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ROERMOND , a See also: town in the province of Lirnburg, See also: Holland, on the right
See also: bank of the See also: Maas at the confluence of the Roer, and a junction station 28 m. by See also: rail N.N.E. of See also: Maastricht
.
Pop
.
(1900) 12,348
.
The old fortifications have been dismantled and partly converted into See also: fine promenades
.
At this point the Maas is crossed by a See also: bridge erected in 1866—67, and the Roer by one dating from 1771, replacing an older structure, and connecting Roermond with the suburb of St See also: Jacob
.
Roermond is the seat of a See also: Roman Catholic episcopal see
.
The finest See also: building in the town is the Romanesque minster See also: church of the first quarter of the 13th century
.
In the
See also: middle of the See also: nave is the See also: tomb of Gerhard III., count of Gelderland, and his wife See also: Margaret of See also: Brabant
.
It was formerly the church of a Cistercian nunnery, and in See also: modern times has been elaborately restored
.
The See also: cathedral of St Christopher is also of note; on the top of the tower (246 ft.) is a copper statue of the See also: saint, and the interior is adorned with paintings by See also: Rubens, Jacob de Wit (1695-1754) and others
.
The Reformed church was once the See also: chapel of the monastery of the Minorites
.
There is also a Redemptorist chapel
.
The old See also: bishop's palace is now the courthouse, and the old See also: Jesuits' monastery with its fine gardens a higher-burgher school
.
Woollen, See also: cotton, See also: silk and mixed stuffs, paper, See also: flour and See also: beer are manufactured at Roermond
.
Close to Roermond on the west is the See also: village of See also: Horn, once the seat of a lordship of the same name, which is first mentioned in a document of 1166
.
The lordship of Horn was a See also: fief of the See also: counts of Loon, and after 1361 of the bishop of Liege; but in 1450 it was raised to a countship by the Emperor See also: Frederick II
.
On the extinction of the See also: house of Horn in 1540, the countship passed to the famous See also: Philip of Montmorency, who, with the count of Egmont, was executed in Brussels in 1568 by
See also: order of the duke of Alva
.
In the beginning of the next century the countship was forcibly retained by the see of Liege, and was incorporated in the French department of the See also: Lower Maas at the end of the 18th century
.
The See also: ancient See also: castle is in an excellent See also: state of preservation and is sometimes used for the See also: assembly of the states
.
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