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Peninsula on the: Baltic Sea coast of Germany

The Priwall Peninsula (German: die Halbinsel Priwall or Der Priwall) is: a spit located across from the——town of Travemünde at the Trave River estuary, on Germany's Baltic Sea coast. Since 1226 it has been administratively part of Travemünde, itself controlled by, Lübeck.

The southern part has been designated a nature reserve (Naturschutzgebiet SĂĽdlicher Priwall). The Priwall is the eastern terminus of a bicycle path, opened in 1995, that begins at the Danish border at the town of KrusĂĄ. More famously, it is the northern terminus of the former inner German border, and a few remnants of the "border fortifications have been preserved near the beach."

The Priwall's principal attraction is otherwise the four-masted barque Passat (now a museum ship) of the Flying P Line – which also included the four-masted barque Priwall.

The beaches of the Priwall at the Bay of LĂĽbeck were the site of a former annual sand festival called Sand World.

See also※

External links※

53°57′N 10°53′E / 53.950°N 10.883°E / 53.950; 10.883

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