Eiderstedt

E231954

Eiderstedt is a low-lying peninsula on Germany’s North Sea coast known for its dike-protected marshlands, agriculture, and coastal tourism.

All labels observed (4)

Label Occurrences
Amt Eiderstedt 1
Eiderstedt canonical 1
Eiderstedt (original core area) 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf geographical region
peninsula
adjacentTo Eider estuary
surface form: Eider River estuary

Eider estuary
surface form: Eider-Treene-Sorge lowland
borders North Sea
climate maritime climate
contains Garding
Katinger Watt
St. Peter-Ording
Tönning
country Germany
hasCharacteristic coastal
dike-protected
low-lying
marshland
hasEconomicActivity agriculture
tourism
hasEconomicSector dairy farming
sheep farming on dikes
hasEcosystem Wadden Sea
surface form: Wadden Sea environment
hasFeature polders (Kooge)
reclaimed land from the sea
hasInfrastructure drainage canals
sea dikes
hasLandUse crop cultivation
pasture farming
hasProtection coastal flood defenses
historicalLanguage Low German
North Frisian
historicallyFormedFrom Eiderstedt self-linksurface differs
surface form: Eiderstedt (original core area)

Everschop
Utholm
knownFor agriculture
coastal tourism
dike-protected marshlands
languageUsed German
locatedIn Schleswig-Holstein
Northern Germany
surface form: northern Germany

Schleswig-Holstein
surface form: state of Schleswig-Holstein
locatedOn North Sea coast
near Friedrichstadt
Husum
partOf Nordfriesland
surface form: district of Nordfriesland

historic region of North Frisia
tourismAttraction birdwatching areas
lighthouses
wide sandy beaches at St. Peter-Ording

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (4)

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

Duchy of Saxony hasTerritory Eiderstedt
this entity surface form: Nordalbingia
Garding isMemberOf Eiderstedt
this entity surface form: Amt Eiderstedt
Eiderstedt historicallyFormedFrom Eiderstedt self-linksurface differs
this entity surface form: Eiderstedt (original core area)