fbpx
Wikipedia

Kleve

Kleve (German: [ˈkleːvə] (listen); traditional English: Cleves /klvz/ KLEEVZ; Dutch: Kleef; French: Clèves; Spanish: Cléveris; Latin: Clivia; Low Rhenish: Kleff) is a town in the Lower Rhine region of northwestern Germany near the Dutch border and the River Rhine. From the 11th century onwards, Cleves was capital of a county and later a duchy. Today, Cleves is the capital of the district of Cleves in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. The city is home to one of the campuses of the Rhine-Waal University of Applied Sciences.

Kleve
Kleve
Schwanenburg Castle
Location of Kleve within Kleve district
NetherlandsKrefeldBorken (district)Viersen (district)Wesel (district)Bedburg-HauEmmerich am RheinGeldernGochIssumKalkarKerkenKevelaerKleveKranenburgReesRheurdtStraelenUedemWachtendonkWeeze
Kleve
Kleve
Coordinates: 51°47′24″N 06°08′24″E / 51.79000°N 6.14000°E / 51.79000; 6.14000Coordinates: 51°47′24″N 06°08′24″E / 51.79000°N 6.14000°E / 51.79000; 6.14000
CountryGermany
StateNorth Rhine-Westphalia
Admin. regionDüsseldorf
DistrictKleve
Government
 • Mayor (2020–25) Wolfgang Gebing[1] (CDU)
Area
 • Total97.79 km2 (37.76 sq mi)
Elevation
12 m (39 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total52,470
 • Density540/km2 (1,400/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
47533
Dialling codes0 28 21
Vehicle registrationKLE
Websitewww.kleve.de

Territory of the municipality

In addition to the inner city, the territory of Kleve comprises fourteen villages and populated places: Bimmen, Brienen, Donsbrüggen, Düffelward, Griethausen, Keeken, Kellen, Materborn, Reichswalde, Rindern, Salmorth, Schenkenschanz, Warbeyen and Wardhausen.

History

The name Kleff probably derives from Middle Dutch clef, clif 'cliff, bluff', referring to the promontory on which the Schwanenburg castle was constructed. Since the city's coat of arms displays three clover leaves (German Klee, Low German Kliev), the city's name is sometimes linked by folk etymology to the clover, but the corresponding Dutch word is klaver.[3] Notably, Kleve was spelled with a C throughout its history until spelling reforms introduced in the 1930s required that the name be spelled with a K. In 2008, the CDU announced its intention to return the name to its original spelling.

The Schwanenburg Castle, which was the residence of the Dukes of Cleves, stands on a steep hill. It is located at the northern terminus of the Kermisdahl where it joins with the Spoykanal, which was previously an important transportation link to the Rhine. The old castle has a massive tower, the Schwanenturm 180 feet (55 m) high, that is associated in legend with the Knight of the Swan, immortalized in Richard Wagner's Lohengrin.

Medieval Kleve grew together from four parts – the Schwanenburg Castle, the village below the castle, the first city of Kleve on Heideberg Hill, and the Neustadt ("New City"), dating from the 14th century. In 1242 Kleve received city rights. The Duchy of Cleves, which roughly covered today's districts of Kleve, Wesel and Duisburg, was united with the Duchy of Mark in 1368, was made a duchy itself in 1417, then united with the neighboring duchies of Jülich and Berg in 1521, when John III, Duke of Cleves, married Mary, heiress of Jülich-Berg-Ravenburg.

 
Cleves in the 17th century

Kleve's most famous native was Anne of Cleves (1515–1557), daughter of John III, Duke of Cleves and (briefly) the fourth wife of Henry VIII of England. Several local businesses are named after her, including the Anne von Kleve Galerie.

 
Mid 17th century Forest Garden

The ducal dynasty became extinct in the male line in 1609, leading to a succession crisis in the duchies: the War of the Jülich Succession (1609–1614). After the Thirty Years' War ended in 1648, the succession dispute was resolved with Cleves passing to the elector of Brandenburg, thus becoming an exclave of the Margraviate of Brandenburg, later Brandenburg-Prussia.

