Hrubý Jeseník
Hrubý Jeseník is a mountain range and geomorphological mesoregion of the Czech Republic. It is located in the east of the country in the Olomouc and Moravian-Silesian regions. It is the second highest mountain range in the Czech Republic.
Etymology
According to the most probable theory, the name has its origin in the word jasan, i.e. 'ash'. Jeseník was first the name of a stream that flowed through an ash forest in a valley. The name was Germanized to Gesenke and used as a name of a small town that was founded in the valley, and then it was transferred first to the valley, and then to the whole mountain range. Later the name was changed back to Czech Jeseník. Jeseníky is a collective term for an area that includes the mountain ranges of Hrubý Jeseník and Nízký Jeseník.Geomorphology
Hrubý Jeseník is a mesoregion of the Eastern Sudetes, which is part of the Sudetes within the Bohemian Massif. It is the second-highest mountain range in the Czech Republic. There are 56 peaks with an altitude of at least 1,000 m, which are spread evenly throughout the territory.It is bordered with the Nízký Jeseník in the southeast, with the Zlatohorská Highlands in the northeast, with the Golden Mountains in the northwest, and with the Hanušovice Highlands in the southwest.
Hrubý Jeseník is further subdivided into the microregions of Keprník Mountains, Medvědí Mountains and Praděd Mountains.
The highest peaks are:
- Praděd,
- Vysoká hole,
- Petrovy kameny,
- Keprník,
- Velký Máj,
- Vozka,
- Malý Děd,
- Jelení hřbet,
- Břidličná hora,
- Dlouhé stráně,
Geography
The territory has an approximately circular shape. Hrubý Jeseník has an area of and an average elevation of.Several rivers and streams originate in the mountain range. The most important are the Desná and the sources of the Opava River. The only notable body of water is the Dlouhé stráně Reservoir.
Due to the mountainous character of the landscape, there are no larger settlements here. The largest settlement in the territory is Vrbno pod Pradědem. The town of Jeseník is located just beyond the borders of the mountain range.