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Selbitz (river)

Selbitz
Schauenstein Selbitztal landscape.jpg
View of the Selbitz Valley from the Hagen mill at Schauenstein
Country Germany
States Bavaria
Basin features
Main source NW of Wüstenselbitz
650 m (2,130 ft)
50°13′17″N 11°41′14″E / 50.221447°N 11.687194°E / 50.221447; 11.687194
River mouth Saale at Blankenstein near Bad Lobenstein
50°24′07″N 11°42′07″E / 50.402011°N 11.701953°E / 50.402011; 11.701953Coordinates: 50°24′07″N 11°42′07″E / 50.402011°N 11.701953°E / 50.402011; 11.701953
River system Elbe
Physical characteristics
Length 36.6 km (22.7 mi)
Towns and villages Helmbrechts, Schauenstein, Selbitz, Naila, Lichtenberg, Issigau, Blankenstein

The Selbitz is a left-bank tributary of the river Saale in the eastern Franconian Forest (Frankenwald) and is a watercourse of tertiary importance. Its source lies about 650 metres above sea level from a pond northwest of the Helmbrechts quarter of Wüstenselbitz, flows around Helmbrechts at first in an easterly direction and then towards the north. As it continues it runs through the towns of Schauenstein, Selbitz and Naila, before flowing through the Höllental (Höllental) between Hölle and Blechschmidtenhammer cutting a channel into the dolorite rock up to 170 m deep.

In the village of Hölle, a district of Naila on the left bank of the Selbitz, a 262 metre-deep mineral spring, the Höllensprudel, has been bored. From the mouth of the Thuringian Muschwitz at the exit of the Hölle Valley and at its own confluence with the Saale near Blankenstein the Selbitz forms the border between Bavaria and Thuringia for about 2 kilometres. During the Cold War division of Germany (1945-1990), the Selbitz was part of the inner German border, with fences and guard towers on the Thuringian side in the German Democratic Republic to prevent east-west traffic.

The footbridge between the Bavarian hamlet of Untereichenstein and Blankenstein is also the end of the Thuringian Rennsteig, a historical border path.

The river is 36.6 kilometres long and falls a total of 236 metres during its course. The name "Selbitz" probably comes from the Slavic word zelenovica and would therefore mean something like "green stream".


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Wikipedia

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