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The Black Forest (German: Schwarzwald [ˈʃvaʁt͡svalt] ⓘ) is a large forested mountain range in the state of Baden-Württemberg in southwest Germany, bounded by the Rhine Valley to the west and south and close to the borders with France and Switzerland. [1]
Hoher Ochsenkopf (1,055 m), 6.5 km northeast of the Hornisgrinde, highest mountain in the county of Rastatt; Schliffkopf (1,055 m), by the Black Forest High Road; Seekopf (1,055 m), above Seebach (Baden), four kilometres southeast of the Hornisgrinde; Bosberg (1,052 m) Geisberg (1,047 m), 3 km northeast of the Rohrhardsberg, near Schonach
The English calamity (German: Engländerunglück) was a hiking disaster which happened on the Schauinsland near Freiburg im Breisgau, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, on 17 April 1936. A group of twenty-seven English schoolboys were stranded after they were led up the mountain by their teacher, Kenneth Keast, who ignored multiple warnings of poor ...
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; List of mountains and hills in the Black Forest
The Black Forest National Park (German: Nationalpark Schwarzwald) is a national park in the state of Baden-Württemberg in the southwest of Germany.. It has an area of 10,062 hectares (100.62 km 2; 38.85 sq mi) and is located on the main crest of the Northern Black Forest, mainly between the Black Forest High Road (Schwarzwaldhochstraße) and the valley of the Murg.
Pages in category "Mountains and hills of the Black Forest" The following 67 pages are in this category, out of 67 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Northern Black Forest is bounded in the north by a line from Karlsruhe to Pforzheim and, in the south, by a line running from the Rench valley to Freudenstadt.Its northern boundary largely coincides with the emergence of the extensively forested bunter sandstone strata from the arable region of the Kraichgau; its southern boundary with the Central Black Forest (or, in the case of a ...
Belchen, 1,414 metres (4,639 ft), or Black Forest Belchen (German: Schwarzwälder Belchen) is the fourth-highest summit of the Black Forest, after Feldberg, Seebuck, and Herzogenhorn. [ a ] The municipalities of Münstertal , Schönenberg and Kleines Wiesental meet on the summit dome of Belchen which is located in the southwest German state of ...