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Fürth The title of this article contains the character ü. Where it is unavailable or not desired, the name may be represented as b is located in northern Bavaria, Germany in the district of Middle Franconia. Together with the major cities of Nuremberg and Erlangen and several minor cities, it forms the so-called "Middle-Franconian conurbation". As of January 2004, it is populated by about 112,000 inhabitants.

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History

The first village is known at the confluence of the rivers Pegnitz and Rednitz (forming the river Regnitz) since the year 800. This was an advantageous place, for several old trade-routes crossed the rivers here.

The town of Fürth is first mentioned in the year 1007 when Emperor Heinrich II. handed over his property "locum Furti dictum" to the bishop of Bamberg. From then on, authority over Fürth changed several times between the bishop of Bamberg, the Margrave of Ansbach and the ruler of Nuremberg. This constellation is represented in the crest of Fürth, a three-leafed cloverleaf.

In the Thirty Years' War the town was burned down, and only a few monuments like St. Michael's Church survived.

Fürth survived the Second World War without significant damage. The oldest building is the St. Michael's Church ("Michaelskirche") which dates partly to the Middle Ages. The historical city hall ("Altes Rathaus") is a 19th century reprise of the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence.

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