Trelebitschkopf
Trelebitschkopf | ||
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View from the Weißenwandspitze to Schleinitz, Trelebitschkopf, Kleine Rotspitze and Alkuser Rotspitze (from left to right) |
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height | 2838 m above sea level A. | |
location | East Tyrol , Austria | |
Mountains | Schobergruppe | |
Coordinates | 46 ° 54 ′ 33 " N , 12 ° 44 ′ 32" E | |
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The Trelebitschkopf ( 2838 m above sea level ) is a mountain peak in the Schober group in East Tyrol ( Austria ). It lies on the border between the municipalities of Ainet and Nussdorf-Debant .
Origin of name
The Trelebitschkopf appears in documents as Treliwasch (1525), Tröllwitsch (1660), Trelewitsch (1746) or Trollewitsch Wand (1774). The name goes back to the alpine pasture area of the same name in the rear part of the Debant valley. Name researchers derive the name from the Slavic trebiti (clean, clear or collect the stones from the field), trebelje (marsh ragwort ) or trebelika / trobelika (pipe, water hemlock).
location
The Trelebitschkopf, built up from primary rock blocks, is located in the southern center of the Schobergruppe between the Kleine Rotspitze ( 2869 m above sea level ) in the north, the Grünleitenkopf in the east ( 2542 m above sea level ) and the Schleinitz ( 2904 m above sea level ) in the South, where Schleinitz and Trelebitschkopf are separated from the Trelebitschtörl ( 2726 m above sea level ). The east ridge of the Trelebitschkopf falls over the Grünleitenköpfe, the Grünleitenscharte and the Trelebitschalm into the Debant valley . South of the east ridge is the Trelebitschsee, which drains over the Trelebitschbach . To the south-west is the Alkuser See , which drains over the Daberbach into the Iseltal .
Promotion opportunities
The easiest ascent to the Trelebitschkopf is from the Trelebitschtörl, which can be reached fastest from Ainet via Oberalkus and the Kunighütte. The ascent from Trelebitschtörl takes place over rubble and gullies on the upper edge of the cirque to the summit. Another option is to climb the south-south-west ridge ( difficulty level II ). The route via Grünleitenscharte and Grünleitenköpfe as well as from the north via the Kleine Rotspitze are further variants.
Literature and map
- Alpine club map sheet 41, 1: 25,000, Schobergruppe , ISBN 3-928777-12-2 .
- Hubert Bergmann: Slavic in the name of the East Tyrolean communities Ainet and Schlaiten. Verlag Edition Praesens, Vienna 2005 (Supplements to Austrian Name Research; Volume 5)
- Walter Mair: Alpine Club Leader Schobergruppe . Bergverlag Rudolf Rother, Munich 1979. ISBN 3-7633-1222-6