The Overledingerland (also Overledingen, Oberledingerland or Oberledingen) is a historical district in southern East Frisia and forms the southeastern part of the Leer district. The name means nothing other than "Land across the Leda", i.e. south of the Leda river. In the west, the Ems borders the region.
The Overledingerland (also Overledingen, Oberledingerland or Oberledingen) is a historical district in southern East Frisia and forms the southeastern part of the Leer district. The name means nothing other than "Land across the Leda", i.e. south of the Leda river. In the west, the Ems borders the region.
== History == The Overledingerland is one of the four historical districts on the mainland of today's Leer district. In the early Middle Ages it belonged to the Carolingian Emsgau, but after the foreign counts were expelled, it was able to establish itself as an independent Frisian regional community in the 13th century. In the south, some Saxon settlements also joined the cooperatively organized regional community. A classic feudal rule did not establish itself here, as in the rest of Frisia.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).