Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Čerchov

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Mountain range
  
Upper Palatine Forest

Parent range
  
Upper Palatine Forest

Čerchov httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Elevation
  
1,042 m n.m. (3,419 ft)

Prominence
  
549 m ↓ east of Nový Klíčov

Isolation
  
19.4 km → Hoher Bogen (Bavarian Forest)

Similar
  
Kreuzfelsen, Hoher Bogen, Osser, Dyleň, Velká Deštná

At 1,042 m n.m., the Čerchov (German: Schwarzkopf) is the highest mountain in the Upper Palatine Forest (Český les) and the northern summit of the Bohemian Forest. It lies ca. 2 km from the German-Czech border, roughly in the middle of a triangle formed by the villages of Waldmünchen, Furth im Wald and Domažlice.

Map of %C4%8Cerchov, Czechia

After its use by the Wehrmacht in the Second World War the summit was intensively used by the Warsaw Pact until the 1990s as a surveillance station and was placed out of bounds to the public. In addition to the observation tower erected in 1904 by Vilém Kurz and known as the Kurz Tower, a second, larger tower was built in 1987 by the Czechoslovak Army which is used today for flight safety purposes and is not accessible. The corresponding NATO communication station was located on the Hoher Bogen about 20 km away to the southeast. Other surveillance posts were sited inter alia on the Velký Zvon (German: Plattenberg, with a tower of very similar design built in 1978 and which had line-of-sight to the Čerchov site) and the Dyleň. As well as the Soviet Army the site was also used by Hauptabteilung III of the East German Stasi as a listening post (codenamed RUBIN). Following the opening of the border and reunification of Germany the listening posts were closed and from July 2000 the Kurz Tower has been accessible once more. The mountain offers an all-round view of the Bavarian Forest and the Czech Plain. In good weather conditions, the Alps may be seen. There is an amateur radio on the mountain.

References

Čerchov Wikipedia