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Matterhorn

The Matterhorn (/ˈmætərhɔːrn/,[3][4] German: [ˈmatɐˌhɔʁn]; Italian: Cervino, [tʃerˈviːno]; French: Cervin, [sɛʁvɛ̃]; Romansh: Mont(e) Cervin(u))[note 3] is a mountain of the Alps, straddling the main watershed and border between Switzerland and Italy. It is a large, near-symmetric pyramidal peak in the extended Monte Rosa area of the Pennine Alps, whose summit is 4,478 metres (14,692 ft) high, making it one of the highest summits in the Alps and Europe.[note 4] The four steep faces, rising above the surrounding glaciers, face the four compass points and are split by the Hörnli, Furggen, Leone/Lion, and Zmutt ridges. The mountain overlooks the Swiss town of Zermatt, in the canton of Valais, to the northeast; and the Italian town of Breuil-Cervinia in the Aosta Valley to the south. Just east of the Matterhorn is Theodul Pass, the main passage between the two valleys on its north and south sides, which has been a trade route since the Roman Era.

Matterhorn
East and north faces of the Matterhorn
Highest point
Elevation4,478 m (14,692 ft)
Prominence1,042 m ↓ Col Durand[note 1]
Parent peakWeisshorn
Isolation13.8 km → Liskamm-West Top[note 2]
ListingAlpine four-thousanders
Great north faces of the Alps
Coordinates45°58′35.0″N 7°39′31.0″E / 45.976389°N 7.658611°E / 45.976389; 7.658611Coordinates: 45°58′35.0″N 7°39′31.0″E / 45.976389°N 7.658611°E / 45.976389; 7.658611[1]
Naming
Native name
English translation(German) "Peak of the Meadows"[2]
(Arpitan) "Great Mountain"
Geography
Matterhorn
Location in the Alps
Location
Parent rangePennine Alps
Topo mapswisstopo 1347 Matterhorn
Climbing
First ascent
Easiest routeHörnli ridge (AD, rock/mixed climb)

The Matterhorn was studied by Horace-Bénédict de Saussure in the late eighteenth century, and was followed by other renowned naturalists and artists, such as John Ruskin, in the 19th century. It remained unclimbed after most of the other great Alpine peaks had been attained and became the subject of an international competition for the summit. The first ascent of the Matterhorn was in 1865 from Zermatt by a party led by Edward Whymper, but during the descent, a sudden fall claimed the lives of four of the seven climbers. This disaster, later portrayed in several films, marked the end of the golden age of alpinism.[5] The north face was not climbed until 1931 and is among the three biggest north faces of the Alps, known as "The Trilogy". The west face, the highest of the Matterhorn's four faces, was completely climbed only in 1962. It is estimated that over 500 alpinists have died on the Matterhorn, making it one of the deadliest peaks in the world.[6]

The Matterhorn is mainly composed of gneisses (originally fragments of the African Plate before the Alpine orogeny) from the Dent Blanche nappe, lying over ophiolites and sedimentary rocks of the Penninic nappes. The mountain's current shape is the result of cirque erosion due to multiple glaciers diverging from the peak, such as the Matterhorn Glacier at the base of the north face. Sometimes referred to as the Mountain of Mountains (German: Berg der Berge),[7] it has become an indelible emblem of the Alps in general. Since the end of the 19th century, when railways were built in the area, the mountain has attracted increasing numbers of visitors and climbers. Each year, numerous mountaineers try to climb the Matterhorn from the Hörnli Hut via the northeast Hörnli ridge, the most popular route to the summit. Many trekkers also undertake the 10-day-long circuit around the mountain. The Matterhorn has been part of the Swiss Federal Inventory of Natural Monuments since 1983.

Names

Location of the Matterhorn

The name Matterhorn derives from the German words Matte ("meadow") and Horn ("horn"),[8] and is often translated as "the peak of the meadows".[2]

In the Schalbetter map, printed by Sebastian Münster in 1545, the valley is labelled Mattertal, but the mountain has the Latin name Mons Silvius as well as the German name Augstalberg, in concord with the Aosta Valley (German Augstal). The 1548 map by Johannes Stumpf gives only Mons Silvius.

The French name Cervin, from which the Italian term Cervino derives, stems from the Latin Mons Silvanus (or Mons Sylvanus), where silva means "forest"; this was corrupted to Selvin and then Servin. The change of the first letter "s" to "c" is attributed to Horace Bénédict de Saussure,[9] who thought the word was related to "deer" (French: cerf and Italian: cervo).[10]

 
View on the south and east faces and the area of the Theodul Pass between Italy (left) and Switzerland (right)

Josias Simler hypothesized in De Alpibus Commentarius (1574) that the name Mons Silvius was readopted by T. G. Farinetti:[11] "Silvius was probably a Roman leader who sojourned with his legions in the land of the Salassi and the Seduni, and perhaps crossed the Theodul Pass between these two places. This Silvius may have been that same Servius Galba whom Caesar charged with the opening up of the Alpine passes, which from that time onward traders have been wanting to cross with great danger and grave difficulty.[12] Servius Galba, in order to carry out Caesar's orders, came with his legions from Allobroges (Savoy) to Octodurum (Martigny) in the Valais, and pitched his camp there. The passes which he had orders to open from there could be no other than the St. Bernard, the Simplon, the Theodul, and the Moro; it therefore seems likely that the name of Servius, whence Silvius and later Servin, or Cervin, was given in his honour to the famous pyramid." It is unknown when the new name of Servin, or Cervin, replaced the old, from which it seems to be derived.[13]: 289 

The Matterhorn is also named Gran Bècca ("big mountain") by the Valdôtains[14] and Horu by the local Walliser German speaking people.[15]

Because of its recognizable shape, many other similar mountains around the world were named or nicknamed the 'Matterhorn' of their respective countries or mountain ranges.[16]

Height

 
The Matterhorn on the National Map of Switzerland

The Matterhorn has two distinct summits, situated at either end of a 100-metre-long (330 ft) exposed rocky crest which forms the Italian/Swiss border.[17] In August 1792, the Genevan geologist and explorer Horace Bénédict de Saussure made the first measurement of the Matterhorn's height, using a sextant and a 50-foot-long (15 m) chain spread out on the Theodul glacier. He calculated its height as 4,501.7 m (14,769 ft).[18] In 1868 the Italian engineer Felice Giordano measured a height of 4,505 m (14,780 ft) by means of a mercury barometer, which he had taken to the summit. The Dufour map, which was afterwards followed by the Italian surveyors, gave 4,482 m (14,705 ft) as the height of the Swiss summit.[13]: 317 

In 1999, the summit height was precisely determined to be at 4,477.54 m (14,690 ft) above sea level by using Global Positioning System technology as part of the TOWER Project (Top of the World Elevations Remeasurement) and to an accuracy of less than one centimetre, which allows future changes to be tracked.[19]

The topographic prominence of the Matterhorn is 1,042 metres (3,419 ft) as the ridge connecting it with a higher summit (in this case the Weisshorn, which is the culminating point of the range west of the Mattertal valley) sinks to a height of 3,436 m (11,273 ft) at the Col Durand, a saddle between the Pointe de Zinal and the Mont Durand.[20] The topographic isolation is 13.9 km (8.6 mi), as the nearest point of higher elevation is the one-metre (3 ft 3 in) higher Western Liskamm.[21]

 
View on the east face with alpine lake

Considering mountains with a topographic prominence of at least 300 m (980 ft), the Matterhorn is the sixth-highest summit in the Alps and Europe outside the Caucasus Mountains. It is the fifth-highest summit of Valais and Switzerland and the third highest summit of the Aosta Valley and Italy.[22] Locally, it is the third-highest summit in the municipality of Zermatt and the highest summit in the municipality of Valtournenche. On the official International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation list of Alpine four-thousanders, which also includes subsidiary summits of higher mountains such as the nearby Monte Rosa, the Matterhorn is the 12th highest summit in the Alps.[23]

Height measurements by year[24]
1792 (Saussure's Travels in the Alps)[25] 1862 (Dufour Map) 1868 (Giordano) 1880 (Siegfried Map) 1934 (S. M.) 1946 (National Map) 1999 (TOWER) 2010 (N. M.)
4,501.7 m
(2309.75 T)
4,482 m 4,505 m 4,482 m 4,481 m 4,477.5 m 4,477.54 m 4,478 m

Geography

 
View from the summit towards Monte Rosa with the valleys of Mattertal (left) and Valtournenche (right)
 
Aerial panorama of the Matterhorn from the Gornergrat 170622

The Matterhorn has a pyramidal shape with four faces nearly facing the four compass points. Three of them (north, east and west) are on the Swiss side of the border and watershed (Mattertal valley) and one of them (south) is on the Italian side of the border (Valtournenche valley). The north face overlooks the Ober Gabelhorn (7 km away) across the Zmutt Glacier and valley (above Zermatt), the east face overlooks the Gorner Glacier system between the Gornergrat and Monte Rosa (respectively 10 and 17 km away) across the Theodul Pass, the west face overlooks the upper basin of the Zmutt Glacier between the Dent Blanche and the Dent d'Hérens (respectively 7 and 4 km away) and the south face fronts the resort town of Breuil-Cervinia and overlooks a good portion of the Valtournenche. The Matterhorn does not form a perfect square pyramid, as the north and south faces are wider than the west and east faces. Moreover, the latter faces do not actually meet on the summit but are connected by a 100-metre-long horizontal west–east ridge between the north and south faces.

The Matterhorn's faces are 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 largest of which are the Tiefmattengletscher to the west, part of the Zmutt Glacier, and the Matterhorn Glacier to the north. Smaller glaciers lie at the base of the south face (the Lower Matterhorn Glacier) and the east face (unnamed). In this area, the border between Switzerland and Italy coincides with the main Alpine watershed, separating the drainage basin of the Rhone on the north (Mediterranean Sea) and that of the Po on the south (Adriatic Sea). The north side is drained by the Zmuttbach (west and north faces) and the Gornera through the Furggbach (east face), tributaries of the Rhone through the (Matter) Vispa.[26] The south side and face is drained by the Marmore torrent, a tributary of the Po through the Dora Baltea (or Doire baltée). The Theodul Pass, located on the watershed between the Matterhorn and the Breithorn, at 3,295 metres, is the easiest passage between the two valleys and countries (the slightly lower Furggjoch not being used as a pass). The pass was used as a crossover and trade route for the Romans and the Romanised Celtic population Salassi between 100 BCE and 400 CE.[27] The area is now heavily glaciated and covered on the north side by the Theodul Glacier.

Well-known faces are the east and north, visible from the area of Zermatt, although mostly hidden from the Mattertal by the chain of the Weisshorn. The east face is 1,000 metres high and, because it is "a long, monotonous slope of rotten rocks",[28] presents a high risk of rockfall, making its ascent dangerous. The north face is 1,200 metres high and is one of the most dangerous north faces in the Alps, in particular for its risk of rockfall and storms. The south face, well visible from the Valtournenche, is 1,350 metres high and offers many different routes. The west face, the highest at 1,400 metres, has the fewest ascent routes and lies in a more remote area than the other faces.

