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Partizione delle Alpi

Partizione delle Alpi

''Partizione delle Alpi''

The Partizione delle Alpi (Italian for "Partition of the Alps", , ) is a classification of the mountain ranges of the Alps, that is primarily used in Italian literature, but also in France and Switzerland. It was devised in 1926.

This classification system entails a division of the main arc of the Alps into the Alpi Occidentali (Western Alps), Alpi Centrali (Central Alps) and Alpi Orientali (Eastern Alps).

Structure

Mountain ranges of the ''Partizione delle Alpi'' and international borders

The basic structure is based on the three main divisions. These were further subdivided into 26 sections" and 112 "groups".

  • The "Western Alps", in this classification run from the Bocchetta di Altare/Colle di Cadibona, usually accepted as the boundary between the Alps and the Apennines, to the Col Ferret (just west of the Great Saint Bernard) between the Aosta Valley and Valais (upper Rhone valley). Its highest peak is Mont Blanc (4,810 m).
  • : The boundary between the western and central arc of the Alps is the line Ivrea – Aosta Valley – Italian Val Ferret – Col Ferret – Swiss Val Ferret – Martigny-Ville – eastern end of Lake Geneva near Montreux/Vevey
  • The "Central Alps" run from the Col Ferret to the Brenner Pass. Their highest summit is Monte Rosa (4,611 m).
  • : The eastern section is bounded by the line of the Adige valley – valley of the Eisack – Brenner – valley of the Sill – Innsbruck – Lower Inn Valley as far as Rosenheim
  • The "Eastern Alps", run from the Brenner as far as Rijeka, including Istrien and Gorski kotar. The Großglockner (3,798 m) is the highest peak of the Eastern Alps.

The term "Central Alps" should not be confused with the Central Alps within the north-to-south division of the Eastern Alps.

History and reception

This classification of the Alps was compiled in 1926 on the occasion of the IXth Congresso Geografico Italiano and published in the Nomi e limiti delle grandi parti del Sistema Alpino ("Names and Boundaries of the Major Elements of the Alpine System").

The system covered the entirety of the Alps and not just that part of the Alps that lay on Italian soil. In spite of that, the classification is focussed on Italy, because it does not employ the usual bipartite division, and in general the subdivisions usually used in other countries were ignored. It was seen as flawed because it included regions that, according to research, were not part of the Alps.

The following have been cited by Marazzi as basic shortcomings and inconsistencies:{{citation

  • the inclusion of the Massif des Maures, which does not belong to the Alpine system either tectonically or geologically
  • the Monts de Vaucluse, Montagne de Lure and the Luberon Massif were not counted as pre-alps of the Dauphiné in French literature, but as part of Provence, because they lay within that region. Moreover, the Provence Alps also include the "Prealps of Digne" (Préalpes de Digne), that were placed under Prealpi di Provenza (Provence Prealps, )
  • in the Prealpi svizzere (Swiss Prealps) more northerly regions are included that, according to Swiss geographic literature, do not belong to the Alpine region, but to the Central Plateau, as part of the northern Alpine Foreland
  • the Alpi Noriche (Noric Alps) cover far too large an area in comparison with the groups given in Austrian literature (rather excessively the Tux Alps, the whole Tauern, the Alps of Styria and Carinthia are incorporated into the Noric Alps)
  • the Alpi bavaresi (Bavarian Alps), the Alpi salisburghesi (Salzburg Alps) and the Alpi austriache (Austrian Alps) are based on archaic concepts, the terms are used entirely differently in the German-speaking region
  • the inclusion of the Karst in a broad sense and Istria in the Alpine system, which, today, are considered part of the Dinaric Alps

More up to date versions of this system are found in standard works like the Dictionnaire encyclopédique des Alpes (2006){{citation |editor-surname1=Enrico Camanni

Sections and groups of the three Alpine divisions

No.English nameItalian nameFrench / Slovenian names French names are used in the Western Alps and Western Central Alps, Slovenian in the Southern Eastern Alps.German nameclass="unsortable"Groups (i.e. ranges)
(English names in brackets)Western AlpsWestalpenCentral AlpsZentralalpenEastern AlpsOstalpen
From Colle di Cadibona to the Col Ferret
1Maritime Alps
2Cottian Alps
3Graian Alps
4Provence Alps
5Dauphiné Alps
6Provence Prealps
7Dauphiné Prealps
8Savoy Prealps, Savoy Alps
From Col Ferret to the Brenner Pass
9Pennine Alps
10Lepontine Alps
11Rhaetian Alps
12Bernese Alps
13Glarus Alps
14Swiss Prealps
15Bavarian Alps
16Lombard Prealps
From Brenner to Rijeka
17Noric Alps
18Dolomites
19Carnic Alps
20Julian Alps
21Kamnik-Savinja AlpsAlpi di Kamnik e della SavinjaKamniško-Savinjske Alpe
22Karawanks
23Salzburg Alps
24Austrian Alps
25Styrian Alps
26Venetian Alps
27Karst

Table notes

Footnotes

References

Literature

  • Comitato Geografico Nazionale Italiano (ed.): Nomi e limiti delle grandi parti del Sistema alpino. In L'Universo. Anno Vili, no. 9, Florence, 1926.
  • G. Bertoglio, G. De Simoni: Partizione delle Alpi (in 220 gruppi). Tipografia Alzani, Pinerolo, 1980.
  • AA. VV.: Guida dei monti d'Italia. 60 vols., TCI-CAI, Milan, 1936–97.

References

  1. [[Raoul Blanchard]]: ''Les Alpes Occidentales.'' 7 vols., Arthaud, Paris, 1938–56.
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