During the Thirty Years' War the city had been under the control of the Dutch Republic, which in 1647 had given Johann Moritz von Nassau-Siegen administrative control over the city. He approved a renovation of Schwanenburg Castle in the baroque style and commissioned the construction of extensive gardens that greatly influenced European landscape design. Significant amounts of his original plan for Kleve were put into effect and have been maintained to the present, a particularly well-loved example of which is the Forstgarten (Forest Garden). In 1701, Cleves became part of the Kingdom of Prussia.

During the War of the First Coalition, Cleves was captured by French Revolutionary troops on 19 October 1794. In 1795 it was incorporated into the Roer department, which became part of the Cisrhenian Republic in 1797, which in turn was formally annexed by the French First Republic in 1802, becoming the French First Empire in 1804. Prussia retrieved the city in 1815.

 
City and port of Kleve (c. 1895)

The mineral waters of Kleve and the wooded parkland surrounding it made it a fashionable spa in the 19th century. At this time, Kleve was named "Bad Cleve" (English: Spa of Cleves). It was not until 1935 when the German spelling of its name was officially changed from Cleve to Kleve.[4]

During World War II Kleve was the site of one of the two radio wave stations that served the Knickebein aircraft navigation system. Luftwaffe bombers used radio beams from Kleve and a second station at Stolberg to navigate to British targets.[5] The Knickebein system was eventually jammed by the British. It was replaced by the higher frequency X-Gerät system, which used transmitter stations located on the channel coast of France.

 
British infantry advance through bombed-out Kleve, February 1945

Kleve was heavily bombed during the Second World War, and over 90% of buildings in the city were severely damaged. Most of the destruction was the result of a raid late in the war in 1945, conducted at the request of Lieutenant-General Brian Horrocks in preparation for Operation Veritable. Horrocks recounted his decision in the 1973 television documentary The World at War:

"Then they came to me and they said, 'Do you want the town of Cleves taken out?' By 'taken out' they meant the whole of the heavy bombers putting on to Cleves. Now, I knew that Cleves was a very fine old historical German town. Anne of Cleves, one of Henry VIII's wives, came from there. I knew that there were a lot of civilians in Cleves, men, women and children. If I said no, they would live. If I said yes, they would die. A terrible decision you’ve got to take. But... everything depended on getting a high piece of ground at Materborn. The German reserves would have to come through Cleves, and we would have to breach the Siegfried Line and get there. And your own lives, your own troops, must come first, so I said yes, I did want it taken out. But when all those bombers went over, the night just before zero hour, to take out Cleves, I felt a murderer. And after the war I had an awful lot of nightmares, but always Cleves."[6]

Horrocks later said that this had been "the most terrible decision I had ever taken in my life" and that he felt "physically sick" when he saw the bombers overhead.[7][8]

As a result of the bombing, relatively little of the pre-1945 city remains. Those structures spared include a number of historic villas built during the heyday of the spa Bad Kleve, located along the B9 near the Tiergarten. Of those buildings destroyed, many were reconstructed, including most of the Schwanenburg and the Stiftskirche, the Catholic parish church. Constructed on high ground, many of these landmarks can be seen from the surrounding communities.

Since 1953 there has been a broadcasting facility for FM radio and television from regional broadcaster WDR near Kleve. The current aerial mast was brought into service in 1993. The steel tube mast rises 126.4 metres high and has a diameter of 1.6 metres. It is stabilized by guy wires attached at 57 and 101.6 metres height.

After the Second World War important employers in the area were associated with the West German "Economic Miracle" (Wirtschaftswunder), and included the XOX Bisquitfabrik (XOX Biscuit Factory) GmbH and the Van den Berg'schen Margerinewerke (Van den Berg’s Margarine Factory). Another important employer was the Elefanten-Kinderschuhfabrik (Elefant Children's Shoe Factory).

