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Reinhardswald

The Reinhardswald (German pronunciation) is a range of hills up to 472.2 m above sea level (NN) and covering an area of over 200 km²[1] in the Weser Uplands in the district of Kassel, Hesse (Germany). Of this, 183 km² are part of the unincorporated area known as Gutsbezirk Reinhardswald.

Valley of the Weser with the Reinhardswald
Oak stand in the Reinhardswald
In the Reinhardswald: the ancient forest of Sababurg
Old oaks in the ancient forest of Sababurg

The area is known for its myths and legends, such as Grimms' Fairy Tales, and the "Sleeping Beauty" castle of Sababurg is internationally known.[2][3]

Geography edit

The Reinhardswald is located in the north of North Hesse between Kassel and Bad Karlshafen, Hann. Münden and Hofgeismar. In the north and east this woodland area runs up against the Weser and, in the southeast and south against the Fulda; both rivers form locally the border with Lower Saxony. In the west it borders partly on the Esse and, in the northwest, on the Diemel.

To the north of the Reinhardswald, on the far side of the Weser, is the Solling, to the northeast is the Kiffing and to the east, the Bramwald. To the southeast, beyond the Fulda, is the Kaufungen Forest; not far away to the southwest of the Reinhardswald the Habichtswald looks down on the Kassel Basin.

Description edit

The Reinhardswald comprises a very extensive, gently folded, extremely thickly forested and almost uninhabited Bunter sandstone plateau, which rises from about 200 m up to a maximum 472.2 m above NN and which tilts gently towards the west. Its two highest hills, both of which are heavily wooded, are called the Staufenberg (472.2 m) and Gahrenberg (472.1 m).

At over 200 km² in area the Reinhardswald is one of the largest forests and most sparsely populated regions in Germany; within Hesse it is the largest contiguous area of forest. Beech and oak, in particular, thrive here and there are extensive areas of wood pasture (Hutewald).

Only a few country roads cross the Reinhardswald. For instance, to cross the hills in a north-south direction from Helmarshausen via Gottsbüren [de] to Immenhausen-Holzhausen by bicycle or car, requires a drive of about 38 km on mostly empty, small and often very narrow roads that, especially in the south of the forest, are often arrow straight. And apart from Gottsbüren there are no settlements until the southern edge of the Reinhardswald near Holzhausen. The road through the north of the forest is a designated tourist route called the "Weser Renaissance Road" and the road through the southern part of the area is part of the designated tourist route Deutsche Märchenstrasse ("German Fairy Tale Route") (the "Sleeping Beauty Route").

History edit

General edit

The Reinhardswald was once an imperial forest. The northern end between the Weser and the Diemel was gifted by the Emperor, Henry II, to Helmarshausen Abbey; the southern portion went to the Bishopric of Paderborn. Landgrave Henry of Hesse purchased the forest back in 1306 and pledged it in 1355 to Hesse, which then retained possession of the forest permanently and whose princes, especially Philip the Magnanimous used it as a favourite stag-hunting ground.

Mining was carried out in and around the Reinhardswald for centuries. Evidence of brown coal mining at Gahrenberg (locally from 1842 to 1970 in the underground mine) may be found as early as the time of Landgrave William IV in 1575. The early mining of alum ore and quartz sand, which was subsequently extracted in the glassworks at Hann. Münden, is recorded. Around 1592 a trade union was documented in Immenhausen-Holzhausen . From the period between 1611 and 1666 other evidence of mining was recorded.

Extensive wood pastures and old farmyards and farms bear witness to the agricultural tradition of the Reinhardswald.

Myths edit

 
The Sababurg

There are several myths about the origin of the Reinhardswald, of which the most famous are described here:

Version 1: Count Reinhard was a gambler and drinker. One night he was playing with the Bishop of Paderborn. After he had lost all his money, he wagered all his property on a game. He begged for grace and the bishop promised him a harvest wherever he sowed acorns. This popular version is also performed by a theatre group.

Version 2: Count Reinhard ruled the mighty forest, densely occupied by villages, but was sentenced to death for extortion and robbery. At his urgent entreaty he was allowed once more before his execution to cultivate the pastures and harvest them. But craftily, after destroying the villages, he sowed the farmers' fields with acorns, which ripened long after he was dead. Thus the Reinhardswald was born.

