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10_94 | essentially Baroque three-winged complex; one-floor building with half-hip roof |
10_95 | Hydroelectric power station, on the Nahe, partly within Norheim’s limits – reservoir with dikes, |
10_96 | weir with bridge and four towers, hydroelectric power station with machine hall and machinist's |
10_97 | house, 1930s/1950s (see also below) |
10_98 | Vineyard house – eight-sided plastered building, 19th century |
10_99 | Vineyard house – half-round tower with Gothic elements, quarrystone, late 19th century |
10_100 | More about buildings and sites |
10_101 | Parish church |
10_102 | The parish church with its girding wall and defensive tower comes mainly from the 12th century; the |
10_103 | quire is Gothic. It was consecrated to Saint Mechtildis, whose reputed grave here was the object of |
10_104 | pilgrimage even into Protestant times, up to about 1575. Indeed, Mechtildis even still appeared in |
10_105 | the village's court seal from 1632. Well known are the frescoes in the tower chapel. In 1940, even |
10_106 | older, Romanesque, wall paintings were discovered in the nave. These had been whitewashed out on |
10_107 | the Meisenheim church administration's orders in 1669. They also had the altars and baptismal font |
10_108 | smashed up. |
10_109 | Power station |
10_110 | The three-span, 75 m-long weir raises the River Nahe's water behind it by roughly 6 m, thereby |
10_111 | forming a reservoir some 5 km long. Even today, RWE still runs a hydroelectric power station here, |
10_112 | supplied by a 600 m-long headrace. The sod was turned on 20 December 1926, and the power station |
10_113 | was brought into service on 18 March 1928. The high dikes on both sides ensure that the village is |
10_114 | effectively safe from flooding. This protection has since been reinforced with the addition of a |
10_115 | mobile barrier. In the beginning, the reservoir's volume was roughly 900 000 m³, but this has since |
10_116 | been markedly reduced over the last few decades by sedimentation. The power station's generating |
10_117 | capacity has a maximum of 1 900 kW, generating a yearly average of 5 232 240 kWh. The reservoir's |
10_118 | area is roughly 30 ha. This enormous intrusion into the natural environment in the Nahe's water |
10_119 | gap, however, has brought about its own microclimate of almost Mediterranean character, which is |
10_120 | especially conducive to winegrowing. |
10_121 | Schmittenstollen |
10_122 | The Lemberg, with an elevation of 420 m above sea level, is the highest peak in the Nahe valley |
10_123 | region. It harbours among other mining points of interest a cultural-historical gem: a mediaeval |
10_124 | cinnabar mine, the Schmittenstollen, the only mercury mine in Western Europe that has been |
10_125 | developed into a visitable mine. The former worship site on the Lemberg that was consecrated to the |
10_126 | god Mercury suggests that quicksilver was being mined here even in Roman times. Evidence, though, |
10_127 | only exists for mining as far back as the 15th century, with three great periods of working, the |
10_128 | last from 1936 to 1942, during which cinnabar was mined. In the gallery that is open to the public, |
10_129 | the visitor can make out the sections that were worked in the Late Middle Ages by hammer and pick |
10_130 | as well as those that were worked in the 20th century by machine and with explosives. This |
10_131 | underground experience gives the visitor a taste of what it was like for generations of miners who |
10_132 | worked the cinnabar mine over the centuries. The Schmittenstollen is open from April to October. |
10_133 | Sport and leisure |
10_134 | The Weinwanderweg (“Wine Hiking Trail”) with a total length of about 4.6 km has gathered up more |
10_135 | than 340 members worldwide, making it the village's biggest club. Many members busy themselves |
10_136 | expanding and maintaining this educational path that leads through Niederhausen's various |
10_137 | vineyards. Unfortunately, what they must often deal with is the damage wrought by vandals. The |
10_138 | membership, though, does its best to put everything back in order. |
10_139 | Economy and infrastructure |
10_140 | Transport |
10_141 | Running through Niederhausen is Landesstraße 235, and it is met in the village centre by |
10_142 | Kreisstraße 56. Landesstraße 235 leads to Bundesstraße 48 at Bad Münster am Stein-Ebernburg, which |
