Gelsenkirchen is a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is located in the northern part of the Ruhr area. Its population as of 31 December 2002 was 274,926.
Gelsenkirchen was first documented in 1150, but it remained a tiny village until the 19th century, when the Industrial Revolution led to the growth of the entire area. In 1840, when the mining of coal began, 6000 inhabitants lived in Gelsenkirchen; in 1900 the population had increased to 138,000.
In the early 20th century Gelsenkirchen was the most important coalmining town in Europe. It was called the "city of a thousand fires", for all its smoking stacks. In 1928 Gelsenkirchen was merged with the adjoining cities of Buer and Horst. The city bore the name Gelsenkirchen-Buer, until it was renamed Gelsenkirchen in 1930. During the Nazi era Gelsenkirchen remained a centre of coal production and oil refining, and for this reason it was bombed by Allied air raids in World War II. Today in Gelsenkirchen there are no collieries any more and Gelsenkirchen is searching for a new image, having been hit for decades with one of the highest unemployment rates of Germany. Today Germany's largest solar power plant is located in the city. In Gelsenkirchen-Scholven there is a coal fired power station with the tallest chimneys in Germany (302 metres).
Gelsenkirchen is home of the football club FC Schalke 04. Schalke's home ground, Veltins-Arena, is generally regarded as one of the most innovative stadiums built in recent years. It is one of 12 German cities to host games during the Football World Cup 2006, and has already hosted the matches between Poland and Ecuador, Argentina and Serbia and Montenegro, Portugal and Mexico and USA and Czech Republic.
It was about 1150 when the name Gelstenkerken or Geilistirinkirkin cropped up for the first time. At about the same time, the first church in town was built in what is now Buer. This ecclesia Buron ("church at Buer") was listed in a directory of parish churches by the sexton from Deutz, Theodericus. This settlement belonged to the Mark. However, in ancient times and even in the Middle Ages, only a few dozen people actually lived in the settlements around the Emscher basin.
After the discovery of coal — lovingly known as "Black Gold" — in the Ruhr area in 1840, and the subsequent industrialization, the Cologne-Minden Railway and the Gelsenkirchen Main Railway Station were opened. In 1868, Gelsenkirchen became the seat of an Amt within the Bochum district which encompassed the communities of Gelsenkirchen, Braubauerschaft (as of 1900, Bismarck), Schalke, Heßler, Bulmke and Hüllen.
Friedrich Grillo founded the Corporation for Chemical Industry (Aktiengesellschaft für Chemische Industrie) in Schalke in 1872, and also the Schalke Mining and Ironworks Association (Schalker Gruben- und Hüttenverein). A year later, and once again in Schalke, he founded the Glass and Mirror Factory Incorporated (Glas- und Spiegel-Manufaktur AG).
After Gelsenkirchen had become an important heavy-industry hub, it was raised to city in 1875.
In 1928, under the Prussian local government reforms, the cities of Gelsenkirchen and Buer along with the Amt of Horst together became a new kreisfreie Stadt called Gelsenkirchen-Buer, effective as of 1 April that year. From that time, the whole city area belonged to the governmental district of Münster. In 1930, on the city's advice, the city's name was changed to Gelsenkirchen, effective 21 May. By this time, the city was home to about 340,000 people.
In 1931, the Gelsenkirchen Mining Corporation (Gelsenkirchener Bergwerks-Aktien-Gesellschaft) founded the "Gelsenberg" Petrol Corporation (Gelsenberg-Benzin-AG). The Hibernia Mining Company founded the Hydrierwerk Scholven AG GE-Buer, a hydrogenation plant, in 1935.
Two synagogues in Gelsenkirchen were destroyed in the anti-Jewish riots of Kristallnacht in November 1938. The one in Buer was burnt down. The one in downtown Gelsenkirchen was likewise destroyed. Exactly 66 years later, the cornerstone was laid there for a new synagogue. The Institute for City History set up a documentation site: "Gelsenkirchen in National Socialist times".
Throughout the time when Hitler was in power, from 1933 to 1945, the city's mayor was Carl Engelbert Böhmer, an NSDAP member appointed by the régime.
