High Harrow (Upland)

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High harrow
height 604.9  m above sea level NHN
location at Ottlar ; District of Waldeck-Frankenberg , North Hesse ( Germany )
Mountains Upland ( Rothaar Mountains )
Coordinates 51 ° 19 ′ 32 "  N , 8 ° 42 ′ 19"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 19 ′ 32 "  N , 8 ° 42 ′ 19"  E
Hohe Egge (Upland) (Hesse)
High Harrow (Upland)

The Hohe Egge near Ottlar in the north Hessian district of Waldeck-Frankenberg is 604.9  m above sea level. NHN high mountain of the Upland in the Rothaar Mountains .

geography

location

The Hohe Egge is located in the Upland, the northeast outlet of the Rothaargebirge, in the Diemelsee Nature Park between Willingen and the Diemelsee reservoir . Its summit rises 850 m southeast of the village church of Ottlar , 2.5 km southwest of Giebringhausen and 2.2 km northwest of Deisfeld , all of which belong to the Diemelsee community , and 1.9 km (as the crow flies ) north-northeast of Hemmighausen , which belongs to the Willingen municipality counts. The mountain belongs to the municipality of Diemelsee; a corner of the Willingen area comes close to it in the south.

A northern spur of the Hohen Egge is called Harberg ( 554.3  m ), an eastern Niegelscheid ( 580.7  m ) and a southern one is nameless ( 601  m ). The mountain is passed east of the Diemel , which feeds the eastern arm of the Diemelsee and, after flowing through the reservoir, flows to the Weser. To the northwest past the mountain runs through Ottlar the Holzbach , which flows to the northeast and flows into the Diemel a little above the eastern arm of the same reservoir.

Natural allocation

The Hohe Egge belongs in the natural spatial main unit group Süderbergland (No. 33), in the main unit Rothaargebirge (with Hochsauerland ) (333) and in the subunit Upland (333.9) to the natural area Inneres Upland (333.90). Its north and east flanks fall in the main unit of the Ostsauerland mountain range (332) and in the sub-unit (Vorupländer) Adorfer Bucht (332.6) into the natural area Vorupländer Hügelland (332.61).

Individual evidence

  1. a b Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation ( information )
  2. Martin Bürgener: Geographical Land Survey: The natural spatial units on sheet 111 Arolsen. Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1963. →  Online map (PDF; 4.1 MB)