Teufelsley (Rhineland-Palatinate)
Teufelsley | |
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East Eifel (Eifel) | |
Geology | |
Type of rock | Quartzite |
The Teufelsley (c.f.
Geography
Location
The Teufelsley rises in the municipalities of
The Dennbach stream, a tributary of Kesselinger Bach, flows past the Teufelsley to the east. The Kesselinger Bach empties into the Rhine tributary of the Ahr, 3.1 kilometres north of the hill in the Ahrbrück village of Brück.
Natural regions
The Teufelsley is in the
Legend
Gottfried Kinkel's remarks about the Teufelsley included the following: "This quite fantastic rock rises on a narrow ridge, so that it looks as if it has been shattered by a massive blow from the east. There is no doubt that the legend, in which the devil built the castle here, high in the heavens, in defiance of God, was based on this observation of the rocks, which had already been made by people in the past with a natural astuteness. (...) This time, as always, it di not turn out well for the devil: his half-finished castle was smashed a single blow of the God's hand, and the rock really does give the impression of a Cyclopian castle ruin.." However, there is no historical evidence at all indicating that there was actually a castle on the Teufelsley and neither are any ruins discernible.
References
- ^ Topographic map of the Teufelsley including the An der Teufelsley nature reserve (Naturschutzverwaltung Rheinland-Pfalz), at naturschutz.rlp.de