Matterhorn
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The Matterhorn (Fr. Mont Cervin, It. Cervino), is perhaps the most familiar mountain in the Alps. Located on the border between Switzerland and Italy, its graceful pyramid towers over the Swiss town of Zermatt and the Italian town Breuil-Cervinia in the Val Tournanche.
The mountain has four faces, facing the four compass points, with the north and south faces meeting to form a short east-west summit ridge. The faces are tremendously steep, and only small patches of snow and ice cling to them; regular avalanches send the snow down to accumulate on the glaciers at the base of each face. The Hörnli ridge of the northeast (in the center of the view from Zermatt) is the usual climbing route.
The Matterhorn was the last major mountain of the Alps to be climbed, not merely because of its technical difficulty, but of the fear it inspired in early mountaineers. The first serious attempts began around 1858, mostly from the Italian side, but despite appearances, the southern routes are harder, and parties repeatedly found themselves on difficult slippery rock and had to turn back.
It was not until 14 July 1865, after several failed attempts, that the party of Edward Whymper, Charles Hudson, Lord Francis Douglas, and Douglas Hadow, with Michel Croz and the two Peter Taugwalders (father and son) tried the Hörnli route and found it considerably easier than anybody expected. But on the descent Hadow slipped, knocking Croz off his feet, and dragging Hudson and Douglas with him. All seven were tied together (a practice long since abandoned), and would no doubt have been lost, but the rope broke, sending the lower four to their deaths on the Matterhorn Glacier 1,400 m below. The bodies of all but Douglas were later found, and are buried today in the Zermatt churchyard.
Three days later, on 17 July, a party led by Jean-Antoine Carrel reached the summit from the Italian side. Julius Elliott made the second ascent from the Zermatt side, in 1868, and soon after John Tyndall traversed the summit. In 1871, Lucy Walker became the first woman to stand atop the mountain, followed a few weeks later by her rival Meta Brevoort.
Matterhornridedisneylandposters.JPG
A small imitation "Matterhorn" featuring bobsleds is one of the attractions at Disneyland in Anaheim, California. The ride opened in 1959.
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See also
The Haute Route from Chamonix to Zermatt Template:Commons
References
- Charles Gos, Le Cervin (Attinger, 1948)
- Edward Whymper, Scrambles Amongst the Alps (1871)
External links
- Matterhorn Webcams (http://bergbahnen.zermatt.ch/d/web-cam/zermatt4.html)
- Matterhorn on Summitpost (http://www.summitpost.org/show/mountain_link.pl/mountain_id/53)
- PeakWare info on Matterhorn (http://www.peakware.com/encyclopedia/peaks/matterhorn.htm)
- Matterhorn on 4000er.de (http://www.4000er.de/gipfel.php?vid=50&lang=en)
- Pictures from a climb (http://ski-zermatt.com/mattnet/features/matterhorn_climb/)
- Hörnli-hütte page (http://www.zermatt.ch/matterhorn-group/berghaus-matterhorn/)
- Walt Disney and Zermatt (http://michaelbarrier.com/Essays/EuropeanJournal_Zermatt/europeanjournal_zermatt.htm)
- Bergbahnen (http://bergbahnen.zermatt.ch/d/web-cam/zermatt4.html)
Gallery
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