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DUISBURG
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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:duisburg:8d7be288c3d3
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
00ef6bc8a3d69cd08f4f224ca20252a865bd60086ad4f79dd893e56eea51b5aa
Computed Hash
00ef6bc8a3d69cd08f4f224ca20252a865bd60086ad4f79dd893e56eea51b5aa
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:42:45
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Verified Text
duisburg, a town of germany in the kingdom of prussia, 15 m. by rail n. from dusseldorf, between the rhine and the ruhr, with which rivers it communicates by a canal. it is an important railway centre. pop. (1885) 47,519; (1900) 92,729; (1905), including many outlying townships then recently incorporated, 191,551. it has six roman catholic and six protestant churches, among the latter the fine gothic salvatorkirche, of the 15th century. it is well furnished with schools, which include a school of machinery. of modern erections, the concert hall, the law courts and a memorial fountain to the cartographer gerhard kremer (mercator) are worthy of mention. there are important foundries, rolling mills for copper, steel and brass plates, chemical works, saw-milling, shipbuilding, tobacco, cotton, sugar, soap and other manufactures. duisburg was known to the romans as _castrum deutonis_, and mentioned under the frankish kings as _dispargum_. in the 12th century it attained the rank of an imperial free town, but on being mortgaged in 1290 to cleves it lost its privileges. at the beginning of the 17th century it was transferred to brandenburg, and during the thirty years' war was alternately occupied by the spaniards and the dutch. in 1655 the elector frederick william of brandenburg founded here a protestant university, which flourished until 1802.