- Westerwald
The Westerwald (IPA2|ˈvɛstɐvalt) is a low
mountain range on the right bank of the riverRhine in the German federal states ofRhineland-Palatinate ,Hesse andNorth Rhine-Westphalia . It is a part of theRheinisches Schiefergebirge (RhenishSlate Mountains). Its highest elevation, at 657 m abovesea level , is the Fuchskaute in the High Westerwald.Tourist attractions include the Dornburg (394 metres), site of some Celtic ruins from La Tène times (5th to 1st century BC), found in the community of the same name, and
Limburg an der Lahn , a town with a mediaeval centre.The geologically old, heavily eroded range of the Westerwald is in its northern parts overlaid by a volcanic upland made of
Tertiary basalt layers. It covers an area of some 50 × 70 km, and thereby roughly 3 000 km², making the Westerwald one ofGermany ’s biggest mountain ranges by area. In areas ofsubsidence , it has in its flatter western part (Lower Westerwald) the characteristics of rolling hills. Typical for the economy of the Upper Westerwald, some 40% of which is actually wooded, are traditional slatemining ,clay quarry ing,diabase and basalt mining,pottery and theiron ore industry, and among other things mining in the "Siegerländer Erzrevier" (roughly “Siegerland Ore Grounds”). Despite its relatively slight elevation, the Westerwald has for a low mountain range a typical agreeable climate. Economically and culturally, it belongs among Germany’s best known mountain ranges.The name “Westerwald” was first mentioned in 1048 in a document from the
Electorate of Trier and described at that time the woodlands ("Wald" is German for “forest” or “woods”) around the three churches inBad Marienberg ,Rennerod and Emmerichenhain, west of the royal court atHerborn . Only since the mid 19th century has the name come into common usage for the whole range.The High Westerwald has since the
Middle Ages formed the heart of the "Herrschaft zum" (also "vom" or "auf dem") "Westerwald" (“Lordship over the Westerwald”). This comprised the three court districts of Marienberg, Emmerichenhain and Neukirch. The Lordship later fell under the governance of the Lordship or County of Beilstein.Geography
Location
The Westerwald lies mostly southwest of the three-state common point shared by Rhineland-Palatinate, Hesse and North Rhine-Westphalia in the districts of Altenkirchen, Lahn-Dill,
Limburg-Weilburg , Neuwied, Rhein-Lahn,Rhein-Sieg ,Westerwaldkreis and partly inSiegen-Wittgenstein . It is found south of theRothaargebirge , southwest of the Lahn-Dill-Bergland (another low mountain range), north of theTaunus and east of theMiddle Rhine and stretches more or less southwards fromSiegen and Burbach, southwestwards fromHaiger , northwestwards fromWeilburg , northwards fromLimburg an der Lahn , northeastwards fromKoblenz , eastwards fromLinz am Rhein , southeastwards fromWissen and southwards fromBetzdorf . In its centre lie Bad Marienberg andHachenburg .Clockwise, the Westerwald is bordered by the following rivers’ valleys: the
Rhine betweenKoblenz and Linz, theSieg as far as Betzdorf, the Heller, the Dill and from its mouth nearWetzlar , theLahn up toLahnstein .Geomorphologically, the Westerwald belongs to the
Rheinisches Schiefergebirge (RhenishSlate Mountains), forming the greater part of that range’s eastern half on the Rhine’s right bank. Likewise, the Gladenbacher Bergland, lying east of the Dill, also belongs to the Westerwald, whereas the mountains reaching up to 680 m near the Haiger Saddle ("Haiger Sattel") and east ofSiegen are counted as part of theRothaargebirge .The Westerwald’s regions
The Westerwald is divided by elevation into these three regions:
* Unterer or Vorderer Westerwald, or Vorderwesterwald: : Translated here as Lower Westerwald, this region borders on the Rhine and Lahn river valley landscapes and manifests itself as the western and southwestern part of the Westerwald, a heavily eroded mountain range with elevations ranging from 200 to 400 m. The subsidence areas found within ("Dierdorfer Senke", "Montabaurer Senke") are known for their clay deposits. Indeed, the name for this small region is the Kannenbäckerland, or “Jug Bakers’ Land”, a reference to the traditionalceramics industry here. In the southwest, in the richly wooded Montabaur Heights ("Montabaurer Höhe") is found amonadnock made ofquartzite , as well as the Malberg Conservation Area ("Naturschutzgebiet Malberg"). TheSiebengebirge joining the range in the northwest nearBonn (reaching 464 m) is, however, regionally grouped with theMiddle Rhine area.
