4.0
(24)
406
달리기 하는 사람
60
러닝
Pyrbaum 주변 조깅은 Faberwald와 같은 광활한 숲과 Straßmühle 주변 지역을 포함한 다양한 풍경을 제공하며, 그림 같고 그늘진 달리기를 위한 수많은 기회를 제공합니다. 이 지역은 Schwarzach 강과 Laber 강이 특징이며, 강둑을 따라 그림 같은 경로를 제공합니다. 근처의 Rothsee 호수에는 물가 풍경을 감상하며 더 긴 달리기에 이상적인 7.5마일(12km) 트레일이 있습니다. 이 다양한 지형은 비교적 평탄한 길과 상당한 고도 상승이 있는 경로를 모두 포함하여 다양한 체력 수준에 적합합니다.
마지막 업데이트: 4월 6, 2026
3.0
(1)
27
달리기 하는 사람
11.8km
01:15
40m
40m
보통 조깅. 좋은 체력 필요. 대부분 포장된 지면. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 갈 수 있음.
18
달리기 하는 사람
11.3km
01:11
50m
50m
보통 조깅. 좋은 체력 필요. 대부분 포장된 지면. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 갈 수 있음.
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4.3
(3)
15
달리기 하는 사람
11.8km
01:14
50m
50m
보통 조깅. 좋은 체력 필요. 대부분 포장된 지면. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 갈 수 있음.
14
달리기 하는 사람
10.3km
01:05
30m
40m
보통 조깅. 좋은 체력 필요. 대부분 포장된 지면. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 갈 수 있음.
13
달리기 하는 사람
17.4km
01:49
60m
60m
어려운 조깅. 우수한 체력 필요. 대부분 포장된 지면. 실력과 관계없이 누구나 갈 수 있음.
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Seligenporten Monastery The monastery, dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary, was founded in 1242 by Gottfried the Elder of Sulzbürg and his wife Adelheid of Hohenfels as a nunnery. In 1247, the monastery, then called "Felix Porta" ("fortunate/blessed gate"), was incorporated into the Cistercian Order through the mediation of the Archbishop of Mainz, and this was confirmed in 1249 by Bishop Heinrich of Eichstätt. In 1299, King Albrecht granted the monastery lower jurisdiction. The monastery was endowed by donations from the citizens of Sulzbürg and later from Wolfstein, as well as from the local nobility, and also served as the burial place for the Wolfstein family. Over the course of its more than 300 years, the Cistercian nunnery had further founders and patrons. Around 1500, the monastery's holdings comprised 350 properties with 650 subjects in over 20 villages, who were liable for taxes. It held the patronage rights for seven parishes and two chaplaincies. In the second half of the 15th century, the Electors of the Palatinate began to bring the Upper Palatinate monasteries under their rule. These monasteries, all heavily indebted and in dire financial straits, were powerless to resist. In 1550, Anna von Kuedorf, the last abbess of the Cistercian convent of Seligenporten, was forced to accept the Protestant church order of the Palatine Elector Ottheinrich. With her death in 1576, Seligenporten, the last abbey in the Palatinate, finally passed into the possession of the sovereign. After the annexation of the Upper Palatinate by Elector Maximilian of Bavaria, it was recatholicized, and the monastery was re-established in 1625. In 1671, the monastery was transferred to the Salesian convent in Amberg. In the course of secularization in 1803, the buildings and properties passed into private hands. Today, the former monastery church is the parish church of Seligenporten. Most of the buildings were demolished. The remaining monastery buildings were taken over in 1930/31 by the expelled Cistercians of Sittich Abbey, belonging to the Mehrerau Congregation. The community of monks, now established in Seligenporten, numbered 16 members in 1963, but was dissolved again in 1967. The former abbey church was restored between 1976 and 1979. In 2003, the former brewhouse of the old monastery brewery was renovated, and a new microbrewery was established. Source: Excerpts from www.wikipedia.de
2
0
Monastery Church of the Assumption of Mary The monastery church was originally dedicated to the Visitation of Mary and is now dedicated to the Assumption of Mary. The nave is stylistically dated to the late 13th century. The chancel likely dates from the first half of the 14th century. The elongated, plastered hall church with a slightly recessed chancel, measuring 54 meters in length, features stepped buttresses at the chancel. A gabled tower with a pointed spire on the west side is open at the bottom. The church is a single-nave structure with a large nuns' gallery and, below it, the burial vault (so-called crypt) for the founding families of Sulzbürg and Wolfstein. The design is simple, with high, bare walls and no paintings or sculptures to minimize distractions from prayer. By the mid-14th century, the church's clear tripartite division was complete: the nuns' church in the west, the lay church in the center, and the priests' church in the east. The nuns' primary duties consisted of choral prayer and work. It can therefore be assumed that the church and the monastic living quarters were the first buildings completed. Until the Reformation, almost all deceased members of the founding family were buried here, and the nuns prayed daily for their souls. Several gravestones from this period still exist. The nuns' choir stalls on the gallery have been preserved and are therefore unique in all of Europe. The Baroque altars that adorn the church were acquired around 1720 after all the paintings and altars were burned during the Reformation. The high altar was crafted by a carpenter named Ulrich Schäfer from Neumarkt; the sculptor of the figures is unknown. The altarpiece, "The Visitation of Mary," is by the Landshut painter Wolf Simon Groß. In the right side altarpiece, dating from the late 17th century, the Three Wise Men pay homage to the Christ Child, above which is a statue of the Archangel Michael with a flaming sword and scales. In the left side altar stands a statue of the Virgin Mary with the Christ Child at the center, flanked by the apostles Peter and Paul. Above, a guardian angel holds his hand over a child. On the north wall of the nave is a dynamic, life-size group of figures dating from 1762, depicting the crucifix with John Nepomuk, accompanied by a putto and an angel. Source: Excerpts from www.wikipedia.de / https://www.pfarrei-seligenporten.de
