Rheinbach, District town in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
Rheinbach serves as the administrative seat of its district in North Rhine-Westphalia, positioned between smaller villages and larger regional centers at the western edge of rolling farmland. The municipality includes residential areas, schools, and educational institutions distributed across several neighborhoods.
Roman engineers built sections of the Eifel Aqueduct through the present town center around 80 AD, and traces of this ancient water channel remained visible in the ground for centuries. After the Second World War, ethnic German refugees from the Sudetenland settled here and brought glass-making skills that continue to shape local industries today.
The settlement of Sudeten Germans in 1947 introduced glass-making traditions, resulting in the establishment of specialized glass education programs and museums.
Highway A61 and the RB23 rail line connect the town to Bonn and other nearby cities, making day trips straightforward to plan. Pedestrians find short walking distances between shops in the center, while hiking trails toward the Eifel begin outside the residential streets.
The municipal coat of arms received official approval from Wilhelm II in 1915 and displays a black cross on silver, pointing to centuries of ties with the Archdiocese of Cologne. This heraldic design remains visible on public buildings and official documents today.
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