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Kleine Röder (Große Röder)

Coordinates: 51°10′12″N 13°58′47″E / 51.169874°N 13.979655°E / 51.169874; 13.979655
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Kleine Röder
Confluence with the Große Röder at Ottendorf-Okrilla
Course from its source north of Leppersdorf to its confluence with the Große Röder at Ottendorf-Okrilla
Location
LocationBautzen, Saxony, Germany
Reference no.DE: 53844
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationsource: on the Eierberg near Lichtenberg
 • coordinates51°10′12″N 13°58′47″E / 51.169874°N 13.979655°E / 51.169874; 13.979655
 • elevation302 m above sea level (NN)
Mouth 
 • location
from the right in Cunnersdorf (village in Ottendorf-Okrilla) into the Große Röder
 • coordinates
51°10′43.52″N 13°48′44.85″E / 51.1787556°N 13.8124583°E / 51.1787556; 13.8124583
 • elevation
162 m above sea level (NN)
Length20 km
Basin features
ProgressionGroße Röder → Black Elster → Elbe → North Sea
River systemElbe
LandmarksVillages: Wachau, Lichtenberg, Ottendorf-Okrilla
Tributaries 
 • leftOrla
 • rightMittelwasser

The Kleine Röder or Wilde Röder is a river in the eastern German state of Saxony. It is about 20 km (12 mi) long and rises on the southwestern slopes of the Eierberg near Lichtenberg in the district of Bautzen at an elevation of 320 m (1,050 ft).

Below Leppersdorf (a village in the borough of Wachau), the stream changes its course from southwest to north, following the general lie of the land. It flows through Kleindittmannsdorf with its four former water mills. On the edge of the mighty Okrilla Basin Sands (Okrillaer Beckensande) it swings west and discharges into the Große Röder in Cunnersdorf (a village in the borough Ottendorf-Okrilla). Its longest tributaries are, from the south, the Orla and, from the north, the Großnaundorfer Wasser.

There are frequent floods in the catchment area of the Kleinen Röder. Flood damage was recorded in the years 1958, 2002, 2006, 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013.[1] Ein großes Hochwasser trat am 12. und 13. August 2002 auf.[1] There was particularly serious damage in Leppersdorf and Ottendorf-Okrilla.[1] Additionally, the plunge pool of the Kleindittmannsdorf Reservoir was destroyed.[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Nachhaltiger Wiederaufbauplan für die Kleine Röder - Erstellung von Hochwassergefahren- und Hochwasserrisikokarten und eines Hochwasserrisikomanagementplans. Endfassung Dezember 2017 pdf