Thaya

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Use dmy dates Template:For multi Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other The Thaya (Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "IPA".) is a river in the Czech Republic and Austria, a right tributary of the Morava River. It flows through the South Moravian Region in the Czech Republic and through Lower Austria in Austria. It is formed by the confluence of the German Thaya and Moravian Thaya rivers. Together with the German Thaya, which is its main source, the Thaya is Template:Convert long. Without the German Thaya, it is Template:Convert long. In the Czech Republic, the Thaya is the seventh longest river in the country with a length of Template:Convert.

Etymology

Both the names Thaya and Dyje have their origin in the Illyrian word 'duja', which can be translated as 'rushing river'. The first written mention of Thaya is from 985, when the name was written as Taja.[1][2]

Characteristic

File:Meandry Dyje.jpg
The Thaya in Podyjí National Park

From a water management point of view, the Thaya and German Thaya are two different rivers with separate numbering of river kilometres. From a broader point of view, the Thaya (as German Thaya) originates in the territory of Schweiggers at an elevation of Template:Cvt[2] and flows to Lanžhot, where it enters the Morava River at an elevation of Template:Cvt.[3] The confluence of the Thaya and Morava is the southernmost and the lowest point of Moravia.

The Thaya is Template:Convert long,[4] of which Template:Convert[3] (including the Austrian-Czech state border) is in the Czech Republic, making it the seventh longest river in the country. Its drainage basin has an area of Template:Convert,[5] of which Template:Convert is in the Czech Republic.[3] The name Thaya is used from the confluence of the German Thaya with the Moravian Thaya in Raabs an der Thaya and from this point to the confluence with the Morava, the river is Template:Convert long.[2]

The Thaya has 573 tributaries.[2] The sources and longest tributaries of the Thaya are:[6]

Tributary Length (km) River km Side
Svratka 168.5 66.0 left
Kyjovka 88.1 8.0 left
Jevišovka 81.7 83.1 left
German Thaya 75.8 235.1
Moravian Thaya 68.2 235.1 left
Pulkau 61.0 97.5 right
Želetavka 55.8 190.7 left
Trkmanka 41.7 34.5 left
Štinkovka 14.3 46.5 left
Gránický potok 13.5 132.5 left

Notable indirect right tributaries are the streams Včelínek (length: 27.2 km) and Daníž (length: 25.5 km), which flow to the artificial canals of the Thaya.[6]

Settlements

File:Mährische Thaya Mündung.JPG
Confluence of the German Thaya (right) and Moravian Thaya

The most populated settlements on the river are the towns of Znojmo and Břeclav. The river flows through or along the following municipalities: Raabs an der Thaya, Ludweis-Aigen, Japons, Drosendorf-Zissersdorf, Vratěnín, Stálky, Uherčice, Podhradí nad Dyjí, Oslnovice, Starý Petřín, Bítov, Chvalatice, Lančov, Vranov nad Dyjí, Horní Břečkov, Hardegg, Lukov, Podmolí, Havraníky, Znojmo, Dobšice, Dyje, Tasovice, Krhovice, Strachotice, Slup, Valtrovice, Křídlůvky, Jaroslavice, Hrádek, Dyjákovice, Laa an der Thaya, Hevlín, Hrabětice, Hrušovany nad Jevišovkou, Wildendürnbach, Jevišovka, Drnholec, Brod nad Dyjí, Dolní Dunajovice, Pasohlávky, Dolní Věstonice, Pavlov, Milovice, Přítluky, Bulhary, Lednice, Podivín, Ladná, Břeclav, Bernhardsthal, Rabensburg, Hohenau an der March and Lanžhot.

Bodies of water

File:Vodni nadrz Nove Mlyny-stred.jpg
Nové Mlýny reservoirs

There are 7,225 bodies of water in the basin area within the Czech Republic. The largest of them are the three Nové Mlýny reservoirs, built directly on the Thaya.[3] Other reservoirs built on the river are the Znojmo and Vranov reservoirs.

Nature

File:Zusammenfluss von March und Thaya, Dreiländereck AT-CZ-SK 01.jpg
Confluence of the Thaya (left) and Morava

The river flows through the Podyjí and Thayatal national parks. Among the protected species that live in the river are the European crayfish and brown trout. The river is also a nesting place for the common kingfisher.[1]

The area of the confluence of the Morava and Thaya, which also includes many pools, oxbow lakes and channels, is the most valuable ichthyological site in the country. About 80% of native Czech fish species can be found there, and 15% of them are endemic, living only there.[7]

Tourism

The Thaya is suitable for river tourism. About Template:Cvt of the river is navigable, including almost the entire flow in the Czech Republic. The river has enough water throughout the year and belongs to the rivers suitable for less experienced paddlers. The river flows through the tourist-attractive areas of the Podyjí and Thayatal national parks, and through the Lednice–Valtice Cultural Landscape, which is included on the UNESCO World Heritage List.[8]

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Sister project

Template:Authority control

  1. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. a b c d Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. a b c d Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  6. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  7. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  8. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".