Lasörling

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Lasörling
Lasörling from the Vorderen Sajatkopf

Lasörling from the Vorderen Sajatkopf

height 3098  m above sea level A.
location Tyrol , Austria
Mountains Venediger group
Dominance 7.39 km →  Alplesspitze
Notch height 490 m ↓  Bachlenke
Coordinates 46 ° 58 ′ 0 ″  N , 12 ° 21 ′ 0 ″  E Coordinates: 46 ° 58 ′ 0 ″  N , 12 ° 21 ′ 0 ″  E
Lasörling (Tyrol)
Lasörling
Normal way South ascent from the Glauret (I)

The Lasörling is with a height of 3098  m above sea level. A. the highest peak of the Lasörling group named after him , which stretches between the Virgental and the Defereggental opposite the Großvenediger . Occasionally the mountain is also referred to as " Großer Lasörling", because it is a double peak (southeast peak: 3055  m above sea level ). The main summit used to be called Bergerspitze , the southeast summit also Musspitze or Virgen Lasörling .

The easiest ascent leads from the Virgental through the Mullitztal via the Lasörlinghütte . The ascent is free of glaciers, but requires surefootedness and has climbing sections of the first degree of difficulty.

Surname

The name “Lasörling” refers to the appearance of the mountain: The word “Arl (ing)” is an old word for ploughshare or plow and is regarded as an old Germanic word or loan word from the Slovenian “oralnik”. Around the year 1531 the mountain was still referred to as “Lasornik” with the Slovenian final syllable “-nik”. The spelling “Lasernik” is documented for the year 1670. The syllable "-nik" was replaced by "-ling" in later parlance. The prefix "Las-" is derived from the (old) Slovenian word for clearing (regrets), as is the case with Lasnitzen, Laßnitz etc.

First ascent

The Lasörling was first climbed in 1861 by Carl von Sonklar after several attempts over the north ridge.

According to other sources, the first climbers are unknown, perhaps hunters. The first historically tangible ascent was therefore made by H. v. Acken and measuring assistants in 1854 in the course of the land survey of today's normal rise, the south rise from the Glauret. Carl Sonklar would only have the first ascent of the eastern flank in the descent (1861) and the north-west ridge (1864).

Routes to the summit

The most common ascent to the Lasörling leads from the Lasörlinghütte ( 2350  m above sea level ) in a north-westerly direction to the former mining area of ​​Glauret. South of the summit, the path branches off to the north and leads in serpentines over moraine slopes to Lasörlingscharte ( 2950  m above sea level ) and finally to the summit. The 748 vertical meters can be conquered in about three hours.

The shortest route from the Virgental to the summit leads through the Lasnitzental in a southerly and later in a south-easterly direction to the west ridge. After a short and easy climb on the ridge in an easterly direction, you meet the path coming from the Lasörlinghütte at the Lasörlingscharte.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Clem Clements, Jonathan de Ferranti, Eberhard Jurgalski , Mark Trengove: The 3000 m SUMMITS of AUSTRIA - 242 peaks with at least 150 m of prominence , October 2011, p. 14.
  2. Federal Office for Metrology and Surveying Austria: Lasörling on the Austrian Map online (Austrian map 1: 50,000) .
  3. a b Peterka / End 1982, margin number 1381
  4. Arl . In: Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm : German dictionary . Volume 1 A - beer whey. Leipzig 1854. Keyword column 551, line 56. Reprint Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag. Munich 1991, ISBN 3-423-05945-1 . dtv 5945. Structure quoted from: The digital Grimm - Electronic edition of the first processing . Version 12/04. Two thousand and one, Frankfurt am Main, ISBN 3-86150-628-9 . Competence center for electronic cataloging and publication processes in the humanities at the University of Trier in conjunction with the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences. See there also the article on the keyword “plow”: Volume 13 N – Quurren. Leipzig 1889. Column 1773, line 45.
  5. a b c Wilhelm Brandenstein: On place name research in East Tyrol. In: Osttiroler Heimatblätter. No. 10 (1930), issue 11/12., Pages 90-93. Quoted from: Fritz Freiherr Lochner von Hüttenbach: Wilhelm Brandenstein. Small name-based work. Academic printing and publishing company. Graz 1978, ISBN 3-201-01038-3 , pages 89-96. On the name Lasörling: page 96.
  6. Otto Stolz: Political-historical description of the country part 1 North Tyrol. Vienna & Leipzig 1923. Page 607. Quoted from: Monika Voggenberger. The Slavic place names in East Tyrol. Keyword “Lasörling”.
  7. Manfred Trummer: Slawische Steiermark = Slightly extended version of the lecture of the same name at the symposium “To be foreign - stay together. The Slovene Ethnic Group in Austria ”as part of the“ Slovene Days ”at the Karl-Franzens University in Graz, 25. – 28. March 1996. From: Christian Stenner (Ed.): Slovenian Styria. Displaced minority in Austria's southeast. Series of publications on the customer of Southeast Europe II / 23. Published by the Institute for History of the University of Graz, Department of Southeast European History, Univ.-Prof. Dr. Karl Kaser. Böhlau, Vienna / Cologne / Weimar 1997, ISBN 3-205-98690-3 , pages 15-34 (examples: pages 21, 22 and 24).
  8. Lasnitzen . In: Monika Voggenberger. The Slavic place names in East Tyrol. Salzburg 1983. Dissertation to obtain a doctorate at the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Salzburg.
  9. ^ Walter Mair: Osttiroler Wanderbuch , p. 260
  10. ^ Walter Mair: Osttiroler Wanderbuch , p. 259 f.