Mulhouse
Mulhouse is a city and commune in eastern France, close to the Swiss and German borders.
With a population of 109,443 in 2017, and 285,121 inhabitants in the metropolitan area in 2016, it is the largest city in the Haut-Rhin département, and the second largest in the Alsace region after Strasbourg. Mulhouse is the principal commune of the 39 communes which make up the agglomeration communities in France of Mulhouse Alsace Agglomération.
Mulhouse is famous for its museums, especially the Cité de l'Automobile and the Cité du Train, respectively the largest automobile and railway museums in the world. An industrial town nicknamed "the French Manchester", Mulhouse is also the main seat of the Upper Alsace University, where the secretariat of the European Physical Society is found.
Administration
Mulhouse is the chief city of an arrondissement of the Haut-Rhin département, of which it is a sub-prefecture.History
In 58 BC a battle took place west of Mulhouse and opposed the Roman army of Julius Caesar by a coalition of Germans led by Ariovistus. The first written records of the town date from the twelfth century. It was part of the southern Alsatian county of Sundgau in the Holy Roman Empire. From 1354 to 1515, Mulhouse was part of the Décapole, an association of ten Free Imperial Cities in Alsace. The city joined the Swiss Confederation as an associate in 1515 and was therefore not annexed by France in the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 like the rest of the Sundgau. An enclave in Alsace, it was a free and independent Calvinist republic, known as Stadtrepublik Mülhausen, associated with the Swiss Confederation until, after a vote by its citizens on 4 January 1798, it became a part of France in the Treaty of Mulhouse signed on 28 January 1798, during the Directory period of the French Revolution.Starting in the middle of the eighteenth century, the Koechlin family pioneered cotton cloth manufacturing; Mulhouse became one of France's leading textile centers in the nineteenth century. André Koechlin built machinery and started making railroad equipment in 1842. The firm in 1839 already employed 1,800 people. It was one of the six large French locomotive constructors until the merger with Elsässische Maschinenbau-Gesellschaft Grafenstaden in 1872, when the company became Société Alsacienne de Constructions Mécaniques.
After the Prussian victory in the Franco-Prussian War, Mulhouse was annexed to the German Empire as part of the territory of Alsace-Lorraine. The city was briefly occupied by French troops on 8 August 1914 at the start of World War I, but they were forced to withdraw two days later in the Battle of Mulhouse. Alsatians who unwisely celebrated the appearance of the French army were left to face German reprisals, with several citizens sentenced to death. After World War I ended in 1918, French troops entered Alsace, and Germany ceded the region to France under the Treaty of Versailles. After the Battle of France in 1940, it was occupied by German forces until its return to French control at the end of World War II in May 1945.
The town's development was stimulated first by the expansion of the textile industry and tanning, and subsequently by chemical and Engineering industries from the mid 18th century. Mulhouse was for a long time called the French Manchester. Consequently, the town has enduring links with Louisiana, from which it imported cotton, and also with the Levant. The town's history also explains why its centre is relatively small.
Geography
Two rivers run through Mulhouse, the Doller and the Ill, both tributaries of the Rhine. Mulhouse is approximately away from Strasbourg and Zürich; it is away from Milan and about from Frankfurt. It lies close enough to Basel, Switzerland and Freiburg, Germany to share the EuroAirPort international airport with these two cities.Districts
Medieval Mulhouse consists essentially of a lower and an upper town.- The lower town was formerly the inner city district of merchants and craftsmen. It developed around the Place de la Réunion. Nowadays this area is pedestrianised.
- The upper town developed from the eighteenth century on. Previously, several monastic orders were established there, notably the Franciscans, Augustinians, Poor Clares and Knights of Malta.
- The Nouveau Quartier is the best example of urban planning in Mulhouse, and was developed from 1826 on, after the town walls had been torn down. It is focused around the Place de la République. Its network of streets and its triangular shape are a good demonstration of the town's desire for a planned layout. The planning was undertaken by the architects G. Stolz and Félix Fries. This inner city district was occupied by rich families and the owners of local industries, who tended to be liberal and republican in their opinions.
- The Rebberg district consists of grand houses inspired by the colonnaded residences of Louisiana cotton planters. Originally, this was the town's vineyard. The houses here were built as terraces in the English style, a result of the town's close relationship with Manchester, where the sons of industrialists were often sent to study.
Main sights
- Hôtel de Ville. The town hall was built in 1553 in the Rhenish Renaissance style. Montaigne described it as a "palais magnifique et tout doré" in 1580. It is known for its trompe l'œil paintings, and its pictures of allegories representing the vices and virtues.
- Workers' quarter, inspired workers' quarters in many other industrial towns.
