Verden an der Aller

E532658

Verden an der Aller is a historic town in Lower Saxony, Germany, known for its medieval architecture and role as a former prince-bishopric seat.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Verden an der Aller canonical 4

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf town
administrativeRegion Weser-Ems (historical) NERFINISHED
areaCode 04231
capitalOf district of Verden
climate temperate oceanic climate
country Germany NERFINISHED
distanceToBremen about 35 kilometres
elevationAboveSeaLevel about 15 metres
hasCityRightsSince 12th century
hasIndustry equestrian industry
food processing
services sector
hasLandmark Aller bridge NERFINISHED
Domplatz NERFINISHED
Verden Cathedral NERFINISHED
historic old town
hasRailwayStation Verden (Aller) station NERFINISHED
hasReligiousBuilding Catholic church
Lutheran churches
hasTwinTown Hargeisa NERFINISHED
Jelgava NERFINISHED
Płock NERFINISHED
Saumur NERFINISHED
historicalRegion Electorate of Hanover NERFINISHED
Prince-Bishopric of Verden NERFINISHED
historicalRole seat of the Prince-Bishopric of Verden
knownFor cathedral
equestrian sports
medieval architecture
locatedEastOf Bremen NERFINISHED
locatedIn Lower Saxony
district of Verden
northwestern Germany
locatedNearRiver Weser NERFINISHED
locatedOnRiver Aller NERFINISHED
mayorTitle Bürgermeister
officialLanguage German
partOf Weser-Aller region NERFINISHED
postalCode 27283
primaryEconomicActivity agriculture in surrounding area
regional services
railwayConnection Bremen–Hanover railway NERFINISHED
state Lower Saxony NERFINISHED
timeZone CET
timeZoneDST CEST
vehicleRegistrationCode VER NERFINISHED

Referenced by (4)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Warwick hasTwinTown Verden an der Aller
Saumur twinTown Verden an der Aller
Prince-Bishopric of Verden capital Verden an der Aller
Saint-Sébastien-sur-Loire, France hasTwinTown Verden an der Aller
subject surface form: Saint-Sébastien-sur-Loire