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Villgraten Mountains

The Villgraten Mountains (German: Villgratner Berge) or Deferegg Alps (Deferegger Alpen), also called the Defreggen Mountains (Defreggengebirge, archaically also with "ff") are a subgroup of the Austrian Central Alps within the Eastern Alps of Europe. Together with the Ankogel Group, the Goldberg Group, the Glockner Group, the Schober Group, the Kreuzeck Group, the Granatspitze Group, the Venediger Group and the Rieserferner Group, the Villgraten Mountains are part of the major mountain range, the High Tauern. Their highest summit is the Weiße Spitze with a height of 2,962 m above sea level (AA).

Villgraten Mountains
The two highest summits of the Villgraten Mountains, the Weiße Spitze (2,962 m, left) and Rote Spitze (2,956 m, right) seen from the Oberseitsee to the northwest (2,576 m)
Highest point
PeakWeiße Spitze
Elevation2,962 m above sea level (AA)
Dimensions
Length44 km (27 mi)
Geography
Location of the Villgraten Mountains within the Eastern Alps
StateEast Tyrol, Trentino-South Tyrol
Range coordinates46°52′18″N 12°21′29″E / 46.87167°N 12.35806°E / 46.87167; 12.35806
Parent rangeHigh Tauern

Location edit

The Villgraten Mountains lie mainly in Austria, in the state of Tyrol, with a smaller element in Italy in the province of South Tyrol, in the region of Trentino-South Tyrol. They are located in the south of the High Tauern. Lienz, the regional capital of East Tyrol, is on the eastern side of the mountain range. Olang in the Puster Valley is located on the western side. Their name comes from the Villgraten Valley (Villgratental), which runs up into the mountains from the south.

The Villgraten Mountains are a peaceful backwater in many respects. There are no spectacular mountain peaks nor any comprehensive access with cable cars and roads. By contrast, the mountain hiker and nature lover can still find peace and quiet and enjoy nature in these mountains. The range is well known for a host of picturesquely situated mountain lakes, its rich plant life and the still relatively intact alpine pastures (Almmähder). The eponymous Villgraten Valley and its neighbour, the Gsies Valley to the west, are a ski touring paradise in winter.

Name edit

Range edit

The range was formally designated as the Villgraten Mountains (Villgratner Berge or Villgrater Berge) in the AVE, the Alpine Club classification of the Eastern Alps in 1984. This term is also used by the publisher, Bergverlag Rudolf Rother, the publishing house with the widest coverage of the Eastern Alps. On many maps, however, they are called the Defereggen Mountains (Defereggengebirge) or Gsies Mountains (Gsieser Berge).

The Defereggen valley is located on the northern edge of the mountain group. North of the valley is the Venediger Group. The Villgraten Valley, by contrast, is located entirely within the Villgraten Mountains. Consequently, the mountains are undoubtedly more logically named after this valley than after the Defereggental. In older classification systems of the Eastern Alps the Lasörling Group, north of the Defereggental, was counted as part of the Defereggen range. In earlier times the Defereggen valley would have been a suitable source of the name. Under the AVE, however, the Lasörling Group now belongs clearly to the Venediger Group.

Following the enforced annexation of South Tyrol after the First World War, the western part of the Villgraten Mountains ended up politically as part of Italy and was officially renamed the Monti di Casies. This was not a historically derived regional name, but a translation by Ettore Tolomei. German-speaking South Tyrolese frequently call them the Gsies Mountains (Gsieser Berge).

The term Villgraten Mountains is also historically and formally correct in referring to the entire mountain chain between the Hochstein east of Lienz and the Staller Saddle. Some maps use the name Defereggen Mountains (Defereggengebirge) for the eastern portion that lies within Austria, whilst labelling them the Gsieser Berge/Monti di Casies in the western portion that lies in Italy.

