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The Hochschwab in the
Upper Styria Upper Styria (german: Obersteiermark), in the Austrian usage of the term, refers exclusively to the northwestern, generally mountainous and well-wooded half of the federal state of Styria. The southwestern half of the state around the capital o ...
is a mountain, , and the highest summit in the eponymous mountain range.


Location

The summit of the Hochschwab is a flat, rock and grass-covered dome, that may easily be climbed from the Schiestlhaus () to the northeast in about half an hour via the plateau to the west (Biwakschachtel Fleischerhütte). The Schiestlhaus may be approached from Seewiesen () at the foot of the Steirischer Seeberg via the ''Seetal'' valley, the ''Untere Dullwitz'' to the Voisthaler Hut, the ''Obere Dullwitz'' and the ''Graf-Meran- Steig'', as well as from the north, from Weichselboden in the Salza valley. The showpiece of the Hochschwab is its mighty south face which has a width of almost two kilometres and rises to a height of up to 300 metres above the Trawies Saddle and the valleys of Trawiestal (to the southwest) and ''Obere Dullwitz'' (to the southeast) which meet at that point. There are climbing routes of all grades up the south face.


1988 Hochschwab tragedy

In early November 1988 there was a mountaineering tragedy on the Hochschwab, which triggered the biggest search operation ever undertaken by the Styrian mountain rescue service to that date. A seven-man group was trapped for 2 days and nights in storms and icy temperatures at a height of 2,000 metres above sea level. Following the deployment of 150 Alpine gendarmes and mountain rescue personnel as well as five helicopters, five of the party were already found to be dead and the remaining two survived with serious injuries.


References


Notes


Literature

* Liselotte Buchenauer: ''Hochschwab'', 1960 und mehrere Neuauflagen. * Rudolf Ägyd Lindner: ''Hochschwab'', Weishaupt, 2nd edition, 2002. * Peter Rieder: ''Alpenvereinsführer Hochschwab''. Bergverlag Rudolf Rother, Munich, 1976.


External links

*
VR Panoramic photographs of the Hochschwab Mountains
* {{Authority control Two-thousanders of Austria Mountains of the Alps Mountains of Styria