Aachen is the 13th-largest city in North Rhine-Westphalia and the 27th-largest city of Germany, with around 261,000 inhabitants.
Aachen is located at the northern foothills of the High Fens and the Eifel Mountains. It sits on the Wurm River, a tributary of the Rur, and together with Mönchengladbach, it is the only larger German city in the drainage basin of the Meuse. It is the westernmost larger city in Germany, lying approximately west of Cologne and Bonn, directly bordering Belgium in the southwest, and the Netherlands in the northwest. The city lies in the Meuse–Rhine Euroregion and is the seat of the district of Aachen (Städteregion Aachen).
The once Celts settlement was equipped with several thermae in the course of colonization by Roman people pioneers settling at the warm Aachen thermal springs around the 1st century. After the withdrawal of the Roman troops, the vicus Aquae Granni was Franks around the 5th century. This was followed by a period of sedentism under first Merovingian and then Carolingian rule. With the completion of the Carolingian Palace of Aachen at the transition to the 9th century, Aachen was constituted as the main royal residence of the Frankish Empire ruled by Charlemagne. Because of that the city is sometimes called "cradle of Europe". After the Treaty of Verdun, the city was within the borders of Middle Francia, until it became part of East Francia after the Treaty of Meerssen (870). It subsequently was part of the Holy Roman Empire and was granted city rights in 1166 by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, becoming an imperial city. It served as the coronation site where 31 Holy Roman Emperors were crowned Kings of the Germans from 936 to 1531, until Frankfurt became the preferred place of coronation.
One of Germany's leading institutes of higher education in technology, the RWTH Aachen University (Rheinisch-Westfälisch Technische Hochschule Aachen), is located in the city. Its university hospital Uniklinikum Aachen is Europe's largest single-building hospital. Aachen's industries include science, engineering and information technology. In 2009, Aachen was ranked eighth among cities in Germany for innovation.
The Aachen dialect spoken in the city is a Central Franconian, Ripuarian variant with strong Limburgish influences from the dialects in the neighbouring Netherlands. As a Rhenish city, Aachen is one of the main centres of carnival celebrations in Germany, along with Cologne Carnival and Mainz carnival. The culinary specialty for which the city is best known is Aachener Printen, a type of gingerbread.
The city is known by a variety of different names in other languages:
Aachen dialect | italic=no | |
Basque language | Akisgran | |
Catalan language | italic=no | , |
Czech language | italic=no | |
Dutch language / Low German | italic=no | |
French | italic=no | |
Greek language | Ακυίσγρανον (Akyísgranon) | |
Italian language | italic=no | |
Latin | italic=no, italic=no, italic=no | |
Limburgish | italic=no | |
Luxembourgish | italic=no | |
Occitan language | Aquisgran, Ais d'Alemanha
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Polish language | italic=no | |
Portuguese | italic=no, italic=no | , |
Russian language | Ахен (Akhen) | |
Spanish language | italic=no | |
Walloon language | italic=no |
The 25-hectare Roman spa resort town of Aquae Granni was, according to legend, founded by Grenus, under Hadrian, around 124 AD. Grenus refers to the Celtic god, and it seems it was the Roman 6th Legion at the start of the 1st century AD that first channelled the hot springs into a spa at Büchel, adding at the end of the same century the Münstertherme spa,. two water pipelines, and a probable sanctuary dedicated to Grannus. A kind of forum, surrounded by colonnades, connected the two spa complexes. There was an extensive residential area. The Romans built bathhouses near Burtscheid. A temple precinct called Vernenum was built near the modern Kornelimünster/Walheim. Today, remains have been found of three bathhouses,. including two fountains in the Elisenbrunnen and the Burtscheid bathhouse.
Roman civil administration in Aachen eventually broke down as the baths and other public buildings (along with most of the villae rusticae of the surrounding countryside) were destroyed around AD 375 at the start of the migration period. The last Roman coin finds are from the time of Emperor Gratian (AD 375–383). Rome withdrew its troops from the area, but the town remained populated. By 470, the town came to be ruled by the Ripuarian Franks. and subordinated to their capital, Cologne. During the Roman period, Aachen was the site of a flourishing Jewish community..
