Burgholz is a hill in the Gilserberg Heights near the town of Kirchhain in Marburg-Biedenkopf, which is 379 metres (1,243 ft) high.[1] On the summit and the north-east slope is the district of Burgholz, which is part of the town of Kirchhain. The majority of the hill is covered by trees, with the exception of some housing on one slope.
Burgholz | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Elevation | 379.1 m (1,244 ft) |
Prominence | 10 m (33 ft) |
Coordinates | 50°52′18″N 8°56′48″E / 50.87167°N 8.94667°E |
Geography | |
Location | Hesse, Germany |
Parent range | Gilserberg Heights |
Geography
editThe Burgholz is the southwestern-most mountain of the Gilserberger Heights and merges directly into the Amöneburg Basin in the northern part of Kirchhain, while the Wohra valley joins it to the west, beyond which the southern Burgwald begins (separated from the northern part by the B3). On its outer flanks are Emsdorf (in the east), higher parts of Langenstein and Kirchhain (in the south), the town of Rauschenberg (already in and behind the valley of the Wohra, in the west), Ernsthausen (in the north of the valley) and Wolferode (also in the valley, in the northeast).
Despite its low height, the Burgholz is about 10 km taller than the Amöneburg, though to the north the elevations of the same ridge are much higher, due to being in the vicinity of the significantly higher Kellerwald.
Peak
editSince 1968, the top of the Burgholz has had the Hunburgturm, a 28.5 m high wooden observation tower, which provides a view of peaks in the Rothaar Mountains, including Kahlem Asten, Ziegenhelle, Bollerberg, and Sackpfeife. Peaks in the Gladenbach Uplands are also visible, including Dünsberg, Rimberg, Knüll, Kellerwald, and the Vogelsberg range. The tower is named after a castle that used to be near there, the Hunburg.[2]
Hunburg Castle
editOn the northwest spur of Burgholz, 6 km north of Kirchhain, are the ruins of Hunburg Castle, from roughly the 8th century. The ruins consist of fortifications with sections of trench and walls, a pincer gate in the southeast, and what is potentially a basement from a now-absent building.[3]
References
edit- ^ "unser.burgholz.de - Home". unser-burgholz.de (in German). Retrieved 2021-12-06.
- ^ "unser.burgholz.de - Aussichtsturm (Hunburgturm)". unser-burgholz.de (in German). Retrieved 2021-12-06.
- ^ "Historisches Ortslexikon : Erweiterte Suche : LAGIS Hessen". www.lagis-hessen.de. Retrieved 2021-12-06.