Leine Explained

Leine
Map:Leine.png
Map Size:280px
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Type3:Reference no.
Subdivision Name3:DE: 488
Length:281km (175miles)
Mouth Location:Near Schwarmstedt into the Aller at km 52.26[1]
Basin Size:6517km2
Discharge1 Avg:5.3m3/s
Discharge1 Location:at Göttingen gauge
Discharge2 Avg:32m3/s
Discharge2 Location:Greene
Discharge3 Avg:52.3m3/s
Discharge3 Location:Herrenhausen
Discharge4 Avg:61.7m3/s
Discharge4 Location:Schwarmstedt

The Leine (pronounced as /de/; Old Saxon Lagina) is a river in Thuringia and Lower Saxony, Germany. It is a left tributary of the Aller and the Weser and is 281km (175miles) long.The river's source is located close to the town of Leinefelde in Thuringia. About 40km (30miles) downriver, the river enters Lower Saxony and runs northwards.

Important towns along its course, from upstream to downstream, are Göttingen, Einbeck, Freden, Alfeld, and Gronau, before the river enters Hanover, the largest city on its banks. Downstream some 40km (30miles) north of Hanover, near Schwarmstedt, the river joins the Aller and reaches the North Sea via the Weser. Its northern (lower) reaches are only navigable today by the smallest commercial carriers, though in the past, it served as an important pre-railway barge transport artery as far upriver as Göttingen.

The river is somewhat polluted by industry, so the water is not used for drinking, but the pollution has never been severe enough to prevent fish from living in it. Like many western rivers since the 1960s, it has enjoyed increasingly cleaner waters since the implementation of environmental controls. Sport fishing is enjoyed from small boats and along the banks, although yields are normally low.

At least one point of the river (Göttingen) is partially diverted into a canal that runs more or less parallel to the river.

Serial killer Fritz Haarmann disposed of most of his victims' remains in the Leine river.[2]

In fiction

In his 1986 bestseller Red Storm Rising, author Tom Clancy uses the Leine as a major obstacle to the Soviet Union's Red Army drive to the Rhine and the North Sea ports of the Netherlands and Belgium through West Germany. In reality, the river is a rather minor one, and, for most of its length, is quite narrow with a small flow volume. As such, it would not provide a significant barrier to an advancing army.

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.wsv.de/wasserstrassen/gliederung_bundeswasserstrassen/index.html Längen (in km) der Hauptschifffahrtswege (Hauptstrecken und bestimmte Nebenstrecken) der Binnenwasserstraßen des Bundes
  2. Web site: The Victims of Fritz Haarmann Memorial.