011.
^ "Imprint." (Archive) Ostfriesische Lufttransport. Retrieved on 4 August 2011. "Gorch-Fock-Str. 103 26721 Emden Germany"
^ Emdenil.com

From Wikipedia, All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

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