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THURINGIAN FOREST (Thiiringerwald)

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 902 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THURINGIAN

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FOREST (Thiiringerwald)  , a range of hills in Germany, extending in an irregular
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line from the neighbour-hood of
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Eisenach in the N.W. to the Lobensteiner
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Kulm on the Bavarian frontier on the S.E . On the S.E. it is continued directly by the
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Frankenwald Mountains to the Fichtelgebirge, while on the N.E. it approaches the Harz Mountains, and thus takes its place in the
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great Sudetic chain of central Germany . The length of the Thuringian chain is70 m., and its breadth varies from 6 to 22 m . It nowhere rises into peaks, and only a few of its rounded summits reach 3000 ft.; the successive hills form a continuous comb; the north-west slopes are precipitous and seamed with winding gorges . This range encloses many charming valleys and glens; the most prominent feature of its scenery is formed by the forests, chiefly of pines and firs . The north-west
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part of the
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system is the loftier and the more densely wooded as well as the more beautiful; the highest summits here are the Grosser Beerberg (3225 ft.), Schneekopf (3203) and the Finsterberg (3104), all in the duchy of
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Gotha . The south-east part of the Thuringian
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Forest is the more populous and
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industrial; the chief summits are the Kieferle (2848 ft.), the Blessberg (2834 ft.), the Wurzelberg (2841 ft.) and the Wetzstein (2575 ft.) . The crest of the Thuringian Forest, from the Werra to the
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Saale, is traversed by the Rennsteig or Rainsteig, a broad path of unknown antiquity, perhaps referred to in a letter of Pope Gregory III. dated 738 . The name means probably " frontier-path "; and the path marks in fact the boundary between Thuringia and Franconia . It may be also regarded as part of the boundary line between north and south Germany, for dialect, customs,
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local names and costume are different on the two sides . The rocks are largely volcanic, the stratification being complex . The
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mineral resources have been nearly exhausted, but the
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district is an important centre of small
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industries (glassware, earthenware,
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meerschaum-
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ware, iron castings and toys being among its
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principal products) and a favourite resort for tourists .

See Regel, Thuringen, ein landeskundlicher Grundriss (

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Jena, 1897) ; Trinius, Thiiringer Wanderbuch (8 vols.,
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Minden, 1896–1902) ; Prescholdt, " Der Thuringer Wald and seine nachste Umgebung," in Forschungen zur deutschen
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Landes- and Volkskunde, vol. v . (
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Stuttgart, 1891) ; Walther, Geologische Heimatskunde von Thuringen (Jena, 1906) ; and Meyer's Reisebuch, Thuringen " (18th ed.,
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Leipzig, 1906) .

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