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The Cologne Trade Fair ground was founded in 1922. Until 2005, the trade fair was based in the historic Rheinhallen, and since then moved into new premises next to them. The old Fair Tower Cologne (Messeturm Köln) is a landmark building from 1928 and features a tower restaurant on the top floor.
The channel was founded in 1999 by Jean-Marie Lustiger, who served as the Archbishop of Paris from 1981 to 2005. It is privately funded by 250,000 donors. [1]Programs have included documentaries about the Vatican and Christians in Iraq, [2] [3] [4] as well as funny skits.
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Messeturm, seen from the left river side. The Messeturm Köln (German for Fair Tower Cologne) is a highrise building which is 80 meters high, [1] in Cologne, Germany.It is crowned by the sculpture Hermes-Gesichter [2] (German for Faces of Hermes) by Hans Wissel [], professor for sculpture and plastic arts at the Kölner Werkschulen.
One of the walls of bones in the Golden Chamber A portion of the collection of skull relics in the Golden Chamber. The Golden Chamber, or Goldene Kammer, of the church contains the alleged remains of St. Ursula and her 11,000 virgins who are said to have been killed by the Huns, possibly around the time of the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains.
Cologne Cathedral (German: Kölner Dom, pronounced [ˌkœlnɐ ˈdoːm] ⓘ, officially Hohe Domkirche Sankt Petrus, English: Cathedral Church of Saint Peter) is a cathedral in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia belonging to the Catholic Church.
Two childhood friends who won the green card lottery and settled in Milwaukee have been working diligently to build their faith community.
The Cologne text Aedidius Gelenius, a catalogue of local saints, mentions in the 1645 edition a possible origin for the church in pre-Carolingian times.The missionaries Viro and Plechelmus, who later were affiliated with the Kaiserswerth cloister, are said to have come to the Rhine, to found monasteries and churches.