10_143 | leads to Bad Kreuznach and, after an interchange onto Bundesstraße 41, the Autobahn A 61 |
10_144 | (Koblenz–Ludwigshafen) just beyond. Serving neighbouring Norheim is a railway station on the Nahe |
10_145 | Valley Railway (Bingen–Saarbrücken). This same line actually likewise runs through Niederhausen, |
10_146 | but the station there is no longer served. |
10_147 | Winegrowing |
10_148 | Niederhausen's structure is characterized mainly by winegrowing. Twelve individual winegrowing |
10_149 | locations – Einzellagen – are distributed among roughly 120 ha of vineyards. One of the best known |
10_150 | winegrowing operations was the Königlich-Preußische Weinbaudomäne Niederhausen-Schloßböckelheim |
10_151 | (“Royal Prussian Winegrowing Domain”). It was already fostering winegrowing in the 19th century, |
10_152 | especially against the phylloxera plague introduced from the United States along with the rise in |
10_153 | fungal pests. This winegrowing domain gave Nahe wines added strength on the market, having before |
10_154 | been sold under other names such as “Rüdesheimer” (referring to Rüdesheim am Rhein rather than |
10_155 | Rüdesheim an der Nahe) or “Rhine Wine”, having no well known identity of its own. Among |
10_156 | Niederhausen's wineries are the following: |
10_157 | Weingut Daum
Weingut-Gästehaus Franzmann
Weingut Lindenhof
Weingut Mathern
Weingut Jakob Schneider |
10_158 | References
External links |
10_159 | Municipality’s official webpage
Niederhausen in the collective municipality’s webpages |
10_160 | Private page about Niederhausen
Private page about Niederhausen’s “wine trail” |
10_161 | Bad Kreuznach (district) |
11_0 | Sir Stephen Sedley (born 9 October 1939) is a British lawyer. He worked as a judge of the Court of |
11_1 | Appeal of England and Wales from 1999 to 2011 and is currently a visiting professor at the |
11_2 | University of Oxford. |
11_3 | Background |
11_4 | Sedley's father was Bill Sedley (1910–1985), of a Jewish immigrant family, who operated a legal |
11_5 | advice service in the East End of London in the 1930s. In the Second World War he served in North |
11_6 | Africa and Italy with the Eighth Army. Bill Sedley founded the firm of lawyers of Seifert and |
11_7 | Sedley in the 1940s with Sigmund Seifert and was a lifelong Communist. |
11_8 | Sir Stephen's younger brother is Professor David Sedley. |
11_9 | Legal career |
11_10 | After graduation from Queens' College, Cambridge, Sedley was called to the Bar (Inner Temple) in |
11_11 | 1964 and practised in Cloisters chambers with John Platts-Mills, David Turner-Samuels and Michael |
11_12 | Mansfield. |
11_13 | Sedley had a particular interest in the development of administrative law (the judicial review of |
11_14 | governmental and administrative decision making). He was involved in cases which broadened the |
11_15 | scope of judicial review and established the modern procedure for judicial review, and in |
11_16 | ground-breaking cases in relation to employment rights, sex and race discrimination, prisoners' |
11_17 | rights, coroners' inquests, immigration and asylum and freedom of speech. He was counsel in many |
11_18 | high-profile cases and inquiries, from the death of Blair Peach and the Carl Bridgewater murder |
11_19 | appeal to the Helen Smith inquest and the contempt hearing against Kenneth Baker, then Home |
11_20 | Secretary. |
11_21 | In 1976, Sedley attended, as one of a group of "observers", the "Luanda Trial", sometimes called |
11_22 | "the Mercenaries' Trial", held by the then recently-victorious MPLA government in Luanda, Angola. |
11_23 | He became a QC in 1983. He was appointed a High Court judge in 1992, serving in the Queen's Bench |
11_24 | Division. In 1999 he was appointed to the Court of Appeal as a Lord Justice of Appeal. He was a |
11_25 | Judge ad hoc of the European Court of Human Rights and a Member ad hoc of the Judicial Committee of |
11_26 | the Privy Council. His retirement from the Court of Appeal in 2011 coincided with the publication |
11_27 | of a collection of his essays and lectures. |
11_28 | Notable judicial opinions |
11_29 | As a first instance judge, Sedley delivered important judgments in the field of administrative law, |
11_30 | notably in relation to the concept of legitimate expectation as a ground for judicial review, and |
11_31 | the duty to give reasons. |
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