 
Wood pasture tree in the ancient forest of Sababurg

Places of interest edit

The best known visitor destination in the Reinhardswald is the so-called "Sleeping Beauty" castle of Sababurg with its wildlife park. In addition the nature reserve of the ancient forest of Sababurg (Urwald Sababurg), which is located between Sababurg Castle and Hofgeismar-Beberbeck recalls a long-forgotten time and a landscape of virgin forest.

Controversy over wind power development edit

In early 2022, the Kassel regional council approved a plan to build 18 wind turbines, each 241 meters high, in the Reinhardswald, creating the largest wind farm in Hesse. Promoters claim to be placing the turbines in spots where the forest is already cleared due to damage by storms, summer droughts, and the bark beetle. The plan is opposed by citizen's groups, partly on grounds that the turbines would endanger birds and bats and would harm tourism.[4]

Hills edit

The hills and elevations within the Reinhardswald and its foothills include (heights in metres above Normalnull):

  • Steinhäufe (391.1 m)
  • Knotberg (388.0 m)
  • Olbenberg (371.1 m)
  • Papenköpfe (367.8 m
  • Steinkopf (353.2 m)[7]
  • Sandkopf (340.1 m)
  • Staufenküppel (333.8 m)
  • Kuhberg (326.0 m)
  • Grunewaldskopf (324.9 m)
  • Kuhläger Kopf (290.5 m)
  • Heegeberg (280.2 m)
  • Sieburg (274 m)
  • Ischenberg (271.8 m)
  • Steinkopf (271 m)[8]
  • Klipsberg (242 m)
  • Kleiner Pinnacker (197.6 m)[9]
  • Moosberg (185 m)

Rivers and streams edit

The Weser flows past just to the east of the Reinhardswald in a deeply incised valley. To the southeast is the equally deep valley of the Fulda; to the west the little Esse and, to the northeast, the Diemel. The Holzape is the longest stream within the uplands themselves, and is fed by numerous other brooks including the Holzkape and Lempe. There are also many ponds and pools.

Towns and villages edit

These places are located within the Reinhardswald:

  • Gottsbüren
  • Hofgeismar-Beberbeck (Gehöft-Ansiedelung)

The following towns and villages lie on the edge of the Reinhardswald:

Somewhat further away from the Reinhardswald are:

Literature edit

  • Augustins Reisehandbücher (Nr. 4) Der Reinhardswald und Bramwald nebst angrenzenden Gebieten. Kassel (o.J., c. 1920)
  • Alfred Bonnemann: Der Reinhardswald. Verlag der Weserbuchhandlung. Hann. Münden 1984
  • Hermann-Josef Rapp (Hrsg.): Reinhardswald. Eine Kulturgeschichte. Euregio, Kassel 2002, ISBN 3-933617-12-X

Film documentaries edit

  • Der Baum der Bäume. Geheimnisvolle Reise in die Welt der Eichen, TV documentary by Herbert Ostwald, Germany 2004 – which focuses on the old oak wood pastures of the Reinhardswald.
  • Der Reinhardswald, TV documentary by Simone Jung, Germany 2005 - The film by Simone Jung gives an insight into the life of several people who live in the forest. The Sababurg and its restoration is also covered.

See also edit

  • The German Wikipedia entry on Reinhardswald

Footnotes and references edit

  1. ^ WRRL Hesse 2009-06-01 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Thomas L. Johnson and Eberhard Michael Iba. The German Fairy Tale Landscape. (2006), pp. 115 and 168.
  3. ^ Darwin Porter and Danforth Prince. Frommer's Germany. (Oxford: Wiley, 2011).
  4. ^ "Bis zu 240 Meter hoch - 18 Windräder im Reinhardswald genehmigt". February 2, 2022.
  5. ^ The Kleiner Staufenberg is the south peak of the Staufenberg
  6. ^ The Großer Pinnacker is an eastern spur of the Hahneberg
  7. ^ The Steinkopf ({{Subst:Formatnum:353.2}} m) is located west of Hilwartshausen
  8. ^ The Steinkopf ({{Subst:Formatnum:271}} m) is east of Wülmersen
  9. ^ The Kleiner Pinnacker is a southeastern spur of the Hahneberg