The four main ridges separating the four faces are the main climbing routes. The least difficult technical climb and the usual climbing route, the Hörnli ridge (Hörnligrat), lies between the east and north faces and is aligned towards the Oberrothorn above Zermatt. To its west lies the Zmutt ridge (Zmuttgrat), between the north and west faces and aligned towards the Wandfluehorn; this is, according to Collomb, "the classic route up the mountain, its longest ridge, also the most disjointed."[28] The Lion ridge (Cresta del Leone / Arête du lion), lying between the south and west faces and aligned towards the Dent d'Hérens is the Italian normal route and goes across Pic Tyndall; Collomb comments, "A superb rock ridge, the shortest on the mountain, now draped with many fixed ropes, but a far superior climb compared with the Hörnli."[28] Finally the south side is separated from the east side by the Furggen ridge (Furggengrat), which is aligned towards the Klein Matterhorn. It is, according to Collomb, "the hardest of the ridges [...] the ridge still has an awesome reputation but is not too difficult in good conditions by the indirect finish".[28]

While the Matterhorn is the culminating point of the Valtournenche on the south, it is only one of the many 4000 metres summits of the Mattertal valley on the north. Its height is exceeded by four major summits: the Weisshorn (4,505 m), the Dom (4,545 m), the Liskamm (4,527 m) and the second-highest in the Alps, Monte Rosa (4,634 m). This section of the Pennine Alps, including the Matterhorn, the Zinalrothorn, the Dent Blanche, the Dent d'Hérens, the Breithorn, the Strahlhorn, the Rimpfischhorn and the Alphubel, concentrates most of western Europe's highest mountains and forms a crown of peaks around Zermatt. The deeply glaciated region between the Matterhorn and Monte Rosa (named Dent Blanche-Matterhorn-Monte Rosa) is listed in the Federal Inventory of Landscapes and Natural Monuments since 1983.

The four faces of the Matterhorn:
 
North
 
West
 
South
 
East

Weather

The Matterhorn is an isolated mountain. Because of its position on the main Alpine watershed and its great height, the Matterhorn is exposed to rapid weather changes. In addition, the steep faces of the mountain and its isolated location make it prone to banner clouds formation, with the air flowing around the mountain producing condensation of the air on the lee side and also creating vortices.

Geology

The Matterhorn's pyramid is composed of Paleozoic rocks, which were thrusted over the Matterhorn's Mesozoic base during the Cenozoic. Quaternary glaciation and weathering give the mountain its current shape.[29]

Apart from the base of the mountain, the Matterhorn is composed of gneiss belonging to the Dent Blanche klippe, an isolated part of the Austroalpine nappes, lying over the Penninic nappes. The Austroalpine nappes are part of the Apulian plate, a small continent that broke up from Africa before the Alpine orogeny. For this reason, the Matterhorn has been popularized as an African mountain. The Austroalpine nappes are mostly common in the Eastern Alps.

The Swiss explorer and geologist Horace-Bénédict de Saussure, inspired by the view of the Matterhorn, anticipated modern theories of geology:

What power must have been required to shatter and to sweep away the missing parts of this pyramid; for we do not see it surrounded by heaps of fragments; one only sees other peaks - themselves rooted to the ground - whose sides, equally rent, indicate an immense mass of débris, of which we do not see any trace in the neighbourhood. Doubtless, this is that débris which, in the form of pebbles, boulders, and sand, fills our valleys and our plains.[30]

Formation

 
Different layers of rock can be seen: the lower part is sedimentary rock (brown); the middle part is greenschist from the oceanic crust. The peak itself is gneiss from the African continent.

The formation of the Matterhorn (and the whole Alpine range) started with the break-up of the Pangaea continent 200 million years ago into Laurasia (containing Europe) and Gondwana (containing Africa). While the rocks constituting the nearby Monte Rosa remained in Laurasia, the rocks constituting the Matterhorn found themselves in Gondwana, separated by the newly formed Tethys Ocean.

100 million years ago the extension of the Tethys Ocean stopped and the Apulian plate broke from Gondwana and moved toward the European continent. This resulted in the closure of the western Tethys by subduction under the Apulian plate (with the Piemont-Liguria Ocean first and Valais Ocean later). The subduction of the oceanic crust left traces still visible today at the base of the Matterhorn (accretionary prism). The orogeny itself began after the end of the oceanic subduction when the European continental crust collided with the Apulian continent, resulting in the formation of nappes.

The Matterhorn acquired its characteristic pyramidal shape in much more recent times as it was caused by natural erosion over the past million years. At the beginning of alpine orogeny, the Matterhorn was only a rounded mountain like a hill. Because its height is above the snowline, its flanks are covered by ice, resulting from the accumulation and compaction of snow. During the warmer period of summer, part of the ice melts and seeps into the bedrock. When it freezes again, it fractures pieces of rock because of its dilatation (freeze-thaw), forming a cirque. Four cirques led to the shape of the mountain.

Rocks

Most of the base of the mountain lies in the Tsaté nappe, a remnant of the Piedmont-Liguria oceanic crust (ophiolites) and its sedimentary rocks.[31] Up to 3,400 metres the mountain is composed of successive layers of ophiolites and sedimentary rocks. From 3,400 metres to the top, the rocks are gneisses from the Dent Blanche nappe (Austroalpine nappes). They are divided into the Arolla series (below 4,200 m) and the Valpelline zone (the summit).[32] Other mountains in the region (Weisshorn, Zinalrothorn, Dent Blanche, Mont Collon) also belong to the Dent Blanche nappe.

Tourism and trekking

Flight around the Matterhorn

Since the eighteenth century, the Alps have attracted more and more people and fascinated generations of explorers and climbers. The Matterhorn remained relatively little known until 1865, but the successful ascent followed by the tragic accident of the expedition led by Edward Whymper caused a rush on the mountains surrounding Zermatt.

The construction of the railway linking the village of Zermatt from the town of Visp started in 1888. The first train reached Zermatt on 18 July 1891 and the entire line was electrified in 1930.[33] Since 1930 the village is directly connected to St. Moritz by the Glacier Express panoramic train. However, there is no connection with the village of Breuil-Cervinia on the Italian side. Travellers have to hire mountain guides to cross the 3,300-metre-high glaciated Theodul Pass, separating the two resorts. The town of Zermatt remains almost completely free of internal combustion vehicles and can be reached by train only. (Apart from the local police service which uses a Volkswagen car, and the refuse collection lorry, only electric vehicles are used locally).

 
View from the train to the Gornergrat

Rail and cable-car facilities have been built to make some of the summits in the area more accessible. The Gornergrat railway, reaching a record altitude of 3,100 metres, was inaugurated in 1898. Areas served by cable car are the Unterrothorn and the Klein Matterhorn (Little Matterhorn) (3,883 m, highest transportation system in Europe). The Hörnli Hut (3,260 m), which is the start of the normal route via the Hörnli ridge, is easily accessible from Schwarzsee (2,600 m) and is also frequented by hikers. The Zermatt and Breuil-Cervinia resorts function as separate ski resort all year round and are connected by skilifts over the Theodul Pass. In 2015 it was expected that there would be constructed a cable car link between Testa Grigia (or Tête grise) and Klein Matterhorn.[34] It will finally provide a link between the Swiss and Italian side of the Matterhorn.[35]

The Matterhorn Museum (Zermatt) relates the general history of the region from alpinism to tourism. In the museum, which is in the form of a reconstituted mountain village, the visitors can relive the first and tragic ascent of the Matterhorn and see the objects that belonged to the protagonists.

The Tour of the Matterhorn can be effected by trekkers in about 10 days. Considered by some as one of the most beautiful treks in the Alps, it follows many ancient trails that have linked the Swiss and Italian valleys for centuries. The circuit includes alpine meadows, balcony trails, larch forests and glacial crossings. It connects six valleys embracing three different cultures: the German-speaking high Valais, the French-speaking central Valais and the bilingual French/Italian-speaking Aosta Valley. Good conditions are necessary to circumnavigate the peak. After reaching Zinal from Zermatt by the Augstbord and Meiden passes, the trekker crosses the Col de Sorebois and the Col de Torrent before arriving at Arolla. Then the Arolla Glacier and the Col Collon must be crossed on the way to Prarayer, followed by the Col de Valcournera to Breuil-Cervinia. In the last and highest section, the Theodul Pass must be crossed before returning to Zermatt. In total, seven passes between 2,800 and 3,300 metres must be crossed on relatively difficult terrain.[36]

As of 2015, almost two million visitors arrive at Zermatt annually. An average of around twelve people per year have died on Matterhorn in the ten years from 2005 to 2015.[37]

Climbing history

 
Plaque on the front wall of the Monte Rosa Hotel, commemorating the first ascent by Edward Whymper[note 5]

The Matterhorn was one of the last of the main Alpine mountains to be ascended, not because of its technical difficulty, but because of the fear it inspired in early mountaineers. The first serious attempts were all from the Italian side, although, despite appearances, the southern routes are technically harder. The main figures were Jean-Antoine Carrel and his uncle Jean-Jacques Carrel, from the Valtournenche area, who made the first attempts in 1857 and 1858, reaching 3,800 m (12,500 ft) on the latter occasion.[38] In July 1860, three brothers from Liverpool attempted the mountain, Alfred, Charles and Sandbach Parker, but they turned back at about 3,500 m (11,500 ft).[39] In August of the same year, Jean-Jacques Carrel returned to guide, with Johann Joseph Bennen [de], Vaughan Hawkins and John Tyndall to about 3,960 m (12,990 ft) before turning back.[38] In 1861 the Carrels managed to reach the Crête du Coq at 4,032 m (13,228 ft). In July 1862, Jean-Antoine, together with César Carrel, accompanied as porters (sic) John Tyndall, Anton Walters and J.J. Bennen to Matterhorn's Shoulder at 4,248 m (13,937 ft), which was subsequently named Pic Tyndall in honor of the client.[38][39]

Edward Whymper joined the efforts in August 1861, but in his first 7 attempts with a variety of companions could only reach a maximum height of 4,100 m (13,500 ft).[39] However, on 14 July 1865, in what is considered the last ascent of the golden age of alpinism, he was able to reach the summit by an ascent of the Hörnli ridge in Switzerland, guided by the famed French mountaineer Michel Croz and the Swiss father and son Peter Taugwalder Sr. and Jr., and accompanied by the British gentlemen Charles Hudson, Lord Francis Douglas, Douglas Robert Hadow. Upon descent, Hadow, Croz, Hudson and Douglas fell to their deaths[40] on the Matterhorn Glacier, and all but Douglas (whose body was never found) are buried in the Zermatt churchyard.

Just three days later, on 17 July 1865, Jean-Antoine Carrel and Jean-Baptiste Bich reached the summit from the Italian side.[28]

Before the first ascent

In the summer of 1860, Edward Whymper came across the Matterhorn for the first time. He was an English artist and engraver who had been hired by a London publisher to make sketches of the mountains in the region of Zermatt. Although the unclimbed Matterhorn had a mixed reputation among British mountaineers, it fascinated Whymper. Whymper's first attempt was in August 1861, from the village of Breuil on the south side. In Châtillon he hired a Swiss guide, who remained anonymous in his accounts, and in Valtournanche he almost hired Jean-Antoine Carrel as well, but, disliking the looks of Carrel's uncle, he changed his mind.[39] The Carrels decided to give Matterhorn a try by themselves again, and caught up with Whymper at nightfall. Whymper now had "a strong inclination to engage the pair; but, finally, decided against it" and the Carrels went alone to reach a new high on Matterhorn of 4,032 m (13,228 ft) the next day. Whymper and his guide camped one more night on the Col du lion (= Col Tournanche) 3,479 m (11,414 ft) and were forced to turn around only an hour above this pass the day after.[39]

 
The Carrel Hut (3,830 m) on the Lion ridge

In 1862 Whymper made further attempts, still from the south side, on the Lion ridge (or Italian ridge), where the route seemed easier than the Hörnli ridge (the normal route today). On his own, he reached above 4,000 metres, but was injured on his way down to Breuil. In July John Tyndall with Johann Joseph Bennen and another guide overcame most of the difficulties of the ridge that seemed so formidable from below and successfully reached the main shoulder; but at a point not very far below the summit they were stopped by a deep cleft that defied their utmost efforts. The Matterhorn remained unclimbed.