Highest summit edit

In the centre of the group rise two summits of almost equal height (46°52′18″N 12°21′29″E / 46.87167°N 12.35806°E / 46.87167; 12.35806 and 46°52′34.86″N 12°20′39.96″E / 46.8763500°N 12.3444333°E / 46.8763500; 12.3444333), called the Weiße Spitze and Rote Spitze ("White Peak" and "Red Peak"). The more easterly, with a height of 2,962 m above sea level (AA), is the highest point in the group. On that, all the maps and literature are agreed. However, the naming of the two summits is disputed. Whilst the majority of the Alpine literature,[1] the official maps[2][3] and the inhabitants of the southern Villgraten valleys[4] call the higher, eastern summit the Weiße Spitze, and its lower, western, neighbour the Rote Spitze, it is referred to in the Defreggental, north of the mountains, and in one of the hiking books [5][6] the other way around, thus naming the highest point as the Rote Spitze.

Because the sources do not agree on the naming of these peaks, the designation used by the Austrian Federal Office of Metrology and Surveying[2] is generally preferred. They confirm that the eastern summit is called the Weiße Spitze with a height of 2,962 m above sea level (AA) as the highest peak in the group.

Peaks edit

No peak in the Villgraten Mountains reaches the 3000 metre mark, but there are 20 summits higher than 2,800 m above sea level (AA) They are (sorted by height):

  • Weiße Spitze, 2,962 m above sea level (AA)
  • Rote Spitze, 2,956 m above sea level (AA)
  • Hochgrabe] 2,951 m above sea level (AA)
  • Großes Degenhorn, 2,946 m above sea level (AA)
  • Gölbner, 2,943 m above sea level (AA)
  • Gumriaul, 2,918 m above sea level (AA)
  • Storfenspitze, 2,895 m above sea level (AA)
  • Regenstein, 2,891 m above sea level (AA)
  • Hochleitenspitze, 2,877 m above sea level (AA)
  • Kleines Degenhorn, 2,849 m above sea level (AA)
  • Wagensam Spitz, 2,849 m above sea level (AA)
  • Kärlskopf, 2,836 m above sea level (AA)
  • Wildegg, 2,830 m above sea level (AA)
  • Deferegger Pfannhorn, 2,820 m above sea level (AA)
  • Rote Wand, 2,818 m above sea level (AA)
  • Rappler, 2,812 m above sea level (AA)
  • Großer Leppleskofel, 2,811 m above sea level (AA)
  • Bockstein, 2,805 m above sea level (AA)
  • Kugelwand, 2,803 m above sea level (AA)
  • Großes Arnhorn, 2,800 m above sea level (AA)

Valleys edit

Four larger valleys runs from the south into Villgraten Mountains: the uninhabited Wilfernertal, that descends to the village of Thal in the municipality of Assling, the likewise unpopulated Kristein, the Villgraten valley with its municipalities of Außervillgraten and Innervillgraten and the Gsieser valley in South Tyrol with its villages of Pichl, St. Magdalena and St. Martin. The Villgraten Mountains are bounded in the north by the Defereggen valley, in the east by the Iseltal, in the southeast by the Lienzer Talboden, in the south by the Puster valley and in the west by the Antholz Valley. Their boundary with Rieserferner Group is formed by the Staller Saddle. Of note is the Gsieser Törl within the Villgraten Mountains which acts as the transition from the South Tyrolean Gsies valley (Gsieser Tal) to the East Tyrolean Defereggen valley (Defereggental), which after the First World War until the 1970s was used as a smuggler's route between Austria and Italy.

Neighbouring mountain groups edit

The Villgraten Mountains border on the following other mountain groups of the Alps:

Huts edit

In the Villgraten Mountains there is an Alpine Club hut as well as several private huts and mountain cafes or (Jausenstationen):