Retail became an increasingly important industry, particularly after the institution of the euro in 2002. Dutch citizens often crossed the open border to patronize Kleves retailers, and much of the euros spent on shopping in Kleve came from the Netherlands. Lower costs of real estate have attracted a wave of Dutch citizens, who purchased houses in the area.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
18156,517—    
18326,990+7.3%
18679,209+31.7%
189813,724+49.0%
191018,135+32.1%
192019,453+7.3%
193021,561+10.8%
193921,784+1.0%
195028,740+31.9%
196021,129−26.5%
197045,675+116.2%
198045,899+0.5%
199047,191+2.8%
200048,926+3.7%
201049,794+1.8%
201350,650+1.7%

Census data

According to the Statistical Yearbook of Cleves[9] as of 2013, 50,650 people resided in the city. The population density was 517.9 people per square kilometer. 86.7% of the residents had the German citizenship (including residents with dual citizenship) and 10.1% another EU citizenship (5.6% Dutch and 2.9% Polish).

In the city, in 2013, the population was distributed with 19.7% under the age of 21, 25.6% from 21 to 40, 29.7% from 41 to 60, 20.1% from 61 to 80, and 4.9% who were 81 years of age or older. For every 100 females, there were 96.7 males. For every 100 females age 21 and over, there were 93.9 males.

81.3 of the citizens lived in households without children under the age of 18, 9.2% with one child, 6.1% with two children, 1.7% with three children, and 0.1% with four children or more.

Religion

Like the rest of the Lower Rhine region, Kleve is a predominantly Roman Catholic city.[9] The city is part of the Diocese of Münster. 61.1% of the residents are Roman Catholics, 14.4% Protestant, and 24.6% "Other". The largest section of this group are residents without any religious affiliation, but there are also sizeable Russian Orthodox and Muslim communities in Kleve.

The synagogue of Kleve was destroyed during Kristallnacht and is today commemorated on the Synagogenplatz (Synagogue square) on which the building's outline can be seen. The fifty killed Jewish citizens of Cleves are remembered with signs that tell their names, and dates and places of death.[10]

In 1767 the town was at the center of a controversy between prominent European rabbis, known as "The Kleve Divorce", over the legality of a divorce granted by a groom whose sanity was in doubt.

Gallery

Government

City Council

Prior to the Nazi Era, Kleve's local politics were dominated by the Catholic Centre Party. This situation continued with the Christian Democratic successor party CDU after the Second World War, in spite of resettled displaced people from eastern Germany, most of them Protestants. Until 2004 the CDU controlled an absolute majority of the city council.

Today, Kleve is governed by a coalition of CDU and the Green Party. Since the last local elections on 25 May 2014 the following parties are represented in Cleves' city council. In addition to nationwide parties, Offene Klever (Open Cleves) has a number of seats.

Party % Seats
CDU (Christian Democrats) 39.52 17
SPD (Social Democrats) 28.96 13
Green Party 13.10 6
Open Cleves 11.00 5
FDP (Liberals) 7.42 3
Participation: 42.32%

The next local elections are scheduled for 2020.

Mayor

In 2015, Sonja Northing (no party affiliation) became mayor of Kleve, with 64.5% of the vote. Her candidacy was supported by the SPD and FDP, and opposed by CDU and Green Party candidates. Northing was the first mayor of Cleves since World War I who was not a CDU member.[11] In 2020 Wolfgang Gebing (CDU) was elected mayor.[1]

Language and dialect

The native language of Kleve and much of the Lower Rhine region is a Dutch dialect known as Cleverlander (Dutch: Kleverlands, German: Kleverländisch), most closely related to South Guelderish, but the official language is German, which is dominant among the younger generation.

Because of its geographical location at the Dutch-German border, there is a strong overlap in culture and language. One example of this is Govert Flinck (1615 – 1660), who though born in Kleve established himself as a Dutch artist. On the other hand, the Dutch artist Barend Cornelis Koekkoek (1803 – 1862) settled in Kleve and became a successful landscape painter. His works are collected by and exhibited in the local museum Haus Koekkoek for his and others' romantic paintings.

