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Kiel
(redirected from Kiel, Germany)

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Kiel (kēl), city (1994 pop. 248,930), capital of Schleswig-Holstein, N central Germany, on Kiel Bay, an arm of the Baltic Sea. Situated at the head of the Kiel Canal, the city was Germany's chief naval base from 1871 to 1945, when the naval installations were dismantled. Kiel is now a shipping and industrial center; the major industries are shipbuilding and engineering. There are large shipyards and factories that manufacture textiles, metal products, and printed materials. It is the largest and economically the most important city in Schleswig-Holstein. Chartered in 1242, Kiel joined the Hanseatic League in 1284. It became the residence of the dukes of Holstein. Kiel passed to Denmark in 1773; with Holstein it was annexed by Prussia in 1866. The sailors' mutiny that began at Kiel at the end of World War I touched off a socialist revolution in Germany. In World War II the city suffered severe damage from Allied air attacks. The city is the seat of a university (founded 1665) and several museums, including the oldest art gallery and botanical gardens in Germany. The sailing and yachting events of the 1972 Olympic summer games were held there. The city holds a yearly regatta that draws visitors from around the world.

Kiel

City (pop., 2002 est.: 232,242), capital of Schleswig-Holstein state, northern Germany. A port at the eastern end of the Kiel Canal, it was founded in 1242. It entered the Hanseatic League in 1284; in 1773 Kiel became part of Denmark. Schleswig-Holstein passed to Prussia in 1866, and Kiel became its capital in 1917. An important naval base, it was the target of Allied bombing during World War II. It is the site of St. Nicholas Church (c. 1240), a ducal palace (c. 1280), and the Christian-Albrechts University of Kiel (founded 1665).


Kiel
a port in N Germany, capital of Schleswig-Holstein state, on the Kiel Canal (connecting the North Sea with the Baltic): joined the Hanseatic League in 1284; became part of Denmark in 1773 and passed to Prussia in 1866; an important naval base in World Wars I and II; shipbuilding and engineering industries. Pop.: 233 039 (2003 est.)

Kiel 

a city and port in the Federal Republic of Germany, in the Land (state) of Schleswig-Holstein. It is located at the Baltic entrance to the Kiel Canal, lying along both shores of the Kiel Fjord. Population, 270,000 (1970). Kiel is an important transportation center and naval base. Approximately 1.5 million tons of freight passes through the port annually (shipping accounts for 80 percent). Industries in Kiel include shipbuilding (Deutsche Werft-Howaldts Werke), electrical engineering, food-processing (margarine and canned fish), and the manufacture of precision and optical instruments. The city is the site of a university and a number of scholarly centers, including an institute for world economics.

Kiel has been known since the 13th century. In 1242 it became a city. In 1284, Kiel entered a union of German cities, which was later called the Hanseatic League. The Treaty of Kiel was concluded in the city in 1814. In early November 1918, there was an uprising of sailors in Kiel, commencing the November Revolution of 1918 in Germany.



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ASNEL papers; 13 PN865 The articles in this volume were first presented at a 2005 meeting of the Association for the Study of New Literatures in English, held in Kiel, Germany.
Byline: ANI Washington, May 25 (ANI): Scientists from University of Kiel, Germany have identified a genetic link between dental disease periodontitis and coronary heart disease (CHD).
Undefeated IBF middleweight champion Arthur Abraham will take on United States fighter Lajuan Simon in Kiel, Germany, on March 14, it was announced on Thursday.
 
 
 
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