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Jülich

Jülich (German pronunciation: [ˈjyːlɪç] ; in old spellings also known as Guelich or Gülich, Dutch: Gulik, French: Juliers, Ripuarian: Jöllesch) is a town in the district of Düren, in the federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. As a border region between the competing powers in the Lower Rhine and Meuse areas, the town and the Duchy of Jülich played a historic role from the Middle Ages up to the 17th century.

Jülich

16

Axel Fuchs[1] (Ind.)

90.4 km2 (34.9 sq mi)

83 m (272 ft)

33,158

370/km2 (950/sq mi)

52428

Geography[edit]

Jülich stands in the Rur valley on the banks of the river Rur. The town is bordered by the town of Linnich in the north, the municipality of Titz in the northeast, the municipality of Niederzier in the southeast, the municipality of Inden in the south, and by the municipality of Aldenhoven in the west. Its maximum size is 13.3 km from east to west and 10.9 km from north to south.


The highest point in Jülich is in Bourheim, 110 m above sea level (excepting Sophienhöhe, an extensive artificial mountain made up of overburden from a nearby open-pit lignite mine, the Tagebau Hambach). The lowest point, 70 m above sea level, lies in the borough of Barmen.

Town centre

Altenburg

Barmen

Bourheim

Broich

Daubenrath

Güsten

Kirchberg

Koslar

Lich-Steinstraß

Mersch

Merzenhausen

Pattern

Selgersdorf

Stetternich

Welldorf (including Serrest)

The town of Jülich comprises 16 boroughs:

Jülich, church

Jülich, church

Entrance of the Citadel

Entrance of the Citadel

Citadel after World War II

Citadel after World War II

Haubourdin, France (1964)

France

Taicang, China (2017)

China

Jülich is twinned with:[5]

(Düren / Jülich Interchange)

BAB 4

BAB 44

literally the Rur Valley Railway (Linnich - Jülich - Düren - Heimbach)

Rurtalbahn

Historical Town Museum

[6]

Italian Renaissance architect

Alessandro Pasqualini

American Cycling Star has traced his family ancestry back to Jülich

Bobby Julich

In the Netherlands, the name is quite common, e.g. the much translated author Robert van Gulik. But one also finds variants like: Van Gulick, Van de(r) Gulik (cf David Van Der Gulik), Guliks, Gulickx, Gulikers, and Jülicher

Van Gulik

the Bavarian war minister, was born in Jülich

Nikolaus von Maillot de la Treille

Guido von Büren (Hrsg.): Jülich Stadt - Territorium - Geschichte]', 2000, ISBN 3-933969-10-7

Kleve

Ulrich Coenen: Von Juliacum bis Jülich. Die Baugeschichte der Stadt und ihrer Vororte von der Antike bis zu Gegenwart, 2. Aufl., 1989. ISBN 3-925714-17-0

Aachen

Ulrich Coenen: Stadt Jülich = Rheinische Kunststätten, Heft 368, Neuss 1991.  3-88094-696-5

ISBN

Conrad Doose/Siegfried Peters: Renaissancefestung Jülich, 1998,  3-87227-058-3

ISBN

Ulrich Eckardt/Wolfgang Hommel/Werner Katscher: Flug über Jülich, 2003,  3-87227-076-1

ISBN

Wolfgang Hommel: Stadtführer Jülich, 1998,  3-87227-065-6

ISBN

Wolfgang Hommel: Jülich im Aufbruch - Landesgartenschau und Stadtentwicklungsprogramm Jülich '98, 1998,  3-87227-098-2

ISBN

Dr. Erwin Fuchs/Wolfgang Hommel: Die Jülicher und ihre Wurzeln, 1997,  3-87227-063-X

ISBN

Eva Behrens-Hommel: Sagen und Überlieferungen des Jülicher Landes, 1996,  3-87227-061-3

ISBN

Eva Behrens-Hommel: Mundartsammlung des Jülicher Landes, 1997,  3-87227-062-1

ISBN

Hartwig Neumann: Stadt und Festung Jülich auf bildlichen Darstellungen, Bonn 1991.  3-7637-5863-1

ISBN

Gabriele Spelthahn: An der Synagoge - Jülich und der Holocaust, 1997,  3-930808-08-0

ISBN

Official website

The research centre

Campus Jülich of FH-Aachen (University of Applied Sciences)

The culture and leisure centre

The former state garden fair

Nice Webcam with a view of the witch tower

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

Media related to Jülich at Wikimedia Commons