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- Hellweg abstract "In the Middle Ages, Hellweg was the official and common name given to main travelling routes in Germany. Their breadth was decreed as an unimpeded passageway a lance's width, about three metres, which the landholders through which the Hellweg passed were required to maintain. In German scholarship and literature, however, Hellweg, i.e. when employed without an adjective, usually refers to the well-researched Westphalian Hellweg, the main road from the region of the lower Rhine east to the mountains of the Teutoburg Forest, linking the imperial cities of Duisburg, at the confluence of the Rhine and Ruhr rivers, and Paderborn, with the slopes of the Sauerland to its south. At Paderborn, it very probably continued into at least two other main imperial roads leading further east and north to the Harz mountains and the middle Elbe river, and the lower Weser and lower Elbe rivers, respectively.The Westphalian Hellweg, as an essential corridor that operated in overland transit of long-distance trade, was used by Charlemagne in his Saxon wars and later was maintained under Imperial supervision. In the 10th and 11th centuries this Hellweg was the preferred route of the Ottonian and Salian kings and emperors travelling at least yearly between their main estates in Saxony and the imperial city of Aachen, when they were not in Italy or on campaign; very important imperial palaces were located in both Duisburg and Paderborn.From the Early Modern period, with the rise of the coal and steel industries, medieval towns founded along the trading route, e.g. Gelsenkirchen, Bochum, Essen or Dortmund, evolved into industrial hubs and absorbed most of the population growth of the region.The name Hellweg, connoting the wide \"bright\" clearway (heller Weg) through the forest, derives from Low German helwech with this same significance. Another etymology for Hellweg is from Salzweg, the \"Salt road\", on the ancient roots hál-s (Greek), and hal (Celtic), \"salt\". Yet another meaning connotes a \"Way of the Dead\"; e.g., in Grimm's Worterbuch, Helvegr is the route to Hel, the Underworld.".
- Hellweg thumbnail HellwegDortmund1610Muhler.jpg?width=300.
- Hellweg wikiPageID "16823271".
- Hellweg wikiPageLength "3365".
- Hellweg wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Hellweg wikiPageRevisionID "695507939".
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Aachen.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Adjective.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Bochum.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Category:Historic_trails_and_roads_in_Germany.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_Germany.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_roads_and_tracks.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Category:Trade_routes.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Charlemagne.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Dortmund.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Duisburg.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Early_modern_period.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Elbe.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Essen.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Free_imperial_city.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Gelsenkirchen.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Harz.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Hel_(location).
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Kaiserpfalz.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Lance.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Low_German.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Ottonian_dynasty.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Paderborn.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Rhine.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Ruhr_(river).
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Salian_dynasty.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Salt_road.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Saxon_Wars.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Saxony.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Teutoburg_Forest.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Trade_route.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Underworld.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Weser.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink Westphalia.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink File:Asseln,_straatzicht_Asselner_Hellweg_foto2_2012-03-25_10.56.JPG.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLink File:HellwegDortmund1610Muhler.jpg.
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hellweg area".
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hellweg".
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ostenhellweg".
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLinkText "Westen-/Ostenhellweg".
- Hellweg wikiPageWikiLinkText "Westphalian Hellweg".
- Hellweg wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Otheruses.
- Hellweg wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Hellweg subject Category:Historic_trails_and_roads_in_Germany.
- Hellweg subject Category:Medieval_Germany.
- Hellweg subject Category:Medieval_roads_and_tracks.
- Hellweg subject Category:Trade_routes.
- Hellweg hypernym Official.
- Hellweg type Road.
- Hellweg type Network.
- Hellweg type Road.
- Hellweg type Route.
- Hellweg comment "In the Middle Ages, Hellweg was the official and common name given to main travelling routes in Germany. Their breadth was decreed as an unimpeded passageway a lance's width, about three metres, which the landholders through which the Hellweg passed were required to maintain. In German scholarship and literature, however, Hellweg, i.e.".
- Hellweg label "Hellweg".
- Hellweg sameAs Q474719.
- Hellweg sameAs Hellweg.
- Hellweg sameAs Hellweg.
- Hellweg sameAs Hellweg.
- Hellweg sameAs Helwei.
- Hellweg sameAs Hellweg.
- Hellweg sameAs Hellweg.
- Hellweg sameAs m.0407hzc.
- Hellweg sameAs Q474719.
- Hellweg wasDerivedFrom Hellweg?oldid=695507939.
- Hellweg depiction HellwegDortmund1610Muhler.jpg.
- Hellweg isPrimaryTopicOf Hellweg.