Pfinz
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pfinz | |
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Origin | Black Forest |
Mouth | Rhine |
Basin countries | Germany |
Length | 60 km |
Source elevation | approx. 450m |
The Pfinz is a right-side tributary of the Rhine in Baden-Württemberg.
Its origin is located at the northern edge of the Black Forest near the Straubenhardt borough of Pfinzweiler. Near Durlach it enters the Upper Rhine River Plains and continues, splitting into several beds and canals, in northwesterly direction through several towns and villages north of Karlsruhe for example Staffort. The Pfinz discharges into the Rhine near Dettenheim-Rußheim. Over the course of its path the Pfinz crosses underneath two canals: one near the Karlsruhe borough of Hagsfeld and one by Dettenheim-Rußheim.
The Pfinz lend its name to the town of Pfinztal. The town was created by combining four previously independent villages on or near the Pfinz during the Baden-Württemberg district reform in the 1970s.
The area along the river is traditionally referred to as the Pfinzgau.
This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.
[edit] External links
- Photos and information about the irrigation system in the Hardt north of Karlsruhe
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