Rhine_57                
1832 Tombleson print BINGEN AM RHEIN, RHEINLAND-PFALZ,  GERMANY (#57)

Print from steel engraving titled Bingen, published in Tombleson's Views of the Rhine edited by W.G.Fearnside, London, 1832, approx. page size is 23.5 x 14 cm, approx.  image size 16 x 11.5 cm, nice hand coloring.


Bingen,

in full Bingen Am Rhein, city, Rhineland-Palatinate Land (state), southwestern Germany. Bingen is a port at the confluence of the Rhine and Nahe rivers, near the whirlpool known as Binger Loch. It originated as the Roman fortress of Bingium and later became an imperial free city, joining the Hanseatic League in 1254. The archbishop-electors of Mainz held the town from 1281 until it fell to Hessen in 1803, after the secularization of the electorate. The Nahe bridge and Klopp Castle (destroyed 1689, restored 1854) are built on Roman foundations, and the local museum has a display of Roman surgical instruments. Other historic buildings are St. Martin's Church (1403), St. Rochus Chapel (built in thanksgiving for deliverance from the plague of 1666), and the well-known Mäuseturm (Mouse Tower) on a rock in the Rhine where, according to Saxon legend, Archbishop Hatto I of Mainz was gnawed to death by mice in 913 for wrongdoing. Now a rail junction and tourist centre, Bingen is an old-established centre of the wine trade. Pop. (1989 est.) 23,141.