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NEUSS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 440 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NEUSS  , a

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town of Germany, in the Prussian Rhine province, lies 4 M. to the W. of
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Dusseldorf and 11 m. from the W.
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bank of the Rhine, with which it is connected by the Erft canal . It lies at the junction of lines to Cologne,
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Viersen, Zevenaar (Holland), Diisseldorf,
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Duren and
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Rheydt . Pop . (19o5) 30,494, of whom 95% were Catholics . The chief
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building in the town is the church of St
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Quirinus, a remarkably
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fine example of the transition from the Round to the Pointed style; and there are six other
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Roman Catholic churches, two
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Protestant churches and a gymnasium, which contains a collection of Roman antiquities . The town hall was built in the 17th and altered in the 18th century . The old fortifications are now laid out as a
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promenade encircling the town . Neuss produces oil and
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meal, and also manufactures woollen stuffs, chemicals and paper, bricks and iron-
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ware . Its markets for cereals are among the most important in Prussia, and it is also the centre of a brisk trade in cattle, coals, building materials and the products of its various manufactories . Neuss, the Novaesium of the Romans, frequently mentioned by Tacitus, formerly
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lay close to the Rhine, and was the natural centre of the
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district of which Dusseldorf has become the chief town . Drusus,
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brother of the emperor Tiberius, threw a
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bridge across the Rhine here, and his name is preserved in the Drusustor, the
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lower
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half of which is of Roman
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masonry . In 1474-1475 Charles the Bold of
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Burgundy besieged the town in vain for eleven months, during which he lost ,o,000 men; but it was taken and sacked by Alexander Farnese in 1586 .

Since 1887 extensive excavations have been made of the

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foundations of a huge Roman camp, and many valuable Roman treasures have been unearthed . See C . Tucking, Geschichte der Stadt Neuss (Diisseldorf, 1891) ; F . Schmitz, Der, Neusser Krieg, 1474–1475 (
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Bonn, 1896); W . Effmann, Die St Quirinus Kirche zu Neuss (Dusseldorf, 189o); and
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Band xx. of the Chroniken der deutschen Stadte .

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