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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LangelsheimLangelsheim - Wikipedia

    Langelsheim is a town in the district of Goslar in Lower Saxony, Germany. Geography [ edit ] The municipality is situated between the river Innerste and its tributary the river Grane , on the northern edge of the Harz mountain range and the Harz National Park , located about 8 km (5.0 mi) northwest of Goslar .

  2. Harz (Landkreis Goslar) /  51.783°N 10.417°E  / 51.783; 10.417. Harz is an unincorporated area in the German district of Goslar . The uninhabited area is located in the Upper Harz ( Lower Saxony ). With a size of 371.76 km 2 (31 December 2006), it is the largest unincorporated area in Germany. Although there are no residents reported ...

  3. The Hildesheim–Goslar railway is a 53 kilometre long, double-track and non-electrified main line in the northern Harz foothills in the German state of Lower Saxony. It serves mainly to connect with the tourist region in the northern Harz ( Goslar , Bad Harzburg and Wernigerode ) with Hildesheim and Hanover .

  4. fr.wikipedia.org › wiki › GoslarGoslar — Wikipédia

    Goslar est une ville de Basse-Saxe, en Allemagne. Elle est la capitale de l' arrondissement de Goslar. C'est une ville touristique très fréquentée et une porte d'entrée du secteur nord-occidental du massif du Harz . L'ancienne ville libre d'Empire fut fondée au Xe siècle après la découverte d' argent dans les mines proches du Rammelsberg.

  5. Goslar es una ciudad perteneciente al estado federado de Baja Sajonia con un total de 42 811 habitantes (2005). Se ubica a los pies de la sierra del Harz . La ciudad histórica de Goslar con las Minas de Rammelsberg fueron declaradas Patrimonio de la Humanidad por la Unesco en el año 1992, uniéndose a la declaración el sistema de gestión hidráulica del Alto Harz en 2010.

  6. GS. Website. www.sg-lutter.de. Lutter am Barenberge is a former Samtgemeinde ("collective municipality") in the district of Goslar, in Lower Saxony, Germany. It was disbanded in November 2021, and its municipalities were absorbed by the town Langelsheim. [2] It was situated northwest of the Harz, approx. 13 km northwest of Goslar.

  7. The earliest archeological finds near Goslar date back to 100,000-50,000 B.C.. In Salzgitter-Lebenstedt, stone tools thought to stem from Mousterian Culture have been discovered. By 4,500 B.C. the region was probably settled by farmers originating from the Danube region. One of their settlements was found in 1956 in Eitzum near Wolfenbüttel .