Reichsstrasse 374

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Reichsstrasse 374 in the German Empire
374
map
Basic data
Operator: German Empire
Start of the street: Wilfersdorf
End of street: Border to the then General Government
Overall length: 380 km historically, partly on Austrian, partly on Czechoslovakian territory ceded in 1938 and annexed in 1939, partly on Polish territory occupied during World War II

Reichsgaue :

The Reichsstraße 374 ( R 374 ) was a Reichsstraße of the German Reich from April 1, 1940 to 1945 , partly on what is now Austrian, partly on Polish, but mostly on 1939 annexed, until then Czech territory ( Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia ) and partly took place in the Sudetenland ceded by Czechoslovakia to the German Reich in 1938 . The road began in Wilfersdorf (Lower Austria) on what was then Reichsstraße 116 and ran north via Břeclav (Lundenburg), where the then Reichsstraße 377 branched off to Brno , and Hodonín (Göding) and further via Uherské Hradiště (Hungarian Hradisch) where the then Reichsstraße 376 crossed, Přerov (Prerau), Lipník (Leipnik), where the then Reichsstraße 373 met it, Hranice na Moravě (Mährisch Weißkirchen), Nový Jičín (Neutitschein), where the then Reichsstraße 146 was crossed, Frýdek -Místek (not yet united with Mistek as Friedeck before 1943), Český Těšín (Teschen, where it crossed the then Reichsstrasse 145 ), Bielsko-Biała ( Bielsko-Biała ), where the then Reichsstrasse 391 crossed, Kęty (Kenty) and further Direction Kraków (Kraków) in the then General Government .

The route of the former national route now leads in Austria , the term Lundenburger road B 47, in the Czech Republic the names Silnice I / 55 and Silnice 655 (parallel to the highway Dálnice 55 ), further Silnice I / 47 , Silnice 647 , Silnice I / 48 , Silnice 648 , in Poland the names Droga ekspresowa S52 (rededicated from the earlier S1 since 2016) and Droga krajowa 52 .

The total length of the Reichsstraße was around 380 kilometers.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Ordinance and Official Gazette for the Reichsgau Niederdonau , year 1940, p. 108.
  2. ^ The German Automobile Club (ed.): Road map of Germany, scale 1: 1,250,000, 1941

Web links