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Kaiserswerth is one of the oldest parts of the City of Düsseldorf, it is in the north of the city, and next to the river Rhine. Kaiserswerth has 7,712 inhabitants and an area of 4.71 m².

History


About the year 700 the monk Suitbertus founded a Benedictine-abbey in Werth, later Kaiserswerth, but it was destroyed 88 years later.

The Kaiserpfalz (temporary seat of the emperor of the Holy Roman Empire of German Nation) was built in 1045. In 1046 the archbishop of Cologne, Anno II of Cologne kidnapped the underage German king Heinrich IV from here and obtained the regency of the Holy Roman Empire in this way. In 1174 Friedrich Barbarossa moved the Rhine Costom to Kaiserswerth. In 1273 the Emperor pledged Kaiserswerth to the archbishop of Cologne.

In 1591 Friedrich Spee von Langenfeld was born in Kaiserswerth. In 1689 Kaiserswerth became particularly destroyed by the war with France, by the Spanish war of succession Kaiserswerth became destroyed very badly in 1702.

In the 19th century Kaiserswerth was famous by its deaconess clinic, where Florence Nightingale was educated. In both World Wars there was a great military hospital in Kaiserswerth.

Kaiserswerth became a part of Düsseldorf in 1929.

Infrastructure


Kaiserswerth is connected to the central stations and the central districts of the cities of Düsseldorf and Duisburg by the metropolitan railway line U 79. There are some bus lines to other parts of Düsseldorf, to Mettmann, Krefeld and Düsseldorf International Airport.

Literature


  • Christa-Maria Zimmermann / Hans Stöcker (Hrsg.), Edmund Spohr: Kayserswerth, 1300 Jahre, Heilige, Kaiser, Reformer. Herausgegeben im Auftrag der Landeshauptstadt Düsseldorf, Kulturamt. 2. durchgesehene Auflage. Triltsch Verlag, Düsseldorf 1981, ISBN 3799800050

External links


Düsseldorf

Düsseldorf-Kaiserswerth

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Düsseldorf-Kaiserswerth".

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