Jump to content

Monte Albergian

Coordinates: 44°58′58.8″N 06°58′58.8″E / 44.983000°N 6.983000°E / 44.983000; 6.983000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Monte Albergian
The mountain as seen from Colle dell'Albergian
Highest point
Elevation3,041 m (9,977 ft)[1]
Prominence428 m (1,404 ft)[2][3]
Isolation9.29 km (5.77 mi) Edit this on Wikidata
ListingAlpine mountains above 3000 m
Coordinates44°58′58.8″N 06°58′58.8″E / 44.983000°N 6.983000°E / 44.983000; 6.983000
Geography
Monte Albergian is located in Alps
Monte Albergian
Monte Albergian
Alps
LocationPiedmont, Italy
Parent rangeCottian Alps
Climbing
Easiest routefootpath

Monte Albergian is a 3,041 m a.s.l. mountain of the Cottian Alps, located in Italy. A battalion of 3rd Alpini Regiment, which during World War I earned a Silver Medal of Military Valor, was named after Monte Albergian.[4]

Etymology

[edit]

The name Albergian could come from the ancient Celtic population of the Egyans (in Italian Egidini) and could mean High Egyans' mountain (Alberg-Egyan) in their language.[5] Another theory link the name of the mountain the Janus, a Roman solar deity.[6]

Geography

[edit]

The mountain is located on a brief ridge heading North which originates from the water divide between Val Chisone and Valle Germanasca. Going South an unnamed saddle at 2,906 m divides Monte Albergian from Monte Gran Miuls (2,974 m a.s.l.), the latter standing on the Germanasca/Chisone water divide.[1]

Administratively the eastern face of the Albergian belongs to the Fenestrelle municipality (comune) and the western one to Pragelato municipality,[1] both in the Metropolitan City of Turin. In clear days its summit, marked by a cross, offers a great view of Western Alps.[7]

SOIUSA classification

[edit]

According to SOIUSA (International Standardized Mountain Subdivision of the Alps) the mountain can be classified in the following way:[8]

  • main part = Western Alps
  • major sector = North Western Alps
  • section = Cottian Alps
  • subsection = Alpi del Monginevro
  • supergroup = Catena Bucie-Grand Queyron-Orsiera
  • group = Gruppo Queyron-Albergian-Sestrière
  • subgroup = Sottogruppo Ghinivert-Albergian
  • code = I/A-4.II-A.2.b

Access to the summit

[edit]

The usual route to Monte Albergian is the waymarked footpath starting from Soucheres Hautes (1,518 m), a frazione (village) of Pragelato municipality. While long (more than 1,500 metres of vertical drop) the route does not require alpine skills.[9] In the Italian scale of hiking difficulty is rated E (Escursionisti, namely suitable for normal hikers).[10] On the WSW ridge of Albergian was described a climbing route of F+ grade.[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Geoportale Nazionale - carta IGM 1:25.000". Istituto Geografico Militare. Retrieved 2017-02-23.
  2. ^ Key col: Colle del Pis, 2613 m
  3. ^ "Monte Albergian, Italy". Retrieved 2017-02-23.
  4. ^ "Storia del Terzo Alpini". Retrieved 2017-02-23.
  5. ^ "Preistoria valdese". Bollettino della Società di studi valdesi (70). Società di Studi Valdesi: 14. 1938. Retrieved 2017-02-24.
  6. ^ Marino, Ugo (1966). Storia di Pinerolo e dei Principi d'Acaja. Tipografia Vescovile. p. 15.
  7. ^ "Monte Albergian m 3041". Retrieved 2017-02-23.
  8. ^ Marazzi, Sergio (2005). Atlante Orografico delle Alpi. SOIUSA (in Italian). Priuli & Verlucca. ISBN 978-88-8068-273-8.
  9. ^ a b Ferreri, Eugenio (1982). Alpi Cozie cenrali. C.A.I./T.C.I. pp. 237–239.
  10. ^ users Andrea72 and renato63 (2010-07-21). "Albergian (Monte) da Pragelato". Retrieved 2017-02-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
[edit]

Maps

[edit]
[edit]