Tharandt Forest

Coordinates: 50°57′32″N 13°29′50″E / 50.95889°N 13.49722°E / 50.95889; 13.49722
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Bust of Heinrich Cotta, sponsor of the Tharandt Forest
View from the Kienberg of Hartha and the Landberg
Porphyrfächer, geological outcrop near Mohorn-Grund
Sandstone faulting near Niederschöna

The Tharandt Forest (

Freiberg and Dresden. Administratively it is fully part of the borough of Tharandt today and bears a legally-protected strapline[1]
with the text: Tharandter Wald – schönster Wald Sachsens ("Tharandt Forest - Saxony's most beautiful forest"), which goes back to the tourist advertisements of the 1920s.

History

In the 12th century, the village of Warnsdorf existed for a short time in the middle of the forest by the water-rich Warnsdorf Spring of the

Forest glassworks are also discernible near Hetzdorf (Glasergrund) and Hartha
(Glasbruch). The beekeepers and forest keepers (collectively called Zeidler) that settled in Fördergersdorf and Hartha supplied honey and beeswax. And artificial ponds are still used today to farm fish.

In the early 18th century in the Tännichtgrund bottom near Naundorf in the Tharandt Forest was the hideaway of the notorious robber, Lips Tullian and his Black Guard (Schwarzen Garde). Tullian was feared throughout Saxony. His lair is stilled recalled by the Lips Tullian Rocks (Lips-Tullian-Felsen) named after him and the old Thieves' Chamber (Diebskammer).

Around 1800 the forest had been seriously reduced by logging and was reforested by

forestry academy and the botanical forest gardens
in Tharandt.

From the 18th century the forest was used as a place of recreation by middle-class families, especially from Dresden. These included such well-known personalities from the sciences and arts as

Nazi era Saxony's Gauleiter and state huntsmaster, Martin Mutschmann, used the Grillenburg hunting lodge as the headquarters of the Saxon Hunting Court (Sächsischen Jägerhof). Its guest house, the Neues Jägerhaus, also used by him and acted during the GDR
period as a VdN convalescent home, known as Elsa Fenske, for victims of fascism.

The entire forest was a recreation area for many years and was signed by volunteers from the Cultural Association of the GDR who also laid out a nature trail. As a contiguous and easily accessible natural region the Tharandt Forest continues to act as a recreation area for the population of the surrounding area and its visitors. There are educational trails and paths for hiking, riding and cycling. Coaches and sleds are permitted on several routes.

The region around the Tharandt Forest has been represented since 1997 by the Tharandt Forest Queen (Tharandter-Wald-Königin), a new one being appointed every two years and who is presented and crowned at the traditional choir gathering, the Chortreffen am Tharandter Wald by the Tharandt Forest Tourist Association (Verkehrs- und Verschönerungsverein "Tharandter Wald" e.V.).

References

  1. ^ Marken-Nr.: DE 39401066, accessed on 6 June 1995

External links

50°57′32″N 13°29′50″E / 50.95889°N 13.49722°E / 50.95889; 13.49722