* Oberer Westerwald: : Translated here as Upper Westerwald, this is a partly wooded land of volcanic crests with major basalt layers, above all in the area of the Westerwald Lake Plateau ("Westerwälder Seenplatte"), with elevations ranging from some 350 to 500 m. To the south, as part of the Lahn valley, the hilly Limburg Basin ("Limburger Becken") abuts the Upper Westerwald.
* Hoher Westerwald: :The High Westerwald is an undulating and basalt-rich tableland decked with woodlands that has a distinctly agreeable climate, and elevations ranging from roughly 450 to 657 m. Here is found the Fuchskaute, the Westerwald’s highest peak.Places
District seats in the Westerwald are: Altenkirchen (Altenkirchen district),
Montabaur (Westerwaldkreis) andNeuwied (Neuwied district). Furthermore, the Lahn-Dill-Kreis, theMayen-Koblenz district, the Rhein-Lahn-Kreis and the Limburg-Weilburg district each have shares of the Westerwald. If Sieg is taken as the Westerwald’s northernmost limit, then the Rhein-Sieg district likewise belongs here, at least in parts (for example the Siebengebirge and the communities ofEitorf andWindeck ).Transport connections
The Westerwald and its outer edges are crossed by stretches of "
Bundesstraße n" 8, 42, 49, 54, 62, 255, 256, 277, 413 and 414, over which there are connections to theAutobahn en A 3 (Cologne –Frankfurt), A 45 (Dortmund –Aschaffenburg ) and A 48.Several
railway lines also lead through the Westerwald, among them theCologne-Frankfurt high-speed rail line with stops in Montabaur and Limburg an der Lahn. Moreover, the Westerwald can also be reached by air through theSiegerland Airport , which lies in the High Westerwald, south of Burbach.Geology
Geologically, the Westerwald is part of the
Rheinisches Schiefergebirge , and likewise represents a heavily eroded remnant of a great Variscan mountain system which in theMesozoic characterized a great deal ofEurope . TheDevonian bedrock is covered by volcanic masses from theTertiary , particularlybasalt andtuff s. Economically important, besides slate,limestone and clayquarry ing, were, and still are,iron and its processing industry betweenRheintal (Unkel, Linz) and the lower Wied,pumice gravel in theNeuwied Basin, various mineral springs and, once, brown coalmining .The whole Westerwald region lay under a tropically warm arm of the sea in the
Palaeozoic (600 to 270 million years ago). This sea deposited layers of sediments many kilometres thick into the Variscangeosyncline , which were heavily folded in theorogeny that followed. The towns ofSiegen andKoblenz on the Westerwald’s north and southwest edges even gave two Lower Devonian layers, with their colourful slates, their names. The upper mountain layers are formed of volcanic strata made of basalt containing tuffs.In a few areas, slate and clay have long been quarried, the latter notably in the so-called Kannenbäckerland, but also in a few other places where the clay is worked into thesalt -glazed greyWesterwald Pottery withcobalt blue decoration. The pottery industry is centred aroundHöhr-Grenzhausen . Exports, particularly toItaly , are also important (more than one million metric tons each year). In the mid16th century , potters fromRaeren inBelgium migrated into the Westerwald, bringing with them some of their moulds. This type of pottery was taken to theNew World and was found in the earlyChesapeake settlements. Today one finds not only highly crafted moulded vases and mugs but also a range of handcrafted utility ware, with hand-painted swirling floral motifs.In the eastern Westerwald (the part lying in Hesse) are found interesting limestone deposits from the most varied of geological times. Erdbach limestone from the Lower
Carboniferous gave one small time period the name “Erdbachian” [ [http://www.bernstein.naturkundemuseum-bw.de/odonata/paleodat.htm Synoptic Time Table of Earth History ] ] .Near Breitscheid are found the remnants of an
atoll from the subtropical Devonian sea that was here 380,000,000 years ago. Parts of this limestone formation are worked inopen-pit mining ; nearEnspel , a “fossil conservation area” has been instituted, in which institutes from several colleges conduct research and excursions. A few karstcave s are of interest tospelaeology and bring about the temporary disappearance and reappearance of the Erdbach.Mountains
The Westerwald’s highest mountain is the Fuchskaute in the High Westerwald, whose somewhat surprising name means, “Fox Hollow”. This apparently refers to a spot on the mountain that the fox used for his lair (the "hollow"). Many peaks and crests exceed the 600-m level. Sorted by elevation above
sea level , these are some of the Westerwald’s highest elevations:* Fuchskaute (657 m), near Willingen, Westerwaldkreis, Rhineland-Palatinate
* Stegskopf (654 m), near Emmerzhausen, Altenkirchen district, Rhineland-Palatinate
* Salzburger Kopf (653 m), near Salzburg, Westerwaldkreis, Rhineland-Palatinate
* Höllberg (643 m), near Driedorf, Lahn-Dill-Kreis, Hesse
* Auf der Baar (618 m), near Driedorf/Breitscheid, Lahn-Dill-Kreis, Hesse
* Barstein (614 m), near Breitscheid, Lahn-Dill-Kreis, Hesse
* Knoten (605 m), near Driedorf, Lahn-Dill-Kreis, Hesse
* Die Höh (598 m), near Burbach, Siegen-Wittgenstein, North Rhine-Westphalia
* Köppel (540 m), near Montabaur, Westerwaldkreis, Rhineland-Palatinate
* Hohenseelbachskopf (530 m), near Daaden, Siegen-Wittgenstein and Altenkirchen district, North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate
* Mahlscheid (509 m), near Herdorf, Siegen-Wittgenstein and Altenkirchen district, North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate
* Malberg (422 m), near Ötzingen, Westerwaldkreis, Rhineland-Palatinate
* Hummelsberg (389 m), near Linz am Rhein, Neuwied district, Rhineland-Palatinate
* Beulskopf (388 m), near Altenkirchen, Altenkirchen district, Rhineland-PalatinateWaterways
Flowing waters
The following are the Westerwald’s rivers and streams:
*River s whose valley systems border the range (clockwise):
**Rhine – southwest edge
**Sieg – north edge
** Dill – east edge, tributary to the Lahn
**Lahn – southeast edge
* Smaller rivers within the range:
** Sayn – in the southern (Lower) Westerwald, flows west to the Rhine
** Wied (between Sieg und Sayn) – flows west to the Rhine
** Nister (in the northeast, boundary of Upper Westerwald) – flows northwest to the Sieg
** Elbbach (Sieg) – near Wissen to the Sieg
** Heller – rises in northern Westerwald and flows through theSiegerland to Betzdorf and into the Sieg.
** Elbbach (Lahn) – nearAilertchen to the Lahn
** Daade – empties between Alsdorf and Grünebach into the Heller.
* Greater streams and brooks:
** Aubach, Brexbach, Dietzhölze, Erdbach, Fockenbach, Gelbach, Hellerbach, Holzbach, Kerkerbach, Masselbach, Saynbach, Ulmbach.Standing waters
* Breitenbachtalsperre (Rennerod) (
reservoir )
* Stausee Driedorf (reservoir)
* Großer Weiher
* Fischweiher
* Heisterberger Weiher
* Krombachtalsperre (reservoir)
* Seeweiher nearMengerskirchen
* Waagweiher
* Waldsee Maroth
* Westerwälder Seenplatte (Westerwald Lake Plateau)
** Brinkenweiher
** Dreifelder Weiher (or Seeweiher)
** Haidenweiher
** Hausweiher
** Hofmannsweiher
** Postweiher
** Wölferlinger Weiher
*Wiesensee (reservoir)"Weiher" is a German word meaning “pond”.
History
Early times
Through prehistoric finds it can be determined that the
Celts settled in the Westerwald and were using theiron ore deposits in the so-called Hallstatt times (Iron Age , roughly 750 to 500 BC). In all likelihood they came into the area from theHunsrück . From La Tène times come the Celtic ringwall-girded defensive and sheltering castles which may be found on, among other peaks, the Malberg. Already by La Tène times,Germanic peoples were thrusting in from the east and from the Sieg valley. They came about 380 BC into the Upper Westerwald, bypassing the High Westerwald, seeing it as nothing more than a trackless wooded wilderness, after which they eventually came up against the Rhine in the second century.Roman times
Even in the time when the Celts found themselves having to avoid the Germanic invaders by moving to the west, the Romans were also pushing in from the Rhine's left bank to the southwest. However, the Romans only managed to seize a strip of land on the Rhine's right bank and the so-called Rhine-Westerwald; the Westerwald itself lay outside the Roman-occupied area, for the Romans preferred to maintain a little-settled, most likely pathless wilderness as their border.
Chatti times
The Westerwald's permanent settlement and thereby its territorial history began with the
Chatti (Hessians) pushing their way into the area after the Romans were driven out in the third century. Placename endings such as " –ar, –mar "and" –aha" ("Haigraha" =Haiger ) stemming from theMigration Period ("Völkerwanderung") can still be found now. These lie around the forest's outer edges in basins and dales whose soils and climate were favourable to early settlers, and include, for instance,Hadamar , Lahr andWetzlar . From the fourth to the sixth century, the settlements from the time of the taking of the land arose in formerly pathless areas, taking endings such as "–ingen" and "–heim", likeBellingen andBladernheim ; these lie on the broad, raised plains in the Upper Westerwald.Frankish times
The
Franks built their old settlements on the edge of the Westerwald in the central areas of their districts, to build up slowly and permanently strongholds in the interior. There arose places with names ending in "–rode, –scheid, –hahn, –berg, –tal" and "–seifen". Once clearing settlements had been established andlogging for iron oresmelting was under way, the widespread destruction of the forest began ["Der Westerwald" by Hermann-Josef Roth (DuMont)] . Between the sixth and ninth centuries came settlement expansion from the old settlements towards the edges, a process still witnessed in placename endings such as "–hausen, –hofen, –kirch, –burg" or "–tal". ["Das Westerwaldbuch", S. 33 ff. from the Westerwaldverein]Middle Ages
The last settlement period in the Westerwald began in the tenth century and ended about 1300. Through Carolingian policy and therefore the Trier and Cologne mission, this area underwent Christianization. Trier advanced up the Lahn, Cologne to the Rhine and Sieg. Trier-Lothringian and Lower Rhine influences were nevertheless brought into the Westerwald. Among the witnesses to the art of building at that time is the monastery church at
Limburg-Dietkirchen , in its oldest parts.After many changes in ownership between the Ottonian and Salian noble families, it was in the end the Counts of Sayn, Diez and Wied who managed to take hold of extensive landholdings. Particular importance was achieved by the Counts of Laurenburg, who later called themselves the Counts of
Nassau . In the east, the Landgraves of Hesse put it about that they could beat the Archbishopric of Mainz on the battlefield. Moreover, the Counts of Wied, the Counts of Sayn-Wittgenstein and the Electorate of Trier were all prominent landlords.Modern times
Political relations were simplified until the 16th century. Among the four greater powers' spheres of influence (Mainz, Cologne, Trier, Hesse), the House of Nassau managed to expand and strengthen its hold its territory on the Dill between
Siegen and Nassau. After the Napoleonic upheavals, Nassau had to share broad swathes of the Westerwald with the newly minted powerPrussia . A sovereignDuchy of Nassau existed until it was annexed by Prussia in 1866.Nowadays, the Westerwald is shared among three German federal states: Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate.