Charlemagne spent most winters in Aachen between 792 and his death in 814. Aachen became the focus of his court and the political centre of his empire. During the Carolingian empire, a Jewish community lived near the royal palace. In Jewish texts, the city of Aachen was called Aish or Ash (אש). In 797, Isaac, a Jewish merchant, accompanied two ambassadors of Charlemagne to the court of Harun al-Rashid. He returned to Aachen in July 802, bearing an elephant called Abul-Abbas as a gift for the emperor. After Charlemagne's death, he was buried in the church which he had built;. his original tomb has been lost, while his alleged remains are preserved in the Karlsschrein, the shrine where he was reburied after being declared a saint; his saintliness, however, was never officially acknowledged by the Roman Curia as such. In 936, Otto I was crowned king of East Francia in the collegiate church built by Charlemagne. During the reign of Otto II, the nobles revolted and the West Francia under Lothair. raided Aachen in 978.. Aachen was attacked again by Odo of Champagne, who attacked the imperial palace while Conrad II was absent. Odo relinquished it and was killed afterwards.. The palace and town of Aachen had fortifying walls built by order of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa between 1172 and 1176. Over the next 500 years, most kings of Germany who ruled the Holy Roman Empire were crowned in Aachen. The original audience hall built by Charlemagne was torn down and replaced by the current Aachen Rathaus in 1330. During the 13th century, many Jews converted to Christianity, as shown in the records of the Aachen Cathedral (today's Cathedral). In 1486, the Jews of Aachen offered gifts to Maximilian I during his coronation ceremony. The last king to be crowned here was Ferdinand I in 1531.
During the Middle Ages, Aachen remained a city of regional importance, due to its proximity to Flanders; it achieved a modest position in the trade in cloths, favoured by imperial privilege. The city remained a free imperial city, subject to the emperor only, but was politically far too weak to influence the policies of any of its neighbours. The only dominion it had was over Burtscheid, a neighbouring territory ruled by a Benedictine abbess, which was forced to accept that all of its traffic must pass through the "Aachener Reich".
As an imperial city, Aachen held certain political privileges that allowed it to remain independent of the troubles of Europe for many years. It remained a direct vassal of the Holy Roman Empire throughout most of the Middle Ages. It was also the site of many important church councils, including the Council of 837 and the Council of 1166, a council convened by the antipope Paschal III.
In 1542, the Dutch humanist and physician Francis Fabricius published his study of the health benefits of the hot springs in Aachen. By the middle of the 17th century, the city had developed a considerable reputation as a spa, although this was in part because Aachen was then – and remained well into the 19th and early 20th century – a place of high-level prostitution. Traces of this hidden agenda of the city's history are found in the 18th-century guidebooks to Aachen as well as to the other spas.
The main indication for visiting patients, ironically, was syphilis; only by the end of the 19th century had rheumatism become the most important object of cures at Aachen and Burtscheid.
Aachen was chosen as the site of several important congresses and peace treaties: the first congress of Aachen (often referred to as the Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle in English) on 2 May 1668,. leading to the First Treaty of Aachen in the same year which ended the War of Devolution.. The second congress ended with the second treaty in 1748, ending the War of the Austrian Succession.. In 1789, there was a constitutional crisis in the Aachen government,. and in 1794 Aachen lost its status as a free imperial city.
In 1629, the Aachen Jewish community was expelled from the city. In 1667, six Jews were allowed to return. Most of the Aachen Jewish community settled in Burtscheid. As recently as the late 18th century the Abbess of Burtscheid was still prevented from building a road linking her territory to the neighbouring estates of the duke of Jülich; the city of Aachen deployed its handful of soldiers to chase away road-diggers.
