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Neu-Isenburg (German pronunciation: [nɔʏˈʔiːzn̩ˌbʊʁk] ⓘ, lit. ' New Isenburg ' ) is a town in Germany , located in the Offenbach district of Hesse . It is part of the Frankfurt Rhein-Main urban area and has a population of 38,204 (2020).
Initially when the Main-Neckar Railway was opened, on 1 August 1846, there was no Neu-Isenburg station. To gain an economic benefit from the railway, the citizens of Neu-Isenburg made numerous submissions to the Ministry of Finance of the Grand Duchy of Hesse in Darmstadt, which was then responsible for transport in the state. These submissions ...
The A line is the north-to-south main line of the Frankfurt U-Bahn.It is the oldest and longest line of the U-Bahn system. Served by four routes (U1, U2, U3 and U8) starting at Südbahnhof Railway Station in Sachsenhausen, the A line runs through downtown Frankfurt up to Heddernheim Station in the north of the city, where it branches out to Ginnheim (U1 and U9), Oberursel (U3), Riedberg (U8 ...
Starting from 1996, the former Stadtwerke Hannover AG marketed its own telecommunications network to control its facilities through a specially established company. HTP GmbH is a telecommunications company operating in the Hanover, Hildesheim , Braunschweig , Peine , Wolfenbüttel , and Hameln-Pyrmont areas with over 100,000 residential and ...
Neu-Isenburg, town in the district of Offenbach in Hesse, Germany; Isenburg, Rhineland-Palatinate, municipality in the district of Neuwied, Germany; Isenburg (Wipperfürth) [], village in the borough of Wipperfürth in Oberbergischen Kreis in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Isenburg-Büdingen absorbed into Isenburg-Birstein: Charles William Louis: 7 May 1763 Meerholz Son of John Frederick William and Caroline of Salm: 4 May 1802 – 12 July 1806: County of Meerholz: Caroline of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Hohenstein (13 September 1764 – 28 April 1833) 29 March 1785 Wittgenstein six children 17 April 1832 Meerholz aged 68
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Steag GmbH, the former "Steinkohlen-Elektrizität AG" ("Anthracite Electricity Company") is a German power company. [1] As of 2022, it is Germany's fifth largest utility. [2]