Cima Brenta is the highest[2] mountain in the Brenta group (It.: Dolomiti di Brenta), a subgroup of the Rhaetian Alps in the Italian Region of Trentino-Alto Adige, with a reported height of 3,150 metres (10,330 ft).[3] The mountain rises imposingly up between the rock towers and pinnacles of the central Brenta Group. A sharp ridge connects the mountain on its southern side to the Spallone die Massodi. The northern ridge steeply descends towards Bocca del Tuckett. Towards north west a slender couloir descends all the way from the top towards the Vedretta di Brenta Inferiore, the mountain's 'lower' glacier. Large shouldering formations extend towards the west, culminating in the Cima Mandrone and the Punti di Campiglio, and northwest, culminating in the Cima Massari. Above these formations a glacier, the Vedretta di Brenta Superiore, the 'upper' glacier descends the mountain, being cut off by a vertical precipice over the Vedretta di Brenta Inferiore. On the eastern side the mountain rises up with an imposing 700-meter high vertical rock face with on its left side a distinct orange-like color. Above this lies a horizontal ledge, the Cengia Garbari, on which the Via delle Bocchette Alte proceeds. The actual mountain has two summits that are some 250 meters apart, of which the eastern top reaches the highest altitude. The glaciers, vedrette, have been shrinking steadily over the last decades as a result of climate change.
The historical name Cima Brenta was not always as evident as it is today. The toponymy of these parts was largely established by Nepomuceno Bolognini.[4] The mountain, somehow, became a place where nationalistic sentiments were demonstrated. In 1889 the Austro-Hungarian authorities decided to rename the mountain to Kaiser Franz Josef-Spitze.[5] The name never caught on -not even in German literature.[6] When the occasion occurred to raise a large yellow-black imperial flag on the summit,[7] fully visible from Val Rendena as well as from Molveno, local guide Giuseppe 'Bepaccia' Zeni and some companions climbed the mountain to take it down. In 1912, on the other hand, the Italian flag was hoisted by irredentists on Cima Brenta, deliberately just before the first snow fall, so that the flag remained visible until the next summer.[8] Around 1953 electricity company SISM, predecessor of ENEL proposed to build a cable car trajectory from Molveno to the top of Cima Brenta.[9] The plans were abandoned and in 1967 the mountain became protected as part of the Parco Naturale Adamello-Brenta.
^"Cima Brenta - peakbagger". peakbagger.com. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
^Michele Stighen (14 June 2015). "Sorpresa: Cima Tosa non è più la vetta «regina» del Brenta".
^Castiglioni-Buscaini, TCI-CAI Guida dei Monti d'Italia: Dolomiti di Brenta (1977), page 241
^Nepomuceno Bolognini (1823-1900) from Pinzolo, avid irredentist, colonel of the Garibaldinian forces and founder of the Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini. He set out the toponymy of the Brenta Group in the Annuario della SAT 1875, page 42-47.
^With nearby Cima Roma renamed to Marie-Valerie Spitze.
^Zeitschrift des DÖAV 1906, page 330.
^Apart from the alleged culprits to be defined as "Todeschi", history remains unclear. Some have held that the flag was planted by alpinists from Berlin - but that would seem not very probable given the still lingering tensions between Austria and Prussia at the time...
^Silvio Girardi: Molveno, Andalo, Fai della Paganella, Manfrini 1973, page 203
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prior use as a triangulation point. Petter E. Bjørstad, Cima Tosa is lower than CimaBrenta Jonathan de Ferranti & Eberhard Jurgalski's map-checked ALPS...
last several dozen metres to the Virgin Mary (or Madonna) summit (Italian: Cima della Madonna, French: Pointe de la Madone or French: Pointe de la Vierge...
The Adamello Brenta Natural Park (Italian: Parco naturale Adamello Brenta) is a nature reserve in Trentino, Italy. Established in 1967, it encompasses...
d'Oltrepiave; and far away over the Adige River to the west—Dolomiti di Brenta (Western Dolomites). A smaller group is called Piccole Dolomiti (Little...