Johannisberg (Naab Mountains)
Johannisberg (Hirmerberg) | ||
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height | 652 m above sea level NN | |
location | Bavaria , Germany | |
Mountains | Naab Mountains , Upper Palatinate Forest | |
Coordinates | 49 ° 28 '8 " N , 11 ° 59' 49" E | |
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Pilgrimage Church of St. Johann Baptist |
The Johannisberg is an east-west striking, wooded ridge in the area of the municipality of Freudenberg . It is part of the Naab Mountains . The highest point of the Johannisberg is the Hirmerberg at its eastern end with a height of 652 m . There is a cross on the Hirmerberg.
The listed pilgrimage church of St. Johann Baptist is located at the western end of the Johannisberg at an altitude of around 604 m . A way of the cross leads to the church.
geography
Geographical location
The Johannisberg is located in the area of the municipality of Freudenberg .
Natural allocation
The Johannisberg is located in the western Naab Mountains , the westernmost branch of the Upper Palatinate Forest . The main natural unit group to which the Johannisberg belongs is the Upper Palatinate-Bavarian Forest .
The single sheets 1: 200,000 for the manual of the natural structure of Germany structure the area as follows:
- 40 Upper Palatinate-Bavarian Forest
- 401 Upper Palatinate Forest
- 401.3 Southwestern Lower Upper Palatinate Forest
- 401.39 Naabgebirge
- 401.392 Western Naab Mountains
- 401.39 Naabgebirge
- 401.3 Southwestern Lower Upper Palatinate Forest
- 401 Upper Palatinate Forest
Web links
- Legends and stories from the Freudenberg area. Ferdinand Schwarz, accessed June 17, 2016 .
Individual evidence
- ^ Emil Meynen , Josef Schmithüsen : Handbook of the natural spatial structure of Germany . Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Remagen / Bad Godesberg 1953–1962 (9 deliveries in 8 books, updated map 1: 1,000,000 with main units 1960).
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↑ Various authors: Geographische Landesaufnahme: The natural spatial units in single sheets 1: 200,000 . Federal Institute for Regional Studies, Bad Godesberg 1952–1994. → Online maps .
- Sheet 164: Regensburg (Dietrich Jürgen Manske 1981; 64 pages)