Schlingenbach (Ilme)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Schlingenbach
Pollard willows at Schlingenbach

Pollard willows at Schlingenbach

Data
location City of Dassel , District of Northeim , Lower Saxony , Germany
River system Weser
Drain over Ilme  → Leine  → Aller  → Weser  → North Sea
source north of Sievershausen
51 ° 46 ′ 55 ″  N , 9 ° 37 ′ 50 ″  E
muzzle in the Ilme coordinates: 51 ° 47 '30 "  N , 9 ° 41' 39"  E 51 ° 47 '30 "  N , 9 ° 41' 39"  E

The Schlingenbach is a tributary of the Ilme in the area of ​​the city of Dassel .

course

It arises on the eastern edge of the Solling north of Sievershausen . It flows through intensively agriculturally used terrain in an easterly direction down towards Dassel . In the area where the Ilme curves around the castle hill of the Ellenser Forest , it flows into the Ilme.

It is an open brook, except that it is piped a few meters under the county road 513 between Dassel and Sievershausen and under the state road 548 between Dassel and Relliehausen .

natural reserve

The brook is one of the tributaries that belong to the FFH protected area of ​​the Ilme. In the bank area near the county road there are some pollarded willows that are occasionally cut by the regional NABU group. Some other trees and shrubs and a wet meadow line the banks of the stream, so that the stream offers a habitat for several species of birds and bats. One of the guest birds is the common snipe , which is rare in Germany and is also found in the linen lowlands of Salzderhelden near the mouth of the Ilme.

Surname

According to an etymological study, the name of the stream is derived less from its course as a meandering meander than from protective measures against bank erosion through undercutting. For this purpose, wickerwork ( Middle Low German "slink") made from willow was probably used.

Individual evidence

  1. Schlingenbach wet meadow
  2. The Common Snipe
  3. Hans-Norbert Mittendorf: On the cultural history of today's Dassel urban area in the mirror of old field names, 1991, p. 56
  4. Selmar Kleemann: The family names of Quedlinburg and the surrounding area, 1891, p. 190
  5. August Lübben: Mitteliederiederdeutsches Handwörterbuch, 1888, p. 353