Stamping points take us to the Devil's Wall in the Harz
- Written by Portal Editor
Once we were gripped by the fever of collecting stamps to receive the Harz hiking badge, this was simultaneously linked to research and subsequently visiting other highlights in the Harz.
So really effective Harz marketing, if you will. But of course, also extremely interesting. If you haven't received any information about the Harz hiking badge yet, please follow this link. We had already hiked or cycled to a few destinations to receive the Harz hiking badge, so during our preliminary research between Neinstedt and Weddersleben we came across stamping point 188 and the two stamping points 74 near Timmersrode at the Hamburger Wappen and near Blankenburg below the Vaterpfalz at the Vaterpfalz inn with the number 76, or rather parts of the so-called Devil's Wall.
Sandstone from the Cretaceous period formed the impressive rock formations
Like all layers on the northern edge of the Harz, the rock layers were steeply positioned or even tipped over by the uplift of the Harz that continued until the Cretaceous period, so that the former layer surfaces now face downwards.
A gap in the layers between the Lias and the Lower Cretaceous and the deposits of the Upper Cretaceous that extend to the Muschelkalk are evidence of activities at different times, which took place primarily on the northern edge of the Harz fault.
Some parts were destroyed by the action of the rivers and later by ice age glaciers. This is why the Devil's Wall has various gaps today. A different course of the Bode is mainly responsible for this.
Archaeological evidence shows traces of the Paleolithic period, the Linear Pottery culture period and the Bronze Age. The first settlers were already present at the Devil's Wall during the Stone Age, as several Stone Age quartzite tools, such as core stones, flakes and a hand axe, were recovered.
As early as 1922, Adolf Brinkmann established the former existence of a settlement: "The Devil's Wall, which slopes steeply to the northeast, appears on its southern side to be a prehistoric rampart, on which the depression of the former huts can still be seen."
However, he leaves open the period from which this rampart might date.
Another settlement was located in 1980 in the area of the eastern part of the Königsstein. Several shards and stone tools from the younger Linear Pottery culture were recovered here as finds.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, fascinated by geology, visited the legendary sandstone wall in 1784. The Goethe Stone, erected in 2005, commemorates this.
Hiking trails, legends and myths about the Devil's Wall
The Devil's Wall near Weddersleben has been designated as the Devil's Wall and Bode nature reserve northeast of Thale since 1935 and is therefore one of the oldest nature reserves in Germany.
Several of the rocks of the Teufelsmauer near Blankenburg are open to climbing.
One of the legends about the Devil's Wall: About the devil and the rooster
Please read as well:
Hiking trail "Huttaler Wider Waage" - stamps 127 & 128