- Place de la Bourse and the building of the Société Industrielle de Mulhouse, in the Nouveau Quartier
- Cité de l'Automobile
- Cité du Train successor to Musée Français du Chemin de Fer
- Museum of Printed Textiles
- The Parc Zoologique et Botanique de Mulhouse
- Saint-Steffen Calvinist temple, by Jean-Baptiste Schacre
Principal economic activities
- Automobile industry
- Chemical industry
- Electronics
- Engineering
Transport
Air
Mulhouse is served by EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg, located south of the town.Rail
is well connected with the rest of France by train, including major destinations such as Paris, Dijon, Besançon, Belfort, Strasbourg, Lyon, Marseille, Montpellier and Lille. Some trains operate to destinations in Switzerland, in particular proximity Basel, Bern and Zürich. There is also a train service to Frankfurt am Main in Germany, and a Eurocity service that connects Brussels, Luxembourg, Strasbourg and Basel calls at Mulhouse.Regional services connect Mulhouse to Colmar, Strasbourg, Basel, Belfort, Kruth and Freiburg im Breisgau.
Urban transport
Transport within Mulhouse is provided by Soléa and comprises a network of buses together with the city's tram network, which opened on 13 May 2006. The tramway now consists of three tram lines and one tram-train line.- Line 1 from Nouveau Bassin to Coteaux
- Line 2 from Gare Centrale to Châtaignier
- Line 3 from Gare Centrale to Lutterbach
- Tram-train line from Gare Centrale to Thann via Lutterbach
Road
People
Mulhouse was the birthplace of:- Jean de Beaugrand, lineographer and mathematician
- , composer and synthesist
- Bernard Bloch, actor and director
- Jean Brenner, painter
- Karl Brandt, German Nazi personal physician to Adolf Hitler and head administrator of the T-4 Euthanasia Program, executed for war crimes
- David Cage, French video game designer, writer and musician. Born in Mulhouse, Cage was the first game developer to receive the Legion of Honour, the highest decoration granted in France.
- Pierre Chambon, biologist
- Mireille Delunsch, soprano
- Tom Dillmann, racing driver
- Artur Dinter, writer and Nazi politician
- Dorian Diring, footballer
- Adrien Dollfus, French zoologist and carcinologist
- Jean Dollfus, French industrialist
- Alfred Dreyfus, French military officer best known for being the focus of the Dreyfus affair
- Huguette Dreyfus, harpsichordist
- Léon Ehrhart, composer
- Nusch Éluard, performer, model and surrealist artist
- , actor, founder of the Cours Florent
- Georges Friedel, mineralogist, son of Charles Friedel
- Charles Frédéric Girard, biologist specializing on ichthyology and herpetology
- Jean-Gaspard Heilmann, painter
- , photographer
- , diplomat
- Daniel Jelensperger, musicologist
- Katia and Maurice Krafft, volcanologists
- Johann Heinrich Lambert, mathematician, physicist and astronomer
- Joffrey Lauvergne, basketball player
- Friedrich Wilhelm Levi, mathematician
- François Loeser, mathematician
- Paul Meyer, clarinetist
- Véronique North-Minca, diplomat
- Thierry Omeyer, handball goalkeeper
- Marc Pfertzel, football player
- Rémy Pflimlin, CEO of France Télévisions from 2010 to 2015
- Pierre Probst, comic and children book artist
- Napoléon Henri Reber, composer
- Claire Roman, French Air Force pilot in World War II
- Daniel Roth, organist, composer and pedagogue
- Franz Eugen Schlachter, revivalist preacher, classical scholar, and translator of the Schlachter Bible
- Christiane Scrivener, EU-Commissioner
- Daniel Schlumberger, archaeologist and professor of Near Eastern Archaeology at the University of Strasbourg and later Princeton University
- , writer
- Jean Schlumberger, jewelry designer at Tiffany & Co
- René Schützenberger, painter
- Jules Siegfried born Mulhouse in 1837, industrialist and politician, French Minister of Commerce 1892-3
- Rémy Stricker, musicologist
- Frank Ténot, press agent, pataphysician and jazz critic
- Philippe Tondre, oboist
- Vitaa, singer
- Pierre Weiss, physicist
- Alfred Werner, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1913
- , photographer
- Robert Wyler, film producer
- William Wyler, award-winning motion picture director
- Jean-Marc Savelli, a virtuoso concert pianist
- Antar Yahia, football player
- Georges Zipélius, illustrator
- Adolphe Braun, photographer
- Alfred de Glehn, designer of steam locomotives
- Armando Thiriet Koenig, industrial engineer, Director of AEG Madrid in 1919, established an AEG subsidiary in Seville in the early 1920s
Twin towns—sister cities
- Walsall, England, since 1953
- Antwerp, Belgium, since 1956
- Kassel, Germany, since 1965
- Bergamo, Italy, since 1989
- Chemnitz, Germany, since 1990
- Giv'atayim, Israel, since 1991
- Timișoara, Romania, since 1991
- Jining, China
Climate