Gänseschnabel
Appearance
The Gänseschnabel is a natural monument north of Ilfeld in Thuringia, Germany. It is a striking, free-standing rock pillar made of porphyry, which resembles the beak of a goose (or duck) and from which there is a comprehensive view of the Behre valley looking towards Netzkater.
There is a legend connected with the Gänseschnabel about a spellbound goose girl who had fallen in love with a monk from the monastery at Ilfeld. A witch went to transform the monk in a rock when he waved to her from the other side of the valley. As the goose girl burst into tears, the witch turned her to stone as well.
References
- ^ Coloured black-and-white photograph.
Sources
- Graevert, Horst (1984), Meyenburg Museum (ed.), "Der Gänseschnabel", Beiträge zur Heimatkunde aus Stadt und Kreis Nordhausen, vol. Heft 9, Nordhausen, pp. 22–25