Whymper returned to Breuil in 1863, persuading Carrel to join forces with him and try the mountain once more via the Italian ridge. On this attempt, however, a storm soon developed and they were stuck halfway to the summit. They remained there for 26 hours in their tent before giving up. Whymper did not make another attempt for two years.

In the decisive year 1865, Whymper returned with new plans, deciding to attack the Matterhorn via its south face instead of the Italian ridge. On 21 June, Whymper began his ascent with Swiss guides, but halfway up they experienced severe rockfall; although nobody was injured, they decided to give up the ascent. This was Whymper's seventh attempt.

During the following weeks, Whymper spent his time climbing other mountains in the area with his guides, before going back to Breuil on 7 July. Meanwhile, the Italian Alpine Club was founded and its leaders, Felice Giordano and Quintino Sella, established plans to conquer the Matterhorn before any non-Italian could succeed. Felice Giordano hired Carrel as a guide. He feared the arrival of Whymper, now a rival, and wrote to Quintino Sella:[41]

I have tried to keep everything secret, but that fellow whose life seems to depend on the Matterhorn is here, suspiciously prying into everything. I have taken all the best men away from him; and yet he is so enamored of the mountain that he may go with others...He is here in the hotel and I try to avoid speaking to him.

 
The Matterhorn seen from the Valtournenche Valley

Just as he did two years before, Whymper asked Carrel to be his guide, but Carrel declined; Whymper was also unsuccessful in hiring other local guides from Breuil. When Whymper discovered Giordano and Carrel's plan, he left Breuil and crossed the Theodul Pass to Zermatt to hire local guides. He encountered Lord Francis Douglas, a Scottish mountaineer, who also wanted to climb the Matterhorn. They arrived later in Zermatt in the Monte Rosa Hotel, where they met two other British climbers — the Reverend Charles Hudson and his young and inexperienced companion, Douglas Robert Hadow — who had hired the French guide Michel Croz to try to make the first ascent. These two groups decided to join forces and try the ascent of the Hörnli ridge. They hired another two local guides, a father and son, both named Peter Taugwalder.

First ascent

Whymper and party left Zermatt early in the morning of 13 July 1865, heading to the foot of the Hörnli ridge, which they reached 6 hours later (approximately where the Hörnli Hut is situated today). Meanwhile, Carrel and six other Italian guides also began their ascent of the Italian ridge.

Despite its appearance, Whymper wrote that the Hörnli ridge was much easier to climb than the Italian ridge:

We were now fairly upon the mountain, and were astonished to find that places which from the Riffel, or even from the Furggen Glacier, looked entirely impracticable, were so easy that we could run about.[42]

 
The first ascent of the Matterhorn, by Gustave Doré

After camping for the night, Whymper and party started on the ridge. According to Whymper:

The whole of this great slope was now revealed, rising for 3,000 feet like a huge natural staircase. Some parts were more, and others were less, easy; but we were not once brought to a halt by any serious impediment, for when an obstruction was met in front it could always be turned to the right or left. For the greater part of the way there was, indeed, no occasion for the rope, and sometimes Hudson led, sometimes myself. At 6.20 we had attained a height of 12,800 feet and halted for half an hour; we then continued the ascent without a break until 9.55, when we stopped for fifty minutes, at a height of 14,000 feet.[42]

When the party came close to the summit, they had to leave the ridge for the north face because "[the ridge] was usually more rotten and steep, and always more difficult than the face".[42] At this point of the ascent Whymper wrote that the less experienced Hadow "required continual assistance".[42] Having overcome these difficulties the group finally arrived in the summit area, with Croz and Whymper reaching the top first.

The slope eased off, and Croz and I, dashing away, ran a neck-and-neck race, which ended in a dead heat. At 1.40 p.m. the world was at our feet, and the Matterhorn was conquered. Hurrah! Not a footstep could be seen.[42]

Precisely at this moment, Carrel and party were approximatively 400 metres below, still dealing with the most difficult parts of the Italian ridge. When seeing his rival on the summit, Carrel and party gave up on their attempt and went back to Breuil.

 
The first descent of the Matterhorn, by Gustave Doré

After building a cairn, Whymper and party stayed an hour on the summit. Then they began their descent of the Hörnli ridge. Croz descended first, then Hadow, Hudson and Douglas, the elder Taugwalder, Whymper, with the younger Taugwalder coming last. They climbed down with great care, only one man moving at a time. Whymper wrote:

As far as I know, at the moment of the accident no one was actually moving. I cannot speak with certainty, neither can the Taugwalders, because the two leading men were partially hidden from our sight by an intervening mass of rock. Poor Croz had laid aside his axe, and in order to give Mr. Hadow greater security was absolutely taking hold of his legs and putting his feet, one by one, into their proper positions. From the movements of their shoulders it is my belief that Croz, having done as I have said, was in the act of turning round to go down a step or two himself; at this moment Mr. Hadow slipped, fell on him, and knocked him over.[43]

The weight of the falling men pulled Hudson and Douglas from their holds and dragged them down the north face. The Taugwalders and Whymper were left alive when the rope linking Douglas to the elder Taugwalder broke. They were stunned by the accident and for a time could not move until the younger Taugwalder descended to enable them to advance. When they were together Whymper asked to see the broken rope and saw that it had been employed by mistake as it was the weakest and oldest of the three ropes they had brought. They frantically looked, but in vain, for traces of their fallen companions. They continued their descent, including an hour in the dark, until 9.30 p.m. when a resting place was found. The descent was resumed at daybreak and the group finally reached Zermatt, where a search of the victims was quickly organized. The bodies of Croz, Hadow and Hudson were found on the Matterhorn Glacier, but the body of Douglas was never found. Although the elder Taugwalder was accused of cutting the rope to save himself and his son, the official inquest found no proof of this.[44]

Second ascent

 
South-west side of the Matterhorn (Tyndall shoulder on the foreground)

On 16 July, two days after the first ascent and the catastrophe, Jean-Antoine Carrel set out to crown Whymper's victory by proving that the Italian side was not unconquerable. He was accompanied by Amé Gorret, a priest who had shared with him the first attempt on the mountain back in 1857. Jean-Baptiste Bich and Jean-Augustin Meynet completed the party. Giordano would have joined them, but Carrel refused absolutely to take him with them; he said he would not have the strength to guide a traveller, and could neither answer for the result nor for any one's life. After hearing Sunday mass at the chapel of Breuil, the party started. Amé Gorret has described this ascent with enthusiasm: "At last we crossed the Col du Lion and set foot upon the pyramid of the Matterhorn!" On the following day, the 17th, they continued the ascent and reached Tyndall's flagstaff. "We were about to enter unknown country," wrote Gorret, "for no man had gone beyond this point." Here opinions were divided; Gorret suggested ascending by the ridge and scaling the last tower straight up. Carrel was inclined to traverse to the west of the peak, and thence go up on the Zmutt side. Naturally the wish of Carrel prevailed, for he was the leader and had not lost the habit of command, notwithstanding his recent defeat.[45]

They made the passage of the enjambée, and traversed the west face to reach the Zmutt ridge. A false step made by one of the party and a fall of icicles from above warned them to return to the direct line of ascent, and the traverse back to the Lion ridge was one of the greatest difficulty. A falling stone injured Gorret in the arm.[45]

At last they reached the base of the final tower. "We stood," wrote Gorret, "in a place that was almost comfortable. Although it was not more than two yards wide, and the slope was one of 75 percent, we gave it all kinds of pleasant names : the corridor, the gallery, the railroad, &c., &c." They imagined all difficulties were at an end; but a rock couloir, which they had hitherto not observed, lay between them and the final bit of ridge, where progress would be perfectly easy. It would have been unwise for all four to descend into the couloir, because they did not know where to fix the rope that would be needed on their return. Time pressed: it was necessary to reduce the numbers of the party; Gorret sacrificed himself, and Meynet stopped with him. Very soon afterwards Carrel and Bich were finally on the top. Meanwhile, Giordano at Breuil was writing in his diary as follows: "Splendid weather; at 9.30 saw Carrel and his men on the Shoulder, after that saw nothing more of them. Then much mist about the summit. Lifted a bit about 3.30, and we saw our flag on the western summit of the Matterhorn."[45]

Other ascents

Ridges

 
The north and west faces with the snowy Zmutt ridge in the centre
 
On the Zmutt ridge, with north face in background (c. 3,900 m)

The first direct ascent of the Italian (south-west) ridge as it is climbed today was by J. J. and J. P. Maquignaz on 13 September 1867.[28] Julius Elliott made the second ascent via the Hörnli (north-east) ridge in 1868, and later that year the party of John Tyndall, J. J. and J. P. Maquignaz was the first to traverse the summit by way of the Hörnli and Italian ridges.[28] On 22 August 1871, while wearing a white print dress, Lucy Walker became the first woman to reach the summit of the Matterhorn,[46] followed a few weeks later by her rival Meta Brevoort. The first winter ascent of the Hörnli ridge was by Vittorio Sella with guides J. A. Carrel, J. B. Carrel and L. Carrel on 17 March 1882,[28] and its first solo ascent was made by W. Paulcke in 1898.[28] The first winter solo ascent of the Hörnli ridge was by G. Gervasutti in 1936.[28]

The Zmutt (north-west) ridge was first climbed by Albert F. Mummery, Alexander Burgener, J. Petrus and A. Gentinetta on 3 September 1879. Its first solo ascent was made by Hans Pfann in 1906,[28] and the first winter ascent was made by H. Masson and E. Petrig on 25 March 1948.[28]

The last of the Matterhorn's four ridges to be ascended was the Furggen (south-east) ridge. M. Piacenza with guides J. J. Carrel and J. Gaspard on 9 September 1911, climbed most of the ridge but bypassed the overhangs near the top to the south.[28] Not until 23 September 1942, during the Second World War, did Alfredo Perino, along with guides Louis Carrel (nicknamed "The Little Carrel") and Giacomo Chiara, climb the complete ridge and the overhangs directly.[47]

In 1966, René Arnold and Joseph Graven made the first solo enchainement of the four Matterhorn ridges in 19.5 hours. Beginning at the 3,300m Bossi Bivouac hut, the pair followed the normal route up the Furggen Ridge and then descended the Hornli Ridge. After crossing the Matterhorn Glacier at the base of the north face, they ascended the Zmutt Ridge and then descended the Italian (Lion) Ridge to the village of Breuil. In 1985, Marco Barmasse repeated their achievement, but this time his route included the first solo ascent of the Furggen overhangs. He completed the enchainement, reaching the Abruzzi Hut after 15 hours.[48]

On 20 August 1992, Italian alpinist Hans Kammerlander and Swiss alpine guide Diego Wellig climbed the Matterhorn four times in just 23 hours and 26 minutes. The route they followed was: Zmutt ridge–summit–Hörnli ridge (descent)–Furggen ridge–summit–Lion ridge (descent)–Lion ridge–summit–Hörnli ridge (descent)–Hörnli ridge–summit–Hörnli Hut (descent).[49] However the Italian route (Lion Ridge), was not climbed from Duca degli Abruzzi Refuge at 2802 m, but from Carrel Hut, at 3830 m, both uphill and downhill.[50]

In 1995, Bruno Brunod climbed Matterhorn from the village Breuil-Cervinia in 2 h 10 min.[51] and from Breuil-Cervinia to Matterhorn and back, in 3:14:44[52]

On 21 August 2013, the Spanish mountain runner Kilian Jornet broke Brunod's record as it took him 1 hour, 56 min to the top from Breuil-Cervinia - a round-trip time of 2 hours 52 minutes to return to his starting point.[53]

 
The north and east faces of the Matterhorn.

