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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Climbing history  





2 See also  





3 References  





4 External links  














Grosses Fiescherhorn






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Coordinates: 46°3305N 8°0340E / 46.55139°N 8.06111°E / 46.55139; 8.06111
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Grosses Fiescherhorn
The north face (Fiescherwand) of the Fiescherhorn (Grosses (right) and Kleines Fiescherhorn (middle), and Finsteraarhorn in the back (left))
Highest point
Elevation4,049 m (13,284 ft)
Prominence396 m (1,299 ft)[1]
Parent peakFinsteraarhorn
Isolation4.7 km (2.9 mi)[2]
Coordinates46°33′05N 8°03′40E / 46.55139°N 8.06111°E / 46.55139; 8.06111
Naming
English translationGrand Horn of Fiesch
Language of nameGerman
Geography
Grosses Fiescherhorn is located in Switzerland
Grosses Fiescherhorn

Grosses Fiescherhorn

Location in Switzerland

CountrySwitzerland
CantonBern and Valais
Parent rangeBernese Alps
Topo mapswisstopo
Geology
Mountain typeglaciated peak
Climbing
First ascent23 July 1862
Easiest routeBasic rock/snow/ice climb

Grosses Fiescherhorn is a mountain peak of the Bernese Alps, located on the border between the cantons of Bern and ValaisValais, halfway between the Mönch and the Finsteraarhorn. At 4,049 metres (13,284 ft) above sea level, its summit culminates over the whole Fiescherhorn massif (German: Fiescherhörner), which is also composed of the slightly lower Hinteres Fiescherhorn (4,025 m (13,205 ft)) to the south and Kleines Fiescherhorn (also called Ochs aka ox, 3,895 m (12,779 ft)) to the east. From the north both are well hidden behind other mountain peaks and can only been seen from IschinGrindelwald (1,095 m). The mountain is shared between the municipalities of Grindelwald and Fieschertal.

Ascents are usually made from one of these three popular routes: one starts from the Mönchsjoch Hut, one from the Konkordia Hut, and the third from the Finsteraarhorn Hut.

Climbing history

[edit]
The Fiescherwand from Bäregg

The summit was first reached on 23 July 1862 by H. B. George and Adolphus Warburton Moore, with guides Christian Almer and Ulrich Kaufmann. They used what is now the normal route, the south-west ridge.[3]

The north side of the mountain was first climbed in 1926. On 13 August, W. Amstutz and P. von Schumacher reached the summit after a 15-hour ascent via the north ridge, which is the northern boundary of the Fiescherwand.[3]

The first direct ascent on the Fiescherwand was made by W. Welzenbach and H. Tillmann in 1930. Welzenbach was an expert climber, who disputed the common idea of his time that an ascent of the Fiescherwand was impossible. The previous year, in 1929, Welzenbach and Tillmann climbed the north ridge in only 8.5 hours.[3] The following year they started the ascent of the Fiescherwand on the morning of 5 September 1930, taking a line that ran directly to the summit. They reached the top that evening, after a 12-hour ascent.[3]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Retrieved from the swisstopo topographic maps. The key col lies on the Fieschergrat at 3,651 metres.
  • ^ Retrieved from Google Earth. The nearest point of higher elevation is east of the Mönch.
  • ^ a b c d Helmut Dumler,Willi P. Burkhardt, Les 4000 des Alpes, ISBN 2-7003-1305-4
  • [edit]
  • flag Switzerland

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Grosses_Fiescherhorn&oldid=1221382598"

    Categories: 
    Alpine four-thousanders
    Bernese Alps
    Mountains of the Alps
    Mountains of Switzerland
    Mountains of Valais
    Mountains of the canton of Bern
    BernValais border
    Four-thousanders of Switzerland
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Coordinates on Wikidata
    Pages using infobox mountain with language parameter
    Articles containing German-language text
    Articles with VIAF identifiers
     



    This page was last edited on 29 April 2024, at 16:17 (UTC).

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