Twin towns – sister cities

Kleve is twinned with:[12]

Notable people

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Wahlergebnisse in NRW Kommunalwahlen 2020, Land Nordrhein-Westfalen, accessed 21 June 2021.
  2. ^ "Bevölkerung der Gemeinden Nordrhein-Westfalens am 31. Dezember 2021" (in German). Landesbetrieb Information und Technik NRW. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
  3. ^ L. Grootaers & G. G. Kloeke, eds., Taalatlas van Noord- en Zuid-Nederland (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1939): [1].
  4. ^ Encarta-encyclopedie Winkler Prins (1993–2002) s.v. "Kleef [aardrijkskunde]. §1. Geschiedenis". Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum.
  5. ^ R. V. Jones. "Most Secret War".
  6. ^ The World at War, Episode Nineteen: "Pincers" - Thames Television 1974
  7. ^ Note, Kleve was bombed by a force of 295 Lancasters and 10 Mosquitoes of No. 1 and No. 8 Groups.
  8. ^ Chris Everitt, Martin Middlebrook, The Bomber Command War Diaries: An Operational Reference Book
  9. ^ a b "Statistisches Jahrbuch 2013" (PDF). Stadt Kleve. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  10. ^ "Sehenswürdigkeiten: Synagogenplatz". Stadt Kleve. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  11. ^ Matthias Grass: Erdrutsch-Sieg für Sonja Northing, Rheinische Post Kleve, September, 14th 2015
  12. ^ "Städtepartnerschaften". kleve.de (in German). Kleve. Retrieved 2021-02-16.

External links

  • Official website   (in German)
  • Tourist Information (in German)
  • Edicts of Jülich, Cleves, Berg, Grand Duchy Berg, 1475-1815 (Coll. Scotti) online
  • Settlement of Dortmund between Brandenburg and Palatinate-Neuburg and the conflict of succession in Jülich, in full text

