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Kranenburg, North Rhine-Westphalia

Kranenburg is a town and municipality in the district of Cleves in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is located near the border with the Netherlands, 12 kilometres (7 mi) south-east of Nijmegen and 11 kilometres (7 mi) west of Cleves.

Kranenburg
Location of Kranenburg within Kleve district
NetherlandsKrefeldBorken (district)Viersen (district)Wesel (district)Bedburg-HauEmmerich am RheinGeldernGochIssumKalkarKerkenKevelaerKleveKranenburgReesRheurdtStraelenUedemWachtendonkWeeze
Kranenburg
Kranenburg
Coordinates: 51°47′23″N 6°0′26″E / 51.78972°N 6.00722°E / 51.78972; 6.00722
CountryGermany
StateNorth Rhine-Westphalia
Admin. regionDüsseldorf
DistrictKleve
Subdivisions9
Government
 • Mayor (2020–25) Ferdi Böhmer[1] (CDU)
Area
 • Total76.96 km2 (29.71 sq mi)
Elevation
21 m (69 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-31)[2]
 • Total11,087
 • Density140/km2 (370/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes
47559
Dialling codes0 28 26 und 0 28 21
Vehicle registrationKLE
Websitewww.kranenburg.de

Since 1992, Kranenburg has evolved into a commuter town for Nijmegen.[citation needed]

The village has always focused on the Dutch city of Nijmegen, and the local language was Dutch until far into the 19th century.[citation needed]

Towns and villages in the municipality Edit

History Edit

Middle Ages Edit

First records show that Kranenburg was founded in the 13th century by the Baron of Kleve. The first castle was built in 1270 and the first church a few years later by Dietrichs Luf von Kleve († 1277). In 1294, the village raised to the status of town. In 1308 "The Miraculous Trinity" ("Wundertätige Dreifaltigkeit") was found, establishing Kranenburg as a place of pilgrimage. According to legend, a one-legged priest went into the forest after church and a divine revelation came upon him. Overcome by the power of the Holy Spirit, the priest fell asleep under a tree. The next day, he woke up to find that God had given him two additional legs. At the tree where he had slept, the Miraculous Trinity now stands, functioning as a memorial to the now three-legged priest.

In 1370, the county Land Kranenburg came into the possession of the von Kleve family line again, after it had been leased to Gerhard I knight, Lord of Horne and Weert, Lord of Perweys, Lord of Herlaer, and later his son, the bishop Dietrich. During this time the town got its first fortifications. At the end of the 15th century, a new castle, substantial stone fortifications with 2 gates and an unknown number of towers were erected. The southernmost of these towers acted as the town windmill (Stadtwindmühle). The town bloomed most prosperously during the first half of the 15th century, which resulted in the construction of the large, Gothic St. Peter und Paul church. In 1436, the St. Martins Priory was moved to Kranenburg from Zyfflich, followed in 1445/46 by the Augustinian women's nunnery Katharinenhof Kranenburg,[3] which was established in the Kranenburger Mühlenstraße as an axillary branch of the Klever Nunnery of Mount Sion (Schwesternhauses vom Berg Sion). After a fierce religious feud over the new prince bishop within the Münster Cathedral Chapter since 1450, the Kranenburger Treaty was signed in Kranenburg in 1457, assigning John II of Pfalz-Simmern as the new prince bishop.[4][5]

Early Renaissance Edit

Multiple town fires and floods diminished the prosperity that Kranenburg had known during the Middle Ages. With the end of the hereditary lineage of the Duchy of Jülich-Kleve-Bergischen in 1609, county Kranenburg and the Duchy of Cleves became the property of lords of Brandenburg-Prussia. In 1675, Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg (16 February 1620 – 29 April 1688) gave Kranenburg to his personal physician, Arnold Fey. After his death in 1678, Kranenburg returned into the possession of the family of Brandenburg-Prussia. Around 1650, the "reformed congregation" of Kranenburg was founded, and got a small church in 1723. The historic town hall was destroyed completely by fire in 1789. In 1800, the then derelict town gates were demolished.

