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Waltrop

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Waltrop ( German pronunciation: [ˈvaltʁɔp] is a town in the district of Recklinghausen , in North Rhine-Westphalia , Germany. It is situated on the Datteln-Hamm Canal , approximately 15 km east of Recklinghausen and 15 km north-west of Dortmund .

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12-468: The town of Waltrop is surrounded by the Bauerschaften (rural boroughs) Lippe (Unterlippe/Oberlippe), Elmenhorst, Brockenscheidt, Leveringhausen , Oberwiese and Holthausen. People already settled in this area about 2,000 years ago. The village developed around the parish church of St. Peter which was built in the 9th/10th century. It is known that in 1432 Waltrop was a part of the county Dortmund. After

24-502: A new suzerain, John I , the Duke of Cleves-Mark, who guaranteed the town its old rights as well as new ones. As a result Emperor Frederick III imposed the imperial ban on the town. The victory of the town (as a result of the Archbishop of Cologne abandoning his attempt) meant that Soest had de facto more freedom than a free imperial city until it was annexed by Prussia , but at

36-508: Is mayor of Waltrop. Waltrop is home to a museum of old ship lifts , including the Henrichenburg boat lift and a historical coal mine, called Zeche Waltrop . Waltrop is twinned with: This Recklinghausen district location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Soest Feud 1444–1449 feud in modern-day Germany [REDACTED] Territorial changes following

48-579: Is the central bibliographical database for title and ownership records of ongoing collections in Germany and Austria, for example from trade journals , magazines and newspapers . The ZDB holds records of almost all German scientific libraries and many other public libraries and is freely available on the Internet. The journal database is managed by the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin (SBB) in cooperation with

60-544: The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (DNB), the German National Library, which is responsible for the technical system support and further development. The basic requirement for the inclusion of a title in the journal database is that it belongs to the genre of the continuous collective works like periodicals , serials or series issued in several parts (booklets, volumes) and which are not limited in

72-585: The Soest Feud , the archbishops of Cologne could intervene against the counts of Mark, so that Waltrop became a part of Vest Recklinghausen. The production of coal in the mine started in 1905. As a consequence, Waltrop grew larger and became an industrial town. One coal mine was closed down in 1979, the other closed in 1992. In 1939, Waltrop got its municipal rights. The town council of Waltrop consists of 36 seats, which are divided into 6 parliamentary groups since September 2020: Since 2020 Marcel Mittelbach (SPD)

84-956: The Soest Feud ^ This is another title of the war diary of the Soest Feud as printed by Hansen. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Soest_Feud&oldid=1254491692 " Categories : Electorate of Cologne Feuds in Germany Soest (district) 1440s in the Holy Roman Empire 15th-century conflicts County of Mark 1440s conflicts Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Articles containing German-language text Articles lacking in-text citations from November 2016 All articles lacking in-text citations ZDB-ID (identifier) The Zeitschriftendatenbank or ZDB (translated as: German Union Catalogue of Serials )

96-618: The Soest Feud. In orange: Cleves-Mark wins Soest and the Soest Börde ; in grey: Cleves-Mark loses its rights in Fredeburg and Bilstein The Soest Feud ( German : Soester Fehde ), or Feud of Soest , was a feud that took place from 1444 to 1449 in which the town of Soest claimed its freedom from Archbishop Dietrich of Cologne (1414–1463), who tried to restore his rule. The town of Soest opposed this attempt on 5 June 1444 by accepting

108-518: The ZDB does not list any article title . Due to its range of title and inventory records, the ZDB is the backbone of interlibrary loan system in Germany for the aforementioned types of literature. In addition to the holdings of German libraries, it also lists those from Austria and (to a limited extent) other European countries. As one of the world's largest database of its kind, the ZDB comprises more than 1.9 million titles in all languages from 1500 up to

120-434: The duration of publication (such as lexica ). The spectrum includes not only printed evidence ( print media ), but also titles from electronic journals and microforms . The database records which periodicals are available in the individual participating libraries and allows searching for magazine titles. The so-called inventory data record provides information about which volumes are available in which library. In contrast,

