- Sulm (Austria)
The Sulm is a river of 83 km length in Southern
Styria (Austria ) which originates at the eastern slopes of theKoralpe (a north-south running mountain range in the Southeastern Alps which separates Styria from Carinthia), and flows eastwards towards theMur through the districts of Deutschlandsberg and Leibnitz. The Sulm valley (see image below) connects the Western Styrian hill ranges with the Eastern Styrian hills and lowlands.Geography
The main tributaries of the Sulm are the "Schwarze Sulm" ("Black Sulm"; with Schwanberg as the central market town) and the "Weiße Sulm" ("White Sulm"; with
Wies ) which merge near the village of Prarath, upstream ofGleinstätten . It is there where the actual Sulm valley is considered to begin. Further downstream, nearGroßklein andFresing , the Sulm proceeds to receive the Saggau river, and - close toLeibnitz - the Lassnitz river, immediately before the Sulm makes a sharp turn to the Southeast and flows almost parallel to theMur river before joining it.The Sulm runs on top of a thick bed of its own massive
quaternary deposits, and therefore the valley bed is now quite flat although (as can be deduced from the remaining terraces on its rims) it must have been steeper initially. The river therefore breached its banks easily, and used to cause frequent major flooding, until it was regulated from the 1960s onward.A unique geographic feature in the Sulm valley is the
Sausal mountain range which has its own mildmicroclimate , supporting a significant fraction of Styria's wine-growing economy.History
The Sulm valley has yielded archeological finds from the
neolithic period onward, illustrating that it has served as an east-west traverse for thousands of years. In theIron Age , during part of theHallstatt Culture period, a settlement on the Burgstallkogel betweenGleinstätten andGroßklein had considerable regional importance. The associatednecropolis , part of which can still be seen, is one of the largest and best-preserved in Central Europe although much has been plundered from the late 19th century onward.The "Frauenberg", a hill near
Leibnitz , is especially significant in terms of pre-history. Apparently a halidom for female goddesses throughout theNeolithic and Celtic periods, its plateau bore a temple during Roman times when the municipium ofFlavia Solva flourished. Recently, one of the largest known cemeteries from the late Roman period has been identified on one of its slopes.It is believed that the Sulm valley was only minimally (if at all) populated during the "Völkerwanderung", after the Romans had withdrawn from the province of
Noricum in the 5th century. Records from the 10th and 11th century C.E., when it was resettled by Bavarian emissaries fromSalzburg , describe it as swamped and hardly passable.Many settlements in the lower Sulm valley likely date back to the 9th century when the Bavarians reclaimed the region from the predecessors of the current
Slovenians who had loosely settled it after the rule of the Avars had succumbed toCharlemagne . During the 12th century the region became a territory of the church-state ofSalzburg , and remained so for more than 400 years. The Khuenburg family, a significant branch of Salzburg nobility, owned large swaths of territory until the late 19th century.War and natural disasters that affected the eastern and southern parts of today's
Austria hardly ever spared the Sulm valley, with the probable exception of migratorylocusts of which there is no local record, even during times when other parts ofStyria suffered severely. In 1532 Turkish troops retreating from their abortive firstSiege of Vienna moved southward along theMur , and laid waste to a broad swath of land on both sides of the river; their cavalry pillaged, burned and abducted almost unhindered. In 1680 and 1681 the last outbreak of theBlack Death (bubonic plague) in Austria claimed numerous victims in the Sulm valley region.The Sulm valley region lost many vital connections to the South (especially to the city of Marburg a.d. Drau, now
Maribor ) in 1919 whenLower Styria was annexed to emergingYugoslavia . As a result, the region became more oriented towards the North, and towards the Styrian capital,Graz but also became a "quiet corner" of Austria.On occasion of a January 1947 special envoy meeting on Austrian affairs that was held in London's
Lancaster House , Yugoslavia made territorial claims not only against the southern parts of the Austrian province of Carinthia (where the population had voted to remain with Austria in theCarinthian Plebiscite of 1920), but also against parts of Southern Styria which were completely Austrian.Josip Broz Tito 's close advisor, Joze Vilfan, presented a memorandum [Memorandum of the Government of the Federative People's Republic of Yugoslavia on Slovene Carinthia, the Slovene frontier areas of Styria and the Croats of Burgenland. Government of Yugoslavia, 1946. Paperback edition] that would have made the Sulm a border river. The split that occurred between Tito and Stalin shortly thereafter caused the USSR to withdraw its initial support of these demands, and together with the uncompromizing attitude of the British occupation forces in Styria this caused the Yugoslav plan to collapse completely. Today the Sulm region andSlovenia have long put the past behind them, and entertain very friendly relations.From 1907 to 1967, a railway line was operated in the valley which merged with the
Austrian Southern Railway atLeibnitz . Many of the original station buildings still exist. Those parts of the groundworks that had not been removed during the following decades have now mostly been converted to abiotope , providing shelter for the local fauna and flora and offering a distant reflection of what the Sulm valley bottom had been before it was diverted to the present intense agricultural use.Economy
The soil of the Sulm valley is rich, and its economy is characterized by agriculture (mostly
maize , but recently also alternative crops) and - on the hillsides and in theSausal mountain range - also wine with an excellent quality. A key vegetable product (not only of the Sulm valley but of the entire region) ispumpkin seed oil , an EU-protected specialty.Tourism, mainly in the form of hiking and cycling, has developed into a significant economic factor. Mostly from the 1970s onward, a service economy has also begun to flourish in the Sulm valley.
Some areas show significant deposits of
clay . In earlier times, when peasants went barefoot except on Sundays or special occasions, the clay sticking to their feet made them yellowish-brown and therefore they were nicknamed "Gelbfüsse" ("yellow-feet"). Especially atGleinstätten these deposits have long been exploited for brick manufacturing. Tondach Gleinstätten AG (part of theWienerberger AG public construction material company) is of significant importance to the regional economy. Two factories of the Assmann Group, atLeibnitz andGleinstätten , are another major contributor.References
External links
* [http://www.sulmtal-sausal.at Sulm Valley and South Styrian wine region]
* [http://www.sulmtal-koralm.info Website of the Sulm Valley and Sausal tourism region (German)]
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