19th and 20th century Edit

During the Napoleonic Wars and subsequent French occupation, Kranenburg was a separate canton within the Roer département and temporary the most northern location of the Napoleonic Empire. At the same time, it however lost its town privileges. In 1802, the Order of St. Martin and the St. Catherine convent became secular. After the Vienna Convention, the counties of Kranenburg, Nütterden und Frasselt-Schottheide grounded the community (Bürgermeisterei) of Kranenburg. Later, in 1936, Grafwegen, that previously belonged to Kessel, was added to the administrative community of Kranenburg. Kranenburg remained a mainly agricultural community until far into the 20th century.

Kranenburg during World War II Edit

 
8 February - 11 March 1945: Operations Veritable and Blockbuster (yellow) and Grenade (green)

During the winter of 1944 -1945, the town of Kranenburg found itself in the middle of heavy fighting. In the nearby Klever Reichswald and the surroundings of the nowadays village of Kranenburg, Operation Veritable, also known as the Battle of the Reichswald took place. Taking place from 8 February till 11 March 1945, Operation Veritable was a part of General Dwight Eisenhower's "broad front" strategy to occupy the west bank of the Rhine, before attempting any crossing, conquest of the Ruhrgebiet industrial area, and eventual push towards Berlin. Veritable was originally called Valediction and had been planned originally for execution in early January, 1945. One day after the start of Operation Veritable on the 8th, the Germans blew the gates out of the largest Roer dam, sending water surging down the valley. The next day they added to the flooding by doing the same to dams further up stream on the Roer and the Urft. The river rose at two feet an hour and the valley downstream to the Meuse stayed flooded for about two weeks.

Modern-day Kranenburg Edit

After the Second World War, the counties of Wyler and Zyfflich were added to the administrative community Kranenburg. After the 1st North Rhine Westphalia Communal Reformation Program (1. kommunalen Neugliederungsprogramm) of 1 July 1969, the country of Kranenburg existed out of the communities of:[6]

  • Kranenburg
  • Nütterden
  • Frasselt
  • Schottheide
  • Grafwegen
  • Mehr
  • Niel
  • Wyler
  • Zyfflich

At present day, the community of Kranenburg is a border town within a Europe "without borders". With the introduction the European Union and subsequent EU internal market without boundaries, many Dutch moved from the Netherlands to Kranenburg in Germany, attracted by economic motives, e.g. low real estate prices/ taxes. This resulted in a massive influx increase of more than 200% between 1992 and 2008, growing the total population of the small community dramatically. Although, German authorities suggest diplomatically to "steer" this influx by "handing out permits selectively", migration away from the area by its original German citizens, and "enclave formation" of "Dutch-only" clusters is already observed.[7] This, according to international publications of the Centre for Border Research (NCBR) of the nearby located University of Nijmegen, is mainly caused by the refusal of the Dutch migrants to integrate/ participate in German society.[8][9] Based on their observations, the investigators conclude that 100% of the life of these Dutch migrants lies across the border in the Netherlands, although their residence lies in Germany, solely out of financial motives. Hence, for example Dutch parents selectively send their children to Dutch schools, Dutch physicians and hospitals are visited, Dutch sporting and social organisations are joined, Dutch media are read, watched, and listened to. Many do not speak the German language, and don't make any effort to acquire German language skills. Illustratively, the Dutch are reported "to drive back to the Netherlands to buy a jar of peanut butter".[9]

In their conclusions, the authors observe that this refusal of the Dutch to integrate, participate, and contribute to their new German community contrasts strongly with the current Dutch public opinion,[10] political climate, or indeed legislation. The Dutch political climate, and the apparent support of Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, was recently discussed and condemned by the European Union.[11][12] Dutch legislation, the Integration law for immigrants to the Netherlands Act obliges migrants entering the Netherlands to integrate into Dutch society.[13][14] To measure this, migrants are subjected to courses and a final exam, determining the migrants' ability to speak the Dutch language and general knowledge of Dutch society. Failure to pass the exam (e.g. inability to speak Dutch) results in expulsion. Participation in this exam is only required of non-EU nationals.[10][15][16] Although public sentiments and opinions vary considerably, as for the whole EEC territory, the German conditions of residence for non EU nationals are very similar to those in the Netherlands.[17]

