Lenne | |
Subdivision Type1: | Country |
Subdivision Name1: | Germany |
Subdivision Type2: | State |
Subdivision Name2: | Lower Saxony |
Subdivision Type3: | District |
Subdivision Name3: | Holzminden |
Length: | 23.7km (14.7miles) |
Source1 Location: | on the Holzberg near Wangelnstedt-Linnenkamp |
Source1 Elevation: | ca. |
Mouth Location: | at Brunswick Gate near Bodenwerder into the Weser |
Basin Size: | 125km2 |
Tributaries Right: | Vorwohle, Ruthe, Taukebach, Spüligbach |
Tributaries Left: | Angerbach, Riehenbach, Wabach, Niederer Bach, Ahlbach |
Custom Label: | References |
Lenne is river of Lower Saxony, Germany. It is a long, right-hand, eastern tributary of the river Weser in the district of Holzminden in the Weser Uplands.
The Lenne rises on the northern edge of the Holzberg ridge. Its source is located at on the terrain of the parish of Wangelnstedt, above the village of Linnenkamp in Wolpersgrund field.
The Lenne flows in a predominantly northwesterly direction through the villages of Linnenkamp and Wangelnstedt, where it passes the uplands of Elfas (max.) to the west. After the village of Lenne the Lenne runs northeast past the hills of the Homburg Forest (max.) and through the town of Eschershausen (with its suburb of Scharfoldendorf), from where it passes between the two ridges of the Ith (max. ; some distance off) to the north and Vogler (max.) to the south. As it does, the Lenne flows through Oelkassen and Kirchbrak and passes the village of (a borough of Bodenwerder), where it is joined by its largest tributary, the Spüligbach.
The Lenne finally discharges into the Weser on the northern edge of the Vogler between the Eckberg (; with its Bismarck Tower) to the north and the Königszinne (; with its observation tower) to the south, immediately east of the town of Bodenwerder.
The gorge at the mouth of the Lenne is known as the Brunswick Gate (German: Braunschweigische Pforte or Latin: Porta Brunswiga). The water gap created by the Lenne opens up a gate here from the former Hanoverian town of Bodenwerder into the former Duchy of Brunswick.
The sand washed into the Weser by the Lenne at one time formed a ford, so that a trade route crossed here very early on. As a result was founded as early as 960 on the opposite side of the mouth of the Lenne.