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  2. Western Sudetes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Sudetes

    The Western Sudetes includes the Giant Mountains, which is the highest mountain range in the Czech Republic. All the highest mountains of the Western Sudetes are located in this mountain range. The highest peak is the Sněžka at 1,603 m (5,259 ft).

  3. Sudetes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudetes

    The name Sudetes is derived from Sudeti montes, a Latinization of the name Soudeta ore used in the Geographia by the Greco-Roman writer Ptolemy (Book 2, Chapter 10) c. AD 150 for a range of mountains in Germania in the general region of the modern Czech Republic.

  4. Ještěd–Kozákov Ridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ještěd–Kozákov_Ridge

    Ještěd–Kozákov Ridge is a mesoregion of the Western Sudetes, which is part of the Sudetes within the Bohemian Massif.It is a distinctive horst and anticline ridge. It is further subdivided into the microregions of Ještěd Ridge and Kozákov Ridge. [1]

  5. Lusatian Mountains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lusatian_Mountains

    The Lausche, viewed from the north. The range is among the westernmost extensions of the Sudetes, which stretch along the border between the historic region of Silesia in the north, and Bohemia and Moravia in the south up to the Moravian Gate in the east, where they join the Carpathian Mountains.

  6. Lusatian Highlands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lusatian_Highlands

    A western extension of the Sudetes range, it is located on the border of the German state of Saxony with the Czech Bohemian region. It is one of the eight natural landscapes of Upper Lusatia . [ 2 ]

  7. Jizera Mountains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jizera_Mountains

    Jizera Mountains (Czech: Jizerské hory), or Izera Mountains (Polish: Góry Izerskie; German: Isergebirge), are part of the Western Sudetes on the border between the Czech Republic and Poland. The range got its name from the Jizera River, which rises at the southern base of the Smrk massif.

  8. Lower Silesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Silesia

    Lower Silesia is located mostly in the basin of the middle Oder River with its historic capital in Wrocław.. The southern border of Lower Silesia is mapped by the mountain ridge of the Western and Central Sudetes, which since the High Middle Ages formed the border between Polish Silesia and the historic Bohemian region of the present-day Czech Republic.

  9. File:Divisions of the Sudetes.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Divisions_of_the...

    The numbers behind the polish names in the table are polish region numbers. (The underlining of some numbers meaning nothing but to separate them visually: 332.2 and its subdevisions from 332.3 in Western Sudetes and 332.1 and its subdevisions from 332.4 and 332.5 in Central Sudetes.) For a map of the polish part of the sudetes with region ...