Bremen pond

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Bremer Teich deer pond
, Bremer Dammteich
Dam of the Bremen pond
Dam of the Bremen pond
Location: Harz , Harz district , Saxony-Anhalt
Tributaries: Bremer Graben
Drain: Bremer Graben
(brook from the Bremen pond)
Larger places nearby: Gernrode , Bad Suderode
Bremen pond (Saxony-Anhalt)
Bremen pond
Coordinates 51 ° 41 '8 "  N , 11 ° 6' 43"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 41 '8 "  N , 11 ° 6' 43"  E
Data on the structure
Construction time: 1796,
renewal 1968,
renovation 2010/2011
Height above foundation level : 13.1 m
Height of the structure crown: 12 m
Crown length: 112 m
Crown width: 3 m
Data on the reservoir
Altitude (at congestion destination ) 423.2  m above sea level NHN
Water surface 3.7 hadep1
Storage space 0.1 million m³
Total storage space : 0.129 million m³
Catchment area 1.3 km²

The Bremer Pond , originally Deer Pond and since 1968 a while Bremer Damm pond , called in the highlands resin is a 1796-scale and about 3.7 hectare storage pond in the wooded southern slopes of the city Quedlinburg belonging district of Gernrode in the district of Harz in Saxony-Anhalt . It is used for fishing , flood protection and local recreation and is entered in the local register of monuments.

Geographical location

The Bremen pond is located in the Lower Harz in the Harz / Saxony-Anhalt Nature Park . Between Friedrichsbrunn (Thale) and Mägdesprung (Harzgerode) it is located in the forest about 4.5 km south-southwest of Gernrode (Quedlinburg), almost 2 km east of the Viktorshöhe ( 581.5  m above sea  level ) at 423.2  m above sea level. It is fed and drained from the Bremer Graben , which flows southeast to the Selke . Its receiving waters are the Selke, Bode and Saale . Not far past is the Romanesque Road and the Nordharz cycle path.

History and description

A hundred years before the Bremen pond was created, the last bear in the Anhalt forests was hunted in 1696 a little southwest of today's pond during a parforce hunt by the Anhalt Prince Viktor Amadeus . To commemorate this, the bear monument was erected around 1900 .

The Bremer Teich was in 1796, according to other data already in 1730, created and to have been intended for catching deer, where his original name, Hirsch pond originates. It owes its current name to the engineer Bremer who constructed the dam. The pond was important for the dewatering of the nearby mining industry and is a testament to the mining history of the Eastern Harz.

Frozen pond in Bremen, March 2018

An earth dam with a core and outer skin seal serves as a dam. It is 13.1 m above the foundation level, 112 m long and 3 m wide at its crown. In 1968, according to other information as early as 1966, this was reinforced by backfilling and for a time the water was called Bremer Dammteich . This resulted in a youth hostel, campsites and a restaurant, which are still located by the pond, which is used as a natural swimming pool, so that this and its surroundings serve as a local recreation area . Further renovations were carried out in 2010/2011.

The pond has an area of ​​3.7 ha, its water surface is 423.2  m above sea level. NHN . The total storage space is 0.129 million m³ and the storage space 0.1 million m³. The size of the catchment area is 1.3 km².

The Bremer Teich is included as No. 196 in the system of stamp points of the Harz hiking pin.

literature

Web links

Commons : Bremer Teich  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Bremer Teich (and other dams) in the area damming area north , at the dam operation Saxony-Anhalt, on talsperren-lsa.de

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k Bremer Teich (and other dams) in the north storage area , at the Saxony-Anhalt dam operation, on talsperren-lsa.de
  2. a b c d Saxony-Anhalt viewer of the State Office for Surveying and Geoinformation ( notes )
  3. a b c List of Standing Waters , on Umwelt-online.de
  4. a b Harzer hiking needle: stamping point 196 / Bremer Teich , on harzer-wandernadel.de
  5. a b Rosemarie and Gerhard Kellermann, Neue Teich in Chronik der Stadt Gernrode , Gernroder Kulturverein Andreas Popperodt e. V. 2013, p. 174
  6. State Office for the Preservation of Monuments in Saxony-Anhalt (ed.): List of monuments in Saxony-Anhalt. Volume 7.2: Falko Grubitzsch, with the participation of Winfried Korf and Theo Gosselke: Quedlinburg district. Halle 2007, ISBN 978-3-86568-072-3 , p. 44