kleve, this, article, about, north, rhine, westphalia, town, other, uses, disambiguation, cleves, redirects, here, duchy, duchy, cleves, jülich, cleves, berg, united, duchies, jülich, cleves, berg, german, ˈkleːvə, listen, traditional, english, cleves, kleevz,. This article is about the North Rhine Westphalia town For other uses see Kleve disambiguation Cleves redirects here For the duchy see Duchy of Cleves For Julich Cleves Berg see United Duchies of Julich Cleves Berg Kleve German ˈkleːve listen traditional English Cleves k l iː v z KLEEVZ Dutch Kleef French Cleves Spanish Cleveris Latin Clivia Low Rhenish Kleff is a town in the Lower Rhine region of northwestern Germany near the Dutch border and the River Rhine From the 11th century onwards Cleves was capital of a county and later a duchy Today Cleves is the capital of the district of Cleves in the German state of North Rhine Westphalia The city is home to one of the campuses of the Rhine Waal University of Applied Sciences Kleve KleveTownSchwanenburg CastleFlagCoat of armsLocation of Kleve within Kleve districtKleveShow map of GermanyKleveShow map of North Rhine WestphaliaCoordinates 51 47 24 N 06 08 24 E 51 79000 N 6 14000 E 51 79000 6 14000 Coordinates 51 47 24 N 06 08 24 E 51 79000 N 6 14000 E 51 79000 6 14000CountryGermanyStateNorth Rhine WestphaliaAdmin regionDusseldorfDistrictKleveGovernment Mayor 2020 25 Wolfgang Gebing 1 CDU Area Total97 79 km2 37 76 sq mi Elevation12 m 39 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total52 470 Density540 km2 1 400 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes47533Dialling codes0 28 21Vehicle registrationKLEWebsitewww kleve de Contents 1 Territory of the municipality 2 History 3 Demographics 3 1 Census data 3 2 Religion 4 Gallery 5 Government 5 1 City Council 5 2 Mayor 6 Language and dialect 7 Twin towns sister cities 8 Notable people 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksTerritory of the municipality EditIn addition to the inner city the territory of Kleve comprises fourteen villages and populated places Bimmen Brienen Donsbruggen Duffelward Griethausen Keeken Kellen Materborn Reichswalde Rindern Salmorth Schenkenschanz Warbeyen and Wardhausen History EditThe name Kleff probably derives from Middle Dutch clef clif cliff bluff referring to the promontory on which the Schwanenburg castle was constructed Since the city s coat of arms displays three clover leaves German Klee Low German Kliev the city s name is sometimes linked by folk etymology to the clover but the corresponding Dutch word is klaver 3 Notably Kleve was spelled with a C throughout its history until spelling reforms introduced in the 1930s required that the name be spelled with a K In 2008 the CDU announced its intention to return the name to its original spelling The Schwanenburg Castle which was the residence of the Dukes of Cleves stands on a steep hill It is located at the northern terminus of the Kermisdahl where it joins with the Spoykanal which was previously an important transportation link to the Rhine The old castle has a massive tower the Schwanenturm 180 feet 55 m high that is associated in legend with the Knight of the Swan immortalized in Richard Wagner s Lohengrin Medieval Kleve grew together from four parts the Schwanenburg Castle the village below the castle the first city of Kleve on Heideberg Hill and the Neustadt New City dating from the 14th century In 1242 Kleve received city rights The Duchy of Cleves which roughly covered today s districts of Kleve Wesel and Duisburg was united with the Duchy of Mark in 1368 was made a duchy itself in 1417 then united with the neighboring duchies of Julich and Berg in 1521 when John III Duke of Cleves married Mary heiress of Julich Berg Ravenburg Cleves in the 17th century Kleve s most famous native was Anne of Cleves 1515 1557 daughter of John III Duke of Cleves and briefly the fourth wife of Henry VIII of England Several local businesses are named after her including the Anne von Kleve Galerie Mid 17th century Forest Garden The ducal dynasty became extinct in the male line in 1609 leading to a succession crisis in the duchies the War of the Julich Succession 1609 1614 After the Thirty Years War ended in 1648 the succession dispute was resolved with Cleves passing to the elector of Brandenburg thus becoming an exclave of the Margraviate of Brandenburg later Brandenburg Prussia During the Thirty Years War the city had been under the control of the Dutch Republic which in 1647 had given Johann Moritz von Nassau Siegen administrative control over the city He approved a renovation of Schwanenburg Castle in the baroque style and commissioned the construction of extensive gardens that greatly influenced European landscape design Significant amounts of his original plan for Kleve were put into effect and have been maintained to the present a particularly well loved example of which is the Forstgarten Forest Garden In 1701 Cleves became part of the Kingdom of Prussia During the War of the First Coalition Cleves was captured by French Revolutionary troops on 19 October 1794 In 1795 it was incorporated into the Roer department which became part of the Cisrhenian Republic in 1797 which in turn was formally annexed by the French First Republic in 1802 becoming