By the middle of the 19th century, industrialisation had swept away most of the city's medieval rules of production and commerce, although the remains of the city's medieval constitution were kept in place until 1801, when Aachen became the "chef-lieu du département de la Roer" in Napoleon's First French Empire. In 1815, after the Napoleonic Wars, the Kingdom of Prussia took over within the new German Confederation. The city was one of its most socially and politically backward centres until the end of the 19th century. Administered within the Rhine Province, by 1880 the population was 80,000. Starting in 1838, the railway from Cologne to Belgium passed through Aachen.. The city suffered extreme overcrowding and deplorable sanitary conditions until 1875, when the medieval fortifications were abandoned as a limit to building and new, better housing was built in the east of the city, where sanitary drainage was easiest. In December 1880, the Aachen tramway network was opened, and in 1895 it was electrified.. In the 19th century and up to the 1930s, the city was important in the production of railway locomotives and carriages, iron, pins, sewing needle, buttons, tobacco, woollen goods, and silk goods.
Aachen was heavily damaged during World War II. According to Jörg Friedrich in The Fire (2008), two Allied air raids on 11 April and 24 May 1944 "radically destroyed" the city. The first killed 1,525, including 212 children, and bombed six hospitals. During the second, 442 aircraft hit two railway stations, killed 207, and left 15,000 homeless. The raids destroyed Aachen-Eilendorf and Burtscheid..
The city and its fortified surroundings were besieged from 12 September to 21 October 1944 by the US 1st Infantry Division. with the 3rd Armored Division assisting from the south.. Around 13 October the US 2nd Armored Division, coming from the north, and got as close as Würselen,. while the 30th Infantry Division completed the encirclement of Aachen on 16 October 1944.. With reinforcements from the US 28th Infantry Division. the battle continued involving direct assaults through the heavily defended city, which forced the German garrison to surrender on 21 October 1944.
Aachen was the first German city to be captured by the Western Allies, and its residents welcomed the soldiers as liberators.. What remained of the city was destroyed—in some areas completely—during the fighting, mostly by American artillery fire and demolitions carried out by the Waffen-SS defenders. Damaged buildings included medieval churches of and the Aachen Rathaus (city hall), although Aachen Cathedral was largely unscathed. 4,000 inhabitants remained in the city; the rest had followed evacuation orders. Its first Allied-appointed mayor, Franz Oppenhoff, was assassinated by an SS commando unit.
The maximum dimensions of the city's territory are from north to south, and from east to west. The city limits are long, of which border Belgium and the Netherlands. The highest point in Aachen, located in the far southeast of the city, lies at an elevation of above sea level. The lowest point, in the north, and on the border with the Netherlands, is at .
Because the city is surrounded by hills, it suffers from inversion-related smog. Some areas of the city have become urban heat islands as a result of poor heat exchange, both because of the area's natural geography and from human activity. The city's numerous cold air corridors, which are slated to remain as free as possible from new construction, therefore play an important role in the urban climate of Aachen..
The January average is , while the July average is . Precipitation is almost evenly spread throughout the year.
The city's oceanic climate provides comparably mild winters: While Aachen falls within the coldest extents covered by Hardiness zone 8b in the 1991–2020 period, having an average yearly minimum of -9.22 °C (15.4 °F), the Canadian city of Regina, Saskatchewan which is located at a similar latitude but at the heart of the North American landmass, far away from the sea's moderating effects, is classified as being in zone 3a.
In the 1991–2020 period, the record latest freeze (at 2 m above ground) of spring occurred on April 28th and the record first fall freeze on October 13th. The average last freeze date for the 1991-2020 period is April 6th, though it varies significantly from year to year and by location (note that the climate station was relocated in 2011)
The Aachen weather station has recorded the following extreme values:
During the Cretaceous period, the ocean penetrated the continent from the direction of the North Sea up to the mountainous area near Aachen, bringing with it clay, sand, and chalk deposits. While the clay (which was the basis for a major pottery industry in nearby Raeren) is mostly found in the lower areas of Aachen, the hills of the Aachen Forest and the Lousberg were formed from upper Cretaceous sand and chalk deposits. More recent sedimentation is mainly located in the north and east of Aachen and was formed through Tertiary and Quaternary river and wind activities.
Along the major thrust fault of the Variscan orogeny, there are over 30 in Aachen and Burtscheid. Additionally, the subsurface of Aachen is traversed by numerous that belong to the Rurgraben fault system, which has been responsible for numerous earthquakes in the past, including the 1756 Düren earthquake. and the 1992 Roermond earthquake,. which was the strongest earthquake ever recorded in the Netherlands.
