Rosengarten group

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The Rosengarten group, usually simple, Rosengarten ( Catinaccio Italian, Ladin Ciadenac, Ciadenáze ), is a mountain massif in the Dolomites in South Tyrol and Trentino (Italy). Since 2003 the South Tyrolean part is majority owned by the Nature Park Sciliar garden; since 2009 is the Rosengarten group alongside eight other areas of the World Heritage Dolomites.

Etymology

The unalpin sounding name Rose Garden for the second highest peak and the whole group is from the late 15th century known ( 1497 Rosengarten, 1506 Kofl at the Rose Garden ); it is derived either from a garden full of roses, as reported in the lauric Sage, nor by the blazing red glowing rocks at dusk at sunset, even if these etiological motifs are likely to have shaped the naming later. Speech researchers suspect that the name of the rose garden with the old root word " ruza " related, which means as much as scree. The Italian name " Catinaccio " for Rose Garden is not, as is usually assumed to be synonymous with " large, wild (mountain) chain," but from the Ladino word " Ciadenac " originate, the mountain or rubble boiler means. Similarly, the name shall be called after Vajolet Karl Felix Wolff " area with gravel ."

Location

The rose garden is located between the Tiers valley with the villages of animal and Nova Levante in Eggen Valley on the west and the Fassa valley on the eastern side. It runs north to south from the Schlern group in the north to the south Karerpass and has a length of about 8 km.

Summit

The highest elevation is the Kesselkogel (Italian Catinaccio d' Antermoia ) with an altitude of 3004 meters. He is from Grasleiten Pass or from the Antermoia Valley over a light rope route climbable. The first ascent was made in 1873 by the British C. Comyn Tucker and TH Carson with the leader A. Bernard.

The second highest peak in the Rose Garden Group is the Rosengartenspitze. It is 2981 meters high and is located in the center of the rose garden massif, the normal route has the second difficulty. About this it was first also climbed on August 31, 1874 by C. Comyn Tucker and TH Carson with the leader Francois Devouassoud.

Other peaks include:

  • Vajolet peak ( 2749 m)
  • Vajolet Towers ( 2813 m)
  • Laurin ( 2813 m)
  • Tscheiner - peak ( 2810 m)
  • Croda Rossa ( Roda di Vaèl, 2806 m)
  • Devil's Wall ( 2727 m)
  • Masarégrat ( 2611 m)
  • Fensterlturm ( 2,670 m ).

Mountain cabins

  • Antermoiahütte ( 2496 m)
  • Rifugio Ciampedie (1998 m)
  • Gartlhütte ( Rifugio Re Alberto I, 2621 m)
  • Grasleiten hut ( Rifugio Bergamo, 2129 m)
  • Grasleiten Pass hut ( Rifugio Passo Principe, 2601 m)
  • Paolina hut ( 2147 m)
  • Rose garden shed or hut Cologne ( Rifugio A. Fronza, 2337 m)
  • Rotwandhütte ( Rifugio Roda di Vael, 2280 m)
  • Santnerpass hut ( 2734 m)
  • Alpe di Tires - hut ( 2438 m)
  • Vajolet ( 2243 m)

Passes and transitions

  • Tierser Alpjoch ( 2440 m ) in the north
  • Grasleiten Pass ( 2599 m)
  • Donapass (2500 m)
  • Vajoletpass ( 2549 m)
  • Lauri Fun ( 2627 m)
  • Santner Pass ( 2740 m; eigtl a rocky shoulder of the Rosengartenspitze )
  • Tschagerjoch ( 2630 m)
  • Vajolonpass ( 2560 m)
  • Karerpass ( 1758 m ) in the south, and
  • Niger Pass (1688 m) on the western flank of the massif.

Via ferrata

  • Kesselkogel via ferrata
  • Laurenzi via ferrata
  • Santnerpass via ferrata
  • Masaré via ferrata and Croda Rossa.
  • Riser 549/551 "around the Croda Rossa ".

Laurin saga

The lauric Sage explains the alpenglow of the rose garden ( here called Rosadira ) as a result of a curse, in which the defeated dwarf king Laurin forgot the transition between day and night ( see King Laurin's rose garden ).

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