Faces

William Penhall and guides made the first (partial) ascent of the west face, the Matterhorn's most hidden and unknown, one hour after Mummery and party's first ascent of the Zmutt ridge on 3 September 1879.[54][55] It was not until 1962 that the west face was completely climbed. The ascent was made on 13 August by Renato Daguin and Giovanni Ottin.[56][57] In January 1978 seven Italian alpine guides made a successful winter climb of Daguin and Ottin's highly direct, and previously unrepeated, 1962 route. But a storm came during their ascent, bringing two metres of snow to Breuil-Cervinia and Zermatt, and their accomplishment turned bitter when one of the climbers died during the descent.[47]

The north face, before it was climbed in 1931, was one of the last great big wall problems in the Alps. To succeed on the north face, good climbing and ice-climbing technique and route-finding ability were required. Unexpectedly it was first climbed by the brothers Franz and Toni Schmid on 31 July – 1 August 1931. They reached the summit at the end of the second day, after a night of bivouac. Because they had kept their plans secret, their ascent was a complete surprise. In addition, the two brothers had travelled by bicycle from Munich and after their successful ascent they cycled back home again.[58] The first winter ascent of the north face was made by Hilti von Allmen and Paul Etter on 3-4 February 1962.[28] Its first solo ascent was made in five hours by Dieter Marchart on 22 July 1959.[28] Walter Bonatti climbed the "North Face Direct" solo on 18-22 February 1965.[28] The same year, Yvette Vaucher became the first woman to climb the north face.[59] Bonatti's direct route was not repeated solo until 29 years later, in winter 1994 by Catherine Destivelle.

Ueli Steck set the record time in climbing the north face (Schmid route) of Matterhorn in 2009 with a time of 1 hour 56 minutes.[60]

After Bonatti's climb, the best alpinists were still preoccupied with one last great problem: the "Zmutt Nose", an overhang lying on the right-hand side of the north face. In July 1969 two Italians, Alessandro Gogna and Leo Cerruti, attempted to solve the problem. It took them four days to figure out the unusual overhangs, avoiding however its steepest part. In July 1981 the Swiss Michel Piola and Pierre-Alain Steiner surmounted the Zmutt Nose by following a direct route, the Piola-Steiner.[47][61]

The first ascent of the south face was made by Enzo Benedetti with guides Louis Carrel and Maurice Bich on 15 October 1931,[28] and the first complete ascent of the east face was made by Enzo Benedetti and G. Mazzotti with guides Louis and Lucien Carrel, Maurice Bich and Antoine Gaspard on 18-19 September 1932.[28]

Casualties on the Matterhorn

 
A climber standing on the summit.

The four men lost in 1865 have not been the only fatalities on the Matterhorn. In fact, several climbers die each year due to a number of factors including the scale of the climb and its inherent dangers, inexperience, falling rocks, and overcrowded routes. The Matterhorn is thus amongst the deadliest mountains in the world. By the late 1980s, it was estimated that over 500 people have died whilst attempting its summit since the 1865 ascent, with an average of about 12 deaths each year.[62]

In the 2000s, there was a trend of fewer people dying each year on the mountain. This has been attributed partly to a greater awareness of the risks, and also due to the fact that a majority of climbers now use local guides.[63] However, in the summer of 2018, at least ten people died on the mountain.[64]

Here is a list of people who died on the mountain whose bodies were not recovered until later:

  • 1954 French skier Henri le Masne went missing on the Matterhorn. In 2005 remains were found, identified as le Masne in 2018[65]
  • 1970 Two Japanese climbers missing; remains found after 45 years in 2015[66]
  • 1979 British climber missing; remains found after 34 years in 2014[67]
  • 2014 Japanese hiker missing; remains found 2018[68]
  • 2016 Two British climbers missing; remains found 2016[69]

Legacy: beginning of mountain culture

The first ascent of the Matterhorn changed mountain culture. Whymper’s book about his first ascent, Scrambles Amongst the Alps, published in 1871, was a worldwide bestseller. Tourists began to visit Switzerland in the summer to see the Alps and often hired locals as guides. With the beginning of alpine skiing in the early 20th century, tourists began traveling to Switzerland in winter also. Mountaineering, in part, helped transform Switzerland’s mountain regions from poor rural areas to tourist destinations. This combination of mountain climbing, skiing and tourism, was used in the western United States, creating Sun Valley, Vail, Jackson Hole, and other mountain towns around the world.[70]

Climbing routes

 
Trail to the Hörnli Hut

Today, all ridges and faces of the Matterhorn have been ascended in all seasons, and mountain guides take a large number of people up the northeast Hörnli route each summer. In total, up to 150 climbers attempt the Matterhorn each day during summer. By modern standards, the climb is fairly difficult (AD Difficulty rating), but not hard for skilled mountaineers according to French climbing grades. There are fixed ropes on parts of the route to help. Still, it should be remembered that several climbers may die on the mountain each year.

The usual pattern of ascent is to take the Schwarzsee cable car up from Zermatt, hike up to the Hörnli Hut elev. 3,260 m (10,700 ft), a large stone building at the base of the main ridge, and spend the night. The next day, climbers rise at 3:30 am so as to reach the summit and descend before the regular afternoon clouds and storms come in. The Solvay Hut located on the ridge at 4,003 m (13,133 ft) can be used only in a case of emergency.

Other popular routes on the mountain include the Italian (Lion) ridge (AD+ Difficulty rating) and the Zmutt ridge (D Difficulty rating). The four faces, as well as the Furggen ridge, constitute the most challenging routes to the summit. The north face is amongst the six most difficult faces of the Alps, as well as ‘The Trilogy’, the three hardest of the six, along with the north faces of the Eiger and the Grandes Jorasses (TD+ Difficulty rating).

Overcrowding on the several routes have become an issue and guides and local authorities have struggled with how to regulate the numbers. In 2015 the Hörnli hut became the first mountain shelter in Europe to limit beds.[71]

Routes Start Time of ascent Difficulty
Ridges Hörnli Hörnli Hut 6 hours AD/III-
Zmutt Hörnli Hut (or Schönbiel Hut) 7 hours (10 hours) D/IV
Lion Carrel Hut 5 hours AD+/III
Furggen Bivacco Bossi 7 hours TD/V+
Faces North Hörnli Hut 14 hours TD/V
West Schönbiel Hut 12 hours TD/V+
South Rifugio Duca degli Abruzzi 15 hours TD+/V+
East Hörnli Hut 14 hours TD

History

Aegidius Tschudi, one of the earliest Alpine topographers and historians, was the first to mention the region around the Matterhorn in his work, De Prisca ac Vera Alpina Raethi, published in Basel in 1538. He approached the Matterhorn as a student when in his Alpine travels he reached the summit of the Theodul Pass but he does not seem to have paid any particular attention to the mountain itself.[72]

 
Theodulpass, c. 1800

The Matterhorn remained unstudied for more than two centuries, until a geologist from Geneva, Horace Benedict de Saussure, travelled to the mountain, which filled him with admiration. However, de Saussure was not moved to climb the mountain, and had no hope of measuring its altitude by taking a barometer to its summit. "Its precipitous sides," he wrote, "which give no hold to the very snows, are such as to afford no means of access." Yet his scientific interest was kindled by "the proud peak which rises to so vast an altitude, like a triangular obelisk, that seems to be carved by a chisel." His mind intuitively grasped the causes which gave the peak its present precipitous form: the Matterhorn was not like a perfected crystal; the centuries had laboured to destroy a great part of an ancient and much larger mountain. On his first journey de Saussure had come from Ayas to the Col des Cimes Blanches, from where the Matterhorn first comes into view; descending to Breuil, he ascended to the Theodul Pass. On his second journey, in 1792, he came to the Valtournanche, studying and describing it; he ascended to the Theodul Pass, where he spent three days, analysing the structure of the Matterhorn, whose height he was the first to measure, and collecting stones, plants and insects. He made careful observations, from the sparse lichen that clung to the rocks to the tiny but vigorous glacier fly that fluttered over the snows and whose existence at such heights was mysterious. At night he took refuge under the tent erected near the ruins of an old fort at the top of the pass. During these days he climbed the Klein Matterhorn (3,883 metres), which he named the Cime Brune du Breithorn.[72]

The first inquirers began to come to the Matterhorn. There is a record of a party of Englishmen who in the summer of 1800 crossed the Great St. Bernard Pass, a few months after the passage of Bonaparte; they came to Aosta and thence to Valtournenche, slept at the chalets of Breuil, and traversed the Theodul Pass, which they called Monte Rosa. The Matterhorn was to them an object of the most intense and continuous admiration.[72]

 
The Matterhorn by Edward Theodore Compton, 1879

The Matterhorn is mentioned in a guide-book to Switzerland by Johann Gottfried Ebel, which was published in Zürich towards the end of the eighteenth century, and translated into English in 1818. The mountain appeared in it under the three names of Silvius, Matterhorn, and Mont Cervin, and was briefly described as one of the most splendid and wonderful obelisks in the Alps. On Zermatt there was a note: "A place which may, perhaps, interest the tourist is the valley of Praborgne (Zermatt); it is bounded by huge glaciers which come right down into the valley; the village of Praborgne is fairly high, and stands at a great height above the glaciers; its climate is almost as warm as that of Italy, and plants belonging to hot countries are to be found there at considerable altitudes, above the ice."[72]

William Brockedon, who came to the region in 1825, considered the crossing of the Theodul Pass from Breuil to Zermatt a difficult undertaking. He gave, however, expression to his enthusiasm on the summit. When he arrived exhausted on the top of the pass, he gazed "on the beautiful pyramid of the Cervin, more wonderful than aught else in sight, rising from its bed of ice to a height of 5,000 feet, a spectacle of indescribable grandeur." In this "immense natural amphitheatre, enclosed from time immemorial by snow-clad mountains and glaciers ever white, in the presence of these grand walls the mind is overwhelmed, not indeed that it is unable to contemplate the scene, but it staggers under the immensity of those objects which it contemplates."

