The Campanile di Val Montanaia is a 2173 m s.l.m. high mountain at the end of the Val Montanaia in the Friulan Dolomites in Italy. The 300-metre high, only 50 to 60-metre wide rock needle has gained fame due to its unusual shape, reminiscent of a Campanile.
Rudolf Reschreiter first made the mountain famous in climbing circles around 1900. Because of its circular band of overhanging rock below the summit, it soon gained the reputation of being "unclimbable". On 7 September 1902, the Italians Napoleone Cozzi and Alberto Zanutti made a first attempt and reached the crux, but could not find a way onto the ring band. Ten days later, after a meeting with Cozzi and Zanutti, the Austrians Karl Günther von Saar and Victor Wolf von Glanvell discovered the transverse passage to the west side, from which the Ring Belt could be reached, and were able to make the first ascent of the Campanile. Their ascent is still considered the normal route ('Via Normale') today.
On 19 September 1926, the summit bell with the Latin inscription "Audentis resonant per me loca muta triumpho" (loosely translated: "Through me the triumph of the daring man resounds in silent places") was erected. After being damaged by lightning in 2019, the bell has been replaced by the CAI of Pordenone after a crowdfunding campaign on Saturday 18 July 2020.
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Author(s): Guido Colombetti
일자: 2021
ISBN: 9788855470599
A selective guidebook describing 105 different sport climbing crags throughout the whole of the Dolomites area, covering the best of the low-level sport climbing across the region, including both single and multi-pitch routes.
Author(s): Daniele Bucco
일자: 2020
ISBN: 9788885475823
This is a comprehensive guidebook describing the rock climbing areas around the Italian and Slovenian border, covering many 1000’s of routes across 78 different crags.
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