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Reußenköge - Wikipedia

  • ️Sat Dec 31 2022

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reußenköge
Reussenkog

A wind farm in the Desmerciereskoog polder

A wind farm in the Desmerciereskoog polder

Coat of arms of Reußenköge Reussenkog

Coat of arms

Location of Reußenköge
Reussenkog within Nordfriesland district

Reußenköge Reussenkog is located in Germany

Reußenköge Reussenkog

Reußenköge
Reussenkog

Reußenköge Reussenkog is located in Schleswig-Holstein

Reußenköge Reussenkog

Reußenköge
Reussenkog

Coordinates: 54°36′33″N 8°54′16″E / 54.60917°N 8.90444°E
CountryGermany
StateSchleswig-Holstein
DistrictNordfriesland
Government
 • MayorDirk Albrecht
Area

• Total

45.91 km2 (17.73 sq mi)
Elevation1 m (3 ft)
Population

 (2022-12-31)[1]

• Total

321
 • Density7.0/km2 (18/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
Postal codes

25821

Dialling codes04671, 04674, 04842
Vehicle registrationNF
Websitewww.reussenkoege.de

Reußenköge (Danish: Reussenkog) is a sparsely populated municipality in the district of Nordfriesland, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is situated directly adjacent the shoreline of the North Sea coast, in a driving distance of in between 15 up to 29 km northwest of the county-capital city of Husum.

The municipality includes a number of six populated polders (German: Koog, plural: Köge), two of which were financed by Count Heinrich XLIII of Reuß-Schleiz-Köstritz and his wife Louise and thus bear the names Louisen-Reußen-Koog (const. 1799) and Reußenkoog (1789). Additional polders are:

  • Sophien-Magdalenen-Koog (const. 1742)
  • Desmerciereskoog (1767)
  • Cecilienkoog (1905)
  • Sönke-Nissen-Koog (1926)
  • Beltringharder Koog (only unsettled northern part) (1987)

The name of the municipality was created by combining both the first names, meaning literally in English: polders of the Reußes. A further non-residential location within the municipality is the Hamburger Hallig. In former times being a settled part of the island of Alt-Nordstrand, it was split up from the rest by the Burchardi Flood in the year 1634.