Auer
Mouth of the Auer
Auer (Odenwald) is located in Hesse
Auer (Odenwald)
Location of mouth in Hesse
Location
CountryGermany
RegionOdenwald
StateHesse
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
  location
Lauter
  coordinates
49°42′08″N 8°36′06″E / 49.70222°N 8.60167°E / 49.70222; 8.60167
Length6.7 km (4.2 mi)
Basin features
ProgressionLauterRhineNorth Sea
River systemRhine

The Auer (also called Mühlbach or Ziegelbach) is a river in Hesse, Germany which springs from the western edge of the Felsberg in the Hessian Odenwald between Balkhausen and Bensheim-Hochstädten. It measures 6.7 kilometers in length and is part of the Rhine river system.

Mühlbach

The Auer has ten tributaries and flows through the Bensheim district of Hochstädten, past the Marble factory and the Goethebrunnen (Bensheim) through the valley Mühltal towards Bensheim-Auerbach. In the past, there were seven mills in the Mühltal powered by the Auer's water. Therefore here the brook's vernacular name is Mühlbach (mill brook). The mill in the village's center is nowadays a wine restaurant, another mill is a nursing home, and another mill is the studio and residential house of an Auerbach-based artist. The other four mills (Kadelsmühle, Wiemersmühle, Mößingersmühle and Jungmühle) are used as residential houses.[1]

The Mühltal is bordered to the north by the Auerberg hill along with Auerbach Castle, an old castle ruin, and to the south by the federal park Fürstenlager.

Auerbach

In the district of Bensheim-Auerbach, the Auer is split into two parts, one above ground and the other being a subterranean channel. Because of the recurring floods in the street Bachgasse, the largest part of the Auer was channeled in the 1980s.[2] Like at the antetype Freiburg Bächle, an ever constant part of the Auer flows openly through the Bachgasse, through the old village of Auerbach passing numerous half-timbered buildings towards the Bundesstraße 3 (Darmstädter Straße).

Ziegelbach

After the two streams united again, the Auer crosses the Bundesstraße under ground and flows towards the Auerbach railway station. Since around 1850 there was a brick factory, also porcelain factory, the Auer is called there also Ziegelbach (brick brook).[3]

After crossing the railway line Darmstadt-Heidelberg, the Auer reaches after approximately 1 km its mouth. It flows into the Winkelbach coming from Bensheim, which is called upstream of the Auer's mouth Lauter. The Winkelbach flows at Gernsheim into the Rhine.

The total length of the Auer from the source to the mouth is 6.7 km.

See also

References

  1. Stadtteil documentation Bensheim-Auerbach
  2. Report in the newspaper report of 29 April 2011: Flood in Auerbach
  3. Landesamt für Denkmal-Pflege Hessen: Porcelain factory


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.