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English: A locator (text-free) map showing the Electorate of Cologne as of 1645. This is based on Willem and Joan(nes) Blaeu's 1645 map File:Blaeu 1645 - Coloniensis Archiepiscopatus.jpg. Cologne was not part of the Electorate, although it was part of the Archibishopric. The gray lines show modern day national borders.
The Cologne Ring is a four lane street and part of Bundesstraße 9. The ring road encircles the old town of Cologne on its southern, western and northern boundaries on the site of the former medieval city wall. It divides Innenstadt into old town (Altstadt) east of it and new town (Neustadt) west of it. Most of the city wall has been worked ...
The Cologne Beltway (German: Kölner Autobahnring) is the generic term for the Autobahns encircling Cologne. It consists of the Bundesautobahn 3 , the Bundesautobahn 4 and the Bundesautobahn 1 . With an average of 160,000 cars per day on the BAB 3 and 100,000 on A4 and A1, the beltway handles one of the highest traffic volumes in Germany.
map of Poll within the district of Porz High water on the "Poller Wiesen", which are a popular location for outdoor festivals. Poll (German: Köln-Poll [ˈkœln ˈpɔl]; Kölsch: Poll) [what does "²" mean?] is a quarter of the city of Cologne, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It is part of the borough of Porz.
Innenstadt (German: Köln-Innenstadt) is the central borough (Stadtbezirk) of the City of Cologne in Germany. The borough was established with the last communal land reform in 1975, and comprises Cologne's historic old town (Altstadt), the Gründerzeit era new town (Neustadt) plus the right-Rhenish quarter of Deutz. The Innenstadt has about ...
The city's tourism office offers walking tours along the remains of the Roman wall or corresponding brochures. [11] In the Middle Ages, the city grew quickly and numerous new districts were incorporated with new walls and gates, most recently from 1180 to 1259 with a new circular wall on a rampart, which now enclosed 401 hectares .
The Schildergasse (German: [ˈʃɪldɐˌɡasə]; Kölsch: Schelderjaß [ˌʃel²dɐˈjasˑ]) [what does "²" mean?] is a shopping street in central Cologne, Germany. With 13,000 people passing through it every hour, it is the busiest shopping street in Europe, according to a 2008 survey by GfK .
The station is named after one of Cologne's busiest old-town squares, on which it is also located and − to a less favorable extent − whose built environment it has shaped for the last 40 years. Public transport at Heumarkt began in 1879, with several horsecar lines encircling the square.