Niederlahnstein
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Niederlahnstein, a town of Germany, situated on the right bank of the Rhine. Pop. (1905) 4351. It has two Roman Catholic churches. The chief industries are the making of machinery and shipbuilding. Niederlahnstein obtained civic rights in 1332, and was until 1803 on the territory of the electors of Trier. Here on 1 January 1814 a part of the Russian army crossed the Rhine. In the vicinity are the Johanniskirche, a Romanesque church restored in 1857, and the Allerheiligenberg, whereon stands a chapel, once a famous place of pilgrimage.
The church of St. John in Niederlahnstein is the oldest gallery church in the Middle Rhine region. The church building, which is situated directly on a bank of the Rhine, was an important example for the development of church buildings in the Middle Rhine region.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.