Vöhrenbach

E357460

Vöhrenbach is a small town in the Black Forest region of Baden-Württemberg, Germany, known for its picturesque setting and traditional clockmaking heritage.

All labels observed (2)

Label Occurrences
Hammereisenbach 1
Vöhrenbach canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf municipality
town
areaCode 07727
continent Europe
country Germany
elevationAboveSeaLevel approximately 800 metres
governmentType municipal council with mayor
hasCharacteristic picturesque setting
hasClimate temperate oceanic climate
hasEconomicActivity forestry
small-scale manufacturing
hasHeritage traditional clockmaking
hasIndustry clockmaking
tourism
hasLandmark Linach dam
St Martin church
historic town centre
hasLandUse forests
pastures
settlement area
hasMunicipalKey 08326070
hasNearbyCity Furtwangen
surface form: Furtwangen im Schwarzwald

Villingen-Schwenningen
hasPopulationRange under 10,000 inhabitants
hasRelief mountainous terrain
hasSubdivision Vöhrenbach self-linksurface differs
surface form: Hammereisenbach

Langenbach
Urach (earlier period)
surface form: Urach
hasTraditionalArchitecture Black Forest farmhouses
hasTraditionalProduct Black Forest clocks
hasTransportConnection regional roads
hasWebsite https://www.voehrenbach.de/
isPartOfTourismRegion Black Forest
surface form: Black Forest tourism region
locatedIn Baden-Württemberg
Black Forest
locatedInAdministrativeTerritory district of Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis
locatedInNaturalRegion Southern Black Forest Nature Park
surface form: Southern Black Forest
locatedInTimeZone Central European Summer Time
Central European Time
locatedOn river Breg
officialLanguage German
partOf Freiburg (Regierungsbezirk)
surface form: region of Freiburg
postalCode 78147
vehicleRegistrationCode VS

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Breg flowsThrough Vöhrenbach
Vöhrenbach hasSubdivision Vöhrenbach self-linksurface differs
this entity surface form: Hammereisenbach