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"The Seven Brothers Cave is a small cavity on a steep rock face on the western edge of the Saale Valley. It is made of porphyry conglomerate that was deposited by a river in the Rotliegend (approx. 290 million years ago) and slopes gently towards the southwest. The boulders are poorly rounded, meaning they were only transported over short distances. The largest boulder is located approx. 2 m to the right of the cave entrance and is 80 cm high. According to legend, seven brothers once lived here." Source: Information board
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Hello she discovered 😃 but it is only very small
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Located somewhat inconspicuously next to the cycle path.
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First seen on the treadmill (Kinomap), then explored by bike
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Erection: 1878 Donor: Halle gymnasts Whereabouts: available Friedrich Ludwig Jahn (* August 11, 1778 Lanz; † October 15, 1852 Freyburg (Unstrut)) is considered the initiator of the German gymnastics movement, which also earned him the nickname "Turnvater Jahn". The movement was linked to the national movement, i.e. its primary goal was not to encourage people to exercise, but to prepare young people for the fight against Napoleon's occupation of German territories in order to liberate Prussia and Germany. During his theology studies at Halle University between 1796 and 1800, Jahn often hid from other students, presumably liaison students, in a cave in the Klausberg mountains. Here he also wrote one of his first writings "On the Promotion of Patriotism in the Prussian Empire". According to unconfirmed reports, he later hid from French troops in the cave that now bears his name. During the wars of liberation in 1813, Jahn fought actively in the Lützow Freikorps against the Napoleonic occupation. As a supporter of national unity, Jahn was persecuted and imprisoned. From 1848 he was a member of the Frankfurt National Assembly, but clashed with the ideas of the revolution of 1848/1849. It was to Jahn's credit that the first German gymnasium was built in Berlin in 1811. Under the motto "fresh, free, happy, pious", the motto of the German gymnasts, he developed the gymnastics movement and his own world view and manifested this in his book "Die deutsche Turnkunst" with the wording: Fresh, free, happy, pious This is the Turner wealth! later changed to: Fresh, pious, happy, free The other God be commanded! It is assumed that this is an adaptation of a 16th-century student slogan, which states in the same way: Fresh, free, happy, pious Are the student's riches! In honor of the father of gymnastics, Jahn, a memorial plaque was erected near the cave named after him, which was renewed in 1924. At the top it bears the symbol of the "4 F" of the slogan, the so-called gymnastics cross. Source: https://www.halle-im-bild.de/fotos/denkmaeler/jahnhoehle
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