You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (September 2024) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (September 2024) |
The Belchen system comprises five mountains with the name Belchen around the tripoint of Germany, France, and Switzerland that may[weasel words] have been used by the Celts as a solar calendar. The term is an extension of the Belchen triangle. The mountains are:
- Belchen, or Black Forest Belchen
- Belchenflue, or Swiss Belchen
- Ballon d'Alsace, or Alsatian Belchen
- Grand Ballon, or Great Belchen
- Petit Ballon, or Little Belchen
Geographical description
editThe heart of the Belchen system is the southernmost mountain of the Vosges, the Ballon d'Alsace (Elsässer Belchen or Alsatian Belchen, 1,247 metres). Seventy three kilometres due east is the Black Forest Belchen (Schwarzwälder Belchen, 1,414 metres), which is only 167 metres higher and over which the sun rises at the equinoxes, i.e. at the beginning of spring and autumn, as seen from Grand Ballon. Conversely, the sun sets over the Alsatian Belchen on these days when seen from the Black Forest Belchen.
Viewed from the Alsatian Belchen at the time of the summer solstice, the sun rises over Petit Ballon (Kleiner Belchen or Little Belchen, 1,272 metres), 27 kilometres away to the northeast. At the winter solstice it rises over the Belchenflue (Schweizer Belchen or Swiss Belchen, 1,099 metres), 88 kilometres to the southeast. Thus from the Alsatian Belchen the start of all four astronomical seasons is defined.
The region of the Belchen system is known today as the Upper Rhine, the Regio Basiliensis, the Dreiland or RegioTriRhena.
See also
edit- Belchen Tunnel under the Belchenflue
References
edit- Walter Eichin, Andreas Bohnert: Belchensystem, in Das Markgräfler Land, 1985, Issue 2, pp. 176ff.
- Astronomisch-kalendarisches Ortungssystem, in Jurablätter, 5 May 1988
- Rolf d’Aujourd’hui: Das Belchensystem, Basler Zeitung, 18 June 1992
External links
edit- Rolf d’Aujourd’hui: Belchen, Historic Lexicon of Switzerland, retrieved 20 May 2013
- Karl Rammstein: The Belchen Legend, 13. Juni 2004, retrieved 20 May 2013
- Hannes Hanggi: Ich will das System verankern (pdf; 844 kB), Basler Zeitung, 8 December 2007, retrieved 20 May 2013
- Gianni Mazzucchelli: Der Sonnenkalender von Rothenfluh - Das Belchen-System Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine (pdf; 9.5 MB), retrieved 20 May 2013
- Belchen, guajara.com, retrieved 20 May 2013
- regbas.ch: Belchen Triangle explained, with illustration
- Reference at archaeobasel.ch: Projekt Archäo-Geometrie – Belchendreieck (PDF; 160 kB); im Jahresbericht der Archäologischen Bodenforschung des Kantons Basel-Stadt 1993, incl. bibliography
- Das magische Dreieck SRF broadcast from the series: Mysterious Switzerland