Those who made their way up through the Valtournanche to the foot of the mountain were few in number. W. A. B. Coolidge, a diligent collector of old and new stories of the Alps, mentions that during those years, besides Brockedon, only Hirzel-Escher of Zürich, who crossed the Theodul Pass in 1822, starting from Breuil, accompanied by a local guide. The greater number came from the Valais up the Visp valley to Zermatt. In 1813, a Frenchman, Henri Maynard, climbed to the Theodul Pass and made the first ascent of the Breithorn; he was accompanied by numerous guides, among them J. M. Couttet of Chamonix, the same man who had gone with de Saussure to the top of the Klein Matterhorn in 1792. The writings of these pioneers make much mention of the Matterhorn; the bare and inert rock is gradually quickened into life by men's enthusiasm. "Stronger minds," remarked Edward Whymper, "felt the influence of the wonderful form, and men who ordinarily spoke or wrote like rational beings, when they came under its power seemed to quit their senses, and ranted and rhapsodised, losing for a time all common forms of speech."[72]

Among the poets of the Matterhorn during these years (1834 to 1840) were Elie de Beaumont, a famous French geologist; Pierre Jean Édouard Desor, a naturalist of Neuchâtel, who went up there with a party of friends, two of whom were Louis Agassiz and Bernhard Studer. Christian Moritz Engelhardt, who was so filled with admiration for Zermatt and its neighbourhood that he returned there at least ten times (from 1835 to 1855), described these places in two valuable volumes, drew panoramas and maps, and collected the most minute notes on the mineralogy and botany of the region. Zermatt was at that time a quiet little village, and travellers found hospitality at the parish priest's, or at the village doctor's.[72]

 
The Matterhorn by John Ruskin, 1849

In 1841 James David Forbes, professor of natural philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, came to see the Matterhorn. A philosopher and geologist, and an observant traveller, he continued the work of De Saussure in his journeys and his writings. He was full of admiration for the Matterhorn, calling it the most wonderful peak in the Alps, unsealed and unscalable. These words, pronounced by a man noted among all his contemporaries for his thorough knowledge of mountains, show what men's feelings then were towards the Matterhorn, and how at a time when the idea of Alpine exploration was gaining ground in their minds, the Matterhorn stood by itself as a mountain apart, of whose conquest it was vain even to dream. And such it remained till long after this; as such it was described by John Ball twenty years later in his celebrated guide-book. Forbes ascended the Theodul Pass in 1842, climbed the Breithorn, and came down to Breuil; as he descended from the savage scenery of the Matterhorn, the Italian landscapes of the Valtournanche seemed to him like paradise. Meanwhile, Gottlieb Samuel Studer, the geographer, together with Melchior Ulrich, was describing and mapping the topographical features of the Zermatt peaks.[72][73]

Rodolphe Töpffer, who first accompanied and guided youth to the Alps for purposes of education and amusement, began his journeys in 1832, but it is only in 1840 that he mentions the Matterhorn. Two years later Töpffer and his pupils came to Zermatt. He has described this journey of his in a chapter entitled Voyage autour du Mont Blanc jusqu'à Zermatt, here he sings a hymn of praise to the Matterhorn, comparing its form with a "huge crystal of a hundred facets, flashing varied hues, that softly reflects the light, unshaded, from the uttermost depths of the heavens". Töpffer's book was illustrated by Alexandre Calame, his master and friend, with drawings of the Matterhorn, executed in the romantic style of the period. It is an artificial mountain, a picture corresponding rather with the exaggerated effect it produces on the astonished mind of the artist, than with the real form of the mountain.[72]

About this time there came a man who studied the Matterhorn in its structure and form, and who sketched it and described it in all its parts with the curiosity of the artist and the insight of the scientist. This was John Ruskin, a new and original type of philosopher and geologist, painter and poet, whom England was enabled to create during that period of radical intellectual reforms, which led the way for the highest development of her civilisation. Ruskin was the Matterhorn's poet par excellence. He went to Zermatt in 1844, and it is to be noticed as a curious fact, that the first time he saw the Matterhorn it did not please him. The mountain on its lofty pedestal in the very heart of the Alps was, perhaps, too far removed from the ideal he had formed of the mountains; but he returned, studied and dreamt for long at its feet, and at length he pronounced it "the most noble cliff in Europe." Ruskin was no mountaineer, nor a great friend to mountaineering; he drew sketches of the mountains merely as an illustration of his teaching of the beauty of natural forms, which was the object of his whole life. In his work on Modern Painters he makes continual use of the mountains as an example of beauty and an incentive to morality. The publication of Ruskin's work certainly produced a great impression at the time on educated people in England, and a widespread desire to see the mountains.[72]

It is a fragment of some size; a group of broken walls, one of them overhanging; crowned with a cornice, nodding some hundred and fifty feet over its massive flank, three thousand above its glacier base, and fourteen thousand above the sea, — a wall truly of some majesty, at once the most precipitous and the strongest mass in the whole chain of the Alps, the Mont Cervin.[72]

 
Aerial photography by Eduard Spelterini in 1910

Other men of high attainments followed, but in the years 1850 scientists and artists were about to be succeeded by real climbers and the passes and peaks around Zermatt were explored little by little. In the preface to the first volume of the Alpine Journal, which appeared in 1863, the editor Hereford Brooke George wrote that: "While even if all other objects of interest in Switzerland should be exhausted, the Matterhorn remains (who shall say for how long?) unconquered and apparently invincible." Whymper successfully reached the summit in 1865, but four men perished on the descent. The English papers discussed it with bitter words of blame; a German newspaper published an article in which Whymper was accused of cutting the rope between Douglas and Taugwalder, at the critical moment, to save his own life.[72]

In 1890 the Federal Government was asked simultaneously by the same contractor for a concession for the Zermatt-Gornergrat railway, and for a Zermatt-Matterhorn one. The Gornergrat railway was constructed in 1896-1898 and has been working since August 1898, but there has been no more talk of the other. The project essentially consisted of a line which went up to the Hörnli, and continued thence in a rectilinear tunnel about two kilometres long, built under the ridge, and issuing near the summit on the Zmutt side.[72] Sixty years later in 1950, Italian engineer Count Dino Lora Totino planned a cable car on the Italian side from Breuil-Cervinia to the summit. But the Alpine Museum of Zermatt sent a protest letter with 90,000 signatures to the Italian government. The latter declared the Matterhorn a natural wonder worthy of protection and refused the concession to the engineer.[74]

2015 marked the 150th anniversary of the first ascent. Events and festivities were held throughout the year. A completely renewed Hörnli Hut opened the same year in the month of July.[75][76]

In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, light artist Gerry Hofstetter started projecting country flags and messages of endurance onto the mountain peak as part of a nightly series designed to show support and spread hope for everyone suffering and those fighting the pandemic.[77]

Other mountains

Hundreds of other mountains have been compared with the Matterhorn, either for their resemblance to it or because of their apparent inaccessibility.[78][79][80]

Mountains named after the Matterhorn

In culture

 
1908 Swiss poster
(Emil Cardinaux)
 
1935 Italian poster
(anonymous)
 
Poster created by Cardinaux for Toblerone in the 1920s

During the 20th century, the Matterhorn and the story of the first ascent in particular, inspired various artists and film producers such as Luis Trenker and Walt Disney.[81][82] Large-scale replicas can be found at Disneyland and Window of the World. In 2021, a Matterhorn-related attraction opened in the Swiss Museum of Transport, enabling visitors to climb it virtually from the Solvay Hut to the summit.[83]

Designed in 1908 by Emil Cardinaux, a leading poster artist of the time, the Matterhorn poster for the Zermatt tourist office is often considered the first modern poster. It has been described as a striking example of a marriage of tourism, patriotism and popular art. It served as decoration in many Swiss military hospices during the war in addition to be found in countless middle-class living rooms. Another affiche depicting the Matterhorn was created by Cardinaux for the chocolate brand Toblerone in the 1920s. The image of the Matterhorn first appeared on Toblerone chocolate bars in 1960.[84] Since then, the Matterhorn has become a reference that still inspires graphic artists today and has been used extensively for all sort of publicity and advertising.[85][86][87][88][89]

Paintings

Coins

Filmography

Bibliography

  • Guido Rey The Matterhorn (translated J. E. C. Eaton), London, 1907[note 6]
  • Beat P. Truffer: Matterhorn-DVD, 1:18 Film, 1'001 Photos, 17 E-Books, 1 Audiobook, Aroleit-Verlag, Zermatt 2015, ISBN 978-3-905097-24-5, www.matterhornworld.ch
  • Charles Gos, Le Cervin (Attinger, 1948)
  • Yvan Hostettler, Matterhorn: Alpine Top Model (Olizane Edition, Geneva, 2006). The use of the Matterhorn in advertisement, publicity, movies, painting and arts
  • R. L. G. Irving, Ten Great Mountains (London, J. M. Dent & Sons, 1940)[note 7]
  • Beat P. Truffler, The History of the Matterhorn: First Ascents, Projects and Adventures, 7th ed., (Aroleit-Verlag, Zermatt, 2015). ISBN 978-3-905097-22-1. Translation of Die Geschichte des Matterhorns from the German by Mirjam Steinmann
  • Edward Whymper, Scrambles Amongst the Alps (1871)
  • The book, Banner in the Sky, by James Ramsey Ullman is based on Edward Whympers ascent.


Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ Despite its prominence in a local sense, the Matterhorn is not among the top 100 mountains in the Alps measured by topographic prominence. Its close neighbors Monte Rosa, the Dom, Liskamm and the Weisshorn, have higher summits. See a panoramic photograph of the view from Finsteraarhorn, to the north. The key col is Col Durand, at 3,436 metres (11,273 ft), between the Matterhorn and the Weisshorn.
  2. ^ Retrieved from Google Earth. The nearest point of higher elevation is the Western Liskamm.
  3. ^ There are several different Romansh dialects, each with its own slight variation on the name for the Matterhorn. Sometimes the mountain is simply known in Romansh as Matterhorn (pronounced [mɐˈtɛrorn]), borrowed from German influence.
  4. ^ Considering summits with at least 300 metres prominence, it is the 6th highest in the Alps and Europe outside the Caucasus Mountains.
  5. ^ "On 14 July 1865, he set forth from this hotel with his companions and guides, and completed the first successful ascent of the Matterhorn."
  6. ^ Rey's Il Monte Cervino was first published in Italian and appeared in English in 1907, in a translation by J. E. C. Eaton; a revised edition, with two further chapters by R. L. G. Irving, was published in Oxford by Basil Blackwell, 1946, and reprinted in 1949
  7. ^ The climbing history up to 1939 of the Matterhorn, Snowdon, Ben Nevis, Ushba, Mount Logan, Everest, Nanga Parbat, Kanchenjunga, Mount Cook and Mont Blanc