the French First Empire in 1804 Prussia retrieved the city in 1815 City and port of Kleve c 1895 The mineral waters of Kleve and the wooded parkland surrounding it made it a fashionable spa in the 19th century At this time Kleve was named Bad Cleve English Spa of Cleves It was not until 1935 when the German spelling of its name was officially changed from Cleve to Kleve 4 During World War II Kleve was the site of one of the two radio wave stations that served the Knickebein aircraft navigation system Luftwaffe bombers used radio beams from Kleve and a second station at Stolberg to navigate to British targets 5 The Knickebein system was eventually jammed by the British It was replaced by the higher frequency X Gerat system which used transmitter stations located on the channel coast of France British infantry advance through bombed out Kleve February 1945 Kleve was heavily bombed during the Second World War and over 90 of buildings in the city were severely damaged Most of the destruction was the result of a raid late in the war in 1945 conducted at the request of Lieutenant General Brian Horrocks in preparation for Operation Veritable Horrocks recounted his decision in the 1973 television documentary The World at War Then they came to me and they said Do you want the town of Cleves taken out By taken out they meant the whole of the heavy bombers putting on to Cleves Now I knew that Cleves was a very fine old historical German town Anne of Cleves one of Henry VIII s wives came from there I knew that there were a lot of civilians in Cleves men women and children If I said no they would live If I said yes they would die A terrible decision you ve got to take But everything depended on getting a high piece of ground at Materborn The German reserves would have to come through Cleves and we would have to breach the Siegfried Line and get there And your own lives your own troops must come first so I said yes I did want it taken out But when all those bombers went over the night just before zero hour to take out Cleves I felt a murderer And after the war I had an awful lot of nightmares but always Cleves 6 Horrocks later said that this had been the most terrible decision I had ever taken in my life and that he felt physically sick when he saw the bombers overhead 7 8 As a result of the bombing relatively little of the pre 1945 city remains Those structures spared include a number of historic villas built during the heyday of the spa Bad Kleve located along the B9 near the Tiergarten Of those buildings destroyed many were reconstructed including most of the Schwanenburg and the Stiftskirche the Catholic parish church Constructed on high ground many of these landmarks can be seen from the surrounding communities Since 1953 there has been a broadcasting facility for FM radio and television from regional broadcaster WDR near Kleve The current aerial mast was brought into service in 1993 The steel tube mast rises 126 4 metres high and has a diameter of 1 6 metres It is stabilized by guy wires attached at 57 and 101 6 metres height After the Second World War important employers in the area were associated with the West German Economic Miracle Wirtschaftswunder and included the XOX Bisquitfabrik XOX Biscuit Factory GmbH and the Van den Berg schen Margerinewerke Van den Berg s Margarine Factory Another important employer was the Elefanten Kinderschuhfabrik Elefant Children s Shoe Factory Retail became an increasingly important industry particularly after the institution of the euro in 2002 Dutch citizens often crossed the open border to patronize Kleves retailers and much of the euros spent on shopping in Kleve came from the Netherlands Lower costs of real estate have attracted a wave of Dutch citizens who purchased houses in the area Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 18156 517 18326 990 7 3 18679 209 31 7 189813 724 49 0 191018 135 32 1 192019 453 7 3 193021 561 10 8 193921 784 1 0 195028 740 31 9 196021 129 26 5 197045 675 116 2 198045 899 0 5 199047 191 2 8 200048 926 3 7 201049 794 1 8 201350 650 1 7 Census data Edit According to the Statistical Yearbook of Cleves 9 as of 2013 50 650 people resided in the city The population density was 517 9 people per square kilometer 86 7 of the residents had the German citizenship including residents with dual citizenship and 10 1 another EU citizenship 5 6 Dutch and 2 9 Polish In the city in 2013 the population was distributed with 19 7 under the age of 21 25 6 from 21 to 40 29 7 from 41 to 60 20 1 from 61 to 80 and 4 9 who were 81 years of age or older For every 100 females there were 96 7 males For every 100 females age 21 and over there were 93 9 males 81 3 of the citizens lived in households without children under the age of 18 9 2 with one child 6 1 with two children 1 7 with three children and 0 1 with four children or more Religion Edit Like the rest of the Lower Rhine region Kleve is a predominantly Roman Catholic city 9 The city is part of the Diocese of Munster 61 1 of the residents are Roman Catholics 14 4 Protestant and 24 6 Other The largest section of this group are residents without any religious affiliation but there are also sizeable Russian Orthodox and Muslim communities in Kleve The synagogue of Kleve was destroyed during Kristallnacht