Ahr Explained

Ahr
Name Etymology:Old High German aha ("water")
Map:Ahr_verlauf.jpg
Map Size:300
Pushpin Map Size:300
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Germany
Length:89km (55miles)
Discharge1 Avg:8.9m3/s
Source1 Location:Blankenheim, Northern Eifel, North Rhine-Westfalia, Germany
Source1 Coordinates:50.438°N 6.6494°W
Source1 Elevation:470m (1,540feet)
Mouth:Rhine
Mouth Location:Remagen, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Mouth Coordinates:50.5594°N 7.2769°W
Mouth Elevation:58m (190feet)
Basin Size:900km2

Ahr (pronounced as /de/) is a river in Germany, a left tributary of the Rhine. Its source is at an elevation of approximately 470m (1,540feet) above sea level in Blankenheim in the Eifel, in the cellar of a timber-frame house near the castle of Blankenheim. After 18km (11miles) it crosses from North Rhine-Westphalia into Rhineland-Palatinate.

The Ahr flows through Ahr valley or Ahrtal, passing through the towns of Schuld, Altenahr and Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler. Between Remagen and Sinzig (south of Bonn), at about 50m (160feet) above sea level, it flows into the Rhine. The length is roughly 89km (55miles), of which 68km (42miles) is within Rhineland-Palatinate. The Ahr has a gradient of 0.4 percent in its lower course, and 0.4 to 0.8 percent in its upper course.

The Ahr and its tributaries are a main drainage system of the eastern Eifel. The watershed is approximately 900km2.

History

There were isolated settlements in the Ahr valley beginning at the latest in Roman times, evidenced by the Roman villa near Ahrweiler. Owing to their isolated location, the upper and middle parts of the course were sparsely populated.

That began changing in the mid-19th century. The development of settlements and transportation routes (including three railway lines) and the expansion of the area used for agriculture in the Ahr valley led to the narrowing and constraint of the riverbed. The course of the river was graded and its banks were stabilized.

Catastrophic flash flooding occurred on the Ahr in 1910 and 2021 resulting in the deaths of hundreds.

Course

The Ahr rises in the middle of the village of Blankenheim, in the Eifel region of the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia, in the basement of a timber-framed house in an enclosed spring at a height of . It then flows through the Schwanenweiher pond below Blankenheim Castle.

See main article: Ahr Valley. The stream, which runs in a south-easterly direction, through the valley meadows of upper Ahr valley, has not cut very deeply into the heights of the Eifel. Much of the upper Ahr valley is protected and follows the B 258 federal road. Below the hamlet of Ahrdorf in the municipality of Blankenheim, the Ahr reaches its southernmost point and enters the state of Rhineland-Palatine. From Müsch via Antweiler to Fuchshofen, the river runs northwards and turns east at Schuld heading through Insul to Dümpelfeld. Here, the Ahr collects the waters of the Adenauer Bach coming from the right and flowing in a northeasterly direction. In Altenahr, the valley bends to the east and initially follows a very winding course. Here the river is accompanied by the B 267, although it does not follow every loop in the river. In Altenahr, the largest bend in the river beings; it is protected because of its flora and fauna. From here, the valley becomes a gorge bordered by the steep cliffs of the Ahr Hills. From Reimerzhoven the valley sides are dominated by vineyards, especially on the south-facing slopes north of the river, particularly around the villages of Mayschoß, Rech, Dernau and Marienthal. The last narrow point in the Ahr valley occurs below the Bunte Kuh ("coloured cow"), a rock formation that almost reaches the river and leaves little room for road and railway. In Walporzheim, the valley widens abruptly, and the Ahr passes through the county town of Bad Neuenahr. In Heimersheim, the vineyards end. The valley floor between Bad Bodendorf on the northern side and Sinzig on a terrace in the south is dominated by agriculture and fruit and vegetable growing.

The mouth of the Ahr lies on the plain of the Golden Mile, between the Remagen district of Kripp and the town of Sinzig at a height of about . Since being re-naturalised (from 1979, see aerial photographs) it has been one of the few natural river mouths on the Rhine and is under protection.[1]

Tributaries

The tributaries of the Ahr include (in upstream order):