Gallery Edit

Notable people Edit

Born in Kranenburg Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ 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. ^ List of Christian religious houses in North Rhine-Westphalia List of Christian religious houses in_North Rhine-Westphalia
  4. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Muenster". newadvent.org.
  5. ^ de:Geschichte der Stadt Münster#Die Stiftsfehde 1450 bis 1457 Geschichte der Stadt Münster, Die Stiftsfehde 1450 bis 1457 (German)
  6. ^ M. Bünermann, Die Gemeinden des ersten Neugliederungsprogramms in Nordrhein-Westfalen, Köln, 1970, Deutscher Gemeindeverlag
  7. ^ Landschaftsverband Westfalen-Lippe (LWL) - Wohnen jenseits der Grenze – Wohnmigration von Niederländern in die deutsche Grenzregion der EUREGIO - Simone Thiesing 9 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Houtum, H. van; Gielis, R. (2006). "Elastic migration: the case of Dutch short-distance transmigrants to the borderlands of Belgium and Germany. In: TESG, Vol. 97, No. 2, pp. 191-198" (PDF).
  9. ^ a b Houtum, H. van en Gielis, R. (2006), Elastische migratie. Nederlandse migranten in de Duitse en Belgische grensgebieden, Geografie, jaargang 15, nummer 8, p. 24-2
  10. ^ a b SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg, Germany (22 September 2011). "Studentin in Ausländer-raus-Show: Mit Applaus zur Abschiebung". SPIEGEL ONLINE.
  11. ^ "Dutch PM refuses Europe call to disavow far-right website". eubusiness.com.
  12. ^ Dutch PM's 'dreadful silence' over anti-immigrant website, Joseph Daul, chairman European People's Party group, European Parliament, 20 March 2012 23 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "Immigratie, integratie en inburgering". rijksoverheid.nl. 13 November 2017.
  14. ^ Dutch Governmental Program: "Het begint met taal" (It's Starts With Language) 1 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "Login". timesonline.co.uk.
  16. ^ SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg, Germany (24 January 2006). "Holland's New Greeting for Immigrants: 'If it Ain't Dutch, It Ain't Much'". SPIEGEL ONLINE.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 May 2012. Retrieved 3 April 2012.

