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Immenrode

GoslarVillages in Lower Saxony
Immenrode 14 06 03 08 800x600
Immenrode 14 06 03 08 800x600

Immenrode is a German village and Stadtteil (district) of the town of Goslar, Lower Saxony. The village is located approximately 5 kilometers west of Vienenburg, 7 kilometers northeast of Goslar, and 20 kilometers south of Braunschweig. Immenrode lies south of some small, wooded ridges in a flat area a few kilometres north of the Harz.

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

Immenrode
Vienenburger Straße,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: ImmenrodeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.95875 ° E 10.48419 °
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Address

Vienenburger Straße 7
38690
Lower Saxony, Germany
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Immenrode 14 06 03 08 800x600
Immenrode 14 06 03 08 800x600
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Nearby Places

Zwinger (Goslar)
Zwinger (Goslar)

The Zwinger in Goslar is a battery tower that is part of the fortifications of the old imperial city of Goslar, Germany. It is located on the Thomaswall in the south of the town and was built in 1517. On this side Goslar was strongly dominated by the nearby hill of Rammelsberg, which would have made a good location for positioning enemy guns in the event of an attack on the town; the town fortifications therefore needed the extra protection of a strong battery tower at this point. The stonework of Goslar's Zwinger was predominantly made of sandstone quarried from the Sudmerberg northeast of Goslar and mortared with burnt lime. Because lime burning was still in not fully developed, the builders mixed the mortar with horsehair, quark, goat's milk and ox blood to harden it fully. Immediately under the corbelling are two sandstone tablets in the wall bearing the coats of arms of the German Empire and the town of Goslar and the inscription "Anno dm M D X V II". The original conical roof was dismantled in 1857. With a wall thickness at the base of 6.5 metres, a diameter of 26 metres and a height of 20 metres, the Zwinger is one of the strongest surviving and utilised defensive towers in Europe. The Goslar Zwinger has been privately owned since 1 August 1936. Today it houses a restaurant on the ground floor, three holiday apartments on the middle floor and a small museum of medieval weapons, armour and torture implements on the top floor.