Name Waterbody No. (GKZ) Length (km) DirectionConfluence
at km
Place Remarks
Stegbach27181112 2.2right 84.9 Blankenheim
Mülheimer Bach2718112 4.5left 83.1
Nonnenbach271812 7.0right 82.5
Reetzer Bach2718132 3.6left 80.5 Reetz
Schaafbach271814 11.4right 79.2 headstream: Eichholzbach
Lampertsbach271816 9.5right 75.7 Dollendorfheadstream: Frömmelsbach
Fuhrbach2718172 5.3right 74.6 Ahrhütte
Mühlenbach271818 7.1left74.0 Ahrhütteheadstream: Weilerbach
Michelsbach2718192 8.3right 73.2
Aulbach2718194 5.1left 72.9
Willemsbach27181992 1.4right 71.1 Uedelhoven
Göttersbach27181994 1.0right 70.7 Ahrdorf
Ahbach27182 14.9right 68.8 Ahrdorf
Trierbach27184 25.3right 64.2 Müsch
Huhnenbach271852 4.3left 61.1 Antweiler
Limbach2718532 3.9right 60.3 Antweiler
Eichenbach2718534 6.9left 58.7 headstream: Hirzenflosseifen
Laufenbach2718536 2.8right 55.5 Fuchshofen
Dreisbach271854 10.0left 55.4 Fuchshofen
Armuthsbach271856 18.4left 52.0 Schuld
Holzseifen2718574 1.0left 47.9 Schuld
Atzenbach2718576 2.5left 47.5
Lückenbach271858 5.7right 45.3 Insul
Adenauerbach27186 15.7right 44.7 Dümpelfeld
Ommelbach2718712 1.8right 43.6 Dümpelfeld
Liersbach271872 14.5left 42.8 Liers
Kesselinger Bach271874 14.1right 95.0 Ahrbrück
Steinbach271876 2.5left 38.3 Ahrbrück
Stream from Schorling271878 2.5left 38.2 Ahrbrück
Sahrbach27188 15.3left 34.0 Kreuzberg
Vischelbach271892 10.5left 33.9 Kreuzberg
Stream from Burtscheiderberg (Roßbach)2718932 2.2left 31.5 Altenahr
Stream from Sonnenheck (Junge Berren)2718934 1.8right 22.0 Rech
Nollbach (Donnenbach)271894 1.8right 21.9 Rech
Kratzenbach27189512 2.1left 18.3 Dernau
Geusbach2718952 2.4right 16.8 Walporzheim
Wingsbach271896 4.5right 15.1 Ahrweiler
Mühlenteichgraben27189712 1.0left 14.5 Bad Neuenahr
Bachemer Bach2718972 7.0right 12.9 Bad Neuenahr
Fuchsbach2718974 4.5left 11.4 Bad Neuenahr
Mühlenteich27189752 1.2right 9.6 Bad Neuenahr
Idienbach2718976 5.3right 9.2 Heimersheim
Leimersdorfer Bach271898 8.5left 8.7 Heppingen
Lohrsdorfer Bach2718992 2.5left 7.0Lohrsdorf
Hellenbach2718996 7.7right3.1Sinzig
Harbach2718998 9.9left 2.5Sinzig
Tributaries with a length of over 7 km (from source to mouth):Left tributaries are in dark blue; right tributaries in light blue.TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:xxxxImageSize = width:750 height:auto barincrement:25PlotArea = left:10 right:10 top:10 bottom:40AlignBars = justifyColors = id:canvas value:rgb(0.97,0.97,0.97)BackgroundColors = canvas:canvasPeriod = from:0 till:30ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:0 gridcolor:blueBarData= barset:FlusslängeDefine $left = textcolor:white color:oceanblueDefine $right = textcolor:black color:skybluePlotData= width:18 fontsize:M textcolor:black color:skyblue shift:(20,-6) anchor:from barset:Flusslänge from:start till:11.4 $right text:Schaafbach (11.4 km) from:start till:9.5 $right text:Lampertsbach (9.5 km) from:start till:7.1 $left text:Mühlenbach (7.1 km) from:start till:8.3 $right text:Michelsbach (8.3 km) from:start till:14.9 $right text:Ahbach (14.9 km) from:start till:25.3 $right text:Trierbach (25.3 km) from:start till:10.0 $left text:Dreisbach (10.0 km) from:start till:18.4 $right text:Armuthsbach (18.4 km) from:start till:15.7 $right text:Adenauerbach (15.7 km) from:start till:14.5 $left text:Liersbach (14.5 km) from:start till:14.1 $right text:Kesselinger Bach (14.1 km) from:start till:15.3 $left text:Sahrbach (15.3 km) from:start till:10.5 $left text:Vischelbach (10.5 km) from:start till:8.3 $left text:Leimersdorfer Bach (8.3 km) from:start till:7.7 $right text:Hellenbach (7.7 km) from:start till:9.9 $right text:Harbach (9.9 km)

TextData= fontsize:M pos:(10,20) text:km

Viticulture

The Ahr is well known for the many vineyards that grace the hillsides downstream of the village of Altenahr. The small Ahr wine region is nevertheless the largest contiguous red wine-growing area in Germany, noted especially for wines made from the Spätburgunder (Pinot noir) grape. The Red Wine Trail runs through the southern slopes of the lower Ahr Valley, passing inter alia the former government bunker.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rechtsverordnung über das Naturschutzgebiet Mündungsgebiet der Ahr . Landkreis Ahrweiler . 1981-06-23 . 2014-01-02 . pdf . https://web.archive.org/web/20140102200744/http://www.naturschutz.rlp.de/Dokumente/rvo/nsg/pdf/NSG-7131-037.pdf . 2014-01-02 . live .