Inde | |
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Inde in Aachen-Kornelimünster
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Map of the Rur Basin, including the Inde
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Country | Germany, Belgium |
Basin features | |
Main source |
Hautes Fagnes ±400 m (1,300 ft) |
River mouth |
Rur 50°53′58″N 6°21′46″E / 50.89944°N 6.36278°ECoordinates: 50°53′58″N 6°21′46″E / 50.89944°N 6.36278°E |
River system | River Rur (Roer River) |
Physical characteristics | |
Length | 54 km (34 mi) |
The River Inde is a small river in Belgium, and in North Rhine-Westphalia, western Germany.
The Inde is a left (western) tributary of the River Rur (Roer River), in eastern Belgium and in North Rhine-Westphalia, western Germany.
Its source is near Raeren, in Eastern Belgium. The Inde runs through Aachen-Kornelimünster, Eschweiler, and Inden. Its mouth is on the River Rur near Jülich. Because of lignite opencast mining, a section of the course was diverted near Inden-Lamersdorf in 2003 .
Tributaries of the Inde include the streams: Omerbach, Otterbach, Saubach, Vichtbach, and Wehebach.
Its name is of Celtic origin: Inda. The Inde has a counterpart, a "small Inde", in France: the Andelle, which is a 55-kilometre (34 mi) long river in the French département Seine-Maritime and whose original name was Indella.
The suffix -ella is an example for Celtic river names comparing for instance Mosella (= Moselle, i.e. "small Mosa (= Maas)"). For the name "Inde", the Indoeuropean stem *wed (= water) is supposed, like in words like Italian "onda" and French "onde" (= wave).
The River Inde acquired historical importance when Emperor Louis the Pious founded the Kornelimünster Abbey monastery along one of its old courses in 815.