Zwickau Mulde
Zwickauer Mulde | |
---|---|
Zwickauer Mulde in Zwickau | |
Basin | |
Main source | Erzgebirge |
River mouth |
Mulde 51°09′37″N 12°47′54″E / 51.16028°N 12.79833°ECoordinates: 51°09′37″N 12°47′54″E / 51.16028°N 12.79833°E |
Country | Germany |
Physiognomy | |
Length | 166 km |
The Zwickau Mulde (German: Zwickauer Mulde, German pronunciation: [ˈtsvɪkaʊɐ ˈmʊldə]) is a river in the Free State of Saxony, Germany. It is the left tributary of the Mulde and 166 km in length.
The source of the river is in the Ore Mountains, near Schöneck, in the Vogtlandkreis. It runs northeast to Aue, then northwest to Zwickau (hence the name), and further north through Glauchau, Rochlitz and Colditz. A few kilometers north of Colditz, the Zwickau Mulde is joined by the Freiberger Mulde to form the united Mulde. The Mulde is a tributary of the Elbe.
History
Cultural landscape development
The valleys in the catchment area of the Mulde were presumably used from the end of the last cold stage as access routes into the Ore Mountains that was covered in dense, ancient forests. This is evinced by the remains of artifacts left behind by Old Stone Age hunters, as well as Bronze Age and Iron Age discoveries as far as the higher regions of the Ore Mountains.
Later, the western Ore Mountains became the territory of Germanic and Slavic tribes. Paths, trade routes and military roads, linked the old settlement areas around Leipzig and Altenburg with Bohemia. The mule tracks, however, avoided the rivers in favour of the ridges. At unavoidable river crossings, (fords, later ferries and bridges) and at intersections castles, villages and monasteries were established. Of the palaces and manor houses, Rochburg, Rochlitz, Wolkenburg, Waldenburg, Forderglauchau, Hinterglauchau und Osterstein have survived. Of the castles, Wiesenburg, Stein Castle and the Isenburg remain. Fortifications constructed in the side valleys include Hartenstein, Wildenfels and Schwarzenberg. With the discovery of the rich silver deposits in the late Middle Ages, settlements grew up around the source streams in the upper Ore Mountains and the mining towns emerged.
Sights and structures
- Prince's Cave (Hartenstein) in the side of the valley below Bad Schlema (Poppenwald)
- Stein Castle and
- Schloss Wolfsbrunn in Hartenstein
- Annual demonstration timber rafting on the Muldenberg rafting waterway system
- Above Zwickau, in Cainsdorf, the Mulde cuts the Rußkohlenflöz. This outcrop of a permanently exposed coal seam is unique in Saxony. It is also a rare example in Europe of an outcrop representing three geological time periods (the Silurian, the Devonian and the Upper Carboniferous). It is protected as a geotope and geological natural monument.[1]
- Osterstein Castle in Zwickau
References
- ↑ Ordinance of the independent town of Zwickau to establish the geological natural monument (#5)Steinkohlenausbiss (Rußkohlenflöz) on the banks of the Mulde by the Cainsdorf Bridge dated 27 January 2000 (iaw § 21 of the Saxon Nature Conservation Act (SächsNatSchG)