2
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Church of the Assumption of Mary The church was originally dedicated to the Visitation of Mary and is now dedicated to the Assumption of Mary. The nave is stylistically dated to the late 13th century. The chancel likely dates from the first half of the 14th century. The elongated, plastered hall church, with a slightly recessed chancel, measures 54 meters in length and features stepped buttresses at the chancel. A gabled tower with a pointed spire on the west side is open at the bottom. The church is a single-nave structure with a large nuns' gallery and, below it, the burial vault (known as a crypt) for the founding families of Sulzbürg and Wolfstein. The design is simple, with high, bare walls and no paintings or sculptures to minimize distractions from prayer. By the mid-14th century, the church's clear tripartite division was complete: the nuns' church in the west, the lay church in the center, and the priests' church in the east. The nuns' primary duties consisted of choral prayer and work. It can therefore be assumed that the church and the monastic living quarters were the first buildings completed. Until the Reformation, almost all deceased members of the founding family were buried here, and the nuns prayed daily for their souls. Several gravestones from this period still exist. The nuns' choir stalls on the gallery have been preserved and are therefore unique in all of Europe. The Baroque altars that adorn the church were acquired around 1720 after all the paintings and altars were burned during the Reformation. The high altar was crafted by a carpenter named Ulrich Schäfer from Neumarkt; the sculptor of the figures is unknown. The altarpiece, "The Visitation of Mary," is by the Landshut painter Wolf Simon Groß. In the right side altarpiece, dating from the late 17th century, the Three Wise Men pay homage to the Christ Child, above which is a statue of the Archangel Michael with a flaming sword and scales. In the left side altar stands a statue of the Virgin Mary with the Christ Child at the center, flanked by the apostles Peter and Paul. Above, a guardian angel holds his hand over a child. On the north wall of the nave is a dynamic, life-size group of figures dating from 1762, depicting the crucifix with John Nepomuk, accompanied by a putto and an angel. Source: Excerpts from www.wikipedia.de / https://www.pfarrei-seligenporten.de
2
0
Seligenporten Monastery The monastery, dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary, was founded in 1242 by Gottfried the Elder of Sulzbürg and his wife Adelheid of Hohenfels as a nunnery. In 1247, the monastery, then called "Felix Porta" ("fortunate/blessed gate"), was incorporated into the Cistercian Order through the mediation of the Archbishop of Mainz, and this was confirmed in 1249 by Bishop Heinrich of Eichstätt. In 1299, King Albrecht granted the monastery lower jurisdiction. The monastery was endowed by donations from the citizens of Sulzbürg and later from Wolfstein, as well as from the local nobility, and also served as the burial place for the Wolfstein family. Over the course of its more than 300 years, the Cistercian nunnery had further founders and patrons. Around 1500, the monastery's holdings comprised 350 properties with 650 subjects in over 20 villages, who were liable for taxes. It held the patronage rights for seven parishes and two chaplaincies. In the second half of the 15th century, the Electors of the Palatinate began to bring the Upper Palatinate monasteries under their rule. These monasteries, all heavily indebted and in dire financial straits, were powerless to resist. In 1550, Anna von Kuedorf, the last abbess of the Cistercian convent of Seligenporten, was forced to accept the Protestant church order of the Palatine Elector Ottheinrich. With her death in 1576, Seligenporten, the last abbey in the Palatinate, finally passed into the possession of the sovereign. After the annexation of the Upper Palatinate by Elector Maximilian of Bavaria, it was recatholicized, and the monastery was re-established in 1625. In 1671, the monastery was transferred to the Salesian convent in Amberg. In the course of secularization in 1803, the buildings and properties passed into private hands. Today, the former monastery church is the parish church of Seligenporten. Most of the buildings were demolished. The remaining monastery buildings were taken over in 1930/31 by the expelled Cistercians of Sittich Abbey, belonging to the Mehrerau Congregation. The community of monks, now established in Seligenporten, numbered 16 members in 1963, but was dissolved again in 1967. The former abbey church was restored between 1976 and 1979. In 2003, the former brewhouse of the old monastery brewery was renovated, and a new microbrewery was established. Source: Excerpts from www.wikipedia.de
2
0
The cycle path leads directly past Kargo Castle. There is a circular path around the fence around the castle.
1
0
The Seligenporten Monastery (Latin Monasterium Felix Porta) is a former abbey of the Cistercians, later a monastery of the Salesians and then a Cistercian abbey located in Markt Pyrbaum in the Upper Palatinate in Bavaria and belonging to the diocese of Eichstätt. The monastery church originally served as the patronage of the Visitation of the Virgin Mary and today has the patronage of the Assumption of Mary. The nave is stylistically dated to the late 13th century. The choir probably dates from the first half of the 14th century, possibly as a foundation from the Frickenhofers. The elongated, plastered hall building with a slightly retracted choir is 54 m long and has stepped buttresses on the choir. A gable tower with a pointed helmet in the west is open at the bottom. Source: Wikipedia
3
0
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