At the end of 2009, the foreign-born residents of Aachen made up 13.6 percent of the total population.. A significant portion of foreign residents are students at the RWTH Aachen University.
The districts of Aachen, including their constituent statistical districts, are:
Regardless of official statistical designations, there are 50 neighbourhoods and communities within Aachen, here arranged by district:
! rowspan=2 colspan=2| Candidate
! rowspan=2| Party
! colspan=2| First round
! colspan=2| Second round
|-
! Votes
! %
! Votes
! %
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Sibylle Keupen
| align=left| Independent (Green)
| 39,662
| 38.9
| 53,685
| 67.4
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Harald Baal
| align=left| Christian Democratic Union
| 25,253
| 24.8
| 26,003
| 32.6
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Mathias Dopatka
| align=left| Social Democratic Party
| 23,031
| 22.6
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Markus Mohr
| align=left| Alternative for Germany
| 3,387
| 3.3
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Wilhelm Helg
| align=left| Free Democratic Party
| 3,122
| 3.1
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Leo Deumens
| align=left| The Left
| 2,397
| 2.4
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Hubert vom Venn
| align=left| Die PARTEI
| 2,112
| 2.1
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Jörg Polzin
| align=left| Independent
| 938
| 0.9
|-
|
| align=left| Ralf Haupts
| align=left| Independent Voters' Association Aachen
| 932
| 0.9
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Matthias Achilles
| align=left| Pirate Party Germany
| 848
| 0.8
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Adonis Böving
| align=left| Independent
| 317
| 0.3
|-
! colspan=3| Valid votes
! 101,999
! 99.2
! 79,688
! 99.3
|-
! colspan=3| Invalid votes
! 819
! 0.8
! 532
! 0.7
|-
! colspan=3| Total
! 102,818
! 100.0
! 80,220
! 100.0
|-
! colspan=3| Electorate/voter turnout
! 192,502
! 53.4
! 192,435
! 41.7
|-
| colspan=7| Source: State Returning Officer
|}
! colspan=2| Party
! Votes
! %
! +/-
! Seats
! +/-
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Alliance 90/The Greens (Grüne)
| 34,712
| 34.1
| 17.5
| 20
| 7
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Christian Democratic Union (CDU)
| 25,268
| 24.8
| 11.5
| 14
| 14
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Social Democratic Party (SPD)
| 18,676
| 18.3
| 7.7
| 11
| 9
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Free Democratic Party (FDP)
| 5,042
| 4.9
| 0.5
| 3
| ±0
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| The Left (Die Linke)
| 4,694
| 4.6
| 1.5
| 3
| 2
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Alternative for Germany (AfD)
| 3,816
| 3.7
| 1.2
| 2
| ±0
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Volt Germany (Volt)
| 3,784
| 3.7
| New
| 2
| New
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Die PARTEI (PARTEI)
| 2,295
| 2.3
| 1.8
| 1
| 1
|-
|
| align=left| Independent Voters' Association Aachen (UWG)
| 1,632
| 1.6
| 0.2
| 1
| ±0
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Pirate Party Germany (Piraten)
| 1,226
| 1.2
| 2.2
| 1
| 2
|-
| colspan=7 bgcolor=lightgrey|
|-
| bgcolor=|
| align=left| Ecological Democratic Party (ÖDP)
| 673
| 0.7
| New
| 0
| New
|-
|
| align=left| Voter Group
| 45
| 0.0
| New
| 0
| New
|-
! colspan=2| Valid votes
! 101,863
! 99.1
!
!
!
|-
! colspan=2| Invalid votes
! 918
! 0.9
!
!
!
|-
! colspan=2| Total
! 102,781
! 100.0
!
! 58
! 18
|-
! colspan=2| Electorate/voter turnout
! 192,502
! 53.4
! 0.7
!
