Talk:Jengish Chokusu

Pinnacles?
Is "harsh pinnacle" an accurate term for the Pobeda section of the Tian Shan? SiGarb 22:17, 23 November 2005 (UTC)

Names
Why is the peak supposed to be called "Shengli Feng" in Chinese, what are the sources for that claim? It should be Tömür in Uighur, and that is the official name of the peak in China, or Tuōmù'ěr Fēng 托木尔峰 in Chinese. Any objections? —Babelfisch 13:01, 18 July 2006 (UTC)

Name again (revert of recent edit)
This page got moved a while back from Peak Pobeda to Jengish Chokusu. The recent edits I reverted amounted to an attempt to move the page back without actually doing so. That is a major enough change that it would need to be discussed on the talk page first, so please do so if you believe that Peak Pobeda is the better name for the peak and the article. However, I believe that Jengish Chokusu is in fact the better name, because it is the official local name for the peak.

Also included in the recent edit was the phrase "harsh pinnacle", mentioned above, and no, this is not an accurate term. A pinnacle is a particular kind of topographical feature, small and pointed, and cannot refer to a whole range or massif, except in a misleadingly metaphorical way. -- Spireguy 13:02, 16 April 2007 (UTC)

Why is the only appropriate name for this is "Pobeda Peak"
The first - it was discovered by russian speaking Soviet expedition, not by local kyrgyz tribes as it took place in Khan Tengri case.

The second - it is well known as Pobeda Peak or Tomur (Chineese), but not other names.

The third and the last - renaming of geographic features is highly political engagment action on the CIS area and it is usually conflict with common sense.

Sorry for bad english :(

Gleb.

great patriotic war
velikaja otechestvennaja vojna in russian would be great fatherland war a great patriotic war would be translated as velikaja patrioticheskaja vojna nobody calls it that, everybody calls it the great fatherland war or world war two so you might want to fix that mistranslation —Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.195.208.44 (talk) 03:07, 30 April 2009 (UTC)

A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for speedy deletion
The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page has been nominated for speedy deletion: You can see the reason for deletion at the file description page linked above. —Community Tech bot (talk) 03:53, 5 May 2019 (UTC)
 * Jengish Chokusu Animation Video.gif

A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion
The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion: Participate in the deletion discussion at the nomination page. —Community Tech bot (talk) 04:53, 5 May 2019 (UTC)
 * Jengish Chokusu Animation Video.gif


 * Ascent
 * On September 19, 1938, Soviet climbers Leonid Gutman, Evgeny Ivanov and Alexander Sidorenko, under the leadership of A. A. Letavet, made the first ascent to the summit (according to TSB) [2] or tried to climb, rising to a height of 6930 m (according to TSB).
 * 1956 - an ascent was made along the northern edge of the Zvezdochka glacier under the guidance of the Soviet climber V. M. Abalakov. According to BRE, this was the first ascent.
 * 1958 - for the first time 13 people climbed the massif of Pobeda peak with ascent along the Eastern ridge from the Chon-Teren pass to Pobeda peak and descending along the Northern ridge. Igor Erokhin led a team of climbers from Moscow Higher Technical School and Moscow State University.[10]
 * 1982 - by al-Ata climbers, who were not part of the First Himalayan Expedition to Everest, a new super-difficult route along the northern wall of the snake ("on a dollar"). Ruk. B. Smirnov.
 * 1984 - mass (27 Soviet climbers) ascent to Pobeda peak[11].
 * 1990 - the first ascent to the northeast of the buttress. Ruk. B. Zhuravlev.
 * 1993 - the first high-speed solo ascent to Pobeda Peak from the ABC camp of the Zvezdochka glacier (4200 m) and back in 20 hours by Gleb Sokolov
 * 1995 - On May 7, 12 Novosibirsk climbers led by Vladimir Yudin and Gleb Sokolov made the first ever spring ascent to Pobeda Peak in honor of the 50th anniversary of Victory in the Great Patriotic War.
 * 2003 — the ascent of a group of Krasnoyarsk climbers led by Gleb Sokolov to Pobeda Peak along a new route through the ice balcony of the northern wall.
 * 2005 - the first solo crossing of the Pobeda massif from the Chon-Teren pass to the Diky Gleb Sokolov pass in 8 days (August 16 - August 23)
 * 2009 - a pair of Novosibirsk Gleb Sokolov - Vitaly Gorelik passed the wall route along the northern wall with access to the Camel gendarmerie.
 * 2011 - Kazakh couple Denis Urubko - Gennady Durov passed a direct route to the top - "stick to dollar" (ascent option 1982).
 * 2017, January/February — the Red Fox Asia team climbed the Khan Tengri and Pobeda Peaks as part of the Five Winter 7000ers program, and a spherical panorama of the Pobeda Peak was compiled based on its photographic materials [12].
 * 2021 - a group of three athletes from St. Petersburg (Nikolai Totmyanin, Alexander Dusheiko, Natalya Belyankina) climbing Pobeda Peak along the route of V. Abalakov (6A cat. Difficulty) after acclimatization to Lenin Peak and traverse Khan - Tengri Peak from the north to the south, Nikolai Totmyanin becomes a 7-time "SNOW LEOPARD". Natalya Belyankina becomes the first St. Petersburg woman on this route. Цйфыву (talk) 15:36, 10 January 2023 (UTC)