Ilse (Oker) Explained

Ilse
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Germany
Subdivision Type2:Location
Subdivision Name2:Harz
Length:40km (30miles)
Source1 Location:below the Brocken
Source1 Elevation:ca. 900 m
Mouth:Oker
Mouth Location:Near Börßum
Mouth Elevation:82 m
Custom Label:References

The Ilse is a river of Saxony-Anhalt and Lower Saxony, Germany.

It rises at about 900m (3,000feet) above sea level on the northern slopes of the Brocken. During its first few kilometres it flows as a narrow brook, almost invisible to the observer, down the side of the Brocken. Known here as the Verdeckte Ilse ("hidden Ilse") it gurgles its way under blocks of granite that hide the stream bed from above.

The Ilse then rushes through the narrow Ilse valley, hemmed in to the east by the rugged, cross-topped Ilsestein, passes by Ilsenburg into the Harz Foreland, flows through Veckenstedt, Wasserleben, Osterwieck and Hornburg and discharges into the Oker near Börßum together with the Schiffgraben from the Großes Bruch. Its total length is around 40km (30miles).

Local folklore personifies the river as the beautiful Princess Ilse, who has her home in the rocks of the Ilsestein.The Ilse is mentioned in literary works such as the Die Harzreise by Heinrich Heine.

See also