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For starters River Jerman taken little stream flowing out of the highest lakes Tear (2535 m asl) from Seven Lakes, which drain into the lake Twins. In Twin flow and streams coming from lakes and Kidney eye, and it already runs a large current flowing through Lake Trefoil and continues down to the northeast. After about 500 m across his right hand runs another stream coming from the bottom two lakes - Fish and Lower Lake and two streams give rise to actual river Jerman.
Until his release from Rila Mountain river Jerman flows in a deep glacial valley with a series of rapids and waterfalls and heavily wooded. At the beginning of the direction it is to the northeast, and 1,3 km northwest of the hut "Vada" sharp turn to the northwest. In Sapareva bathroom Jerman enters Doupnitsa valley turns west and the valley it becomes wide and fairly shallow. After Dupnitsa Jerman, fed by numerous tributaries mainly Rila becomes deep, turns south-southwest Valley it significantly expands and flows through the so-called. Lower Dupnishko field. It flows left the Struma River, 369 m above sea level, 1 km east of the town of Boboshevo.
Europa, Deutschland, Berlin, Treptow-Köpenick, Grünau, Blick von der Sportpromenade auf den Langen See
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The Great Saint Martin Church (German: Groß Sankt Martin, mostly Groß St. Martin) is a Romanesque Catholic church in Cologne, Germany. Its foundations (circa 960 AD) rest on remnants of a Roman chapel, built on what was then an island in the Rhine. The church was later transformed into a Benedictine monastery. The current buildings, including a soaring crossing tower that is a landmark of Cologne's Old Town, were erected between 1150-1250. The architecture of its eastern end forms a triconch or trefoil plan, consisting of three apses around the crossing, similar to that at St. Maria im Kapitol. The church was badly damaged in World War II, with restoration work completed in 1985.