  • Hochstein Hut (Lienz Section, ÖAV): Height: 2,023 m above sea level (AA), managed from early May to end October and from December to mid-March, 4 beds, 8 mattresses, base: Lienz, journey time from the end of the toll road: 10 minutes
  • Gölbnerblick Hut (private): Height: 1,824 m above sea level (AA), managed from early June to end September, 4 beds, base: Anras, journey time from the car park in the Kristeinertal: 20 minutes
  • Volkzeiner Hut (private, formerly the Sillianer Hut of the ÖAV's Sillian Section): Height: 1,886 m above sea level (AA), managed from about Pentecost to mid-October, 30 beds, 10 mattresses, base: Außervillgraten, journey time from the car park in the Winkeltal: 5 minutes
  • Unterstalleralm (private): Height: 1,664 m above sea level (AA), managed from mid-May to mid-October, only a Jausenstation. Rooms may be rented in the surrounding alpine pasture huts, base: Innervillgraten, by the car park in the Arntal
  • Jausenstation Kalkstein (private): Height: 1,641 m above sea level (AA), managed in the summer and winter season, accommodation in the Gasthof Bad Kalkstein or Haus Bethanien of the Calasantine order, base: Kalkstein, by the car park.
  • Thurntalerrast (private): Height: 1,978 m above sea level (AA), managed von mid-December to Easter and from mid-June to mid-October, 5 holiday apartments, base: Außervillgraten, accessible by road via the Fraktion Unterwalden
  • Bonner hut (private, formerly DAV's Bonn Section): Height: 2,340 m above sea level (AA), managed from end May to end October, 8 beds 7 mattresses, base: Toblach, journey time from Kandellen ca. 2–3 hours
 
The Villgraten Mountains seen from the Defereggental with the Roter and Weißer Spitze

References edit

  1. ^ e.g. Walter Mayr (2006), East Tyrol Süd, Rother Wanderführer (in German), ISBN 3763341323
  2. ^ a b ÖK50
  3. ^ Julian Pistotnik, "3.9.2. Defregger Alps", in Geologische Bundesanstalt Wien (ed.), The geologische Aufbau Austrias (in German), Wien, New York: Springer-Verlag, pp. 348–350, ISBN 3-211-81556-2, retrieved 2011-04-30
  4. ^ "The Villgraten valley" (PDF). p. 10. Retrieved 2011-04-30.
  5. ^ Martin Gasser, Defreggental : Führer für Wanderer and Bergsteiger (PDF) (in German), retrieved 2011-04-30
  6. ^ Gebietsführer "Defereggental"; Führer für Wanderer and Bergsteiger, von Martin Gasser, 184 Seiten, erschienen in the Selbstverlag, vgl. dort Seite 34 unten

External links edit

  • Villgraten Mountains at www.summitpost.org (English)

