Lichtenfels Forest

The vegetation consists mostly of the coniferous trees, with small areas mixed with forests of oak and birch.

During the High Middle Ages the vast forest was the property of the Banz Abbey.

The northern edge of the forest in the 13th Century was inhabited by the Lords of Sonneberg.

When the federal highway Bundesautobahn 73 was under construction, there were some protests by environmental conservation groups because the route was planned to cut through the Lichtenfels Forest; e.g. a lawsuit filed by Bund für Umwelt und Naturschutz Deutschland [German, “Confederation for the Protection of the Environment and Nature of Germany”] against the regional government of Upper Franconia was turned down by the Federal Administrative Court of Germany in 2004.

[1] The same protests were also made for the same reason against Deutsche Bahn’s high-speed track, the Nuremberg–Erfurt high-speed railway, which now runs across the Lichtenfels Forest between Niederfüllbach and Weißenbrunn am Forst.

Bundesautobahn A73 under construction in the Lichtenfels Forest