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Aar (Lahn)

Germany river stubsHesse river stubsRhineland-Palatinate geography stubsRivers of GermanyRivers of Hesse
Rivers of Rhineland-PalatinateRivers of the TaunusTributaries of the Lahn
MK37329 Wasserfall Adolfseck
MK37329 Wasserfall Adolfseck

The Aar is a 50-kilometre-long (31 mi) river in western Germany, left tributary of the Lahn. It rises in the Taunus mountains, near Taunusstein. It flows generally north through the towns Taunusstein, Bad Schwalbach, Aarbergen and Hahnstätten. It flows into the Lahn in Diez.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Aar (Lahn) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Aar (Lahn)
Kanalstraße, Diez

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.368611111111 ° E 8.0055555555556 °
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Weltzeit-Sonnenuhr

Kanalstraße
65582 Diez
Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
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MK37329 Wasserfall Adolfseck
MK37329 Wasserfall Adolfseck
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5th Panzer Division (Bundeswehr)
5th Panzer Division (Bundeswehr)

The 5th Armoured Division (5. Panzer-Division) was a West German armored formation. It was part of the III Corps of the Bundeswehr, which also incorporated in 1985 the 2nd Panzergrenadier Division and 12th Panzer Division. III Corps was part of NATO's Central Army Group (CENTAG), along with the Bundeswehr's II Corps and the American V and VII Corps. Headquarters in 1985 was at Diez/Lahn, with subordinate brigades at Wetzlar (13th PG Bde), Neustadt/Marburg (6th Panzer Brigade) and Koblenz (15th Panzergrenadier Brigade). It played a major role in the defense of West Germany from the Soviet Union during the Cold War. The division was constituted on 1 October 1956 as part of the III Corps of the Bundeswehr. In 1985, the corps also received the 2nd Panzergrenadier Division and 12th Panzer Division. Subordinated to NATO's Central Army Group, the III Corps defended the "zone of vital defense" of NATO, at the side of the II Corps of the German Army and the U.S. Army's V and VII Corps. Following the Soviet Union's fall, the US VII Corps was withdrawn and two combined US/German corps were created in the former CENTAG area. As part of this arrangement, 5th Armoured Division was administratively placed under the V Corps (United States) for main defence purposes. This meant that if an attack from the East was anticipated, the division would fall under U.S. control. Meanwhile, an American division would likewise fall under control of the German II or III Corps. The 5th Panzer sent some of their units to Yugoslavia in 1990. German budget constraints meant that the 5th Panzer Division had to be indefinitely disbanded on 30 June 2001.