External links Edit

  Media related to Kranenburg at Wikimedia Commons

kranenburg, north, rhine, westphalia, kranenburg, town, municipality, district, cleves, state, north, rhine, westphalia, germany, located, near, border, with, netherlands, kilometres, south, east, nijmegen, kilometres, west, cleves, kranenburgmunicipalitycoat,. Kranenburg is a town and municipality in the district of Cleves in the state of North Rhine Westphalia Germany It is located near the border with the Netherlands 12 kilometres 7 mi south east of Nijmegen and 11 kilometres 7 mi west of Cleves KranenburgMunicipalityCoat of armsLocation of Kranenburg within Kleve districtKranenburgShow map of GermanyKranenburgShow map of North Rhine WestphaliaCoordinates 51 47 23 N 6 0 26 E 51 78972 N 6 00722 E 51 78972 6 00722CountryGermanyStateNorth Rhine WestphaliaAdmin regionDusseldorfDistrictKleveSubdivisions9Government Mayor 2020 25 Ferdi Bohmer 1 CDU Area Total76 96 km2 29 71 sq mi Elevation21 m 69 ft Population 2021 12 31 2 Total11 087 Density140 km2 370 sq mi Time zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST Postal codes47559Dialling codes0 28 26 und 0 28 21Vehicle registrationKLEWebsitewww kranenburg deSince 1992 Kranenburg has evolved into a commuter town for Nijmegen citation needed The village has always focused on the Dutch city of Nijmegen and the local language was Dutch until far into the 19th century citation needed Contents 1 Towns and villages in the municipality 2 History 2 1 Middle Ages 2 2 Early Renaissance 2 3 19th and 20th century 2 4 Kranenburg during World War II 2 5 Modern day Kranenburg 2 6 Gallery 3 Notable people 3 1 Born in Kranenburg 4 References 5 External linksTowns and villages in the municipality EditKranenburg Nutterden Schottheide Mehr including Zelem Castle Frasselt Zyfflich Wyler Niel GrafwegenHistory EditMiddle Ages Edit First records show that Kranenburg was founded in the 13th century by the Baron of Kleve The first castle was built in 1270 and the first church a few years later by Dietrichs Luf von Kleve 1277 In 1294 the village raised to the status of town In 1308 The Miraculous Trinity Wundertatige Dreifaltigkeit was found establishing Kranenburg as a place of pilgrimage According to legend a one legged priest went into the forest after church and a divine revelation came upon him Overcome by the power of the Holy Spirit the priest fell asleep under a tree The next day he woke up to find that God had given him two additional legs At the tree where he had slept the Miraculous Trinity now stands functioning as a memorial to the now three legged priest In 1370 the county Land Kranenburg came into the possession of the von Kleve family line again after it had been leased to Gerhard I knight Lord of Horne and Weert Lord of Perweys Lord of Herlaer and later his son the bishop Dietrich During this time the town got its first fortifications At the end of the 15th century a new castle substantial stone fortifications with 2 gates and an unknown number of towers were erected The southernmost of these towers acted as the town windmill Stadtwindmuhle The town bloomed most prosperously during the first half of the 15th century which resulted in the construction of the large Gothic St Peter und Paul church In 1436 the St Martins Priory was moved to Kranenburg from Zyfflich followed in 1445 46 by the Augustinian women s nunnery Katharinenhof Kranenburg 3 which was established in the Kranenburger Muhlenstrasse as an axillary branch of the Klever Nunnery of Mount Sion Schwesternhauses vom Berg Sion After a fierce religious feud over the new prince bishop within the Munster Cathedral Chapter since 1450 the Kranenburger Treaty was signed in Kranenburg in 1457 assigning John II of Pfalz Simmern as the new prince bishop 4 5 Early Renaissance Edit Multiple town fires and floods diminished the prosperity that Kranenburg had known during the Middle Ages With the end of the hereditary lineage of the Duchy of Julich Kleve Bergischen in 1609 county Kranenburg and the Duchy of Cleves became the property of lords of Brandenburg Prussia In 1675 Frederick William Elector of Brandenburg 16 February 1620 29 April 1688 gave Kranenburg to his personal physician Arnold Fey After his death in 1678 Kranenburg returned into the possession of the family of Brandenburg Prussia Around 1650 the reformed congregation of Kranenburg was founded and got a small church in 1723 The historic town hall was destroyed completely by fire in 1789 In 1800 the then derelict town gates were demolished 19th and 20th century Edit During the Napoleonic Wars and subsequent French occupation Kranenburg was a separate canton within the Roer departement and temporary the most northern location of the Napoleonic Empire At the same time it however lost its town privileges In 1802 the Order of St Martin and the St Catherine convent became secular After the Vienna Convention the counties of Kranenburg Nutterden und Frasselt Schottheide grounded the community Burgermeisterei of Kranenburg Later in 1936 Grafwegen that previously belonged to Kessel was added to the administrative community of Kranenburg Kranenburg remained a mainly agricultural community until far into the 20th century Kranenburg during World War II Edit nbsp 8 February 11 March 1945 Operations Veritable and Blockbuster yellow and Grenade green During the winter of 1944 1945 the town of Kranenburg found itself in the middle of heavy fighting In the nearby Klever Reichswald and the surroundings of the nowadays village of Kranenburg Operation Veritable also known as the Battle of the Reichswald took place Taking place from 8 February till 11 March 1945 Operation Veritable was a part of General Dwight Eisenhower s broad front strategy to occupy the west bank of the Rhine before attempting any crossing conquest of the Ruhrgebiet industrial area and eventual push towards Berlin Veritable was originally called Valediction and had been planned originally for execution in early January 1945 One day after the