The Collaborative International Dictionary
Wikipedia
Selters (Taunus) is a community with 8,000 inhabitants north of Bad Camberg in Limburg-Weilburg district in Hesse, Germany.
Selters can refer to:
- Selters, a mineral water brand
- Places in Germany:
- Selters, Rhineland-Palatinate, a town in the Westerwaldkreis, Rhineland-Palatinate
- Selters (Taunus), a municipality near Limburg in the Limburg-Weilburg district, Hesse
- Selters (Lahn), a village near Weilburg in the Limburg-Weilburg district, Hesse
Selters is a village in the district Limburg-Weilburg, Hesse, Germany. It is situated at the Taunus side of the river Lahn and belongs to the municipality Löhnberg. The village has a total population of about 400 inhabitants.
The village is famous for its natural springs of carbonated mineral water, which is sold as Selters water. In English, both Seltzer and Alka Seltzer refer to the toponym.
Selters (Westerwald) is a Verbandsgemeinde ("collective municipality") in the district Westerwaldkreis, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. The seat of the Verbandsgemeinde is in Selters.
The Verbandsgemeinde Selters (Westerwald) consists of the following Ortsgemeinden ("local municipalities"):
- Ellenhausen
- Ewighausen
- Freilingen
- Freirachdorf
- Goddert
- Hartenfels
- Herschbach, Selters
- Krümmel
- Marienrachdorf
- Maroth
- Maxsain
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- Nordhofen
- Quirnbach
- Rückeroth
- Schenkelberg
- Selters
- Sessenhausen
- Steinen
- Vielbach
- Weidenhahn
- Wölferlingen
Selters is a German brand of natural mineral water sourced from wells in the area of Selters in Hesse, at the Taunus mountains. The water has been known since the Bronze Age and famous as a natural soda water because of its high concentration of sodium bicarbonate, "soda". The Selters water also contains raised levels of calcium, chloride, magnesium, sulfate and potassium ions. The water is naturally carbonated, over 250 mg/l, but sold in both sparkling and still versions.
The Romans used the wells and may have given the origin of the current name Selters, either from "" (lat. "water jump") or "" (salt rising) but both possibilities present linguistic uncertainties. The same name is also used in some other places in Germany with mineral wells. The wells are mentioned already in 772 in documents at the nearby monasteries in Fulda and Lorsch. In the 16th century under the rule of Johann von der Leyen, the water from the wells gained international fame.
Selters has been a popular as a spa resort and the water has been used for health effects as well as for its taste. The water has been exported in large quantities for many centuries; in 1787 JF Westrumb reported that over a million Selters bottles were exported all around the world. The Selters bottle was common during the 17th to 19th centuries, made of stoneware, not to confuse with the modern " seltzer bottle" i.e. a soda siphon.
Artificial "selters waters" with added minerals have been created to make competition, thus helping to establish the fame of the original water as an international reference of soda water, e.g. by Torbern Bergman who made thorough analyses of mineral waters and in 1775 presented how to make carbonated water to mimic genuine mineral waters.
The production at the famous main well in Niederselters was terminated in 1999, but production continues at a well in the nearby (25 km away) village of Selters-Löhnberg, in commercial use for almost 200 years, as well as at the competing one in Oberselters. There is a Selters water museum in Niederselters.
The name and the water of Selters are the prototype of seltzer, a soda water variety well known in the United States.