High Fens – Eifel Nature Park

The German-Belgian High Fens – Eifel Nature Park (German: Naturpark Hohes Venn – Eifel), often called the North Eifel Nature Park (Naturpark Nord Eifel), is a cross-border nature park with elements in the German federal states of North Rhine-Westphalia and Rhineland-Palatinate as well as the Belgian province of Liège. It has a total area of 2,485 km2 (959 sq mi).

High Fens – Eifel Nature Park
Naturpark Hohes Venn – Eifel
Landscape in the Hohes Venn
Location of the Hohes Venn–Eifel Nature Park in Germany
LocationNorth Rhine-Westphalia and
Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Liège, Belgium
Nearest citySchleiden, Germany
Coordinates50°30′29″N 6°22′12″E / 50.508°N 6.37°E / 50.508; 6.37[1]
Area2,485 km2 (959 sq mi)
Established1960
www.naturpark-hohesvenn-eifel.de
Official nameLes Hautes Fagnes
Designated24 March 2003
Reference no.1405[2]

The nature park lies between Langerwehe and Eupen in the north and Bad Münstereifel, Prüm and Sankt Vith in the south and covers six regions: the Rur Eifel, the High Eifel, the Limestone Eifel, the Our valley, the Venn Foreland and the Hohes Venn, a raised bog and heath landscape, remnants of the last ice age 7,500 years ago.

The geographical description North Eifel in its narrowest sense only covers the Eifel landscape between Zitter Forest in the south and Aachen in the north, Bad Münster Eifel to the east and over the Rur Eifel to the Belgian border in the west. The Hohe Venn is geographically seen as a separate natural region within the whole Eifel area, but is nevertheless included in the nature park.

German sign in Belgium
French sign in Belgium

History

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In 1960, the president of the now-defunct administrative district of Aachen, Hubert Schmitt-Degenhardt, founded the North Eifel Nature Park. In 1971 it was merged with the Belgian Parc Naturel Hautes Fagnes to become the Hohes Venn – Eifel Nature Park. The emblem of the nature park is the black grouse.[3]

Eifel National Park

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In the middle of the nature park, largely around the former Belgian Army military training area at Vogelsang and the Rur Valley Dam, is the Eifel National Park founded in 2004 and expanded after the withdrawal of the Belgians on 1 January 2006.[citation needed]

Literature

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  • Baedeker Reiseführer Belgien

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Hohes Venn (Nordeifel) Nature Park". protectedplanet.net.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "Les Hautes Fagnes". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  3. ^ "V. Auszug aus der Verordnung über das Reichswirtschaftsgericht", Die Kartellverordnung, De Gruyter, pp. 130–143, 1925-12-31, retrieved 2022-06-17
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