The Reichenspitze is a mountain, , in the eastern
Zillertal Alps on the border between the
Austrian states of
Salzburg and
Tyrol. It is the highest peak of the range named after it, the
Reichenspitze Group
The Reichenspitze is a mountain, , in the eastern Zillertal Alps on the border between the Austrian states of Salzburg and Tyrol. It is the highest peak of the range named after it, the Reichenspitze Group, and offers good, all-round views. Its ...
, and offers good, all-round views. Its neighbouring peaks, all linked by
arêtes, are the 3,263-metre-high ''Gabler'' to the northeast, the ''Richterspitze'' (3,052 m) to the south and the 3,278-metre-high
Wildgerlosspitze to the northwest.
First ascent
The mountain was first ascended in 1856 by a farmer from
Prettau
Prettau (; it, Predoi ) is a ''comune'' (municipality) in South Tyrol, a province in northern Italy, located about northeast of Bolzano, on the border with Austria.
Geography
As of 31 December 2015, it had a population of 571 and an area of .Al ...
in the valley of
Tauferer Ahrntal, whose name has been lost. He climbed from the southeast up the east face, a route that, today, is assessed near the summit as
climbing grade
In rock climbing, mountaineering, and other climbing disciplines, climbers give a grade to a climbing route or boulder problem, intended to describe concisely the difficulty and danger of climbing it. Different types of climbing (such as spor ...
UIAA III. The first touristic ascent took place on 16 July 1865 by Peter Haller from Gmünd and foresters, Anton Peer and Josef Unterrainer of Schönachtal.
['' Zeitschrift des Deutschen und Oesterreichischen Alpenvereins'', Munich, 1870/71, Abteilung I, p. 113]
Routes
An ascent of the summit may be launched from the
Plauener Hut (2,373 m), the
Richter Hut
Richter may refer to:
Science and technology
* Richter magnitude scale, a scale measuring the strength of earthquakes, created by Charles Francis Richter
* Richter tuning scale developed in 1825 to which harmonicas are usually tuned
* Richter's ...
(2,374 m) or the
Zittauer Hut (2,328 m).
Literature and maps
* Heinrich Klier and Walter Klier: ''
Alpine Club Guide Zillertaler Alpen'', Munich, 1990,
*
Alpine Club Map 1:25,000. Sheet 35/3, ''Zillertaler Alpen, Ost''
References
Alpine three-thousanders
Mountains of the Alps
Zillertal Alps
Mountains of Tyrol (state)
Mountains of Salzburg (state)
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