Moselle Eifel

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View from the plateau at the Monument of the Wartime Generation of the loop in the Moselle near Stuben Abbey (below) with Ediger-Eller (l), Neef (centre) and Bremm (r)

The Moselle Eifel (

East Eifel to the left of the Moselle from the city of Trier downstream as far as Moselkern; in the southeast it does not reach as far as the Moselle Valley. It lies exclusively within the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate and is a truncated highland
, roughly half of which is forested.

Geography

Location

The Moselle Eifel runs in a southwest to northeast direction, northwest along the Moselle river, sometimes away from the river, between

Trier-Ehrang, at the confluence of the Kyll and the Moselle, and Moselkern at the confluence of the Elzbach with the same Rhine tributary. The hills of the Moselle Eifel are lower than those of the adjacent and very ancient Volcanic Eifel to the north and only exceed 400 m above sea level (NHN) in a few places, reaching a maximum of 423 m above NHN at Schafstall near Bremm. On the far, southeastern side of the Moselle Valley with its many meanders and well known castles rises the somewhat higher hill range of the Hunsrück
.

Natural region grouping

The Moselle Eifel forms a major

BfN no. 27001.[1] It is divided as follows:[2][3][4]

270 Moselle Eifel (Moseleifel, 790.0552 km²)

The Moselle Eifel lies between these major natural regional units looking downstream along the Moselle:[2][3][4]

in the direction of the Eifel:

the direction of and along the Moselle:

  • 250 Middle Moselle Valley (Mittleres Moseltal) – southwest to northwest part of the Moselle Eifel, from Trier-Ehrang to Moselkern

Hills and viewing points

Eltz Castle

The hills and viewing points left of the Moselle Valley include the following (in downstream order) – with heights in metres (m) above sea level (NHN) (unless otherwise stated:[5])

Further inland towards the Volcanic Eifel are the:

  • Eickelslay (390 m),[6] with a panoramic view
  • Falkenley (413.7 m), near Bad Bertrich, north of the Kondelwald
  • Asberg (354.8 m), near Salmrohr

Description

The region is a popular holiday area and part of the

railway only travels along the valley as far as the first river bend at Zell
and then ascends the hill upland.

References and footnotes

  1. ^ Landschaftssteckbrief: Moseleifel Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, auf bfn.de
  2. ^
    Die naturräumlichen Einheiten auf Blatt 148/149 Trier/Mettendorf. Bundesanstalt für Landeskunde, Bad Godesberg 1974. → Online-Karte
    (PDF; 4,5 MB)
  3. ^
    Die naturräumlichen Einheiten auf Blatt 136/137 Cochem. Bundesanstalt für Landeskunde, Bad Godesberg 1974. → Online-Karte
    (PDF; 5,6 MB)
  4. ^
    Die naturräumlichen Einheiten auf Blatt 138 Koblenz. Bundesanstalt für Landeskunde, Bad Godesberg 1971. → Online-Karte
    (PDF; 5,7 MB)
  5. ^ Map service of the Landscape Information System of the Rhineland-Palatinate Nature Conservation Office (Naturschutzverwaltung Rheinland-Pfalz)
  6. ^ a b Berghöhe – diverse Erhebungen laut unbekannte / nicht recherchierte Quelle

Literature and external links