References

  1. ^ "Commune Zermatt" (Map). Matterhorn peak (digital ed.). 1:10 0000. National Map 1:10'000. Wabern, Switzerland: Federal Office of Topography – swisstopo. Retrieved 2018-01-23 – via map.geo.admin.ch.
  2. ^ a b Lunn, Arnold (1965). Matterhorn Centenary. Allen & Unwin. p. 25.
  3. ^ Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.
  4. ^ Jones, Daniel (2011). Roach, Peter; Setter, Jane; Esling, John (eds.). Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15255-6.
  5. ^ Messner, Reinhold (September 2001). The big walls: from the North Face of the Eiger to the South Face of Dhaulagiri. The Mountaineers Books. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-89886-844-9. Retrieved 13 July 2011.
  6. ^ "Grave of the Unknown Climber". zermatt.ch. Zermatt Tourism. Retrieved 4 April 2021. The "Grave of the Unknown Climber" is located in the Mountaineers' Cemetery. It reminds us of the more than 500 deaths, which have taken place on the Matterhorn since 1865. And of the missing and dead, who could not be found or completely removed after their fall.
  7. ^ Gieri Venzin, ed. (2 April 2015). "Literatur zum Berg der Berge" (in German). Zurich, Switzerland: SRF. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  8. ^ Harper, Douglas. "Matterhorn". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2022-09-06.
  9. ^ "Déguisé le Mont-Cervin". 24 heures. 17 October 2008. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012.
  10. ^ . www.swissworld.org. Archived from the original on 2008-03-18. Retrieved 2007-11-26.
  11. ^ Bulletin of the Italian Alpine Club (vol. ii., 1867, p. 107)
  12. ^ Caesar, De Bello Gallico, book iii.
  13. ^ a b Rey, Guido (1907). The Matterhorn. Oxford: B. Blackwell.
  14. ^ Silvia Tenderini (2002). La montagna per tutti: ospitalità sulle Alpi nel Novecento (in Italian). p. 40.
  15. ^ . myswitzerland.com. Archived from the original on 2009-06-05. Retrieved 2011-01-23.
  16. ^ A list of 109 world 'Matterhorns' CERVIN top model des Alpes 2007-10-17 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 15 October 2007 (in French).
  17. ^ Nuova antologia. Nuova antologia. 1907.
  18. ^ Key dates in the history of Zermatt, Zermatt tourism[permanent dead link]. Retrieved on 2009-10-16
  19. ^ "No change in the height of the Matterhorn" (PDF). leica-geosystems.com. Retrieved 30 August 2020.
  20. ^ Col Durand (1:25,000) (Map). Swisstopo. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  21. ^ Liskamm (1:25,000) (Map). Swisstopo. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  22. ^ After Mont Blanc and the Liskamm.
  23. ^ "Mountain Classification – UIAA". International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation (UIAA). Retrieved 30 August 2020.
  24. ^ "Journey through time - Maps". map.geo.admin.ch. Swisstopo. Retrieved 2015-12-11.
  25. ^ Cherbuliez, Joel (1840). Bibliothèque universelle de Genève, Volume 27. p. 346.
  26. ^ The Vispa, formed by the Matter Vispa and Saaser Vispa, runs only a few kilometres before its ends in the Rhone.
  27. ^ Key dates in the history of Zermatt[permanent dead link] Retrieved on 2009-10-19
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Robin G. Collomb, Pennine Alps Central, London: Alpine Club, 1975, pp. 241–59
  29. ^ Marthaler, Michel; Rougier, Henri (2021). "An Outstanding Mountain: The Matterhorn, in Landscapes and Landforms of Switzerland, World Geomorphological Landscapes". ResearchGate. Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021. Retrieved 15 January 2022.
  30. ^ Edward Whymper, Scrambles amongst the Alps, 6th edition, London: John Murray, 1936, p. 80
  31. ^ "The Matterhorn - Really from Africa?" (PDF).
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on September 22, 2009.
  33. ^ Histoire du BVZ Zermatt-Bahn 2007-10-21 at the Wayback Machine mgbahn.ch. Retrieved on 2009-10-16
  34. ^ "Investments and projects : Matterhorn - Zermatt". www.matterhornparadise.ch.
  35. ^ Zermatt Bergbahnen AG, Projects Retrieved on 2009-10-22
  36. ^ Hilary Sharp, Tour of the Matterhorn, Cicerone
  37. ^ "Swiss Move to Reduce Stress on the Matterhorn". The New York Times. July 13, 2015. Retrieved 2018-11-04.
  38. ^ a b c Pierre Staelen: La Conquête du Cervin Retrieved 2010-01-18
  39. ^ a b c d e Whymper, Edward (1880). The Ascent of the Matterhorn. J. Murray. pp. 46–57.
  40. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Matterhorn" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 895.
  41. ^ Roger W. Patillo, The Canadian Rockies: Pioneers, Legends and True Tales, p. 176
  42. ^ a b c d e Edward Whymper, Scrambles amongst the Alps, 6th edition, London: John Murray, 1936, pp. 309–13
  43. ^ The Times 08-08-1865, p 9
  44. ^ Whymper, Edward (2002). Scrambles Amongst the Alps in the Years 1860-1869. Washington, DC: National Geographic Society. pp. 369–378. ISBN 9780792269236.
  45. ^ a b c Guido Rey, The Matterhorn (translated J. E. C. Eaton), London, 1908, p. 140
  46. ^ Janet Adam Smith, Lucy Walker (1836–1916), Oxford University Press
  47. ^ a b c Herve Barmasse and Luca Maspes, July 2006, "The Matterhorn", Alpinist, 16
  48. ^ La Stampa 08-21-1992, p. 12
  49. ^ Quattro volte sul Cervino in sole 24 ore corriere.it, August 1992
  50. ^ Ascent Races and Records - ISF/FSA recognised 2014-04-22 at the Wayback Machine skyrunning.com
  51. ^ Races and Records - ISF / FSA recognised 2014-04-23 at the Wayback Machine skyrunning.com
  52. ^ MacDonald, Dougald (22 August 2013). "Kilian Jornet Shatters Matterhorn Speed Record". Climbing Magazine. Retrieved 31 August 2020.
  53. ^ Helmut Dumler and Willi P. Burkhardt, The High Mountains of the Alps, London: Diadem, 1994, p. 151.
  54. ^ William Penhall, 'The Matterhorn from the Zmutt Glacier', Alpine Journal, Vol. IX, reprinted in Peaks, Passes and Glaciers, ed. Walt Unsworth, London: Allen Lane, 1981, pp. 64–72.
  55. ^ Matterhorn in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
  56. ^ Guide des Alpes Valaisannes, du Col Collon au Theodulpass, 1992, Swiss Alpine Club
  57. ^ Reinhold Messner, The big walls: from the North Face of the Eiger to the South Face of Dhaulagiri, p 41
  58. ^ Birkett, Bill; Peascod, Bill (1990). Women Climbing: 200 Years of Achievement. The Mountaineers.
  59. ^ Breaking boundaries one perilous face at a time, Swissinfo. Retrieved on 2012-12-09.
  60. ^ . Archived from the original on November 1, 2010.
  61. ^ Black, Lee (2014). Mountaineering. Edina, United States: ABDO Publishing Company. p. 29. ISBN 9781629680101.
  62. ^ Curtis, Malcolm (13 October 2013). "Increased use of guides cuts Matterhorn deaths". The Local ch. Retrieved 22 Jan 2019.
  63. ^ "Sharp rise in mountain deaths in Swiss Alps (Half-year figures)". SWI swissinfo.ch. 16 Sep 2018. Retrieved 22 Jan 2019.
  64. ^ Quinn, Rob (July 30, 2018). "His Brother Vanished on a Skiing Trip 64 Years Ago. He Finally Knows What Happened". Newser.
  65. ^ "Remains of two Japanese climbers on Matterhorn identified after 45 years". news.yahoo.com.
  66. ^ "Remains of UK climber found on Matterhorn". www.thelocal.ch. February 11, 2014.
  67. ^ "Remains of missing Japanese hiker found on Matterhorn". news.yahoo.com.
  68. ^ "Two Britons found dead on Matterhorn". BBC News. August 6, 2016.
  69. ^ Jenkins, Mark (August 1, 2019). "How the pursuit of one European peak gave rise to modern mountaineering". National Geographic News. Retrieved 2022-06-26.
  70. ^ McMillan, Kelley (July 13, 2015). "Swiss Move to Reduce Stress on the Matterhorn". The New York Times.
  71. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Rey, Guido, The Matterhorn (translated J. E. C. Eaton), London, 1908. Available on the Internet Archive
  72. ^ Sydney Spencer,Mountaineering, p. 27, 1934
  73. ^ Tragödien am Matterhorn 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine, Johannes Schweikle, Merian.de
  74. ^ . Zermatt Tourism. Archived from the original on 2014-12-19. Retrieved 2014-08-20.
  75. ^ "The Matterhorn Trek". outdooractive. Retrieved 2020-04-21.
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  77. ^ Pyatt, Edward. "The Matterhorn Image" (PDF). Alpine Journal. With all this tremendous emphasis it is not surprising to find that mountains elsewhere, of similar steep, clean, pyramidal lines and similarly isolated, should be likened to it and dubbed the 'Matterhorn' of their particular country, district or range. There is perhaps one other consideration involved. The Matterhorn long enjoyed a reputation for inaccessibility, such that many mountainers would not even attempt it. A mountain might earn its sobriquet on the grounds that it looked difficult or impossible to climb, a category into which many columnar-type mountains might also fall.
  78. ^ Jouty, Sylvain (2009). Dictionnaire de la montagne. Place des éditeurs. ISBN 9782258082205. tandis que des centaines de « Cervin » et de « Matterhorn » attestent de par le monde la renommée inouïe de cette montagne [while hundreds of "Cervino" and "Matterhorn" attest to the incredible fame of this mountain throughout the world]
  79. ^ Musa, Ghazali; Higham, James; Thompson-Carr, Anna (2015). Mountaineering Tourism. Routledge. p. 114. ISBN 9781317668749. Not inconsequentially, new 'Matterhorns' could suddenly be found in all the major ranges, as well. Ushba, for example, became 'the Matterhorn of the Caucasus'; Ama Dablam, 'the Matterhorn of the Himalayas'; the 'Matterhorn of India' was Shivling; Mt Assiniboine was the 'Matterhorn of North America'; and Mt Aspiring/Tititea in New Zealand became the 'Matterhorn of the South'.
  80. ^ Hans-Michael Bock, Tim Bergfelder, The Concise Cinegraph: Encyclopaedia of German Cinema, p. 480
  81. ^ "MichaelBarrier.com -- Essays: Zermatt". michaelbarrier.com.
  82. ^ Pinol, Christophe (8 June 2021). "Sueurs froides au sommet du Cervin" [Cold sweats at the top of the Matterhorn]. Le Temps. Lausanne. Retrieved 16 June 2021. Il faudra alors entrer dans une reconstitution du refuge Solvay, situé à 4003 m d'altitude, sur le fil de l'arête est du Cervin, pour commencer à s'équiper: des capteurs aux mains et aux pieds, le sac à dos abritant la technique et enfin le casque VR [It will then be necessary to enter a reconstruction of the Solvay refuge, located at an altitude of 4,003 m, on the edge of the east ridge of the Matterhorn, to start equipping: sensors on the hands and feet, the backpack housing the technique and finally the VR headset]
  83. ^ "Matterhorn: the Swiss Toblerone Chocolate Mountain – Zermatterhorn". Retrieved 2019-06-22.
  84. ^ The first Swiss Posters: travel posters 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine admin.ch
  85. ^ Publicité Toblerone 2014-03-14 at the Wayback Machine toblerone.ch
  86. ^ David Scott, Poetics of the Poster: The Rhetoric of Image-Text, p. 94
  87. ^ Hans Ulrich Jost, From Liotard to Le Corbusier: 200 years of Swiss painting, 1730-1930, p. 19
  88. ^ Hilary Sharp, Tour of Monte Rosa, p. 54
  89. ^ "Focus Matterhorn - Im Banne des Berges". www.focus-matterhorn.ch.
  90. ^ "The Horn". 17 October 2016 – via www.imdb.com.
  • La conquête du Cervin, Pierre Staelen

