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Upcoming Events

Program of the Permanent Conference for Historical Cities of the Mediterranean Sea


برنامج المؤتمر الدائم للمدن التاريخية للبحر الأبيض المتوسط


رسالة عيد الميلاد 2008 من بيت لحم الى العالم


Christmas Message From Bethlehem To The World


Lightning of CHRISTAMS TREE In Manger Square


حفل إضاءة شجرة عيد الميــلاد في ساحة المهد


Glasgow and Bethlehem

Country: Scotland
Date of Agreement: 20 October 1992
Name of Mayor: The Lord Provost Alex Mosson
Tel: 0044 141 2874001-2
Fax: 0044 141 2874747
Address: City Chamber, Glasgow G2 1DU

The Glasgow School of Art is one of several educational institutions in Glasgow.

Glasgow, is a city and administrative center of Strathclyde Region, western Scotland, on the Clyde River. Glasgow is the largest city and leading industrial center of Scotland. It has an excellent harbor and modern port facilities. Major imports include petroleum, grain, and timber; exports are largely manufactured goods. The city is located near important coalfields and is a major steel-producing center. Other industries include shipbuilding and printing and the manufacture of textiles, carpets, aircraft engines, electronic equipment, chemicals, alcoholic beverages, and processed foods. Relatively few buildings in Glasgow predate the 18th century; the most prominent of these are Saint Mungo's Cathedral (begun about 1136 and completed in the mid-15th century) and Provand's Lordship (circa 1471), the city's oldest house. Glasgow is an educational center; the University of Glasgow (1451), the University of Strathclyde (1796), the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama (1847), Glasgow School of Art (1845), and several technical colleges are located here. The extensive collections of the Glasgow Museums and Art Galleries are among the finest in Great Britain. Also of note in the city are the Hunterian Museum (1807), the botanic gardens, and a zoo.Glasgow grew around a church built in the mid-6th century by St. Kentigern (also called St. Mungo), apostle to the Scots. In 1116 the town's church was rebuilt for the reconstituted episcopal see of Glasgow. The great commercial growth of the community dates from the union of Scotland with England in 1707. Glasgow obtained a large share of the American commerce and soon became a center of the tobacco trade. The river was dredged to accommodate seagoing vessels. The tobacco trade ceased as a result of the American Revolution and was subsequently supplanted by cotton textile manufacture and the sugar trade with the West Indies. In the early 19th century, Glasgow began its growth as a major iron founding and shipbuilding center. During World War II the city suffered some damage from German bombing. Slum clearance and urban redevelopment projects have been undertaken since the war.