!
|-
| colspan=7| Source: State Returning Officer
|}
After Frederick Barbarossa Canonisation Charlemagne in 1165 the chapel became a Pilgrimage. For 600 years, from 936 to 1531, Aachen Cathedral was the church of coronation for 30 German kings and 12 queens. The church built by Charlemagne is still the main attraction of the city.. In addition to holding the remains of its founder, it became the burial place of his successor Otto III. In the upper chamber of the gallery, Charlemagne's marble throne is housed.. Aachen Cathedral has been designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Most of the marble and columns used in the construction of the cathedral were brought from Rome and Ravenna, including the sarcophagus in which Charlemagne was eventually laid to rest.. A bronze bear from Gaul was placed inside, along with an equestrian statue from Ravenna, believed to be Theodric, in contrast to a wolf and a statue of Marcus Aurelius in the Capitoline. Bronze pieces such as the doors and railings, some of which have survived to present day, were cast in a local foundry. Finally, there is uncertainty surrounding the bronze pine cone in the chapel, and where it was created. Wherever it was made, it was also a parallel to a piece in Rome, this in Old St. Peter's Basilica.
Since 2009, the city hall has been a station on the Route Charlemagne, a tour programme by which historical sights of Aachen are presented to visitors. At the city hall, a museum exhibition explains the history and art of the building and gives a sense of the historical coronation banquets that took place there. A portrait of Napoleon from 1807 by Louis-André-Gabriel Bouchet and one of his wife Joséphine from 1805 by Robert Lefèvre are viewable as part of the tour.
As before, the city hall is the seat of the mayor of Aachen and of the city council, and annually the Charlemagne Prize is awarded there.
The Elisenbrunnen is one of the most famous sights of Aachen. It is a neo-classical hall covering one of the city's famous fountains. It is just a minute away from the cathedral. Just a few steps in a south-easterly direction lies the 19th-century Theater Aachen.
Also of note are two remaining city gates, the Ponttor (Pont gate), northwest of the cathedral, and the Marschiertor (marching gate), close to the central railway station. There are also a few parts of both medieval city walls left, most of them integrated into more recent buildings, but some others still visible. There are even five towers left, some of which are used for housing.
St. Michael's Church, Aachen was built as a church of the Aachen Jesuit Collegium in 1628. It is attributed to the Rhine mannerism, and a sample of a local Renaissance architecture. The rich façade remained unfinished until 1891, when the architect Peter Friedrich Peters added to it. The church is a Greek Orthodox church today, but the building is used also for concerts because of its good acoustics.
The synagogue in Aachen, which was destroyed on the Night of Broken Glass (Kristallnacht), 9 November 1938, was reinaugurated on 18 May 1995... One of the contributors to the reconstructions of the synagogue was Jürgen Linden, the Lord Mayor of Aachen from 1989 to 2009.
There are numerous other notable churches and monastery, a few remarkable 17th- and 18th-century buildings in the particular Baroque style typical of the region, a synagogue, a collection of statues and monuments, park areas, cemeteries, among others. Among the museums in the town are the Suermondt-Ludwig Museum, which has a fine sculpture collection and the Aachen Museum of the International Press, which is dedicated to newspapers from the 16th century to the present.. The area's industrial history is reflected in dozens of 19th- and early 20th-century manufacturing sites in the city.
Products manufactured in Aachen include electrical goods, fine woolen textiles, foodstuffs (chocolate and candy), glass, machinery, rubber products, furniture, metal products. Also in and around Aachen chemicals, plastics, cosmetics, and needles and pins are produced.. Though once a major player in Aachen's economy, today glassware and textile production make up only 10% of total manufacturing jobs in the city. There have been a number of spin-offs from the university's IT technology department.
In December 2014 DHL Group purchased the StreetScooter company from Günther, operating it as a wholly owned subsidiary. Deutsche Post DHL übernimmt StreetScooter GmbH 9.
In 2015, Günther founded a new electric vehicle company, e.GO Mobile, which started producing the e.GO Life electric passenger car and other vehicles in April 2019.
By April 2016, StreetScooter announced that it would produce 2000 of its electric vans, branded the Work, in Aachen by the end of the year, and would be scaling up to manufacture approximately 10,000 Works annually, starting in 2017, also in Aachen. At the time, this target would make it the largest electric light utility vehicle manufacturer in Europe, surpassing Renault's smaller Renault Kangoo
FH Aachen, Aachen University of Applied Sciences (AcUAS) was founded in 1971. The AcUAS offers a classic engineering education in professions such as mechatronics, construction engineering, mechanical engineering or electrical engineering. German and international students are educated in more than 20 international or foreign-oriented programmes and can acquire German as well as international degrees (Bachelor/Master) or Doppelabschlüsse (double degrees). Foreign students account for more than 21% of the student body.
