Page Type: | Mountain/Rock |
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Lat/Lon: | 46.04581°N / 7.89576°E |
Activities: | Mountaineering |
Elevation: | 13211 ft / 4027 m |
Allalinhorn is a famous mountain in the Swiss Alps. There are two main reasons for this fame, the first one being the altitude of 4027 meters, making it one of the 82 mountains above 4000 meters (UIAA-list) in the Alps and therefore a (very) popular objective for climbers. The second reason is the ease of the ascent. Allalinhorn is considered (together with Breithorn) the easiest 4000 meter peak in the Alps. The vicinity of the Mittelallalin top station, which drops climbers off at an altitude of almost 3500 meters, adds to Allalinhorn’s label of an easy mountain. Still, even if considered easy, Allalinhorn is a real alpine climb and should not te be taken lightly. Weather can change rapidly at these high altitudes and the whole climb along the normal route leads through glaciated terrain with large crevasses present throughout the route. It is advised to take a guide if you do not have the proper experience to climb an alpine peak like Allalinhorn.
Allalinhorn is considered as one of the home mountains of the famous ski resort Saas Fee. Its heavily glaciated North face is looming above the village, attracting many hikers and climbers looking for climbing this peak. Many climbers and gatherers of 4000 meter peaks will give you the exact same answer when asked: What was your first 4000 meter peak? The answer will probably be either Breithorn or Allalinhorn. As a result, especially in the summer period with good weather, the mountain can get crowded. Mountain guides from the Saas valley and beyond organize guided tours up the mountain on a daily routine. The mountain guide Camillo Supersaxo from Saas Fee has climbed Allalinhorn more than a 1000 times. To celebrate the anniversary, Bishop Eldingen said mass on the summit. Although crowded, Allalinhorn is a beautiful mountain and offers fantastic views. It is located in the heart of the ‘Walliser 4000ers’ and many of them can be seen from the summit: Weissmies, Monte Rosa, Matterhorn, Breithorn & Dom to name a few. Allalinhorn has several faces, the North face is heavily glaciated; the south face however, is a near vertical wall with poor rock quality and from the east Allalinhorn does justice to its own name: It looks like a horn (a spire).
Allalinhorn was first climbed on August 28, 1856. Priest Johann Josef Imseng from Saas-Grund and his servant Franz Josef Andenmatten led the Englishman Edward Levi Ames to the summit. Today’s normal route, the northwest flank, was first climbed on 1. August 1860 by Franz-Josef Andenmatten, together with Sir LeslieStephen, F. W. Short, Frederick William Jacomb, C. Fisher, Moritz Anthamatten, Peter Taugwalder and Johann Kronig. See the History section below for more information.
Besides the heavily ascended Normal route, which is graded F+ (Facile) and has no real difficulties, there are other, more interesting routes. A good example is the Hohlaubgrat, graded AD, along the East ridge of Allalinhorn. This route involves some mixed climbing and is a good, more challenging alternative to the normal route. Other, less climbed, and more difficult routes are the North-East ridge (AD+), the North-East Face (TD) and the South Wall (AD+, IV). See the ‘’Routes’’ section for more detailed information about the routes on Allalinhorn.
Allalinhorn is part of the Mischabel ridge between the Saas Valley in the east and the Mattertal to the west and is part of the Allalin Group together with 3 other, higher peaks: Alphubel , Strahlhorn and Rimpfischhorn. Allalinhorn is located 7 kilometers southwest of Saas-Fee and is surrounded by four large glaciers : the Fee-glacier to the North , the Hohlaubgletscher to the east, the Allalingletscher to the southeast and the Mellichgletscher to the southwest. There are four ridges that lead to the summit of Allalinhorn, three of them are covered under a thick ice cap with the exception of the East Ridge – mostly referred to as the Hohlaubgrat. Directly west of Allalinhorn are Feekopf (3888m ) and Alphubel (4206 m) separated by the Feejoch (3826m) and Alphubeljoch (3772m). To the south the Allalinpass (3564 m) separates Allalinhorn from Rimpfischhorn (4199m).
From the summit of Allalinhorn you have fantastic views . In the west the near Rimpfischhorn and Strahlhorn can be seen up close; Also the Monte Rosa, Matterhorn, Weisshorn and Mont Blanc Massif are visible. In the north you can see Alphubel and the rest of the Mischabel group with Täschhorn and Dom. In the east you can see Mittelallalin, Saas Fee, Fletschhorn, Lagginhorn and Weissmies. Allalinhorn is really surrounded by many of the major peaks in the Alps and therefore offers one of the best views around.
