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Klingbach

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Klingbach
The Klingbach and the old mill in Herxheim
Course of the Klingbach (top)
Location
LocationRhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Reference no.DE: 237546
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationNear Lindelbrunn Castle
 • elevation350 m
Mouth 
 • location
Near Hördt into the Michelsbach
 • coordinates
49°10′43″N 8°20′23″E / 49.178509°N 8.339857°E / 49.178509; 8.339857
 • elevation
99 m
Length37.84 km
Basin size130.241 km²
Basin features
ProgressionMichelsbach → Rhine → North Sea
River systemRhine
Tributaries 
 • leftKaiserbach, Quodbach

The Klingbach is a stream, just under 38 kilometres long, in South Palatinate, Germany, and a left-hand tributary of the Michelsbach.

Geography

Course

Footpath by the Klingbach in Billigheim-Ingenheim

The main source of the Klingbach arises in the southern Palatine Forest, the German part of the Wasgau, at a height of about 350 m above sea level (NN) on the northeast slope of the castle hill of the ruined Lindelbrunn Castle. Another, almost as strong source rises a good two kilometres to the south. The two source streams converged after about three kilometres in Silz.

The Klingbach leaves the hills in an eastern direction at Klingenmünster , crosses the German Wine Route and reaches the Upper Rhine Plain. It flows through the western half of the plain, initially in an easterly direction, later swinging more to the northeast. Southeast of Rohrbach it is joined on the left by the almost 20 kilometre long Kaiserbach, and, above Herxheim, by the eight kilometre long Quodbach.

Until the first half of the 19th century, the Klingbach emptied into a meander of the Upper Rhine east of Hördt. With the channelization of the Rhine its confluence became part of the (99 m above sea level (NN)) Old Rhine. Today the old bend in the river is a river in its own right, called the Michelsbach.

Municipalities along the Klingbach

History

Running upstream alongside the Klingbach is part of the southern section of the Palatine St James' Way.

To distinguish it from other places with the name of Münster ("minster") the municipality of Klingenmünster was named after the stream.

References