Glisborn

Glisborn
Country Germany
Basin
Main source Odenberg
233 m (764 ft)
51°12′00″N 9°23′01″E / 51.19989883°N 9.383506209°E / 51.19989883; 9.383506209
River mouth at Edermünde-Holzhausen in to the Pilgerbach
182 m (597 ft)
51°12′54″N 9°24′50″E / 51.21512170°N 9.414018151°E / 51.21512170; 9.414018151Coordinates: 51°12′54″N 9°24′50″E / 51.21512170°N 9.414018151°E / 51.21512170; 9.414018151
Progression Glisborn—PilgerbachEderFuldaWeserNorth Sea
Physical characteristics
Length 3.0 km (1.9 mi)
Pool in front of the Glisborn spring. Photo taken in winter 2015

The Glisborn, or Glißborn, is a small, short (3 kilometres (1.9 mi)) stream that rises from a spring of the same name. The spring is located close to the Odenberg hill near Gudensberg in the northern Hessian district of Schwalm-Eder-Kreis. The spring is connected with numerous legends (see below).

Course

The Glisborn spring is situated 650 metres (2,130 ft) m north of the summit of the Odenberg hill and 1,100 metres (3,600 ft) northwest of Scharfenstein hill, at an elevation of 233 metres (764 ft). The spring water flows directly in to a large pool (see photo) before emptying into the stream. Its very short course of 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) flows through arable land and then into the Pilgerbach stream near Edermünde-Holzhausen at an elevation of 182 metres (597 ft). This gives an average gradient of 1.7%.

Profile of the Glisborn stream

Legends

The first written versions of legends about the Glisborn were recorded by the Brothers Grimm;

Karl der Große .... Die Krieger schmachteten vor Durst, der König saß auf schnee-weißem Schimmel; da trat das Pferd mit dem Huf auf den Boden und schlug einen Stein vom Felsen, aus der Öfnung sprudelte die Quelle mächtig. Das ganze Heer wurde getränkt. Diese Quelle heißt Glisborn, ihrer kühlen, klaren Flut mißt das Landvolk größere Reinigungskraft bei als gewöhnlichem Wasser, und aus umliegenden Dörfern gehen die Weiber dahin ihr Leinen zu waschen.
Jacob Grimm, Deutsche Mythologie, Band 2, p.890[1]

Charlemagne .... His warriors pined with thirst, the king sat on a snow-white steed; then the horse stomped with his hoof on the ground and broke away a piece of rock; out of the opening gushed a bubbling spring and the whole army was watered. Glisborn is the name of the spring, to whose clear cold flood the country-folk impute a higher cleansing power than to common water, and women from surrounding villages come to wash their linen there.
Jacob Grimm (transl. James Steven Stallybrass), Teutonic Mythology, 4th Edition, p.938[2]

It is, however, most probable that this legend is based on an older Chatti legend which states that the god Wōden came riding from the Odenberg on his white, eight-legged horse Sleipnir. At every hoof-fall of the horse, a spring arose, such as the Glisborn.[3][4]

For this reason the Chatti held the Glisborn sacred. After the Chatti were Christianised in the 8th Century by Saint Boniface, the legend was changed to the Charlemagne story. Both variants of the legend are "supported" by a stone with the imprint of a horse's hoof that was embedded in the wall of a church (Karlskirche) in Karlskirchen, a long abandoned village nearby.[5] During the Protestant Reformation in the Landgraviate of Hesse in the year 1526, the church was destroyed because it was also still used for certain pagan practices. Many years later this stone was cemented into the wall that surrounds the St. Margarethen church in Gudensberg, where it can be still seen today.[6][7]

Water Quality

In 2010, the water at Glisborn was found to have a total nitrate content above 50 mg/l, which is the maximum value that is allowed in drink water by German law (Trinkwasserschutzverordnung)[8] and European drinking water quality standards. The Hessian Water Authority have stated that in a study from 1994 it was found that the soil around Glisborn is composed of thick loess deposits in various states of weathering. The high nitrate values are caused by natural loess decomposition and are not due to farming practice.[9]

References

  1. Grimm, Jacob (1844). Deutsche Mythologie, Band 2 (in German). Göttingen: Dieterichsche Buchhandlung. p. 890.
  2. Grimm, Jacob (1883). Teutonic Mythology, fourth Edition, Translated by James Steven Stallybrass (PDF). London: George Bell and Sons. p. 938.
  3. Korn, Felix (1843). Etymologisch-symbolisch-mythologisches Real-Wörterbuch (in German). Stuttgart: Cast'schen Buchhandlung. p. 161.
  4. "Glisborn" (in German).
  5. Landau, Georg (1840). "Die Karlskirche". Zeitschrift des Vereins für hessische Geschichte und Landeskunde (in German). Alte Folge 2: 281–286.
  6. "Stadt Gudensberg," (in German).
  7. "Grimm Heimat Hessen" (in German).
  8. "Kleine Anfrage des Abg. Daniel May (Bündnis90/Die Grünen) vom 09.08.2011 betreffend Nitrat und Pestizide im hessischen Grundwasser" (PDF) (in German). 2011.
  9. "Stellungnahmen zum BP, MP und zum Umweltbericht" (PDF) (in German).

See also

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