Maddalena Pass Explained

Maddalena Pass
Elevation M:1996
Map:Alps
Label:Maddalena Pass
Coords:44.4217°N 6.8986°W
Location:Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France / Province of Cuneo, Italy
Range:Cottian Alps and Maritime Alps

The Maddalena Pass (Italian: Colle della Maddalena French: Col de Larche, historically Col de l'Argentière) (elevation 1996 m.) is a high mountain pass between the Cottian Alps and the Maritime Alps, located on the border between Italy and France. It connects Barcelonnette in France with Cuneo in Italy. Its French name Col de Larche refers to the village Larche on its northwestern side.

Under its earlier name, Col de l'Argentière it has historically linked Lyon with Italy; the Col de l'Argentière was in the possession of the house of Savoy from 1388 to 1713, offering an easy route between Piedmont and its outlying valley of Barcelonnette, which came into Savoyard possession in 1388, when Amadeus VI of Savoy purchased it for the sum of 60,000 ecus,[1] it was of such strategic and commercial importance.

A few hundred metres from the pass, on its Italian side, is the Lago della Maddalena, which is the source of the Stura di Demonte, an important tributary of the Tanaro.

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Notes and References

  1. W. A. B. Coolidge, "The Passages of the Alps in 1518" The English Historical Review 30 No. 120 (October 1915:681-691) pp 687-88, 690.