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Elbe–Lübeck Canal

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The Elbe–Lübeck Canal (Template:Audio) (also known as the Elbe–Trave Canal) is an artificial waterway in eastern Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It connects the rivers Elbe and Trave, creating an inland water route across the drainage divide from the North Sea to the Baltic Sea. The canal includes seven locks and runs for a length of Template:Convert between the cities of Lübeck in the north and Lauenburg in the south by way of the Mölln lakes.<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> The modern canal was built in the 1890s to replace the Stecknitz Canal, a medieval watercourse linking the same two rivers.<ref name="Britannica">Template:Cite web</ref>

Preceding canal

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The older Stecknitz Canal had first connected Lauenburg and Lübeck on the Old Salt Route by linking the tiny rivers Stecknitz (a tributary of the Trave) and Delvenau (a tributary of the Elbe). Built between 1391 and 1398, the Stecknitz Canal was the first European summit-level canal and one of the earliest artificial waterways in Europe.<ref name="Zumerchik">Template:Cite book</ref>

History

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File:ETK Damals – erstes Kriegsschiff.jpg
The Imperial German torpedo boat S65 making the first transit of the Elbe–Lübeck Canal by a warship in 1903

After German unification in the late nineteenth century, there was a burst of canal-building within the new German Empire.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Stecknitz Canal had been in service for centuries, but newer vessels demanded deeper and wider canals, and modern engineering offered the possibility of rebuilding and enlarging the venerable waterway. In 1893 the German government closed the Stecknitz Canal to barge traffic, and in 1895 construction began on a widened and straightened waterway which includes some of the old canal's watercourse.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The new Elbe–Lübeck Canal was inaugurated by German Emperor Wilhelm II and opened to shipping traffic in 1900.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Today it continues to carry substantial freight traffic, as well as offering a scenic route for pleasure craft.<ref name="WSA Lauenburg" />

Technology

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File:SlusePram.jpg
A barge loaded with timber in a lock on the Elbe–Lübeck Canal

The canal passes through two locks ascending from the Elbe to the canal's highest point and five locks descending from the high point to the Trave. Each lock was built with an interior length of Template:Convert and an interior width of Template:Convert.<ref name="WSA Lauenburg">Template:Cite web</ref>

References

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