The Katholische Hochschule Nordrhein-Westfalen – Abteilung Aachen (Catholic University of Applied Sciences Northrhine-Westphalia – Aachen department). offers its some 750 students a variety of degree programmes: social work, childhood education, nursing, and co-operative management. It also has the only programme of study in Germany especially designed for mothers..
The italic=no (Cologne University of Music) is one of the world's foremost performing arts schools and one of the largest music institutions for higher education in Europe. with one of its three campuses in Aachen.. The Aachen campus substantially contributes to the Opera/Musical Theatre master's programme by collaborating with the Theater Aachen and the recently established musical theatre chair through the Rheinische Opernakademie.
The German Army's technical school (Ausbildungszentrum Technik Landsysteme) is located in Aachen..
The local football team Alemannia Aachen had a short run in Germany's Bundesliga, after its promotion in 2006. However, the team could not sustain its status and is now back in the third division. The stadium Old Tivoli, opened in 1928, served as the venue for the team's home games and was well known for its incomparable atmosphere throughout the whole of the second division.. Before the old stadium's demolition in 2011, it was used by amateurs, whilst the Bundesliga Club held its games in the new stadium "Neuer Tivoli" – meaning New Tivoli—a couple of metres down the road. The building work for the stadium which has a capacity of 32,960, began in May 2008 and was completed by the beginning of 2009.
The Ladies in Black women's volleyball team (part of the "PTSV Aachen" sports club since 2013) has played in the first German volleyball league (DVL) since 2008.
In June 2022, the local basketball club BG Aachen e.V. was promoted to the 1st regional league.
There are four smaller stations in Aachen: Aachen West, Aachen Schanz, Aachen-Rothe Erde and Eilendorf. Slower trains stop at these. Aachen West has gained in importance with the expansion of RWTH Aachen University.
Today, the ASEAG ( Aachener Straßenbahn und Energieversorgungs-AG, literally "Aachen Tram and Power Supply Company") operates a bus network with 68 bus routes. Because of the location at the border, many bus routes extend to Belgium and the Netherlands. Lines 14 to Eupen, Belgium and 44 to Heerlen, Netherlands are jointly operated with Transport en Commun and Veolia Transport Nederland, respectively. ASEAG is one of the main participants in the Aachener Verkehrsverbund (AVV), a tariff association in the region. Along with ASEAG, city bus routes of Aachen are served by private contractors such as Sadar, Taeter, Schlömer, or DB Regio Bus. Line 350, which runs from Maastricht, also enters Aachen.
Recreational aviation is served by the (formerly military) Aachen Merzbrück Airfield.
The International Charlemagne Prize of Aachen was awarded in the year 2000 to US president Bill Clinton, for his special personal contribution to co-operation with the states of Europe, for the preservation of peace, freedom, democracy and human rights in Europe, and for his support of the enlargement of the European Union. In 2004, Pope John Paul II's efforts to unite Europe were honoured with an "Extraordinary Charlemagne Medal", which was awarded for the only time ever.
Geology
Demographics
Aachen had 245,885 inhabitants as of 31 December 2015, of whom 118,272 were female, and 127,613 were male.
+ Largest groups of foreign residents 6,745 4,365 3,998 3,751 3,662 2,369 1,786 1,836 1,745 1,542 1,495 1994 246,570. 2007 247,740 2011 238,665 2014 243,336 2015 245,885
Dialect
Boroughs
Neighbouring communities
Politics
Mayor
City council
Main sights
Cathedral
Cathedral Treasury
Rathaus
Other sights
Economy
Electric vehicle manufacturing
Culture
Education
Sports
Transport
Rail
Intercity bus stations
Public transport
Roads
Airport
Charlemagne Prize
Literature
Notable people
Twin towns – sister cities
Former twin towns
See also
Notes
Sources
Further reading
External links
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