Glockenkarkopf


The Glockenkarkopf is a mountain of in the Zillertal Alps on the border between the Austrian state Salzburg and the Italian province of South Tyrol.

Location

The ridgeline of Glockenkarkopf forms the international border extending between two mountain passes, Krimmler Tauern in the west and Birnlücke in the east. Nearby summits include Tauernkopf to the west, and to the southwest the higher Pfaffenschneidkopf, from which the Pfaffenschneid slopes southward. This slope is crossed by the Lausitz path at the Teufelsstiege.

Political history and toponymy

In 1896 the mountain, then belonging to Austria-Hungary, was mentioned in the journal of the Österreichischer Alpenverein. The summit was reached for the first time in 1895 by Franz Hofer and Fritz Kögl. On 16 July 1904 the Italian nationalist, irredentist, and later fascist Ettore Tolomei climbed the mountain, proclaimed himself the first to reach its summit, asserted that it was the northernmost point of the Adriatic Sea's drainage basin and thus belonged to Italy, and named it "Vetta d'Italia". However, the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye defines the northernmost point of Italy as the summit not of Glockenkarkopf, but of nearby , which is slightly farther north and is in fact the northernmost point of the Adriatic Sea's drainage basin.
Tolomei's name is used in Italian maps from 1905 onward. Austrian nobleman and political theorist Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn wrote that United States president Woodrow Wilson was poorly knowledgeable about European geography and history, and that the name "Vetta d'Italia" convinced him of the legitimacy of Italy's claim to the region.
Besides the name "Vetta d'Italia", which is widely rejected by the German-speaking population of South Tyrol, local researchers on the toponymy of village names argue that "Klockerkarkopf" is the older and correct name, being derived from the name "Klockeralm".

Literature

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