Rhine Gorge
Upper Middle Rhine Valley | |
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Name as inscribed on the World Heritage List | |
Type | Cultural |
Criteria | ii, iv, v |
Reference | 1066 |
UNESCO region | Europe |
Inscription history | |
Inscription | 2002 (26th Session) |
The Rhine Gorge is a popular name for the Upper Middle Rhine Valley, a 65 km section of the River Rhine between Koblenz and Bingen in Germany. It was added to the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites in June 2002 for a unique combination of geological, historical, cultural and industrial reasons.
The region's rocks were laid down in the Devonian period and are known as Rhenish Facies. This is a fossil-bearing sedimentary rock type consisting mainly of slate. The rocks underwent considerable folding during the Carboniferous period. The gorge was carved out during a much more recent uplift to leave the river contained within steep walls 200 m high, the most famous feature being the Loreley.
The gorge produces its own microclimate and has acted as a corridor for species not otherwise found in the region. Its slopes have long been terraced for agriculture, in particular viticulture which has good conditions on south-facing slopes. Most of the vineyards belong to the wine region Mittelrhein, but the southernmost parts of the Rhine Gorge fall in Rheingau and Nahe.
The river has been an important trade route into central Europe since prehistoric times and a string of small settlements has grown up along the banks. Constrained in size, many of these old towns retain a historic feel today. With increasing wealth, many castles appeared and the valley became a core region of the Holy Roman Empire. It was at the centre of the Thirty Years' War, which left many of the castles in ruins, a particular attraction for today's cruise ships which follow the river. At one time forming a border of France, in the 19th Century the valley became part of Prussia and its landscape became the quintessential image of Germany.
This part of the Rhine features strongly in folklore, such as a legendary castle on the Rhine being the setting for the opera Götterdämmerung. The annual Rhine in Flames festivals include spectacular firework displays at Sankt Goar in September and Koblenz in August, the best view being from one of a convoy of boats.
Towns And Cities Along the Gorge
- Koblenz (west+east)
- Lahnstein (east)
- Rhens (west)
- Braubach (east)
- Boppard (west)
- St. Goarshausen (east) and almost directly opposite
- Sankt Goar (west) by the Loreley rock (east)
- Oberwesel (west)
- Kaub (east)
- Bacharach (west)
- Lorch (east)
- Assmannshausen (east)
- Bingen (west)
- Rüdesheim (east)
Gallery
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Koblenz, the northern gateway to the world heritage site, with the Ehrenbreitstein Fortress
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Deutsches Eck, at the confluence of Rhine and Moselle
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Stolzenfels Castle, near Koblenz, the epitome of the Rhine romanticism
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Marksburg Castle, the only hilltop castle in the Middle Rhine Valley that was never destroyed
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View from the left bank of the Rhine near St. Goar on the Lorelei
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Stamp from 2006, showing the World Heritage Site
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Burg Pfalzgrafenstein at Kaub, in the background Burg Gutenfels
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Werner Chapel at Bacharach
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Burg Rheinstein, the first castle to be rebuilt in the 19th century
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Binger Loch, the southern gateway to the gorge; on the left the Mouse Tower, on the right Burg Ehrenfels Castle
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The Niederwalddenkmal monument, with Germania (personification), at Rüdesheim
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One of the oldest surviving church building in the world heritage area, the Basilica of St. Castor in Koblenz
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Rhein in Flammen in 2011, before the Ehrenbreitstein Fortress at Koblenz
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Burg Stahleck Castle
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Middle Rhine Valley at Kaub
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Rhine Cable Railway at Koblenz
See also
External links
Media related to Mittelrhein at Wikimedia Commons
Coordinates: 50°10′25″N 7°41′39″E / 50.1736°N 7.69417°E