External links

  • Matterhorn from the Zermatt Tourism official website
  • from the Zermatt Tourism official website
  • Matterhorn Webcams from the Breuil-Cervinia Tourism official website
  • Chronology of climbs (in German)
Climbing and trekking
  • Matterhorn on Summitpost
  • Matterhorn on Hikr
  • Matterhorn on GeoFinder.ch
  • Matterhorn on 4000er.de (in German)
  • 2018 BBC story of skier lost near Matterhorn 1954; found 2005; identified 2018 BBC July 29, 2018
Videos
  • Der Berg ruft! is available for free download at the Internet Archive (subtitles in French) - film based on the first ascent story
  • The Challenge on YouTube - remake of Der Berg ruft!
  • The Matterhorn on YouTube - documentary featuring the climb on the Hörnli ridge
  • The Matterhorn Summit (150y) on YouTube - traverse of the very sharp summit ridge by two Polish climbers (A.Wójcik, Y.Trokhymenko)

matterhorn, other, uses, disambiguation, ɔːr, german, ˈmatɐˌhɔʁn, italian, cervino, tʃerˈviːno, french, cervin, sɛʁvɛ, romansh, mont, cervin, note, mountain, alps, straddling, main, watershed, border, between, switzerland, italy, large, near, symmetric, pyrami. For other uses see Matterhorn disambiguation The Matterhorn ˈ m ae t er h ɔːr n 3 4 German ˈmatɐˌhɔʁn Italian Cervino tʃerˈviːno French Cervin sɛʁvɛ Romansh Mont e Cervin u note 3 is a mountain of the Alps straddling the main watershed and border between Switzerland and Italy It is a large near symmetric pyramidal peak in the extended Monte Rosa area of the Pennine Alps whose summit is 4 478 metres 14 692 ft high making it one of the highest summits in the Alps and Europe note 4 The four steep faces rising above the surrounding glaciers face the four compass points and are split by the Hornli Furggen Leone Lion and Zmutt ridges The mountain overlooks the Swiss town of Zermatt in the canton of Valais to the northeast and the Italian town of Breuil Cervinia in the Aosta Valley to the south Just east of the Matterhorn is Theodul Pass the main passage between the two valleys on its north and south sides which has been a trade route since the Roman Era MatterhornCervino Italian Cervin French East and north faces of the MatterhornHighest pointElevation4 478 m 14 692 ft Prominence1 042 m Col Durand note 1 Parent peakWeisshornIsolation13 8 km Liskamm West Top note 2 ListingAlpine four thousanders Great north faces of the AlpsCoordinates45 58 35 0 N 7 39 31 0 E 45 976389 N 7 658611 E 45 976389 7 658611 Coordinates 45 58 35 0 N 7 39 31 0 E 45 976389 N 7 658611 E 45 976389 7 658611 1 NamingNative nameGran Beca Arpitan Horu Walser English translation German Peak of the Meadows 2 Arpitan Great Mountain GeographyMatterhornLocation in the AlpsLocationAosta Valley Italy Valais SwitzerlandParent rangePennine AlpsTopo mapswisstopo 1347 MatterhornClimbingFirst ascent14 July 1865 by Edward Whymper Charles Hudson Francis Douglas Douglas Robert Hadow Michel Croz Peter Taugwalder father Peter Taugwalder son Easiest routeHornli ridge AD rock mixed climb The Matterhorn was studied by Horace Benedict de Saussure in the late eighteenth century and was followed by other renowned naturalists and artists such as John Ruskin in the 19th century It remained unclimbed after most of the other great Alpine peaks had been attained and became the subject of an international competition for the summit The first ascent of the Matterhorn was in 1865 from Zermatt by a party led by Edward Whymper but during the descent a sudden fall claimed the lives of four of the seven climbers This disaster later portrayed in several films marked the end of the golden age of alpinism 5 The north face was not climbed until 1931 and is among the three biggest north faces of the Alps known as The Trilogy The west face the highest of the Matterhorn s four faces was completely climbed only in 1962 It is estimated that over 500 alpinists have died on the Matterhorn making it one of the deadliest peaks in the world 6 The Matterhorn is mainly composed of gneisses originally fragments of the African Plate before the Alpine orogeny from the Dent Blanche nappe lying over ophiolites and sedimentary rocks of the Penninic nappes The mountain s current shape is the result of cirque erosion due to multiple glaciers diverging from the peak such as the Matterhorn Glacier at the base of the north face Sometimes referred to as the Mountain of Mountains German Berg der Berge 7 it has become an indelible emblem of the Alps in general Since the end of the 19th century when railways were built in the area the mountain has attracted increasing numbers of visitors and climbers Each year numerous mountaineers try to climb the Matterhorn from the Hornli Hut via the northeast Hornli ridge the most popular route to the summit Many trekkers also undertake the 10 day long circuit around the mountain The Matterhorn has been part of the Swiss Federal Inventory of Natural Monuments since 1983 Contents 1 Names 2 Height 3 Geography 4 Weather 5 Geology 5 1 Formation 5 2 Rocks 6 Tourism and trekking 7 Climbing history 7 1 Before the first ascent 7 2 First ascent 7 3 Second ascent 7 4 Other ascents 7 4 1 Ridges 7 4 2 Faces 7 5 Casualties on the Matterhorn 7 6 Legacy beginning of mountain culture 8 Climbing routes 9 History 10 Other mountains 10 1 Mountains named after the Matterhorn 11 In culture 11 1 Paintings 11 2 Coins 11 3 Filmography 12 Bibliography 13 Notes and references 13 1 Notes 13 2 References 14 External linksNames EditLocation of the Matterhorn Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues Interactive fullscreen map The name Matterhorn derives from the German words Matte meadow and Horn horn 8 and is often translated as the peak of the meadows 2 In the Schalbetter map printed by Sebastian Munster in 1545 the valley is labelled Mattertal but the mountain has the Latin name Mons Silvius as well as the German name Augstalberg in concord with the Aosta Valley German Augstal The 1548 map by Johannes Stumpf gives only Mons Silvius The French name Cervin from which the Italian term Cervino derives stems from the Latin Mons Silvanus or Mons Sylvanus where silva means forest this was corrupted to Selvin and then Servin The change of the first letter s to c is attributed to Horace Benedict de Saussure 9 who thought the word was related to deer French cerf and Italian cervo 10 View on the south and east faces and the area of the Theodul Pass between Italy left and Switzerland right Josias Simler hypothesized in De Alpibus Commentarius 1574 that the name Mons Silvius was readopted by T G Farinetti 11 Silvius was probably a Roman leader who sojourned with his legions in the land of the Salassi and the Seduni and perhaps crossed the Theodul Pass between these two places This Silvius may have been that same Servius Galba whom Caesar charged with the opening up of the Alpine passes which from that time onward traders have been wanting to cross with great danger and grave difficulty 12 Servius Galba in order to carry out Caesar s orders came with his legions from Allobroges Savoy to Octodurum Martigny in the Valais and pitched his camp there The passes which he had orders to open from there could be no other than the St Bernard the Simplon the Theodul and the Moro it therefore seems likely that the name of Servius whence Silvius and later Servin or Cervin was given in his honour to the famous pyramid It is unknown when the new name of Servin or Cervin replaced the old from which it seems to be derived 13 289 The Matterhorn is also named Gran Becca big mountain by the Valdotains 14 and Horu by the local Walliser German speaking people 15 Because of its recognizable shape many other similar mountains around the world were named or nicknamed the Matterhorn of their respective countries or mountain ranges 16 Height Edit The Matterhorn on the National Map of Switzerland The Matterhorn has two distinct summits situated at either end of a 100 metre long 330 ft exposed rocky crest which forms the Italian Swiss border 17 In August 1792 the Genevan geologist and explorer Horace Benedict de Saussure made the first measurement of the Matterhorn s height using a sextant and a 50 foot long 15 m chain spread out on the Theodul glacier He calculated its height as 4 501 7 m 14 769 ft 18 In 1868 the Italian engineer Felice Giordano measured a height of 4 505 m 14 780 ft by means of a mercury barometer which he had taken to the summit The Dufour map which was afterwards followed by the Italian surveyors gave 4 482 m 14 705 ft as the height of the Swiss summit 13 317 In 1999 the summit height was precisely determined to be at 4 477 54 m 14 690 ft above sea level by using Global Positioning System technology as part of the TOWER Project Top of the World Elevations Remeasurement and to an accuracy of less than one centimetre which allows future changes to be tracked 19 The topographic prominence of the Matterhorn is 1 042 metres 3 419 ft as the ridge connecting it with a higher summit in this case the Weisshorn which is the culminating point of the range west of the Mattertal valley sinks to a height of 3 436 m 11 273 ft at the Col Durand a saddle between the Pointe de Zinal and the Mont Durand 20 The topographic isolation is 13 9 km 8 6 mi as the nearest point of higher elevation is the one metre 3 ft 3 in higher Western Liskamm 21 View on the east face with alpine lake Considering mountains with a topographic prominence of at least 300 m 980 ft the Matterhorn is the sixth highest summit in the Alps and Europe outside the Caucasus Mountains It is the fifth highest summit of Valais and Switzerland and the third highest summit of the Aosta Valley and Italy 22 Locally it is the third highest summit in the municipality of Zermatt and the highest summit in the municipality of Valtournenche On the official International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation list of Alpine four thousanders which also includes subsidiary summits of higher mountains such as the nearby Monte Rosa the Matterhorn is the 12th highest summit in the Alps 23 Height measurements by year 24 1792 Saussure s Travels in the Alps 25 1862 Dufour Map 1868 Giordano 1880 Siegfried Map 1934 S M 1946 National Map 1999 TOWER 2010 N M 4 501 7 m 2309 75 T 4 482 m 4 505 m 4 482 m 4 481 m 4 477 5 m 4 477 54 m 4 478 mGeography Edit View from the summit towards Monte Rosa with the valleys of Mattertal left and Valtournenche right Aerial panorama of the Matterhorn from the Gornergrat 170622 The Matterhorn has a pyramidal shape with four faces nearly facing the four compass points Three of them north east and west are on the Swiss side of the border and watershed Mattertal valley and one of them south is on the Italian side of the border Valtournenche valley The north face overlooks the Ober Gabelhorn 7 km away across the Zmutt Glacier and valley above Zermatt the east face overlooks the Gorner Glacier system between the Gornergrat and Monte Rosa respectively 10 and 17 km away across the Theodul Pass the west face overlooks the upper basin of the Zmutt Glacier between the Dent Blanche and the Dent d Herens respectively 7 and 4 km away and the south face fronts the resort town of Breuil Cervinia and overlooks a good portion of the Valtournenche The Matterhorn does not form a perfect square pyramid as the north and south faces are wider than the west and east faces Moreover the latter faces do not actually meet on the summit but are connected by a 100 metre long horizontal west east ridge between the north and south faces The Matterhorn s faces are 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 largest of which are the Tiefmattengletscher to the west part of the Zmutt Glacier and the Matterhorn Glacier to the north Smaller glaciers lie at the base of the south face the Lower Matterhorn Glacier and the east face unnamed In this area the border between Switzerland and Italy coincides with the main Alpine watershed separating the drainage basin of the Rhone on the north Mediterranean Sea and that of the Po on the south Adriatic Sea The north side is drained by the Zmuttbach west and north faces and the Gornera through the Furggbach east face tributaries of the Rhone through the Matter Vispa 26 The south side and face is drained by the Marmore torrent a tributary of the Po through the Dora Baltea or Doire baltee The Theodul Pass located on the watershed between the Matterhorn and the Breithorn at 3 295 metres is the easiest passage between the two valleys and countries the slightly lower Furggjoch not being used as a pass The pass was used as a crossover and trade route for the Romans and the Romanised Celtic population Salassi between 100 BCE and 400 CE 27 The area is now heavily glaciated and covered on the north side by the Theodul Glacier Well known faces are the east and north