Online Encyclopedia

ERZGEBIRGE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 759 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ERZGEBIRGE  , a

mountain chain of Germany, extending in a W.S.W. direction from the Elbe to the Elstergebirge along the frontier between Saxony and Bohemia . Its length from E.N.E. to W.S.W. is about 8o m., and its
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average breadth about 25 M . The
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southern declivity is generally steep and rugged, forming in some places an almost perpendicular wall of the height of from 2000 to 2500 ft.; while the
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northern, divided at intervals into valleys, sometimes of
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great fertility and sometimes wildly romantic, slopes gradually towards the great plain of northern Germany . The central
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part of the chain forms a plateau of an average height of more than 3000 ft . At the extremities of this plateau are situated the highest summits of the range:—in the south-east the Keilberg (4080 ft.); in the north-east the Fichtelberg (3980 ft.); and in the south-west the Spitzberg (3650 ft.) . Between the Keilberg and the Fichtelberg, at the height of about 3300 ft., is situated Gottesgab, the highest
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town in Bohemia . Geologically, the Erzgebirge range consists mainly of
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gneiss,
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mica and phyllite . As its name (Ore Mountains) indicates, it is famous for its
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mineral ores . These are chiefly
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silver and lead, the layers of both of which are very extensive, tin, nickel, copper and iron . Gold is found in several places, and some arsenic, antimony,
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bismuth, manganese, mercury and
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sulphur . The Erzgebirge is celebrated for its lace manufactures, introduced by Barbara Uttmann in 1541, embroideries,
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silk-
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weaving and toys . The
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climate is in winter inclement in the higher elevations, and, as the snow lies deep until the spring, the range is largely frequented by devotees of winter sport, ski, toboganning, &c .

In summer the

air is bracing, and many
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climatic
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health resorts have sprung into existence, among which may be mentioned Kipsdorf, Barenfels and Oberwiesenthal . Communication with the Erzgebirge is provided by numerous lines of railway, some, such as that from Freiberg to Brux, that from Chemnitz to Komotau, and that from
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Zwickau to
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Carlsbad,
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crossing the range, while various
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local lines serve the higher valleys . The Elstergebirge, a range some 16 m. in length, in which the Weisse
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Elster has its source, runs S.W. from the Erzgebirge to the Fichtelgebirge and attains a height of 2630 ft . See Grohmann, Das Obererzgebirge and seine Stadte (1903), and Schurtz, Die Passe
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des Erzgebirges (1891); also Daniel, Deutsch-
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land, vol. ii., and Gebauer, Lander and Volkerkunde, vol. i .

End of Article: ERZGEBIRGE
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