Heidberge (Güstrow)

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Heather mountains
Highest peak nameless elevation ( 46.7  m above sea  level )
location at Güstrow and Mühl Rosin ; District of Rostock , Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania ( Germany )
Coordinates 53 ° 47 '  N , 12 ° 13'  E Coordinates: 53 ° 47 '  N , 12 ° 13'  E
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The Heidberge near Güstrow and Mühl Rosin in the Mecklenburg- Western Pomerania district of Rostock are up to 46.7  m above sea level. NHN high and wooded terminal moraines and hilly landscape in the back country of the Mecklenburg Lake District .

geography

Location, elevations, waters

The Heidberge are located southeast of the core town of Güstrow between Primerburg in the north and Klueß in the east, two districts of Güstrow, Kirch Rosin in the south and Mühl Rosin in the south-southwest, two districts of Mühl Rosin, and Schabernack in the southwest and Heidberg in the west, two districts of Guestrow. Except for the Blocksberg ( 35.9  m ) in the south , which is in the municipality of Mühl Rosin, the hilly landscape belongs to the urban area of ​​Güstrow; its highest (nameless) elevation is east of the village of Heidberg. To the west of the landscape is the island lake, which is 4.58 km² in size . The Warnow tributary Nebel in the east and north and its tributary Teuchelbach (Mühl- / Mühlenbach) in the south and southwest, which the Nebel flows into after flowing through the Inselsee, flow past .

Natural allocation

The Heidberge belong within the Northeast German Lake District , a large natural area of ​​Germany , in the main natural area of ​​the hinterland of the Mecklenburg Lake District (74) to the Warnow-Recknitz area (with the Bützower and Güstrow basins) (740).

Others

Parts of the Inselsee and Heidberge landscape protection areas are located on the Heidberge ( CDDA no. 321958; designated in 1964; 15.29  km² in size). A common section of federal highways 103 and 104 runs through its northern part . The Wildpark-MV is also located there in Güstrow.

Elisabethstein

The heather mountains were almost completely cut down by the Middle Ages. Therefore, Elisabeth of Denmark and Norway (1524–1586), first wife of Duke Ulrich zu Mecklenburg (1527–1603), had fir seeds sowed in the countryside in 1573 by students from the cathedral school in Güstrow . The inscription on the Elisabethstein east of the village of Heidberg has been a reminder of this since 1883 .

References and comments

  1. a b Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
  2. Elisabethstein : Inscription