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WESEL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 526 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WESEL  , a fortress

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town of Germany, in the Prussian province of Westphalia at the confluence of the Rhine and the
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Lippe, 46 m . S W. of Munster and 35 M . N.W. of
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Duisburg . Pop.(19o5) 23,237 (43 °A Protestants), including a considerable garrison . There is a junction of five railway lines, and the Rhine is crossed by a large railway
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bridge and by a bridge of boats . The inner
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line of fortifications was razed in 1890, and the defensive
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works now consist only of the citadel and three detached forts, one of which, Fort Blucher, serves as a te"te-de-pont on the
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left
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bank of the Rhine . Wesel contains some quaint old houses, and a town hall, dating from 1396, with an elaborate
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facade, and containing a valuable collection of old
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silver
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plate . The large
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Protestant church of St Willibrord has a choir, built 1424-1526, which is one of the noblest
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Gothic structures on the
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Lower Rhine, and a
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modern
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nave (1882-96) . The Mathena church
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dates from1429-1477 . The two
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Roman Catholic churches, the castle, now the commandant's house (built in 1417), the Berliner Tor—Berlin gate—(built in 1722 and recently restored), the Lower-Rhenish museum of antiquities and the modern gymnasium and military hospital, are among the other chief buildings . Wesel carries on a considerable trade in grain,
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timber, colonial goods,
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tobacco, &c., facilitated by new harbour accommodation and wharves at the mouth of the Lippe . It has manufactures of wire, leaden pipes and other metal goods, cement,
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sugar, &c .

Wesel, formerly known as Lippemunde, was one of the points from which

Charlemagne directed his operations against the
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heathen
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Saxons . Incorporated in 1241, it became a flourishing commercial town, and though repeatedly subject to the
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counts of Cleves, was a member of the Hanseatic
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League, and as
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late as 1521 a
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free imperial city . It was occupied by the Spaniards in 1614, by the Dutch in 1629, by the French in 1672, also during the Seven Years' War, and in 18o5, and was ceded to Prussia in 1814 . A monument outside the town commemorates eleven of Ferdinand von Schill's
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officers who were shot here on the 16th of September 1809 after their unsuccessful attempt at
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Stralsund . Wesel is occasionally spoken of as Unterwesel, to distinguish it from Oberwesel, a small town on the Rhine, above St Goar . See Gantesweiler, Chronik der Stadt Wesel (Wesel, 1881), and Reinhold, Verfassungsgeschichte Wesels (Breslau . 1888) .

End of Article: WESEL
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JOHANN RUCHRAT VON WESEL (d. 1481)

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