Famous people
*
Sabine Bätzing (Germanpolitician ,SPD )
* Hans-Arthur Bauckhage (German politician,FDP )
* Johann Wilhelm Bausch (Bishop of Limburg 1834–1840)
* Joseph Blank (German politician,CDU )
*Theodor Blank (former Federal minister, CDU)
* Wilhelm Boden (German politician, CDU; Premier of Rhineland-Palatinate 1946–1947)
* Katja Burkard (Germantelevision moderator)
* Ralph Dommermuth (entrepreneur )
*Paul Deussen (German philosophic historian and Indologist)
*Paul Dickopf (co-founder of the BKA)
* Thomas Enders (manager)
* Dieter Fritsch (German surveyor)
* Erhard Geyer (former Federal Chairman of the German Officials’ Federation)
* Frank Göbler (German Slavist)
* Paul Grimm (Germanartist )
* Dieter Hackler (Federal Commissioner for the Civil Service 1991–2006)
* Annegret Held (German writer)
* Hendrik Hering (German politician, SPD)
*Joseph Höffner (Bishop ofMünster 1962–1969 andArchbishop of Cologne 1969–1987)
* Joachim Hörster (German politician CDU, Member of theBundestag )
*Bodo Illgner (German national football player)
* Johannes Kalpers (German singer)
* Kaspar Kögler (German painter and homeland poet)
*Georg Leber (former Federal minister, SPD)
* Franz Leuninger (Resistance fighter against the National Socialist régime, died 1945)
*Ernst Lindemann , (German naval officer, Captain of the "Bismarck")
* Johann Ludwig von Nassau-Hadamar (German prince)
* Heinrich August Luyken (German writer inEsperanto )
* Hanns-Josef Ortheil (German writer)
*Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen (German social reformer)
*Mike Rockenfeller (German racecar driver)
* Gerhard Roth (German politician, SPD)
* Barbara Rudnik (German actress)
*Rudolf Scharping (German politician, SPD)
* Dirk Schiefen (German musician)
* Gerd Silberbauer (Germanactor )
*Martin Stadtfeld (Germanpianist )
*Heinrich Friedrich Karl vom Stein (Prussia n politician)
*Clemens Wilmenrod (German television cook)
*Jan Schlaudraff (German national football player)
* Dominik Schwaderlapp (Vicar-General of the Archbishopric of Cologne)
* Johann Philipp von Walderdorff (as Johann IX Elector and Archbishop of Trier 1756-1768,Prince-Bishop of Worms 1763-1768)
* Hermann Heinrich Traut (German librarian)
* Erich Wenderoth (German jurist and co-founder of theRheinische Post )
* Siegfried von Westerburg (Archbishop of Cologne 1275–1297)
* Peter, Manfred, Uwe and Günter Ludolf, the main producers of the television series "Die Ludolfs""Westerwaldlied"
The Westerwald is also internationally known in songs, above all in folksongs, and particularly the "Westerwaldlied" (“Westerwald Song”), as well as "Westerwald-Marsch" (“Westerwald March”), "Westerwald, du bist so schön" (“Westerwald, you are so lovely”), the "neues Westerwaldlied" (“New Westerwald Song”) by songwriter Ulrik Remy, "Ich bin aus 'm Westerwald" (“I am from the Westerwald”) and "Das schönste Mädchen vom Westerwald" (“The Loveliest Girl from the Westerwald”) by Karl-Eberhard Hain and Jürgen Hardeck, made well known by "De Höhner", "Die Schröders" and other groups.
