WUPPERTAL


Wuppertal University

The Schwebebahn in Wuppertal

Wuppertal

A panorama view over the Ölberg in Wuppertal

'Wuppertal' () is a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is located on the Wupper river south of the Ruhr area. Population 361,333 (2005).
It is a major industrial centre including such industries as: textiles, metallurgy, chemicals, medicine (Bayer), electric, rubber, vehicles and printing equipment. One of the most famous pain-killers, Aspirin, was invented in Wuppertal by Bayer.

Contents
History
Main sights
''Schwebebahn''
Wuppertal in the arts
Noted Wuppertal people
Sister Cities

History


The city was formed in 1929 by merging Barmen, Elberfeld, Vohwinkel, Ronsdorf, Cronenberg, Langerfeld, and Beyenburg. The name was initially 'Barmen-Elberfeld', and after 1930 Wuppertal ("Wupper-valley").
The city has, unique in Germany, a ribbon-like structure due to the steep hillsides along the river Wupper. The dominating city-centres Elberfeld (historic commercial centre) and Barmen (more industrial) form a united built-up area since 1850. In the following decades this "Wupper-Town" became the dominating industrial agglomeration of the territories in northwestern Germany. Before the 19th century ended this conurbation had been surpassed by Cologne, Düsseldorf and the Ruhr area, all with much more favourable topography.
During World War II it was destroyed to about 40% by the Allies as were many other industrial centres at the time. However, a large quantity of historic sites have been preserved such as the ("Mount Petrol") District, one of Germany's largest working class districts, and the so-called Briller Viertel, Germany's largest district of Bourgeois dwellings.
After the liberation from the Nazi Regime Wuppertal became a part of the British Occupancy Zone, and subsequently a part of North Rhine-Westphalia state of West Germany.

Main sights


In total, Wuppertal possesses over 4,500 buildings classified national monuments, most dating from periods of classicism, Art Nouveau and Bauhaus.
Main sights include:

★ The 'Concert-hall', a fine masterpiece of turn-of-the-century architecture (Stadthalle), inaugurated in 1900 by the German emperor William II and his wife.

★ The 'Tanztheater Wuppertal', headed by Pina Bausch, is world-famous and regularly plays at theatres in New York, Tokyo, Paris, London etc.

★ 'Engels'' house (''Engelshaus''), architecturally typical of the region. It houses a permanent display of materials associated with Friedrich Engels and other famous citizens of Wuppertal.

★ 'Wuppertal Zoo'', one of the largest, nicely landscaped zoos in Germany with many rare animals.

★ the 'Von der Heydt Museum', one of the most important galleries in Germany, with works by 19th and 20th century artists. The first of Picasso's works that ever appeared in public was displayed here.
''Schwebebahn''

One of the city's greatest attractions is the suspended monorail ("''Wuppertaler Schwebebahn''"), which was established in 1901. The tracks are 8 m above the streets and 12 m above the Wupper river.

Wuppertal in the arts



★ The play ''Die Wupper'' by Else Lasker-Schüler takes places in Elberfeld.

★ The 2000 movie ''The Princess and the Warrior'' by Tom Tykwer was filmed in Wuppertal.

★ In the 1974 Wim Wenders film ''Alice in the Cities'', the main characters visit Wuppertal.

Noted Wuppertal people



Accept, popular heavy metal band was formed in Wuppertal in the early 1970s

Friedrich Bayer, founder of the Friedrich Bayer paint factory that later became Bayer AG

Arno Breker, sculptor

Friedrich Engels, historian, co-author of the Communist Manifesto (with Karl Marx)

Hans Knappertsbusch, orchestra conductor

Else Lasker-Schüler, expressionist poet

Ulrich Leyendecker, composer

Reimar Lüst, astrophysicist

Steffen Möller, satirist, soap-opera star and TV celebrity in Poland; the most popular German in Poland

Simone Osygus, swimmer

Siegfried Palm, cellist

Johannes Rau, former Federal President of Germany

Alice Schwarzer, one of the leaders of the German feminist movement

★ Sir Hans Wolfgang Singer, economist

Rita Süssmuth, former President of the German Parliament

Helmut Thielicke, theologian

Tom Tykwer, film director ("Run Lola, Run", "The Princess and the Warrior"), co-founder of X-Filme syndicate

Günter Wand, orchestra conductor

Sulamith Wülfing, artist and illustrator

Peter Brotzmann and Peter Kowald, noted innovators in modern improvised music

Christoph Maria Herbst, actor

Sister Cities


Wuppertal is twinned with:

Beersheba, Israel

Berlin-Tempelhof-Schöneberg, Germany

Košice, Slovakia

Legnica, Poland

Matagalpa, Nicaragua

Saint-Étienne, France

Schwerin, Germany

South Tyneside, United Kingdom

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Wuppertal Companies
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