'Khan Tengri' (
Uighur, translated as "Lord of the spirits", or "Lord of the sky"; or
Turkic translated as "Ruler of Skies", "Ruler Tengri") is a
mountain of the
Tian Shan mountain range. It is located on the
Kyrgyzstan—
Kazakhstan border, east of lake
Issyk Kul. Its geologic elevation is but its glacial cap rises to . For this reason, in mountaineering circles, including for the
Soviet Snow Leopard award criteria, it is considered a 7000-metre peak. It is also known as: Khan Tangiri Shyngy, Kan-Too Chokusu, Pik Khan-Tengry, Hantengri Feng.
Khan Tengri is the second-highest mountain in the Tian Shan, surpassed only by
Jengish Chokusu (7439 m) a few miles to the south. Khan Tengri is the highest point in
Kazakhstan and the third-highest peak in Kyrgyzstan, after Jengish Chokusu and the
Pamir's
Independence Peak (7,134 m).
Features
Khan Tengri is a massive marble pyramid, covered in snow and ice. At sunset the marble glows red, giving it the Kazakh name "Kan Tau" (blood mountain). Located just across the South Ingelchek (or Inylchek) glacier, 16 km north of
Jengish Chokusu, Khan Tengri was originally thought to be the highest peak in the Tien Shan because of its dramatic shape, compared to the massive bulk of Jengish Chokusu. Khan Tengri is the highest peak in the extreme Tengri Tag subrange, also known as the Mustag, that also contains peaks
Chapaeva and
Gorkova.
Anatoli Boukreev considered Khan Tengri perhaps the world's most beautiful peak because of its geometric ridges and its symmetry.
History

South Inylchek Base Camp, at 4,000 m on the glacier's southern moraine, looking northwest to Pik Chapaeva and Khan Tengri in the distance
Although it is 1,500 ft lower than its near neighbor to the south, Khan Tengri was believed to be the highest peak in the range until Jengish Chokusu's discovery in
1946.
The first ascent of the peak was made in
1931 by Mikhail Pogrebetsky's Ukrainian team from the south, along the west ridge. M. Kuzmin's team made the first ascent from the north in
1964. Khan Tengri is one of five peaks that a Soviet mountaineer needed to scale to earn the prestigious
Snow Leopard award.
In
2004, it was the site of a terrible catastrophe as more than a dozen mountaineers were killed in a large avalanche on the mountain's most popular route.
External links
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Khan Tengri on SummitPost
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Khan Tengri on Peakware
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Khan-Tengri/Kyrgyzstan climbing information
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Alex Gavan's Khan Tengri 2004 Expedition (one of the best personal pages related with this mountain)