The name "Ochsenkopf" does not appear in old descriptions of the mountains. The first person to write about the Fichtel Mountains, Matthias von Kemnath (actually Matthias Widmann, b 23 February 1429 in
Kemnath) reported in 1476: ("A mountain, high, wide and well-known, lies in Bavaria, known as the Fichtelberg"). In descriptions of the border in 1499 and 1536 the mountain is called
Vichtelberg, thereafter the name was extended to the whole mountain region. It is also mentioned in old documents: around 1317 the Lords of Hirschberg were enfeoffed
inter alia with the
walt zu dem Vythenberge. By the 14th century iron ore was being extracted in the
St. Veith Pit on the southern foot of the Ochsenkopf.
Vyth → Veit → Fichtel. High-profile local history and name researchers have still not had the last word. The name Ochsenkopf appeared in mining deeds for the first time in 1495, when Lorenz von Ploben from Nürnberg was given the mine on the Fichtelberge "near the Ochsenkopf" as a
feoff. That may be the first reference to the head of a steer carved into a rock on the summit, which can still be seen today. == The
Asenturm ==