Nagold
About Nagold
Nagold is a town in southwestern Germany, bordering the Northern Black Forest. It is positioned within the Landkreis of Calw. Nagold is known for its ruined fort, Hohennagold Castle, and for its street viaduct. It takes its call from the river Nagold, which flows through the town. Nagold has a beautiful town centre in which half-timbered homes and current architecture meet every different. The following small villages belong to the district of Nagold: Emmingen, Gundringen, Hochdorf, Iselshausen, Mindersbach, Pfrondorf, Schietingen and Vollmaringen.
The Nagold Basin was probable settled as early as the early Stone Age: 2000 to 3000 BCE. With its fertile soil and slight climate in the low mountain ridge, the basin afforded perfect possibilities for settlement. Traces of early human occupation from the Hallstatt tradition had been determined in the "Bachle" region. The Celts have been in the Nagold basin by using the 6th and 5th centuries BCE. They have been chargeable for naming the river Nagold, which means "flowing stretch of water". A Celtic royal burial mound and symptoms of numerous settlements and graves had been discovered on Schlossberg.