start of Operation Veritable on the 8th the Germans blew the gates out of the largest Roer dam sending water surging down the valley The next day they added to the flooding by doing the same to dams further up stream on the Roer and the Urft The river rose at two feet an hour and the valley downstream to the Meuse stayed flooded for about two weeks Modern day Kranenburg Edit After the Second World War the counties of Wyler and Zyfflich were added to the administrative community Kranenburg After the 1st North Rhine Westphalia Communal Reformation Program 1 kommunalen Neugliederungsprogramm of 1 July 1969 the country of Kranenburg existed out of the communities of 6 Kranenburg Nutterden Frasselt Schottheide Grafwegen Mehr Niel Wyler ZyfflichAt present day the community of Kranenburg is a border town within a Europe without borders With the introduction the European Union and subsequent EU internal market without boundaries many Dutch moved from the Netherlands to Kranenburg in Germany attracted by economic motives e g low real estate prices taxes This resulted in a massive influx increase of more than 200 between 1992 and 2008 growing the total population of the small community dramatically Although German authorities suggest diplomatically to steer this influx by handing out permits selectively migration away from the area by its original German citizens and enclave formation of Dutch only clusters is already observed 7 This according to international publications of the Centre for Border Research NCBR of the nearby located University of Nijmegen is mainly caused by the refusal of the Dutch migrants to integrate participate in German society 8 9 Based on their observations the investigators conclude that 100 of the life of these Dutch migrants lies across the border in the Netherlands although their residence lies in Germany solely out of financial motives Hence for example Dutch parents selectively send their children to Dutch schools Dutch physicians and hospitals are visited Dutch sporting and social organisations are joined Dutch media are read watched and listened to Many do not speak the German language and don t make any effort to acquire German language skills Illustratively the Dutch are reported to drive back to the Netherlands to buy a jar of peanut butter 9 In their conclusions the authors observe that this refusal of the Dutch to integrate participate and contribute to their new German community contrasts strongly with the current Dutch public opinion 10 political climate or indeed legislation The Dutch political climate and the apparent support of Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte was recently discussed and condemned by the European Union 11 12 Dutch legislation the Integration law for immigrants to the Netherlands Act obliges migrants entering the Netherlands to integrate into Dutch society 13 14 To measure this migrants are subjected to courses and a final exam determining the migrants ability to speak the Dutch language and general knowledge of Dutch society Failure to pass the exam e g inability to speak Dutch results in expulsion Participation in this exam is only required of non EU nationals 10 15 16 Although public sentiments and opinions vary considerably as for the whole EEC territory the German conditions of residence for non EU nationals are very similar to those in the Netherlands 17 Gallery Edit nbsp Kranenburg catholic church Pfarrkirche Kranenburg nbsp Kranenburg tower the Muhlenturm nbsp Nutterden catholic church Pfarrkirche nbsp Frasselt catholic church Pfarrkirche Frasselt nbsp Niel church Sankt Bonifatiuskirche nbsp Wyler catholic church Pfarrkirche Wyler nbsp Zyfflich church Sankt MartinskircheNotable people EditBorn in Kranenburg Edit Alexander von Spaen 1619 1692 Prussian field marshalReferences Edit 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 List of Christian religious houses in North Rhine Westphalia List of Christian religious houses in North Rhine Westphalia CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Muenster newadvent org de Geschichte der Stadt Munster Die Stiftsfehde 1450 bis 1457 Geschichte der Stadt Munster Die Stiftsfehde 1450 bis 1457 German M Bunermann Die Gemeinden des ersten Neugliederungsprogramms in Nordrhein Westfalen Koln 1970 Deutscher Gemeindeverlag Landschaftsverband Westfalen Lippe LWL Wohnen jenseits der Grenze Wohnmigration von Niederlandern in die deutsche Grenzregion der EUREGIO Simone Thiesing Archived 9 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Houtum H van Gielis R 2006 Elastic migration the case of Dutch short distance transmigrants to the borderlands of Belgium and Germany In TESG Vol 97 No 2 pp 191 198 PDF a b Houtum H van en Gielis R 2006 Elastische migratie Nederlandse migranten in de Duitse en Belgische grensgebieden Geografie jaargang 15 nummer 8 p 24 2 a b SPIEGEL ONLINE Hamburg Germany 22 September 2011 Studentin in Auslander raus Show Mit Applaus zur Abschiebung SPIEGEL ONLINE Dutch PM refuses Europe call to disavow far right website eubusiness com Dutch PM s dreadful silence over anti immigrant website Joseph Daul chairman European People s Party group European Parliament 20 March 2012 Archived 23 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Immigratie integratie en inburgering rijksoverheid nl 13 November 2017 Dutch Governmental Program Het begint met taal It s Starts With Language Archived 1 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine Login timesonline co uk SPIEGEL ONLINE Hamburg Germany 24 January 2006 Holland s New Greeting for Immigrants If it Ain t Dutch It Ain t Much SPIEGEL ONLINE Bundesregierung die Anspruchseinburgerung Archived from the original on 1 May 2012 Retrieved 3 April 2012 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Kranenburg at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kranenburg North Rhine Westphalia amp oldid 1137486262, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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