Lasnitzen
Lasnitzenbach | ||
Lasnitzen with Lasnitzenhütte and Lasnitzenbach |
||
Data | ||
Water code | AT : 2-374-64-16 | |
location | In East Tyrol , Austria , from the south into the Virgental | |
River system | Danube | |
Drain over | Isel → Drau → Danube → Black Sea | |
source | in Lasnitzen am Lasörling 46 ° 58 ′ 39 ″ N , 12 ° 19 ′ 54 ″ E |
|
Source height | 2565 m above sea level A. | |
muzzle | between Ströden and Hinterbichl in the Isel Coordinates: 47 ° 0 '55 " N , 12 ° 20' 3" E 47 ° 0 '55 " N , 12 ° 20' 3" E |
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Mouth height | 1330 m above sea level A. | |
Height difference | 1235 m | |
Bottom slope | 23% | |
length | 5.5 km | |
Catchment area | 9.6 km² | |
Left tributaries | Michelbach | |
Communities | Embossing | |
Residents in the catchment area | High mountains and alpine pastures, no permanent settlement |
The Lasnitzen is a high valley in the Lasörling group south of the Virgental in East Tyrol , Austria .
The word also denotes the stream that flows through this valley. In maps this brook is called Lasnitzenbach, the valley can also be called Lasnitzental.
The area is located in the municipality of Prägraten am Großvenediger . It runs from south to north and flows into the Virgen Valley with a steep drop.
The stream rises on the mountain ridge between Stampfleskopf and Lasörling and flows into the Isel between Ströden and Hinterbichl , which flows through the Virgental. It is a torrent with a steep gradient that overcomes the steep slope of the terrain in a pathless, steep V valley .
The Lasnitzenalm with the Lasnitzenhütte is located on the upper reaches of the Lasnitzenbach. This mountain hut is 1887 m above sea level . It can be reached via a path in about 2 hours from Prägraten and is the starting point for mountain tours and hikes in the area, such as the Lasörlinghütte or the Reichenberger Hütte .
From the Lasnitzen to the west, the Micheltal leads to the Micheltalscharte.
Names
The place names of the area contain evidence of the history of the settlement: there are names with Slavic roots and German names.
The name Lasnitzen (and its spelling variants such as Laßnitz etc.) comes from Slavic (originally eg "Lieznica", "Luosniza") and means a stream that comes from a forest or a cleared area (meadow, meadow, etc.) , e.g. B. translated as "Waldbach". In linguistics, a derivation from * loNč'nica “Wiesenbach” is discussed for Laßnitz (from the year 890: Luonzniza) , as a further possibility (from the year 1345: Lesniz, Laßnitz near Murau or in 1080 in the Paltental Laznich) * laz 'nica "Gereutbach" or "Rodebach". The derivation from * laz / 6nica , to lazъ, "clearing, clearing, clear place in the forest" also contains a reference to the course of the stream in a cleared area.
The name of the Micheltal comes from the word "michel". This word is an old word for "big, strong" and evidence of German-speaking settlement. It has nothing to do with the first name Michael, but is related to the Latin "magnus", Greek "mega-".
Web links
credentials
- ↑ a b c TIRIS - Tyrolean regional planning and information system
- ↑ Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Water Management (Ed.): Area directory of the Austrian river basins: Draugebiet. Contributions to the hydrography of Austria, issue No. 59, Vienna 2011, p. 6 ( PDF; 3.5 MB )
- ↑ Hut page with mountain tours and pictures.
- ^ Wilhelm Brandenstein : The settlement history of northern East Tyrol in the light of place name research. In: Festschrift of the German Alpine Club Prague. (1930), pages 229-245. 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 61-77 On the settlement of the Slavs: page 68.
- ↑ Werner Tscherne : From Lonsperch to Deutschlandsberg. Editor and publisher: Stadtgemeinde Deutschlandsberg 1990. No ISBN. Page 40.
- ↑ 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 Verlag, Vienna-Cologne-Weimar 1997, pages 15-34 (examples: pages 21, 22 and 24). ISBN 3-205-98690-3 .
- ^ Eberhard Kranzmayer: Place name book of Carinthia. Part I: The settlement history of Carinthia from prehistoric times to the present in the mirror of the names. Klagenfurt 1956. Published by the History Association for Carinthia in the series Archive for patriotic history and topography , Volume 50. Derived from Old Slovene * lo (n) č (i) níca . Pages 113, 158. Quoted from: 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. No publisher, no ISBN. Keyword "Lasnitzen".
- ↑ 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. No publisher, no ISBN. Keyword "Lasnitzen".
- ^ Brandenstein / Lochner von Hüttenbach: Settlement history of East Tyrol . Page 71.
- ↑ Grimm. German dictionary. Volume 12 L-Mythical. Leipzig 1885. Column 2169, line 42.