"Westerwaldlied" lyrics
Other
The standard German term for a Westerwald dweller is "Westerwälder" (IPA2|ˈvɛstɐvɛldɐ; plural: same), but they are also popularly known as "Basaltköpp" (“Basalt Heads”), as they are said to be thickheaded, and they live in a basalt-rich region. "Wäller" is another vernacular name for them.
Bibliography
Hermann Josef Roth: Naturkundliche Bibliographie des rechtsrheinischen Schiefergebirges zwischen Lahn und Sieg (= Planaria, 3). Overath 1989, ISSN 0931-3737
Further reading
* Hellmuth Gensicke: "Landesgeschichte des Westerwaldes." 2., ergänzter Nachdruck der Ausgabe von 1958. Veröffentlichungen der Historischen Kommission für Nassau, Nr. 13. Gemeinsam mit der Landesarchivverwaltung Rheinland-Pfalz herausgegeben von der Historischen Kommission für Nassau. Historische Kommission für Nassau, Wiesbaden 1987, XVIII/659 S., ISBN 3-922244-80-7
* Hermann Josef Roth: Der Westerwald. Vom Siebengebirge zum Hessischen hinterland. Kultur und Landschaft zwischen Rhein, Lahn und Sieg. 4. Aufl. Köln 1989, ISBN 3-7701-1198-2
* Hermann Josef Roth: Siegerland, Westerwald, Lahn und Taunus. Geologie, Mineralogie und Paläonztologie. 2. Aufl. Bindlach 1993, ISBN 3-8112-1055-6
* Hermann J. Roth, Herbert A. Ebert & Bruno P. Kremer: Kulturlandschaft Westerwald. Perspektiven einer ökologischen Regionalentwicklung (= Pollichia-Buch 35). Bad Dürkheim 1997, ISBN 3-925754-34-2
* Markus Müller: "Gemeinden und Staat in der Reichsgrafschaft Sayn-Hachenburg 1652-1799". Wiesbaden 2005, Verlag der Historischen Kommission für Nassau. Beiträge zur Geschichte Nassaus und des Landes Hessen, Bd. 3/561 S., ISBN 3-930221-14-4
* Heiner Feldhoff: "Westerwald." In: "Literarischer Reiseführer Rheinland-Pfalz". Herausgegeben von Josef Zierden. Frankfurt 2001, ISBN 3-86099-483-2
* Oliver Greifendorf: "Kriegsschauplatz Westerwald - Einmarsch der Amerikaner im Frühjahr 1945." Helios-Verlag, Aachen 2003, ISBN 3-938208-05-8
* Ulrich Fliess: "Volkskundliche Abteilung." Ausstellungskatalog des Historischen Museum am Hohen Ufer Hannover II. Hannover 1972. Seite 99-102: "Westerwälder Steinzeug" und "Wandvitrine 142" nebst Tafel 15.
* Hermann-Josef Hucke (Redaktion) (Hrsg.): Großer Westerwaldführer. 3. Auflage. Verlag Westerwald-Verein e.V., Montabaur 1991, ISBN 3-921548-04-7.External links
* [http://www.gfh-westerwald.de/ History and local lore in the Westerwald] de icon
* Heiner Feldhoff: [http://www.kritische-ausgabe.de/hefte/provinz/profeldhoff.pdf „Hui Wäller? – Allemol! Ein literarhistorischer Gruß aus dem Westerwald“] (PDF), in: "Kritische Ausgabe", Heft 2/2001 de icon
* [http://www.westerwaldforum.de/ Information about the Westerwald, initiatives and many pictures] de icon
* [http://www2.genealogy.net/vereine/ArGeWe/karten-wewa.htm Historic Westerwald maps] de iconReferences
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