History
In the nineteenth century, many mills used the water power of the Elbbach. They included grain mills, an ironworks inEtymology
The first part of the name “Elbbach” has an etymology like that of the Elbe, a major river in Central Europe whose name derived from the Latin ' meaning “river”. And, the German word for “stream” is “bach”, a common suffix for German rivers.Orel, Vladimir.Route
The Elbbach arises in the Rhineland-Palatinate part of the Westerwald, a few miles northwest of Westerburg, from the convergence of several streams north ofNature preserves
In the latter part of its route, through the state of Hesse, the Elbbach flows through the nature reserve "Elbbachtal". This protected area follows the course of the river over approximately from the state border to the city of Hadamar. The boundary of the reserve is usually close to the river, which means that the reserve covers only despite its long distance. The official short description and justification of this protected area is: "Near-natural watercourses with brook-riparian riparian forests, high-altitude meadows, wet meadows, freshwater meadows, reedbeds and floodplains. Vegetation valuable from both botanical and faunistic point of view, habitat of numerous rare and endangered species of flora and fauna, of particular importance for running waters, locally significant bird breeding area." Further along this river’s course is the nature reserve "Kalksteinbruch bei Hadamar" comprising , and the area "Elbbachaue east of Elz" comprising . The latter area consists of two sub-areas of wet meadow, which is particularly important because of the occurrence of the dark and the light-colored butterfly called the Scarce large blue.List of tributaries
The tributaries of the Elbbach are as follows (L = left side, R = right side), with each river’s length in kilometers (and miles):See also
* List of rivers of Hesse * List of rivers of Rhineland-PalatinateReferences
{{Authority control Rivers of Hesse Rivers of Rhineland-Palatinate Rivers of the Westerwald Rivers of Germany