Deixlfurter See
Deixlfurter See | ||
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Deixlfurter See, in the background Gut Deixlfurt | ||
Geographical location | Municipality Tutzing , Starnberg , Bavaria | |
Tributaries | 2 unnamed streams | |
Drain | Deixlfurter Bach → Wielinger Bach → Weiherbach → Maisinger Bach → Starnberger See | |
Places on the shore | Gut Deixlfurt | |
Location close to the shore | Weilheim | |
Data | ||
Coordinates | 47 ° 55 '8 " N , 11 ° 15' 16" E | |
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Altitude above sea level | 694 m | |
surface | 21 ha | |
length | 500 m | |
width | 520 m | |
particularities |
LSG 00403.01 Lake Group (total 31.3 ha) |
The Deixlfurter See is a 21 hectare lake in the Fünfseenland within the municipality of Tutzing in the district of Starnberg . It is 110 meters above sea level on Lake Starnberg on the northern edge of a water-rich bog on a moraine hill that was formed in the Würme Ice Age .
history
Burial mounds from the Bronze Age suggest that the area around the lake was inhabited very early. Later evidence of settlement are the remains of a Roman estate 200 meters from the western shore of the lake.
The lake is mentioned for the first time in 1472 in a document that attests to the handover of Starnberg Castle and its lands by the Bavarian Duke Siegmund to his brother Albrecht IV . “Teichsselfurt” is also among the properties listed there. Over the centuries, different owners followed, including the Bernried monastery . Due to the secularization , the fish-rich waters fell to the Bavarian state in 1803. In 1875, the Munich opera singer couple Heinrich Vogl and Therese Vogl acquired the Deixlfurter See and a large part of the neighboring corridors . Under her leadership, an agricultural estate developed on the lakeshore, where cattle and dairy farming were carried out and Bavaria's first potato distillery was opened in 1881 . During this time, several dams were built to create six new ponds that were suitable for fish farming . Since then, the entire lake group has consisted of the following bodies of water from north to south:
- Long pond 4.7 hectares
- Resi Weiher 0.02 hectare (new plant Vogl)
- Johanni Weiher 1.65 hectares (new Vogl plant)
- Deixlfurter See 21 hectares
- Rüdiger Weiher 1.23 hectares (new Vogl plant)
- Clenze Weiher 1.3 hectares (new Vogl plant)
- Vogl Weiher 0.6 hectare (new Vogl plant)
- Cermak pond 0.75 hectares (new plant Vogl)
The former pasture areas of the Deixlfurt estate were converted into a golf course in 1983.
Nature and landscape protection
The Deixlfurter lake and surrounding ponds are located in the conservation area Lake Starnberg and west adjacent areas. A fishing club takes care of the protection and maintenance of the waters. The somewhat hidden Deixlfurter See is particularly popular with hikers and bathers who love quiet natural beaches.
See also
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Martinus Fesq-Martin, Amei Lang, Michael Peters (ed.): Der Starnberger See - Natural and Prehistory of a Bavarian Landscape, Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-89937-090-4
- ↑ a b c Ferdinand Kopp (ed.): Traubinger Heimatbuch mit Chronik , Buchdruckerei Fischer, Weilheim, 1981
- ↑ Protected planet: Starnberger See and neighboring areas to the west , accessed on November 24, 2016