Monte Bertrand | |
Other Name: | French: Mont Bertrand |
Elevation M: | 2480 |
Elevation Ref: | [1] |
Prominence M: | 383 |
Prominence Ref: | [2] |
Range: | Ligurian Alps |
Listing: | Alpine mountains 2000-2499 m |
Location: | Piemonte, Italy - Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France |
Map: | Alps#Italy |
Label: | Monte Bertrand |
Label Position: | right |
Coordinates: | 44.118°N 7.6746°W |
Easiest Route: | unmarked footpath |
First Ascent: | ancestral |
Monte Bertrand (Italian) or Mont Bertrand (French) is a mountain located on the French-Italian border between Piemonte and Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur.
The mountain up to World War II was totally belonging to Italy but, following the Paris Peace Treaties, signed in February 1947, is now shared between Italy and France.[3]
The mountain belongs to the Ligurian Alps and is located on the main chain of the Alps. On its top three ridges meet; one of them heads West dividing two tributary valleys of the Roya, Vallon du Réfrei (north) and Vallon du Morignole.[4] Going North the main chain of the Alps connects the mountain with the Colle delle Selle Vecchie, while southwards the saddle of Colla Rossa (2172 m) divides the Monte Bertrand from the neighbouring Cime de Missun. On the Italian side of the mountain runs a former-military dirt road connecting Monesi (a village of the municipality of Triora) with the colle di Tenda. The summit of the Monte Bertrand is marked by a cairn and a summit cross and can be easily seen from Upega, a village of the iItalian comune of Briga Alta, and by Morignolo, located in the French mairie of La Brigue.
According to the SOIUSA (International Standardized Mountain Subdivision of the Alps) the mountain can be classified in the following way:[5]
The mountain is made of steep but regular and mainly grassy slopes on its western side, and is rockier on the eastern one. Its NE slopes are included in the Parco naturale del Marguareis.[6]
The mountain is accessible by an unmarked footpaths both from the saddle of Colla Rossa (South) and from the Colle delle Selle Vecchie[7] (in the second case crossing the Cima Valega).