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The Ryck is a river in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany. From its source near Bartmannshagen, part of the Süderholz community northeast of Grimmen, the Ryck flows for about to the east, reaching Greifswald shortly before its mouth. The larger part of the river outside Greifswald is also referred to as ''Ryckgraben''. In Greifswald, the Ryck provided both the medieval Hanseatic port and natural salt evaporation ponds, as due to the low elevation, hypersaline water of the Baltic Sea is driven into the river by the wind, flooding the lower meadows on the Ryck's northern bank. In the High Middle Ages, the Ryck marked the southern border of the Principality of Rügen and the northern border of the County of Gützkow. West of Greifswald, the Ryck fed the ''Boltenhägener Teich'', a medieval lake. The old Hanseatic port in Greifswald is now an open-air ship museum. Image:Caspar David Friedrich 043.jpg|"Meadows near Greifswald" Caspar David Friedrich, 1820 (depicting the area used for salt evaporation) File:Greifswald_Museumshafen_StbBr.JPG|Old port, downtown Greifswald, view from Steinbecker bridge File:Greifswald Museumshafen.JPG|Old port, downtown Greifswald, view from pedestrians' bridge Image:Greifswald-Wieck_3.jpg|Old bridge in Greifswald-Wieck Image:Greifswald Wieck.jpg|Mouth at Greifswald-Wieck File:Greifswald im Mittelalter (Rekonstruktion Theodor Pyl).jpg|Map of medieval Greifswald showing ''Boltenhäg(en)er Teich'' and the confluence of the ''Baberow'', both do not exist anymore. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Ryck」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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