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Culture of Dachau


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Running from the west the river Amper runs south of Dachau�s old town, changes its direction at the former paper milling plant to the northeast and continues through Prittlbach into Hebertshausen.

Coming from Karlsfeld, the W�rm crosses Dachau-East and merges into the river Amper just outside the district limit of Hebertshausen.

The Gr�benbach, which has its source south of Puchheim, runs through town coming from the south and merges into the Amper river at several locations near the festival grounds.

The M�hlbach, a man made canal, which is diverted from the river Amper at the electrical power plant and runs parallel and flows back into it after passing the paper mill. The name derives from the frequent mills in former times along the canal which took advantage of the decline between M�hlbach and Amper. West of the so called Festwiese runs another canal, called Lodererbach.

In town there are still parts of the Schlei�heimer canal remaining today. This canal was built in the mid-eighteenth century as part of the northern Munich canal system to which the Nymphenburger Canal belongs as well. It functioned as a transportation route between Dachau and Schlei�heim. The building material recovered from the demolition of three wings of the Dachau castle was transported to Schlei�heim this way.

By allowing it to run to seed and through deliberate cultivation by the town of Dachau the canal is only still recognizable as such between Fr�hlingstrasse and the Pollnbach. Outside the city limit the original canal continues on to Schloss Schlei�heim.

Within the city boundaries, in Dachau S�d (South), there is also a small lake called Stadtweiher
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