132-480: The present day and it contains over 17 million ownership records of around 3630 German and Austrian libraries for these titles. Since June 2014, most of the metadata has been under the Creative Commons Zero (CC0 1.0) license and is therefore released for reuse. In the 1970s, the former Gemeinsame Körperschaftsdatei (GKD) was created from the catalogue data of the ZDB. This was incorporated into

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144-3447: The same time it had to forfeit its economic power because it was now an enclave within Cologne's territory. References [ edit ] [REDACTED] This article includes a list of references , related reading , or external links , but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations . Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations. ( November 2016 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this message ) Sources [ edit ] Joseph Hansen (ed.): The Chroniken der deutschen Städte vom 14. bis 16. Jahrhundert, Bd. 21: Soest. Leipzig, 1889 [reprint: Stuttgart, 1969]. incl: Kriegstagebuch der Soester Fehde (pp. 1–171), Werler Reimchronik der Soester Fehde (pp. 277–336), Lippstädter Reimchronik der Soester Fehde (pp. 173–275). Franz Winter: Quellenchronik zur Soester Fehde (=  Veröffentlichungen des Stadtarchivs Soest, Vol. 20, ZDB-ID   2142953-4 ). Stadtarchiv Soest, Soest, 1997. Bartholomäus van der Lake : Geschichte der Soester Fehde („Historia der Twist Veede und Uneinicheit tuschen dem Hochwerdigesten in Got Vader, edelem wolgeboren Fursten und Heren, Heren Dyderyck [Dietrich von Moers] Ertzbyschop tho Collen, des hylligen romischen Rykes dorch Italien Ertzkentzeler Churfurst, Administrator des Stichtes Paderborne, Hertoge tho Engern und Westvalen, Grave tho Möerße an einer und der ersam und erlicken Stadt Soyst an ander Syden. Begint clarlich van Byschop Dyderyck.“) Soest [ohne Jahr] ( Access to digital version ). J. A. A. Moeller: The soestische Fehde oder Krieges-Geschichte des Erzbischofs Diederich zu Koeln mit der Stadt Soest : Aus einem original alt plattdeutschen Kriegstagebuch uebersetzt und mit Anmerkungen und Zusaetzen begleitet . Lippstadt, 1804 ( digital version ). Tobias Daniels: Die Soester Fehde im diplomatischen Wirken und den historiographischen Werken des Enea Silvio Piccolomini (Papst Pius II.) . In: Soester Zeitschrift 124 (2012), pp. 35–53. Wolf-Herbert Deus: Die Soester Fehde. Festschrift der Stadt Soest zum 500. Jahrestage der Beendigung der Soester Fehde am 27. April 1949 (=  Soester wissenschaftliche Beiträge, Bd. 2, ISSN   0171-3752 ). Ritter (in Kommission), Soest, 1949. Heinz-Dieter Heimann: Die Soester Fehde. Geschichte einer erstrittenen Stadtfreiheit. Westfälische Verlags-Buchhandlung Mocker & Jahn, Soest, 2003, ISBN   3-87902-216-X . Heinz-Dieter Heimann, Uwe Tresp (ed.): Thüringische und böhmische Söldner in der Soester Fehde. Quellen zum landesherrlichen Militärwesen im 15. Jahrhundert aus thüringischen und sächsischen Archiven (=  Quellen und Studien zur History und Kultur Brandenburg-Preußens und des Alten Reiches ). Verlag für Berlin-Brandenburg, Potsdam, 2002, ISBN   3-935035-35-7 . Heinz-Dieter Heimann: Die Soester Fehde (1444–1449) . In: Harm Klueting (ed.): Das Herzogtum Westfalen, Vol. 1: Das kölnische Herzogtum Westfalen von den Anfängen der Kölner Herrschaft im südlichen Westfalen bis zur Säkularisation 1803. Münster, 2009, ISBN   978-3-402-12827-5 , pp. 321–342. External links [ edit ] Juni 1444 – The start of

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