Reichsstrasse 369
Reichsstrasse 369 in the German Empire | |
369 | |
map | |
Basic data | |
Operator: | German Empire |
Start of the street: | Benešov (Beneschau) |
End of street: | Brno (Brno) |
Overall length: | 185 km historical, on Czech territory annexed in 1939 |
The Reichsstraße 369 ( R 369 ) was a Reichsstraße of the German Reich until 1945 , which was completely annexed in 1939, until then Czechoslovakian territory ( Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia ). The road branched off in the town of Benešov (Beneschau) from what was then Reichsstrasse 170 (today Silnice I / 3 ) and followed the course of today's Silnice 112 to the southeast via Vlašim (Wlaschim) and Čechtice (Chechtitz), where what was then Reichsstrasse 366 ( today Silnice 150 ) branched off to the northeast. From Čechtice it continued via Křelovice u Pelhřimova (Krelowitz), where it crossed the then Reichsstrasse 349 , and from there to Pelhřimov (Pilgram), where it crossed the then Reichsstrasse 96 . It then followed in an easterly direction the route of today's Silnice 602 to Jihlava (Iglau) and from there via Velké Meziříčí (Groß Meseritsch) and Velká Bíteš (German name from 1940: Heinrichs) to Brünn (Brno), where it is on the then Reichsstraße 177 ended.
Their total length was around 185 kilometers.
Individual evidence
- ^ The German Automobile Club (ed.): Road map of Germany, scale 1: 1,250,000, 1941