File:Ulm_Panorama_01.jpg · Wikimedia Commons · See Wikimedia Commons
Also known as Ulm alb-Donau
Ulm () is the sixth-largest city of the southwestern German state of Baden-Württemberg, and with around 129,000 inhabitants, it is Germany's 60th-largest city.
Ulm is a major city in southwestern Germany with a population of around 129,000 people, making it the sixth-largest city in the state of Baden-Württemberg and the 60th-largest in all of Germany. While the provided information establishes its size and location, specific details about why the city is historically or culturally significant are not included in the context given.
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Ulm () is the sixth-largest city of the southwestern German state of Baden-Württemberg, and with around 129,000 inhabitants, it is Germany's 60th-largest city.
Ulm is located on the eastern edges of the Swabian Jura mountain range, on the upper course of the River Danube, at the confluence with the small Blau Stream, coming from the Blautopf in the west. The mouth of the Iller also falls within Ulm's city limits. The Danube forms the border with Bavaria, where Ulm's twin city Neu-Ulm lies. The city was part of Ulm until 1810, and Ulm and Neu-Ulm have a combined population of around 190,000. Ulm forms an urban district of its own (Stadtkreis Ulm), and is the administrative seat of the Alb-Donau-Kreis, the district that surrounds it on three sides, but which the city itself is not a part of. Ulm is the overall 11th-largest city on the river Danube, and the third-largest German Danubian city after Regensburg and Ingolstadt.
3 mapped locations
via Wikipedia infobox
Ulm 4) Donau
The historical entry for Ulm, Ulm, including parish and jurisdiction information, in the Meyers Gazetteer of the German Empire also known as Meyers Orts- und Verkehrs-Lexikon des Deutschen Reichs.
meyersgaz.org →BKdo Ulm 4) Donau [self] - The Bezirkskommando for Ulm is in itself. The Bezirkskommando is the District Military Command. You can look in the BKdo to find military records. The list below are those places from the Meyers Gazetteer that are nearby to Ulm (which may include itself) and are listed as containing a Catholic Church or Parish, a Protestant Church or Parish, a Synagogue, or Other Church.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).