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Europe?s industrial heritage

Where was the first ever factory on Earth? Where was the largest steam engine built? And where can you find the most up-to-date colliery of its time? Industrialisation changed the face of Europe. Consequently it has left us a rich industrial heritage. A gigantic network of sites spread all over the continent. It only has to be brought back to life. That is what the European Route of Industrial Heritage (ERIH) is doing. Come with us on an exciting journey of discovery along the milestones of European industrial history.
 
What is ERIH?
ERIH is the European Route of Industrial Heritage, a network of the most important industrial heritage sites in Europe. It is the common link between them all. From disused production plants to industrial landscape parks and inter-active technology museums. The backbone of the route consists of the so-called anchor points: the outstanding industrial monuments in the former heartlands of the Industrial Revolution, Great Britain, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg and Germany. But this is just the beginning. For ERIH intends to grow further - right to the borders of Europe.
 
Anchor Points
The name says it all. There are a lot of features anchored here. Primarily the overall framework. Anchor points comprise the complete range of European industrial history. After that, they tell tourists what they can see at a local level. Visitors of all ages can relive their industrial heritage in the form of attractive guided tours, multi-media presentations and outstanding special events. Last not least, all the anchor points are simultaneously starting points for a variety of regional routes.
 
Regional Routes
Each region has its own speciality. In this respect European industrial heritage is just like food. Its strength lies in the fact that it unites many different traditions within a single idea. The Regional Routes link landscapes and sites which have left their mark on European industrial history. Germany's Ruhrgebiet, for example. Or South Wales, a key region in the "world's first industrial nation". Both these areas comprise a number of less significant industrial monuments - the small cogs in the large machine. 
 
European Theme Routes
Such as "The treasures of the Earth": what, where, when and how were they extracted from the ground? Or "Textile manufacturing": the milestones along the way from fibre to factory. Or "Transport and Communication": retracing the tracks of the industrial revolution. Theme Routes take up specific questions relating to European industrial history and reveal potential links between radically different industrial monuments all over Europe. The result is a "circuit diagram" of the common routes of European industrial heritage. 

Latest News:

05.08.10

ERIH Annual Conference 2010 27th to 29th October 2010 in Barcelona, Spain

The registration for the ERIH conference is now open until 30th September 2010.


20.07.10

Guido Coal Mine awarded

ERIH Anchor Point Guido Coal Mine in Zabrze (Poland) awarded as Ambassador of Silesia


19.07.10

Days of Industrial Heritage in the Rhine-Main area

10 to 15 August 2010 more than 240 events at 150 sites will take place in the region between...


Welcome

to the European Route of Industrial Heritage, the tourism information network of industrial heritage in Europe.

Currently we present more than 850 sites in 32 European countries. Among these sites there are 72 Anchor Points which build the virtual ERIH main route. On thirteen Regional Routes you can discover the industrial history of these landscapes in detail. All sites relate to ten European Theme Routes which show the diversity of European industrial history and their common roots.

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Anchor Point of the Day
The mine, The Carreau Wendel Museum | Petite-Rosselle

The sheer size of the central tip is enough to give you an idea of what was going on here...

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Anchor Points

Anchor points illustrate the complete range of European industrial history.
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Regional Routes

The Regional Routes link landscapes and sites which have left their mark on European industrial history.
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European Theme Routes

Theme Routes take up specific questions relating to European industrial history.
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Biographies

History is always made by people. We present a selection of personalities who influenced the European industrial history.
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Do you know...

where the first cast-iron bridge in the world is situated?

In Ironbridge, a small town in the English county of Shropshire in the Severn Valley. The eponymous 30 meter long iron bridge over the river was built in 1779 and was the first ever bridge to be made of iron. Hence the name of the town and also the gorge spanned by the bridge. Ironbridge is an anchor point on the European Route of Industrial Heritage …

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