In 1997, the Federal Garden Show (Bundesgartenschau or BUGA) was held on the grounds of the disused Nordstern coalmine in Horst. In 1999, the last phase of the Emscher Park International Building Exhibition, an undertaking that brought together many cities in North Rhine-Westphalia, was held. Coke was produced at the old Hassel coking works for the last time on 29 September 1999. This marked the shutdown of the last coking plant in Gelsenkirchen, after being a coking town for more than 117 years. In the same year, Shell Solar Deutschland AG took over production of photovoltaic equipment. On 28 April 2000, the Ewald-Hugo colliery closed — Gelsenkirchen's last colliery. Three thousand coalminers lost their jobs. In 2003, Buer celebrated its thousandth anniversary of first documentary mention, and FC Schalke 04 celebrated on 4 May 2004 its hundredth anniversary.
Today, Gelsenkirchen is a centre for sciences, services, and production, with good infrastructure.
| Year | Population figure | - | 1798 | ca. 350 | - | 1838 | 505 | - | 1871 | 7,825 | - | 1875 | 11,295 | - | 1 December 1890 ¹ | 28,057 | - | 1 December 1895 ¹ | 31,582 | - | 1 December 1900 ¹ | 36,937 | - | 1903 | 138.000 | - | 1 December 1905 ¹ | 147,005 | - | 1 December 1910 ¹ | 169,513 | - | 1914 | 175,000 | - | 8 October 1919 ¹ | 168,557 | - | 16 June 1925 ¹ | 208,512 | - | 1928 | 340,077 |
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| Year | Population figure | - | 16 June 1933 ¹ | 332,545 | - | 17 May 1939 ¹ | 317,568 | - | 1945 | 160,000 | - | 13 September 1950 ¹ | 315,460 | - | 1959 | 391,745 | - | 6 June 1961 ¹ | 382,689 | - | 31 December 1970 | 347,100 | - | 30 June 1975 | 325,400 | - | 30 June 1980 | 305,600 | - | 30 June 1985 | 286,500 | - | 1 January 1989 | 287,255 | - | 30 June 1997 | 287,800 | - | 31 December 2003 | 272,445 | - | 31 December 2004 | 270,107 |
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As for waterways, Gelsenkirchen can be reached along the Rhine-Herne Canal, where a commercial-industrial harbour is to be found. The harbour has a yearly turnover of 2 000 000 t and a water surface area of about 1.2 km², one of Germany's biggest and most important canal harbours, and is furthermore connected to Deutsche Bahn's railway network.
Local transport in Gelsenkirchen is afforded by trams and buses run by the Bochum-Gelsenkirchener Straßenbahn AG (BOGESTRA), as well as by Vestische Straßenbahnen GmbH in the city's north end (despite its name, it nowadays runs only buses). There is also a Stadtbahn service connecting Buer to Essen which is operated by EVAG. Tram lines connect the city to Bochum and Essen. All these services have an integrated fare structure within the VRR. There are three tram lines, one light rail line, and about 50 bus routes in Gelsenkirchen.
Among newspapers, the Buersche Zeitung is a daily. The Dortmund paper Ruhr-Nachrichten does the local news section. Also, the Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung and the local radio station REL report the local news.
There is also a free weekly newspaper, the Stadtspiegel Gelsenkirchen, along with monthly, or irregular, local publications called the Familienpost and the Beckhausener Kurier.
The Power Station Westerholt has the tallest chimney in Germany (337 metres tall)
The Fachhochschule Gelsenkirchen, founded in 1992, has campuses in Bocholt and Recklinghausen with the following course offerings: Economics, Computer Science, Physical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Supply and Disposal Engineering.
Also found in Gelsenkirchen is one of the seven locations of the Fachhochschule für öffentliche Verwaltung NRW (Fachhochschule for public administration North Rhine-Westphalia) offering as fields of study Municipal Administrative Service, Police Training, and Administrative Economics. There is also a folk high school as well as a city library with three branches in Horst, Buer and Erle with more than 100,000 books, films, and CDs.
Cities in North Rhine-Westphalia
غيلزنكيرشن | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | Γκελζενκίρχεν | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | گلزنکیرشن | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | 겔젠키르헨 | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | גלזנקירשן | Gelsenkirhene | Gelsenkirchen | ゲルゼンキルヒェン | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | Chäsekerken | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | Гельзенкирхен | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | Гелзенкирхен | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | Gelsenkirchen | 盖尔森基兴
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