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EUR 46 - 76 Schwarzer Adler
A perfect blend of romantic flair and contemporary design, this hotel is a comfortable base for excursions in East Frisia and is situated right on the… MoreEUR 45 - 75 Hotel Pellmühle
Hotel Pellmuehle is situated in the city centre of the Frisian town Jever.
The hotel is surrounded by a lot of greenery and offers an idyllic garde… MoreEUR 55 - 94 GreenLine Hotel Im Schützenhof
This traditional hotel is located in Jever in Lower Saxony, just 500 metres from the train station. It offers bright rooms, free parking spaces and a … MoreEUR 46 - 79 Friesen Hotel
Offering a pretty garden and brightly decorated rooms with Wi-Fi, this family-run, 3-star hotel in the Frisian brewery town of Jever is just 600 metre… More | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Even though the seaport did not exist after the middle-ages, Jever remained a prospering, politically independent site of trade and commerce, attracting merchants and pirates alike, e. g. the Victual Brothers. Only after the death of the last chieftain of the Jever territory, Edo Wiemken the Younger, who died in 1511, Jever fell to Graf Edzard the Great of East Frisia for a short while before being released into independence again under the rule of Maria (Froiken Maria = Miss Maria), Edo's daughter.
She died in 1575 and her death was kept secret for fear of a return of the East Frisians. Instead, Jever became one of Oldenburg's territories by last will of Maria. It was later passed to the House of Anhalt-Zerbst. After prince Friedrich August, who had supported the English in the American Revolutionary War for financial reasons, died in 1793, Anhalt-Zerbst perished and its territories were split. Interestingly, Jever was given to Catherine II of Russia and remained Russian until Napoleon's armies occupied it in 1807. Between 1808 and 1810 it was of the Kingdom of Holland, a Napoleonic vassal state. When the French were forced to withdraw in 1813, Russia regained possession of Jever and returned it to the grand dukes of Oldenburg in 1818.
Because the Anhalt-Zerbst had guaranteed for their security and freedom of business, Jever became a center of Jewish life in Frisia, which reached its peak in the late 19th century, after which many youngsters left for the larger cities where they hoped to find better economic chances (and since the 1920s also in escape of growing anti-semitism). This caused the community to shrink to only half of its former size: In 1933, there were only 98 Jews left in Jever. The synagogue (inauguration 1802) was completely destroyed in the Night of Broken Glass, at least 63 Jever Jews were killed in the Shoah.
Image:Jever Ostfriesland 1500.png|The Herrschaft Jever, ca. 1500
Image:Jever1930.jpg|Jever, ca. 1930
Image:Jever Bottle.jpg|A bottle of Jever beer
This "Travel Guide" section is drawn from the Wikipedia article "Jever". We hope you will edit and improve it. It is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.