villgraten, mountains, german, villgratner, berge, deferegg, alps, deferegger, alpen, also, called, defreggen, mountains, defreggengebirge, archaically, also, with, subgroup, austrian, central, alps, within, eastern, alps, europe, together, with, ankogel, grou. The Villgraten Mountains German Villgratner Berge or Deferegg Alps Deferegger Alpen also called the Defreggen Mountains Defreggengebirge archaically also with ff are a subgroup of the Austrian Central Alps within the Eastern Alps of Europe Together with the Ankogel Group the Goldberg Group the Glockner Group the Schober Group the Kreuzeck Group the Granatspitze Group the Venediger Group and the Rieserferner Group the Villgraten Mountains are part of the major mountain range the High Tauern Their highest summit is the Weisse Spitze with a height of 2 962 m above sea level AA Villgraten MountainsThe two highest summits of the Villgraten Mountains the Weisse Spitze 2 962 m left and Rote Spitze 2 956 m right seen from the Oberseitsee to the northwest 2 576 m Highest pointPeakWeisse SpitzeElevation2 962 m above sea level AA DimensionsLength44 km 27 mi GeographyLocation of the Villgraten Mountains within the Eastern AlpsStateEast Tyrol Trentino South TyrolRange coordinates46 52 18 N 12 21 29 E 46 87167 N 12 35806 E 46 87167 12 35806Parent rangeHigh Tauern Contents 1 Location 2 Name 2 1 Range 2 2 Highest summit 3 Peaks 4 Valleys 5 Neighbouring mountain groups 6 Huts 7 References 8 External linksLocation editThe Villgraten Mountains lie mainly in Austria in the state of Tyrol with a smaller element in Italy in the province of South Tyrol in the region of Trentino South Tyrol They are located in the south of the High Tauern Lienz the regional capital of East Tyrol is on the eastern side of the mountain range Olang in the Puster Valley is located on the western side Their name comes from the Villgraten Valley Villgratental which runs up into the mountains from the south The Villgraten Mountains are a peaceful backwater in many respects There are no spectacular mountain peaks nor any comprehensive access with cable cars and roads By contrast the mountain hiker and nature lover can still find peace and quiet and enjoy nature in these mountains The range is well known for a host of picturesquely situated mountain lakes its rich plant life and the still relatively intact alpine pastures Almmahder The eponymous Villgraten Valley and its neighbour the Gsies Valley to the west are a ski touring paradise in winter Name editRange edit The range was formally designated as the Villgraten Mountains Villgratner Berge or Villgrater Berge in the AVE the Alpine Club classification of the Eastern Alps in 1984 This term is also used by the publisher Bergverlag Rudolf Rother the publishing house with the widest coverage of the Eastern Alps On many maps however they are called the Defereggen Mountains Defereggengebirge or Gsies Mountains Gsieser Berge The Defereggen valley is located on the northern edge of the mountain group North of the valley is the Venediger Group The Villgraten Valley by contrast is located entirely within the Villgraten Mountains Consequently the mountains are undoubtedly more logically named after this valley than after the Defereggental In older classification systems of the Eastern Alps the Lasorling Group north of the Defereggental was counted as part of the Defereggen range In earlier times the Defereggen valley would have been a suitable source of the name Under the AVE however the Lasorling Group now belongs clearly to the Venediger Group Following the enforced annexation of South Tyrol after the First World War the western part of the Villgraten Mountains ended up politically as part of Italy and was officially renamed the Monti di Casies This was not a historically derived regional name but a translation by Ettore Tolomei German speaking South Tyrolese frequently call them the Gsies Mountains Gsieser Berge The term Villgraten Mountains is also historically and formally correct in referring to the entire mountain chain between the Hochstein east of Lienz and the Staller Saddle Some maps use the name Defereggen Mountains Defereggengebirge for the eastern portion that lies within Austria whilst labelling them the Gsieser Berge Monti di Casies in the western portion that lies in Italy Highest summit edit In the centre of the group rise two summits of almost equal height 46 52 18 N 12 21 29 E 46 87167 N 12 35806 E 46 87167 12 35806 and 46 52 34 86 N 12 20 39 96 E 46 8763500 N 12 3444333 E 46 8763500 12 3444333 called the Weisse Spitze and Rote Spitze White Peak and Red Peak The more easterly with a height of 2 962 m above sea level AA is the highest point in the group On that all the maps and literature are agreed However the naming of the two summits is disputed Whilst the majority of the Alpine literature 1 the official maps 2 3 and the inhabitants of the southern Villgraten valleys 4 call the higher eastern summit the Weisse Spitze and its lower western neighbour the Rote Spitze it is referred to in the Defreggental north of the mountains and in one of the hiking books 5 6 the other way around thus naming the highest point as the Rote Spitze Because the sources do not agree on the naming of these peaks the