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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Climbing history  





2 Gallery  





3 Huts  





4 References  





5 External links  














Piz Badile






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Coordinates: 46°1741N 9°3510E / 46.29472°N 9.58611°E / 46.29472; 9.58611
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Piz Badile

The north-east face and north ridge of Piz Badile

Highest point

Elevation

3,308 m (10,853 ft)

Prominence

262 m (860 ft)[1]

Parent peak

Piz Cengalo

Isolation

1.1 km (0.68 mi)[2]

Listing

Great north faces of the Alps

Coordinates

46°17′41N 9°35′10E / 46.29472°N 9.58611°E / 46.29472; 9.58611

Geography

Piz Badile is located in Alps
Piz Badile

Piz Badile

Location in the Alps

Location

Lombardy, Italy
Graubünden, Switzerland

Parent range

Bregaglia Range

Geology

Mountain type

Granite

Climbing

First ascent

W. A. B. Coolidge with guides François Devouassoud and Henri Devouassoud on 27 July 1867

Easiest route

South Ridge (Couloir Route) PD

Piz Badile (3,308 m) is a mountain of the Bregaglia range in the Swiss canton of Graubünden and the Italian region of Lombardy. The border between the two countries runs along the summit ridge. Its north-east face, overlooking the Swiss Val Bregaglia near Soglio, is considered one of the six great north faces of the Alps. The name Badile means spadeorshovel (arising from the mountain's appearance when viewed from the Val Bregaglia).

Climbing history[edit]

The first ascent of Piz Badile was by W. A. B. Coolidge with guides François Devouassoud and Henri Devouassoud on 27 July 1867 by the south ridge.[3] The mountain had first come to the notice of British alpinists from D. W. Freshfield's writings of the 1860s. He gave the name 'the Grey Twins' to Piz Badile and Piz Cengalo, and made the first ascent of Piz Cengalo in 1866.[4]

The two classic routes on Piz Badile are the north ridge and the Cassin Route on the north-east face. The north ridge – the Badilekante – was first prospected solo by the Swiss guide Christian Klucker in 1892 (Klucker later made the first ascent of the Badile's west-south-west ridge with Anton von Rydzewski and M. Barbaria on 14 June 1897). After several unsuccessful attempts by Italian parties in 1911, the ridge (IV, one pitch of V−) finally fell to Alfred Zürcher with the guide Walter Risch on 4 August 1923. F. l'Orsa and André Roch found a more direct line on the ridge on the second ascent (18 July 1926).[3]

The most popular route on the north-east face is the Cassin Route (V+/A0 or VI+), so-called after the first ascentionist Riccardo Cassin, who climbed it with V. Ratti and G. Esposito, together with the Como team of Mario Molteni and Giuseppe Valsecchi on 14–16 July 1937. Molteni and Valsecchi were already on the face when Cassin and his party started out, but the climbers subsequently joined forces. In this famous alpine epic, Molteni died of exhaustion and exposure on the summit, whilst Valsecchi died on the descent by the south ridge just before reaching the hut.[3]

Gallery[edit]

Huts[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Retrieved from the Swisstopo topographic maps. The key col is located east of Punta Sertori at 3,046 metres.
  • ^ Retrieved from Google Earth. The nearest point of higher elevation is west of Piz Cengalo.
  • ^ a b c Collomb, Robin, Bregaglia West, Goring: West Col Productions, 1988
  • ^ Engel, Claire, Mountaineering in the Alps, London: George Allen and Unwin, 1971
  • External links[edit]

    International

    National


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Piz_Badile&oldid=1197406150"

    Categories: 
    Mountains of the Alps
    Alpine three-thousanders
    Great north faces of the Alps
    International mountains of Europe
    ItalySwitzerland border
    Mountains of Lombardy
    Mountains of Graubünden
    Mountains of Switzerland
    Val Bregaglia
    Hidden categories: 
    Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Coordinates on Wikidata
    Commons category link is on Wikidata
    Articles with VIAF identifiers
    Articles with GND identifiers
     



    This page was last edited on 20 January 2024, at 10:38 (UTC).

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