In 1828, Heinrich Michaelis and a guide crossed the Allalin Pass and thereby opened up the route to the south-west ridge. The first ascent of the Allalinhorn via the same ridge only took place 28 years later. On 28 August 1856, the parish priest Johann Josef Imseng from Saas-Grund and his servant Franz Josef Andenmatten led the Englishman Edward Levi Ames to the summit. Today’s normal route, the north-west flank, was first climbed on 1. August 1860 by Franz-Josef Andenmatten, together with Sir Leslie Stephen, F. W. Short, Frederick William Jacomb, C.Fisher, Moritz Anthamatten, Peter Taugwalder and Johann Kronig. The Bernese high school teacher and historian Heinrich Dübi ascended the summit via the difficult north-east ridge on 27 July 1882 with the guides Alphons and Peter Supersaxo, and then descended via the Hohlaubgrat ridge. This represented the first crossing of both ridges. The Hohlaub ridge was conquered as an ascent for the first time five years later, on 12 July 1887, by the Englishmen Harold Ward Topham, C. H. Redall and the guide Aloys Supersaxo. A year earlier, Aloy Supersaxo and the Briton C. A. C. Bowlker were the first to climb the south face, a grade IV climb. The first winter ascent of the Allalin was by the Swiss mountaineer R. Bracken, climbing solo, in 1907. The first ascent on skis was on 17 April of the same year by A. Hurter und Max Stahel, both from Zürich, together with the local mountaineers Othmar and Oskar Supersaxo.
The disclosure of Allalinhorn started as early as 1912, when the construction of the Britannia Hut was completed. In 1938, Berghaus Längfluh opened making it the second mountain hut in the vicinity of the mountain .In 1954 a cable car was built to Spielboden, which was extended to Längfluh (2869m) in 1959. Längfluh is the area between the two tongues of the Fee glacier. In 1969 it was possible to get even closer to the mountain with the construction of the cable car to the Felskinn (2989m). In the 1970s, it was planned to extend the system further to Feekopf (3888m). This project has been denied a license by the Swiss Federal Council. As an alternative, the Metro Alpin to Mittelallalin (3456m) was built on what is now a summer ski area. In January 2011, the operating company of the mountain railways announced an expansion to the Feejoch (3826m) , from where the summit could be reached in just 45 minutes. This expansion, fortunately, hasn’t been built to this date.
The name Allalin refers to the area to the east of the summit as well as the mountain itself. There is large dispute about the origin of the name though. The emphasis at the end of the word suggests a pre-German origin. On the other hand, the name Allalin led the archaeologist and writer Christian Moritz Engelhardt to his “Saracen hypothesis” in 1840, according to which Saracens in the 10th century left behind a series of names in the Saas valley and as far as the Simplon area. Engelhardt specifies the name as Alalain and traces this back to the Arabic “ala ain” (at the spring). Another explanation comes from the year 1976. The writer Jules Guex cited a letter from Johann Ulrich Hubschmied, which derived the name Allalin from the Celtic “akarnos” (“maple”). A diminutive, “agarinus”, gradually evolved into “agalin”, which means “small maple” in the Valle Verzasca. This became “ayalin” in the Saas valley, which was not yet Germanised, from which Hubschmied constructed the hybrid form “all’ayalin”, later made into Allalin by the Alemannic settlers. This theory, too, is not widely accepted. Without any historical proof, no definitive explanation exists.
Hut | Elevation | Telephone | SP-Link | Photo |
Brittannia Hut | 3030m | +41 27 957 22 88 | Here | |
Täsch Hut | 2701m | +41 27 967 39 13 | ||
Berghaus Längfluh | 2870m | +41 27 958 77 00 | / |
Publisher | Name | Author | Year (last Print) | ISBN / EAN |
Rother Verlag | Hochtouren Westalpen Band I | Wolfgang Pusch | 2015 | 9783763330287 |
Rother Verlag | Viertausender der Alpen | Helmut Dumler | 2014 | 9783763374311 |
Rother Verlag | The High mountains of the Alps | Helmut Dumler | 1994 | 9780898863789 |
Idea Montagna | 4000m peaks of the Alps | Marco Romelli | 2015 | 9788897299585 |
Rother Verlag | Walliser Alpen Skitourenfuhrer | Daniel Haussinger | 2012 | 9783763359301 |
Topo Verlag | Walliser Alpen | Daniel Silbernagel | 2016 | 9783033024311 |
Bruckmann Verlag | 4000er Tourenfuhrer | Richard Goedeke | 2015 | 9783765457616 |
Type | Name | Scale | ISBN / EAN | Additional Info. |
Schweizer Landeskarte | 5006 Matterhorn Michabel | 1:50.000 | 9783302050065 |
Covers_the entire_area
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Schweizer Landeskarte | 1328 Randa | 1:25.000 | 9783302013282 | Covers the entire area |
Schweizer Landeskarte | 2515 Zermatt Gornergrat | 1:25.000 | 9783302025155 | Covers all routes except from the East |
Kompass Map | 117 Zermatt Saas Fee | 1:50.000 | 9783850269261 | Covers the entire area |
Allalinhorn is climbed mostly during the summer months: July, August, September. Especially on the normal route, crowds are no exception. The normal route is often climbed with skis during the winter season.