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Ismoil Somoni Peak

Highest mountain in Tajikistan

Ismoil Somoni Peak

Summary

Highest mountain in Tajikistan

FieldValue
nameIsmoil Somoni Peak
other_nameStalin Peak, Communism Peak
photoFile:Pik Kommunizma.jpg
photo_captionIsmoil Somoni Peak (also known as Pik Kommunizma) in 2023
photo_size289
elevation_m7495
elevation_ref
Ranked 50th
prominence_m3402
prominence_ref
Ranked 54th
listingCountry high point
Ultra
locationNorthwestern Gorno-Badakhshan, Tajikistan
rangePamirs
mapTajikistan
map_size290
map_captionLocation in Tajikistan
label_positionright
coordinates
first_ascent3 September 1933 by Yevgeniy Abalakov and Nikolay Gorbunov.
easiest_routerock/snow/ice climb

Ranked 50th Ranked 54th Ultra

[[Junko Tabei]] on Communism Peak in 1985 together with two other Japanese and four Estonian mountaineers. Photo by [[Jaan Künnap]].

Ismoil Somoni Peak (; ) is the highest mountain in Tajikistan

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--, as well as the former Russian Empire and Soviet Union before Tajikistan's independence. The mountain is named after Ismail Samani, a ruler of the Samanid dynasty. It is located in the Pamir Range.

Name

When the existence of a peak in the Soviet Pamir Mountains higher than Lenin Peak was first established in 1928, the mountain was tentatively identified with Mount Garmo. However, as the result of the work of further Soviet expeditions, it became clear by 1932 that they were not the same, and in 1933 the new peak, in the Academy of Sciences Range, was named Stalin Peak (), after Joseph Stalin. In 1962, as part of Khrushchev's nationwide de-Stalinization process, the name was changed to Communism Peak ( ), a name by which it is still commonly known. The name Communism Peak was officially dropped in 1998 in favour of the current name, commemorating the 9th-10th century Samanid emir, Ismail Samani.

History

By the end of the 1880s, a Russian expedition, led by V.F. Oshanin, conducted research and named various regions in the area. He noted in his diary: "I believe that the eastern peak has a height of up to 25,000 ft." The central Pamirs would continue to be visited by the expeditions of Kosineko, Korzhenevsky, Lipsky, Novitsky, Musketov, and others, but they failed to reach the Academy of Sciences Range.

In 1913, the central part of the Pamirs was explored by an expedition led by the German mountain explorer and climber . The expedition penetrated the upper reaches of the Obikhingou River, where they saw a 6650 m peak. It was given the name Garmo Peak, according to the name given by the Tajiks from Pashimgar. Subsequent expeditions to the area of the Range of the Academy of Sciences took place in Soviet times.

In 1928, the long-term Tajik-Pamir expedition of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR began to operate, which began with the Soviet-German expedition with the participation of Willi Rickmers. As a result of topographic survey, it was found that one of the peaks visible in the west of the Fedchenko glaciers reaches a height of 7495 m. Having compared the survey results with a schematic map compiled by Korzhenevsky back in 1925, and with other data, the members of the expedition of the Academy of Sciences decided that this peak is Garmo Peak, which was mapped by the German expedition of 1913. However, this led to the "mystery of the Garmo", as there was a discrepancy between the heights: 6650 m and 7495 m. This was solved only during the expeditions of 1931 and 1932, when two detachments of climbers and topographers (led by Gorbunov and Krylenko) penetrated the area from the east and from the west. The 6650 m peak was determined to be the real Garmo, and the unnamed 7495 m peak was conclusively discovered and mapped, and given the name Stalin Peak in honor of Stalin's upcoming 55th birthday.

The first ascent (to the then Stalin Peak) was made on 3 September 1933 by the Soviet mountaineer Yevgeniy Abalakov, during the Tajik-Pamir expedition of 1933, alongside the politician, chemist and mountaineer Nikolai Gorbunov.

The first woman to ascend to the peak was Lyudmila Agranovskaya in 1969.

The first winter ascent was made in February 1986 by 24 climbers (7 from Uzbekistan, and 17 from the rest of the USSR).

References

  • The Free Dictionary: Imeni Ismail Samani Peak |url-access=registration |publisher=Reader's Digest Association, Inc |year=1980 |isbn=0-89577-087-3 |editor-last=Scheffel |editor-first=Richard L.

References

  1. (1 March 2010). "Territorial and border issues".
  2. "General information about Tajikistan". [[Conference on Interaction and Confidence-Building Measures in Asia]].
  3. (1997). "The Newly Independent States of Eurasia Handbook of Former Soviet Republics". Oryx Press.
  4. (1956). "USSR A Reference Book of Facts and Figures". Farleigh Press Ltd.
  5. (1966). "The Orient". Meredith Press.
  6. "Tajikistan".
  7. (2010). "Symbolism and Power in Central Asia: Politics of the Spectacular". [[Routledge]].
  8. Hannan, Martin. (2011). "Harvey Wallbangers and Tam O'Shanters A Book of Eponyms". Kings Road.
  9. "Countries and Territories of the World".
  10. "Альпинисты Северной Столицы. Горы.".
  11. "Последняя загадка Памирских гор".
  12. Kalinin, G.. (1983). "Фортамбек и его вершины".
  13. Яценко, В. С.. (1950). "В горах Памира". Geografgiz.
  14. Лукницкий, П. Н.. "Таджикская экспедиция. Средняя Азия".
  15. "История экспедиций".
  16. "Альпинисты Северной Столицы".
  17. Захаров, П.П.. "Что мы знаем об альпинисте Вилли Рикмер-Рикмерсе?".
  18. The Great Soviet Encyclopaedia. Communizma Peak. Also [http://www.summitpost.org/pik-kommunizma/150290 Pik Kommunzma] at summitpost.org accessed 3Nov2016.
  19. . ["Cписки расстрелянных: Горбунов Николай Петрович"](https://memory-kommunarka.ru/person/1050).
  20. "Рекорды в мире природы".
  21. "39 Первопрохождений на пик Коммунизма".
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