Gratzenbach (Strobnitz)

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Gratzenbach
Data
location In the Waldviertel , Austria , to the northwest to the Strobnitz in the Czech Republic
River system Elbe
Drain over Strobnitz  → Maltsch  → Moldau  → Elbe  → North Sea
source in the Reutlüss in the Heinrichs area near Weitra
48 ° 45 ′ 22 ″  N , 14 ° 48 ′ 50 ″  E
Source height 605  m above sea level A.
muzzle Near Nové Hrady (Gratzen), Czech Republic, in the Strobnitz coordinates: 48 ° 47 '18 "  N , 14 ° 46' 17"  E 48 ° 47 '18 "  N , 14 ° 46' 17"  E
Mouth height 480  m above sea level A.
Height difference 125 m
Bottom slope 18 ‰
length 6.9 km
Catchment area 3 km²
Small towns Nové Hrady (Gratzen)
Communities Unserfrau-Altweitra
Residents in the catchment area 2000

The Gratzenbach ( Czech Novohradský potok ) is a right tributary of the Strobnitz ( Czech Stropnice ) in Austria and the Czech Republic .

It rises in the Reutlüss west of Heinrichs bei Weitra in the municipality of Unserfrau-Altweitra . Its course follows the Luigraben between the vineyards Gugel and Forst north to Pyhrabruck. To the south of its headwaters lie the catchment areas of the Göllitzbach and the Lembach.

A few hundred meters west of Pyhrabruck, it forms the state border between Austria and the Czech Republic for a few meters from boundary stone IV / 59 and then flows further west.

After about three kilometers it flows into the Stropnice (Strobnitz) at Nové Hrady (Gratzen) and Údolí (Niederthal ) .

In the Czech Republic it is called Novohradský potok .

The German name Gratzenbach is recorded on the Austrian official maps of the 1968 survey, there the name Luigraben is not mentioned. In the maps from the 2001 update, the German name of the stream is not recorded, but the name of the trench is entered.

The Czech name Novohradský ‑ potok (incorrectly spelled with a hyphen or division line) is present in both card generations.

credentials

  1. Austrianmap (north-western Lower Austria, enter "Reutlüss" when searching and select the first reference)
  2. ^ Austrian map 1: 50,000. Sheet of 4 ridges. Recorded in 1968. Map revision 1978. Abroad: Map of Czechoslovakia 1: 25,000 (1934); Individual supplements 1977. Edited by the Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying (Landesaufnahme) in Vienna.
    The same situation offers: freytag & berndt hiking, cycling and leisure map WK 111: Zwettl-Gmünd-Nebelstein-Arbesbach 1: 50,000. Directory of places, culture, sights, customs, alpine and tourist information, refuges and excursion inns. Tour suggestions. Verlag Freytag & Berndt, Vienna (according to comment: spring 1991). ISBN 3-85084-779-7 , corrected ISBN 3-85084-779-9 . However, this edition of the map is not an independent source. It is a combination of the official maps of the area, which has been provided with additional entries such as cycle routes, a separate commentary and directories. Approval from the Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying Zl. L 70 066/91.
  3. ^ Austrian map 1: 50,000: sheet 4309 Gmünd. 2001 update. Abroad: Map of the Czech Republic 1: 25,000 (1986-92) and 1: 50,000 (1988, 89). Edited by the Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying (Landesaufnahme) in Vienna.