and is today commemorated on the Synagogenplatz Synagogue square on which the building s outline can be seen The fifty killed Jewish citizens of Cleves are remembered with signs that tell their names and dates and places of death 10 In 1767 the town was at the center of a controversy between prominent European rabbis known as The Kleve Divorce over the legality of a divorce granted by a groom whose sanity was in doubt Gallery Edit Schwanenburg Castle Forest Garden Bust Barend Cornelis Koekkoek Museum Haus KoekkoekGovernment EditCity Council Edit Prior to the Nazi Era Kleve s local politics were dominated by the Catholic Centre Party This situation continued with the Christian Democratic successor party CDU after the Second World War in spite of resettled displaced people from eastern Germany most of them Protestants Until 2004 the CDU controlled an absolute majority of the city council Today Kleve is governed by a coalition of CDU and the Green Party Since the last local elections on 25 May 2014 the following parties are represented in Cleves city council In addition to nationwide parties Offene Klever Open Cleves has a number of seats Party SeatsCDU Christian Democrats 39 52 17SPD Social Democrats 28 96 13Green Party 13 10 6Open Cleves 11 00 5FDP Liberals 7 42 3Participation 42 32 The next local elections are scheduled for 2020 Mayor Edit In 2015 Sonja Northing no party affiliation became mayor of Kleve with 64 5 of the vote Her candidacy was supported by the SPD and FDP and opposed by CDU and Green Party candidates Northing was the first mayor of Cleves since World War I who was not a CDU member 11 In 2020 Wolfgang Gebing CDU was elected mayor 1 Language and dialect EditThe native language of Kleve and much of the Lower Rhine region is a Dutch dialect known as Cleverlander Dutch Kleverlands German Kleverlandisch most closely related to South Guelderish but the official language is German which is dominant among the younger generation Because of its geographical location at the Dutch German border there is a strong overlap in culture and language One example of this is Govert Flinck 1615 1660 who though born in Kleve established himself as a Dutch artist On the other hand the Dutch artist Barend Cornelis Koekkoek 1803 1862 settled in Kleve and became a successful landscape painter His works are collected by and exhibited in the local museum Haus Koekkoek for his and others romantic paintings Twin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Germany Kleve is twinned with 12 Ameland Netherlands Fitchburg United States Ronse Belgium Worcester England United KingdomNotable people EditMarie of Cleves Duchess of Orleans 1426 1487 mother of king Louis XII of France Johannes von Soest 1448 1506 medieval musician music theorist poet and composer Duke Englebert of Cleves 1462 1506 Count of Nevers Anne of Cleves 1515 1557 fourth wife of Henry VIII of England Marie Eleonore of Cleves 1550 1608 Duchess Consort of Prussia Govaert Flinck 1615 1660 Dutch painter worked in Kleve Anacharsis Cloots 1755 1794 nobleman politician and French revolutionary Heinrich Vohs c 1763 1804 actor and singer Joachim Murat 1767 1815 Grand Duke of Grand Duchy of Berg during the Napoleonic years Heinrich Berghaus 1797 1884 cartographer Joseph Beuys 1921 1986 artist grew up in Kleve Karl Leisner 1915 1945 Roman Catholic martyr and beatified by Pope John Paul II grew up in Kleve Willi Lippens born 1945 footballer Jurgen Mollemann 1945 2003 politician FDP Federal Minister Barbara Hendricks born 1952 politician SPD Federal Minister Klaus Steinbach born 1953 swimmer president of the German Olympic Sports Confederation in 2002 2006 Tina Theune born 1953 football coachSee also EditGet of Cleves Kleve transmitterReferences Edit a b Wahlergebnisse in NRW Kommunalwahlen 2020 Land Nordrhein Westfalen accessed 21 June 2021 Bevolkerung der Gemeinden Nordrhein Westfalens am 31 Dezember 2021 in German Landesbetrieb Information und Technik NRW Retrieved 20 June 2022 L Grootaers amp G G Kloeke eds Taalatlas van Noord en Zuid Nederland Leiden E J Brill 1939 1 Encarta encyclopedie Winkler Prins 1993 2002 s v Kleef aardrijkskunde 1 Geschiedenis Microsoft Corporation Het Spectrum R V Jones Most Secret War The World at War Episode Nineteen Pincers Thames Television 1974 Note Kleve was bombed by a force of 295 Lancasters and 10 Mosquitoes of No 1 and No 8 Groups Chris Everitt Martin Middlebrook The Bomber Command War Diaries An Operational Reference Book a b Statistisches Jahrbuch 2013 PDF Stadt Kleve Retrieved December 22 2015 Sehenswurdigkeiten Synagogenplatz Stadt Kleve Retrieved December 22 2015 Matthias Grass Erdrutsch Sieg fur Sonja Northing Rheinische Post Kleve September 14th 2015 Stadtepartnerschaften kleve de in German Kleve Retrieved 2021 02 16 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kleve Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Kleve Official website in German Tourist Information in German Edicts of Julich Cleves Berg Grand Duchy Berg 1475 1815 Coll Scotti online Settlement of Dortmund between Brandenburg and Palatinate Neuburg and the conflict of succession in Julich in full text Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kleve amp oldid 1132851086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.