External links edit

  • at Spiegel-Online

51°31′N 9°31′E / 51.517°N 9.517°E / 51.517; 9.517

reinhardswald, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Reinhardswald news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German March 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 122 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Reinhardswald see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated de Reinhardswald to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Learn how and when to remove this message The Reinhardswald German pronunciation is a range of hills up to 472 2 m above sea level NN and covering an area of over 200 km 1 in the Weser Uplands in the district of Kassel Hesse Germany Of this 183 km are part of the unincorporated area known as Gutsbezirk Reinhardswald Valley of the Weser with the Reinhardswald Oak stand in the Reinhardswald In the Reinhardswald the ancient forest of Sababurg Old oaks in the ancient forest of Sababurg The area is known for its myths and legends such as Grimms Fairy Tales and the Sleeping Beauty castle of Sababurg is internationally known 2 3 Contents 1 Geography 2 Description 3 History 3 1 General 3 2 Myths 4 Places of interest 5 Controversy over wind power development 6 Hills 7 Rivers and streams 8 Towns and villages 9 Literature 10 Film documentaries 11 See also 12 Footnotes and references 13 External linksGeography editThe Reinhardswald is located in the north of North Hesse between Kassel and Bad Karlshafen Hann Munden and Hofgeismar In the north and east this woodland area runs up against the Weser and in the southeast and south against the Fulda both rivers form locally the border with Lower Saxony In the west it borders partly on the Esse and in the northwest on the Diemel To the north of the Reinhardswald on the far side of the Weser is the Solling to the northeast is the Kiffing and to the east the Bramwald To the southeast beyond the Fulda is the Kaufungen Forest not far away to the southwest of the Reinhardswald the Habichtswald looks down on the Kassel Basin Description editThe Reinhardswald comprises a very extensive gently folded extremely thickly forested and almost uninhabited Bunter sandstone plateau which rises from about 200 m up to a maximum 472 2 m above NN and which tilts gently towards the west Its two highest hills both of which are heavily wooded are called the Staufenberg 472 2 m and Gahrenberg 472 1 m At over 200 km in area the Reinhardswald is one of the largest forests and most sparsely populated regions in Germany within Hesse it is the largest contiguous area of forest Beech and oak in particular thrive here and there are extensive areas of wood pasture Hutewald Only a few country roads cross the Reinhardswald For instance to cross the hills in a north south direction from Helmarshausen via Gottsburen de to Immenhausen Holzhausen by bicycle or car requires a drive of about 38 km on mostly empty small and often very narrow roads that especially in the south of the forest are often arrow straight And apart from Gottsburen there are no settlements until the southern edge of the Reinhardswald near Holzhausen The road through the north of the forest is a designated tourist route called the Weser Renaissance Road and the road through the southern part of the area is part of the designated tourist route Deutsche Marchenstrasse German Fairy Tale Route the Sleeping Beauty Route History editGeneral edit The Reinhardswald was once an imperial forest The northern end between the Weser and the Diemel was gifted by the Emperor Henry II to Helmarshausen Abbey the southern portion went to the Bishopric of Paderborn Landgrave Henry of Hesse purchased the forest back in 1306 and pledged it in 1355 to Hesse which then retained possession of the forest permanently and whose princes especially Philip the Magnanimous used it as a favourite stag hunting ground Mining was carried out in and around the Reinhardswald for centuries Evidence of brown coal mining at Gahrenberg locally from 1842 to 1970 in the underground mine may be found as early as the time of Landgrave William IV in 1575 The early mining of alum ore and quartz sand which was subsequently extracted in the glassworks at Hann Munden is recorded Around 1592 a trade union was documented in Immenhausen Holzhausen From the period between 1611 and 1666 other evidence of mining was recorded Extensive wood pastures and old farmyards and farms bear witness to the agricultural tradition of the Reinhardswald Myths edit nbsp The Sababurg There are several myths about the origin of the Reinhardswald of which the most famous are described here Version 1 Count Reinhard was a gambler and drinker One night he was playing with the Bishop of Paderborn After he had lost all his money he wagered all his property on a game He