designation used by the Austrian Federal Office of Metrology and Surveying 2 is generally preferred They confirm that the eastern summit is called the Weisse Spitze with a height of 2 962 m above sea level AA as the highest peak in the group Peaks editNo peak in the Villgraten Mountains reaches the 3000 metre mark but there are 20 summits higher than 2 800 m above sea level AA They are sorted by height Weisse Spitze 2 962 m above sea level AA Rote Spitze 2 956 m above sea level AA Hochgrabe 2 951 m above sea level AA Grosses Degenhorn 2 946 m above sea level AA Golbner 2 943 m above sea level AA Gumriaul 2 918 m above sea level AA Storfenspitze 2 895 m above sea level AA Regenstein 2 891 m above sea level AA Hochleitenspitze 2 877 m above sea level AA Kleines Degenhorn 2 849 m above sea level AA Wagensam Spitz 2 849 m above sea level AA Karlskopf 2 836 m above sea level AA Wildegg 2 830 m above sea level AA Deferegger Pfannhorn 2 820 m above sea level AA Rote Wand 2 818 m above sea level AA Rappler 2 812 m above sea level AA Grosser Leppleskofel 2 811 m above sea level AA Bockstein 2 805 m above sea level AA Kugelwand 2 803 m above sea level AA Grosses Arnhorn 2 800 m above sea level AA Valleys editFour larger valleys runs from the south into Villgraten Mountains the uninhabited Wilfernertal that descends to the village of Thal in the municipality of Assling the likewise unpopulated Kristein the Villgraten valley with its municipalities of Ausservillgraten and Innervillgraten and the Gsieser valley in South Tyrol with its villages of Pichl St Magdalena and St Martin The Villgraten Mountains are bounded in the north by the Defereggen valley in the east by the Iseltal in the southeast by the Lienzer Talboden in the south by the Puster valley and in the west by the Antholz Valley Their boundary with Rieserferner Group is formed by the Staller Saddle Of note is the Gsieser Torl within the Villgraten Mountains which acts as the transition from the South Tyrolean Gsies valley Gsieser Tal to the East Tyrolean Defereggen valley Defereggental which after the First World War until the 1970s was used as a smuggler s route between Austria and Italy Neighbouring mountain groups editThe Villgraten Mountains border on the following other mountain groups of the Alps Venediger Group with its subgroups the Panargenkamm and Lasorling Group to the north Granatspitze Group to the northeast Schober Group to the east Gailtal Alps to the southeast Carnic main crest to the south Dolomites to the southwest Rieserferner Group to the northwest Huts editIn the Villgraten Mountains there is an Alpine Club hut as well as several private huts and mountain cafes or Jausenstationen Hochstein Hut Lienz Section OAV Height 2 023 m above sea level AA managed from early May to end October and from December to mid March 4 beds 8 mattresses base Lienz journey time from the end of the toll road 10 minutes Golbnerblick Hut private Height 1 824 m above sea level AA managed from early June to end September 4 beds base Anras journey time from the car park in the Kristeinertal 20 minutes Volkzeiner Hut private formerly the Sillianer Hut of the OAV s Sillian Section Height 1 886 m above sea level AA managed from about Pentecost to mid October 30 beds 10 mattresses base Ausservillgraten journey time from the car park in the Winkeltal 5 minutes Unterstalleralm private Height 1 664 m above sea level AA managed from mid May to mid October only a Jausenstation Rooms may be rented in the surrounding alpine pasture huts base Innervillgraten by the car park in the Arntal Jausenstation Kalkstein private Height 1 641 m above sea level AA managed in the summer and winter season accommodation in the Gasthof Bad Kalkstein or Haus Bethanien of the Calasantine order base Kalkstein by the car park Thurntalerrast private Height 1 978 m above sea level AA managed von mid December to Easter and from mid June to mid October 5 holiday apartments base Ausservillgraten accessible by road via the Fraktion Unterwalden Bonner hut private formerly DAV s Bonn Section Height 2 340 m above sea level AA managed from end May to end October 8 beds 7 mattresses base Toblach journey time from Kandellen ca 2 3 hours nbsp The Villgraten Mountains seen from the Defereggental with the Roter and Weisser SpitzeReferences edit e g Walter Mayr 2006 East Tyrol Sud Rother Wanderfuhrer in German ISBN 3763341323 a b OK50 Julian Pistotnik 3 9 2 Defregger Alps in Geologische Bundesanstalt Wien ed The geologische Aufbau Austrias in German Wien New York Springer Verlag pp 348 350 ISBN 3 211 81556 2 retrieved 2011 04 30 The Villgraten valley PDF p 10 Retrieved 2011 04 30 Martin Gasser Defreggental Fuhrer fur Wanderer and Bergsteiger PDF in German retrieved 2011 04 30 Gebietsfuhrer Defereggental Fuhrer fur Wanderer and Bergsteiger von Martin Gasser 184 Seiten erschienen in the Selbstverlag vgl dort Seite 34 untenExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Villgratner Mountains Villgraten Mountains at www summitpost org English Category Mountain ranges of the Alps Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Villgraten Mountains amp oldid 947653075, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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