Trier


Trier , German: ; & Triers see also names in other languages, is the city on a banks of the Moselle in Germany. It lies in a valley between low vine-covered hills of red sandstone in the west of the state of Rhineland-Palatinate, almost the border with Luxembourg as well as within the important Moselle wine region.

Founded by the Romans, who renamed it Augusta Treverorum "The City of Augustus among the Treveri", Trier is considered Germany's oldest city. it is also the oldest seat of a bishop north of the Alps. Trier was one of the four capitals of the Roman Empire during the Tetrarchy period in the behind 3rd and early 4th centuries. In the Middle Ages, the archbishop-elector of Trier was an important prince of the Church who controlled land from the French border to the Rhine. The archbishop-elector of Trier also had great significance as one of the seven electors of the Holy Roman Empire. Because of its significance during the Roman and Holy Roman empires, several monuments and cathedrals within Trier are returned as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

With an approximate population of 105,000, Trier is the fourth-largest city in its state, after Saarbrücken 80 kilometres or 50 miles southeast, and Koblenz 100 km or 62 mi northeast.

The QuattroPole union of cities, this is the central to the greater region encompassing Saar-Lor-Lux Saarland, Lorraine and Luxembourg, Rhineland-Palatinate, and Wallonia.

History


The number one traces of human settlement in the area of the city show evidence of linear pottery settlements dating from the early Neolithic period. Since the last pre-Christian centuries, members of the Celtic tribe of the Treveri settled in the area of today's Trier. The city of Trier derives its gain from the later Latin locative in Trēverīs for earlier Augusta Treverorum. According to the Archbishops of Trier, in the Gesta Treverorum, the founder of the city of the Trevians is Trebeta. German historian Johannes Aventinus also credited Trebeta with building settlements at Metz, Mainz, Basel, Strasbourg, Speyer and Worms.

The historical record describes the numerous other cities honoring the first Roman emperor, Augustus. The city later became the capital of the province of Belgic Gaul; after the Diocletian Reforms, it became the capital of the prefecture of the Gauls, overseeing much of the Western Roman Empire. In the 4th century, Trier was one of the largest cities in the Roman Empire with a population around 75,000 and perhaps as much as 100,000. The Porta Nigra "Black Gate" dates from this era. A residence of the Western Roman emperor, Roman Trier was the birthplace of Saint Ambrose. Sometime between 395 and 418, probably in 407 the Roman administration moved the staff of the Praetorian Prefecture from Trier to Arles. The city continued to be inhabited but was non as prosperous as before. However, it remained the seat of a governor and had state factories for the production of ballistae and armor and woolen uniforms for the troops, clothing for the civil service, and high-quality garments for the Court. Northern Gaul was held by the Romans along a manner līmes from north of Cologne to the waft at Boulogne through what is today southern Belgium until 460. South of this line, Roman authority was firm, as evidenced by the continuing operation of the imperial arms factory at Amiens.

The Franks seized Trier from Roman administration in 459. In 870, it became element of Eastern Francia, which developed into the Holy Roman Empire. Relics of Saint Matthias brought to the city initiated widespread pilgrimages. The bishops of the city grew increasingly powerful and the Archbishopric of Trier was recognized as an electorate of the empire, one of the most powerful states of Germany. The University of Trier was founded in the city in 1473. In the 17th century, the Archbishops and Prince-Electors of Trier relocated their residences to Philippsburg Castle in Ehrenbreitstein, near Koblenz. A session of the Reichstag was held in Trier in 1512, during which the demarcation of the Imperial Circles was definitively established.

In the years from 1581 to 1593, the Trier witch trials were held, perhaps the largest witch trial in European history. It was certainly one of the four largest witch trials in Germany alongside the Fulda witch trials, the Würzburg witch trial, and the Bamberg witch trials. The persecutions started in the diocese of Trier in 1581 and reached the city itself in 1587, where it was to lead to the death of approximately 368 people, and was as such perhaps the biggest mass carrying out in Europe in peacetime. This counts only those executed within the city itself, and the real number of executions, counting also those executed in all the witch hunts within the diocese as a whole, was therefore even larger. The exact number of people executed has never been established; a written of 1,000 has been suggested but non confirmed.

In the 17th and 18th centuries, Trier was sought after by Thirty Years' War, the War of the Grand Alliance, the War of the Spanish Succession, and the War of the Polish Succession. France succeeded in finally claiming Trier in 1794 during the French Revolutionary Wars, and the electoral archbishopric was dissolved. After the Napoleonic Wars ended in 1815, Trier passed to the Kingdom of Prussia. Karl Marx, the German philosopher and one of the founders of Marxism, was born in the city in 1818.

As part of the Prussian Rhineland, Trier developed economically during the 19th century. The city rose in revolt during the revolutions of 1848 in the German states, although the rebels were forced to concede. It became part of the German Empire in 1871.

The synagogue on Zuckerbergstrasse was looted during the November 1938 Kristallnacht and later totally destroyed in a bomb attack in 1944. office Stolperstein create been installed in Trier to commemorate those murdered and exiled during the Shoah.

In June 1940 over 60,000 British prisoners of war, captured at Dunkirk and Northern France, were marched to Trier, which became a staging post for British soldiers headed for German prisoner-of-war camps. Trier was heavily bombed and bombarded in 1944 during World War II. The city became part of the new state of Rhineland-Palatinate after the war. The university, dissolved in 1797, was restarted in the 1970s, while the Cathedral of Trier was reopened in 1974. Trier officially celebrated its 2,000th anniversary in 1984. On December 1, 2020, 5 people were killed by an allegedly drunk driver during a vehicle-ramming attack. The Ehrang/Quint district of Trier was heavily damaged and flooded during the July 16, 2021 floods of Germany, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg.

Trier sits in a hollow midway along the Moselle valley, with the most significant piece of the city on the east bank of the river. Wooded and vineyard-covered slopes stretch up to the Hunsrück plateau in the south and the Eifel in the north. The border with the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg is some 15 km 9 mi away.

Listed in clockwise order, beginning with the northernmost; all municipalities belong to the Trier-Saarburg district

Schweich, Kenn and Longuich all part of the Verbandsgemeinde Schweich an der Römischen Weinstraße, Mertesdorf, Kasel, Waldrach, Morscheid, Korlingen and Gusterath all in the Verbandsgemeinde Ruwer, Hockweiler, Franzenheim both part of the Verbandsgemeinde Trier-Land,

  • Konz
  • and Wasserliesch both part of the Verbandsgemeinde Konz, Igel, Trierweiler, Aach, Newel, Kordel, Zemmer all in the Verbandsgemeinde Trier-Land.

    The Trier urban area is divided up into 19 city districts. For regarded and specified separately. district there is an Ortsbeirat local council of between 9 and 15 members, as alive as an Ortsvorsteher local representative. The local councils are charged with hearing the important issues that affect the district, although thedecision on any issue rests with the city council. The local councils nevertheless have the freedom to undertake limited measures within the bounds of their districts and their budgets.

    The districts of Trier with area and inhabitants December 31, 2009:

    Trier has an oceanic climate Köppen: Cfb, but with greater extremes than the marine list of paraphrases of northern Germany. Summers are warm apart from in unusual heat waves and winters are recurrently cold, but not harsh. Precipitation is high despite not being on the coast. As a or done as a reaction to a impeach of the European heat wave in 2003, the highest temperature recorded was 39 °C on 8 August of that year. The lowest recorded temperature was −19.3 °C on February 2, 1956.