begged for grace and the bishop promised him a harvest wherever he sowed acorns This popular version is also performed by a theatre group Version 2 Count Reinhard ruled the mighty forest densely occupied by villages but was sentenced to death for extortion and robbery At his urgent entreaty he was allowed once more before his execution to cultivate the pastures and harvest them But craftily after destroying the villages he sowed the farmers fields with acorns which ripened long after he was dead Thus the Reinhardswald was born nbsp Wood pasture tree in the ancient forest of SababurgPlaces of interest editThe best known visitor destination in the Reinhardswald is the so called Sleeping Beauty castle of Sababurg with its wildlife park In addition the nature reserve of the ancient forest of Sababurg Urwald Sababurg which is located between Sababurg Castle and Hofgeismar Beberbeck recalls a long forgotten time and a landscape of virgin forest Controversy over wind power development editIn early 2022 the Kassel regional council approved a plan to build 18 wind turbines each 241 meters high in the Reinhardswald creating the largest wind farm in Hesse Promoters claim to be placing the turbines in spots where the forest is already cleared due to damage by storms summer droughts and the bark beetle The plan is opposed by citizen s groups partly on grounds that the turbines would endanger birds and bats and would harm tourism 4 Hills editThe hills and elevations within the Reinhardswald and its foothills include heights in metres above Normalnull Staufenberg 472 2 m Gahrenberg 472 1 m Hahneberg 460 8 m Junkernkopf 451 5 m Muhlenberg 439 0 m Langenberg 423 6 m Kleiner Staufenberg 421 0 m 5 Grosser Pinnacker 400 0 m 6 Ahlberg 394 6 m Steinhaufe 391 1 m Knotberg 388 0 m Olbenberg 371 1 m Papenkopfe 367 8 m Steinkopf 353 2 m 7 Sandkopf 340 1 m Staufenkuppel 333 8 m Kuhberg 326 0 m Grunewaldskopf 324 9 m Kuhlager Kopf 290 5 m Heegeberg 280 2 m Sieburg 274 m Ischenberg 271 8 m Steinkopf 271 m 8 Klipsberg 242 m Kleiner Pinnacker 197 6 m 9 Moosberg 185 m Rivers and streams editThe Weser flows past just to the east of the Reinhardswald in a deeply incised valley To the southeast is the equally deep valley of the Fulda to the west the little Esse and to the northeast the Diemel The Holzape is the longest stream within the uplands themselves and is fed by numerous other brooks including the Holzkape and Lempe There are also many ponds and pools Towns and villages editThese places are located within the Reinhardswald Gottsburen Hofgeismar Beberbeck Gehoft Ansiedelung The following towns and villages lie on the edge of the Reinhardswald in the north Bad Karlshafen in the east Oberweser and Reinhardshagen in the southeast Hann Munden in the west Hombressen in the southwest Immenhausen Somewhat further away from the Reinhardswald are in the west Grebenstein Hofgeismar and Trendelburg in the south KasselLiterature editAugustins Reisehandbucher Nr 4 Der Reinhardswald und Bramwald nebst angrenzenden Gebieten Kassel o J c 1920 Alfred Bonnemann Der Reinhardswald Verlag der Weserbuchhandlung Hann Munden 1984 Hermann Josef Rapp Hrsg Reinhardswald Eine Kulturgeschichte Euregio Kassel 2002 ISBN 3 933617 12 XFilm documentaries editDer Baum der Baume Geheimnisvolle Reise in die Welt der Eichen TV documentary by Herbert Ostwald Germany 2004 which focuses on the old oak wood pastures of the Reinhardswald Der Reinhardswald TV documentary by Simone Jung Germany 2005 The film by Simone Jung gives an insight into the life of several people who live in the forest The Sababurg and its restoration is also covered See also editThe German Wikipedia entry on ReinhardswaldFootnotes and references edit WRRL Hesse Archived 2009 06 01 at the Wayback Machine Thomas L Johnson and Eberhard Michael Iba The German Fairy Tale Landscape 2006 pp 115 and 168 Darwin Porter and Danforth Prince Frommer s Germany Oxford Wiley 2011 Bis zu 240 Meter hoch 18 Windrader im Reinhardswald genehmigt February 2 2022 The Kleiner Staufenberg is the south peak of the Staufenberg The Grosser Pinnacker is an eastern spur of the Hahneberg The Steinkopf Subst Formatnum 353 2 m is located west of Hilwartshausen The Steinkopf Subst Formatnum 271 m is east of Wulmersen The Kleiner Pinnacker is a southeastern spur of the HahnebergExternal links edithttps web archive org web 20050209082531 http www hessennet de reinhardswald https web archive org web 20090901121134 http www landkreiskassel de freizeit sehensw reinhard htm Forest folk from the Reinhardswald unique voters in the land at Spiegel Online 51 31 N 9 31 E 51 517 N 9 517 E 51 517 9 517 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reinhardswald amp oldid 1197944947, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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