Königsruhe
Königsruhe is a small settlement in the Bode Gorge in the Harz Mountains of Germany, south of the town of Thale in Saxony-Anhalt.
Location
Königsruhe lies in the Hirschgrund immediately next to the River Bode, a mountain river that has cut deeply into the surrounding mountains at this point. The footpath along the gorge from Thale to Treseburg runs through the settlement which lies in the borough of Thale. As far as Königsruhe, the track can be used by motor vehicles from the direction of Thale when required, but is normally closed to traffic. A narrow, stone bridge, the Jungfern Bridge, crosses the Bode in Königsruhe.History
In 1834 a shopkeeper, Christian Jung from Thale, built a wooden hut with a fireplace in the Hirschgrund in the Bode Gorge. In 1856 another larger building followed, which was sited next to the bridge over the Bode. Initially it was called Hirschgrund. To commemorate the Prussian king, Frederick William IV, who stayed here on 5 May 1834, the extended inn was called Hotel Königsruhe in 1875.The name Königsruhe remained until the period of the German Democratic Republic when, for political reasons, the place was renamed Hirschgrund. In August 1994 the Bauer family bought the property and, since 1995, it has once again been given the name "Königsruhe".