Schleinitz (Schober Group)

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Schleinitz
Schleinitz with Rotgabele seen from Zettersfeld during the sunrise

Schleinitz with Rotgabele seen from Zettersfeld during the sunrise

height 2904  m above sea level A.
location Tyrol , Austria
Mountains Schobergruppe
Dominance 2.5 km →  Alkuser Rotspitze
Notch height 215 m ↓  Trelebitschtörl
Coordinates 46 ° 53 '44 "  N , 12 ° 44' 55"  E Coordinates: 46 ° 53 '44 "  N , 12 ° 44' 55"  E
Schleinitz (Schobergruppe) (Tyrol)
Schleinitz (Schober Group)
First ascent August 3, 1798 by David Heinrich Hoppe with mountain guide (tourist)
Normal way Hike from the Zettersfeld mountain station

The Schleinitz is a mountain in the southern Schober group in East Tyrol and dominates with its 2904  m above sea level. A. the Lienz basin .

location

To the southeast, the Schleinitz sends the Neualplkamm (also Neualplschneid) with the Neualplseen ( 2438  m ), which leads over the less important peaks Goisele ( 2433  m , also Gösselmandl ), Schoberköpfl ( 2281  m ) and Steinermandl to the Zettersfeld . To the west of the Schleinitz, separated by the Alkuser Scharte , lies the Rotgabele ( 2696  m , also Rotgebele ), actually just the mighty shoulder in the western ridge of the Schleinitz. To the northwest, the long Schleinitzkamm stretches over the Trelebitschtörl ( 2710  m ) into the heart of the Schober group , to the Alkuser Rotspitze ( 3053  m ) and to the Hochschober ( 3242  m ).

The so-called Schleinitzmulde lies on the southern flank of the Schleinitz . In addition to the alp seas in the east are in the northwest of Alkuser Lake ( 2432  m ), one of the prettiest on the Schober group, and in the north of the small Trelebitschsee ( 2336  m ).

Tourist development

On August 3, 1798, the Regensburg botanist David Heinrich Hoppe was the first known tourist to reach the summit with a mountain guide. He published a short report on this in the Botanical Pocket Book in 1799.

summit

The summit has a summit cross and offers a beautiful view of the valley floor and the surrounding Lienzer Unholde , as the Lienz Dolomites are sometimes popularly called.

Individual evidence

  1. a b ÖK50
  2. ^ Mair 1979, Alpine Club Guide
  3. David Heinrich Hoppe: Botanical trip to some Salzburg, Carinthian and Tyrolean Alps 1799 . Botanical paperback to the year 1799, pp. 125–128.

literature

Web links

Commons : Schleinitz  - collection of images, videos and audio files