Wölpe Explained

Wölpe
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Germany
Subdivision Type2:State
Subdivision Name2:Lower Saxony
Length:16.6km (10.3miles)
Source1 Location:east of Nienburg
Mouth Location:near Rethem into the Aller
Progression:Alpe
Tributaries Right:Schwarze Riede, Weißer Graben
Tributaries Left:Schipsegraben (branches off again)
Custom Label:References

Wölpe is a river of Lower Saxony, Germany. It is about long and a left tributary of the Alpe.

The Wölpe has its source in a depression southeast of, a village in the borough of Nienburg and flows towards the northeast. In front of Rethem the Weiße Graben ("White Ditch") links the Wölpe with the Alpe. The Alpe-Wolpe-Umfluter then discharges into the Aller near Wohlendorf in the borough of Rethem. The waterway has been considerably straightened. It flows through woods, grassland and cultivated fields. According to the 2000 Water Quality Chart issued by the NLWKN it is critically polluted throughout (quality class II−III).[1]

History

At about 0.8km (00.5miles) from the source near the Nienburg village of Erichshagen-Wölpe the Wölpe flows by the mound on which the former castle of the counts of Wölpe stood. During the Middle Ages the waterway was widened into a moat for the security of the fortified position and flowed around the castle built in the 12th century. After the destruction of the site in the 17th century the castle moat and the Wölpe were filled with rubble.

About further on near Heemsen the Wölpe flows into the wood by the site of the 9th century castle. Here, too, the stream was probably used as part of the defences.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.nlwkn.niedersachsen.de/master/C7128994_L20_D0 NLWKN Water Quality Chart