Bible Encyclopedias
Luneburger Heide

1911 Encyclopedia Britannica

A district of Germany, in the Prussian province of Hanover, lying between the Aller and the Elbe and intersected by the railways Harburg-Hanover and BremenStendal. Its main character is that of a broad saddle-back, running for J5 m. from S.E. to N.W. of a mean elevation of about 250 ft. and attaining its greatest height in the Wilseder Berg (55 o ft.) at its northern end. The soil is quartz sand and is chiefly covered with heather and brushwood. In the north, and in the deep valleys through which the streams descend to the plain, there are extensive forests of oak, birch and beech, and in the south, of fir and larch. Though the climate is raw and good soil rare, the heath is not unfertile. Its main products are sheep - the celebrated Heidschnucken breed, - potatoes, bilberries, cranberries and honey. The district is also remarkable for the numerous Hun barrows found scattered throughout its whole extent.

See Rabe, Die Luneburger Heide and die Bewirthschaftung der Heidhofe (Jena, 1900); Kniep, Fuhrer durch die Luneburger Heide (Hanover, 1900); Linde, Die Luneburger Heide (Luneburg, 1905), and Kuck, Das alte Bauernleben der Luneburger Heide (Leipzig, 1906).

Bibliography Information
Chisholm, Hugh, General Editor. Entry for 'Luneburger Heide'. 1911 Encyclopedia Britanica. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​bri/​l/luneburger-heide.html. 1910.