visible from the area of Zermatt although mostly hidden from the Mattertal by the chain of the Weisshorn The east face is 1 000 metres high and because it is a long monotonous slope of rotten rocks 28 presents a high risk of rockfall making its ascent dangerous The north face is 1 200 metres high and is one of the most dangerous north faces in the Alps in particular for its risk of rockfall and storms The south face well visible from the Valtournenche is 1 350 metres high and offers many different routes The west face the highest at 1 400 metres has the fewest ascent routes and lies in a more remote area than the other faces The four main ridges separating the four faces are the main climbing routes The least difficult technical climb and the usual climbing route the Hornli ridge Hornligrat lies between the east and north faces and is aligned towards the Oberrothorn above Zermatt To its west lies the Zmutt ridge Zmuttgrat between the north and west faces and aligned towards the Wandfluehorn this is according to Collomb the classic route up the mountain its longest ridge also the most disjointed 28 The Lion ridge Cresta del Leone Arete du lion lying between the south and west faces and aligned towards the Dent d Herens is the Italian normal route and goes across Pic Tyndall Collomb comments A superb rock ridge the shortest on the mountain now draped with many fixed ropes but a far superior climb compared with the Hornli 28 Finally the south side is separated from the east side by the Furggen ridge Furggengrat which is aligned towards the Klein Matterhorn It is according to Collomb the hardest of the ridges the ridge still has an awesome reputation but is not too difficult in good conditions by the indirect finish 28 While the Matterhorn is the culminating point of the Valtournenche on the south it is only one of the many 4000 metres summits of the Mattertal valley on the north Its height is exceeded by four major summits the Weisshorn 4 505 m the Dom 4 545 m the Liskamm 4 527 m and the second highest in the Alps Monte Rosa 4 634 m This section of the Pennine Alps including the Matterhorn the Zinalrothorn the Dent Blanche the Dent d Herens the Breithorn the Strahlhorn the Rimpfischhorn and the Alphubel concentrates most of western Europe s highest mountains and forms a crown of peaks around Zermatt The deeply glaciated region between the Matterhorn and Monte Rosa named Dent Blanche Matterhorn Monte Rosa is listed in the Federal Inventory of Landscapes and Natural Monuments since 1983 The four faces of the Matterhorn North West South EastWeather EditThe Matterhorn is an isolated mountain Because of its position on the main Alpine watershed and its great height the Matterhorn is exposed to rapid weather changes In addition the steep faces of the mountain and its isolated location make it prone to banner clouds formation with the air flowing around the mountain producing condensation of the air on the lee side and also creating vortices Geology EditSee also Geology of the Alps The Matterhorn s pyramid is composed of Paleozoic rocks which were thrusted over the Matterhorn s Mesozoic base during the Cenozoic Quaternary glaciation and weathering give the mountain its current shape 29 Apart from the base of the mountain the Matterhorn is composed of gneiss belonging to the Dent Blanche klippe an isolated part of the Austroalpine nappes lying over the Penninic nappes The Austroalpine nappes are part of the Apulian plate a small continent that broke up from Africa before the Alpine orogeny For this reason the Matterhorn has been popularized as an African mountain The Austroalpine nappes are mostly common in the Eastern Alps The Swiss explorer and geologist Horace Benedict de Saussure inspired by the view of the Matterhorn anticipated modern theories of geology What power must have been required to shatter and to sweep away the missing parts of this pyramid for we do not see it surrounded by heaps of fragments one only sees other peaks themselves rooted to the ground whose sides equally rent indicate an immense mass of debris of which we do not see any trace in the neighbourhood Doubtless this is that debris which in the form of pebbles boulders and sand fills our valleys and our plains 30 Formation Edit Different layers of rock can be seen the lower part is sedimentary rock brown the middle part is greenschist from the oceanic crust The peak itself is gneiss from the African continent The formation of the Matterhorn and the whole Alpine range started with the break up of the Pangaea continent 200 million years ago into Laurasia containing Europe and Gondwana containing Africa While the rocks constituting the nearby Monte Rosa remained in Laurasia the rocks constituting the Matterhorn found themselves in Gondwana separated by the newly formed Tethys Ocean 100 million years ago the extension of the Tethys Ocean stopped and the Apulian plate broke from Gondwana and moved toward the European continent This resulted in the closure of the western Tethys by subduction under the Apulian plate with the Piemont Liguria Ocean first and Valais Ocean later The subduction of the oceanic crust left traces still visible today at the base of the Matterhorn accretionary prism The orogeny itself began after the end of the oceanic subduction when the European continental crust collided with the Apulian continent resulting in the formation of nappes The Matterhorn acquired its characteristic pyramidal shape in much more recent times as it was caused by natural erosion over the past million years At the beginning of alpine orogeny the Matterhorn was only a rounded mountain like a hill Because its height is above the snowline its flanks are covered by ice resulting from the accumulation and compaction of snow During the warmer period of summer part of the ice melts and seeps into the bedrock When it freezes again it fractures pieces of rock because of its dilatation freeze thaw forming a cirque Four cirques led to the shape of the mountain Rocks Edit Most of the base of the mountain lies in the Tsate nappe a remnant of the Piedmont Liguria oceanic crust ophiolites and its sedimentary rocks 31 Up to 3 400 metres the mountain is composed of successive layers of ophiolites and sedimentary rocks From 3 400 metres to the top the rocks are gneisses from the Dent Blanche nappe Austroalpine nappes They are divided into the Arolla series below 4 200 m and the Valpelline zone the summit 32 Other mountains in the region Weisshorn Zinalrothorn Dent Blanche Mont Collon also belong to the Dent Blanche nappe Tourism and trekking Edit source source source source source source source source Flight around the Matterhorn Since the eighteenth century the Alps have attracted more and more people and fascinated generations of explorers and climbers The Matterhorn remained relatively little known until 1865 but the successful ascent followed by the tragic accident of the expedition led by Edward Whymper caused a rush on the mountains surrounding Zermatt The construction of the railway linking the village of Zermatt from the town of Visp started in 1888 The first train reached Zermatt on 18 July 1891 and the entire line was electrified in 1930 33 Since 1930 the village is directly connected to St Moritz by the Glacier Express panoramic train However there is no connection with the village of Breuil Cervinia on the Italian side Travellers have to hire mountain guides to cross the 3 300 metre high glaciated Theodul Pass separating the two resorts The town of Zermatt remains almost completely free of internal combustion vehicles and can be reached by train only Apart from the local police service which uses a Volkswagen car and the refuse collection lorry only electric vehicles are used locally View from the train to the Gornergrat Rail and cable car facilities have been built to make some of the summits in the area more accessible The Gornergrat railway reaching a record altitude of 3 100 metres was inaugurated in 1898 Areas served by cable car are the Unterrothorn and the Klein Matterhorn Little Matterhorn 3 883 m highest transportation system in Europe The Hornli Hut 3 260 m which is the start of the normal route via the Hornli ridge is easily accessible from Schwarzsee 2 600 m and is also frequented by hikers The Zermatt and Breuil Cervinia resorts function as separate ski resort all year round and are connected by skilifts over the Theodul Pass In 2015 it was expected that there would be constructed a cable car link between Testa Grigia or Tete grise and Klein Matterhorn 34 It will finally provide a link between the Swiss and Italian side of the Matterhorn 35 The Matterhorn Museum Zermatt relates the general history of the region from alpinism to tourism In the museum which is in the form of a reconstituted mountain village the visitors can relive the first and tragic ascent of the Matterhorn and see the objects that belonged to the protagonists The Tour of the Matterhorn can be effected by trekkers in about 10 days Considered by some as one of the most beautiful treks in the Alps it follows many ancient trails that have linked the Swiss and Italian valleys for centuries The circuit includes alpine meadows balcony trails larch forests and glacial crossings It connects six valleys embracing three different cultures the German speaking high Valais the French speaking central Valais and the bilingual French Italian speaking Aosta Valley Good conditions are necessary to circumnavigate the peak After reaching Zinal from Zermatt by the Augstbord and Meiden passes the trekker crosses the Col de Sorebois and the Col de Torrent before arriving at Arolla Then the Arolla Glacier and the Col Collon must be crossed on the way to Prarayer followed by the Col de Valcournera to Breuil Cervinia In the last and highest section the Theodul Pass must be crossed before returning to Zermatt In total seven passes between 2 800 and 3 300 metres must be crossed on relatively difficult terrain 36 As of 2015 almost two million visitors arrive at Zermatt annually An average of around twelve people per year have died on Matterhorn in the ten years from 2005 to 2015 37 Climbing history EditSee also Timeline of climbing the Matterhorn Plaque on the front wall of the Monte Rosa Hotel commemorating the first ascent by Edward Whymper note 5 The Matterhorn was one of the last of the main Alpine mountains to be ascended not because of its technical difficulty but because of the fear it inspired in early mountaineers The first serious attempts were all from the Italian side although despite appearances the southern routes are technically harder The main figures were Jean Antoine Carrel and his uncle Jean Jacques Carrel from the Valtournenche area who made the first attempts in 1857 and 1858 reaching 3 800 m 12 500 ft on the latter occasion 38 In July 1860 three brothers from Liverpool attempted the mountain Alfred Charles and Sandbach Parker but they turned back at about 3 500 m 11 500 ft 39 In August of the same year Jean Jacques Carrel returned to guide with Johann Joseph Bennen de Vaughan Hawkins and John Tyndall to about 3 960 m 12 990 ft before turning back 38 In 1861 the Carrels managed to reach the Crete du Coq at 4 032 m 13 228 ft In July 1862 Jean Antoine together with Cesar Carrel accompanied as porters sic John Tyndall Anton Walters and J J Bennen to Matterhorn s Shoulder at 4 248 m 13 937 ft which was subsequently named Pic Tyndall in honor of the client 38 39 Edward Whymper joined the efforts in August 1861 but in his first 7 attempts with a variety of companions could only reach a maximum height of 4 100 m 13 500 ft 39 However on 14 July 1865 in what is considered the last ascent of the golden age of alpinism he was able to reach the summit by an ascent of the Hornli ridge in Switzerland guided by the famed French mountaineer Michel Croz and the Swiss father and son Peter Taugwalder Sr and Jr and accompanied by the British gentlemen Charles Hudson Lord Francis Douglas Douglas Robert Hadow Upon descent Hadow Croz Hudson and Douglas fell to their deaths 40 on the Matterhorn Glacier and all but Douglas whose body was never found are buried in the Zermatt churchyard Just three days later on 17 July 1865 Jean Antoine Carrel and Jean Baptiste Bich reached the summit from the Italian side 28 Before the first ascent Edit In the summer of 1860 Edward Whymper came across the Matterhorn for the first time He was an English artist and engraver who had been hired by a London publisher to make sketches of the mountains in the region of Zermatt Although the unclimbed Matterhorn had a mixed reputation among British mountaineers it fascinated Whymper Whymper s first attempt was in August 1861 from the village of Breuil on the south side In Chatillon he hired a Swiss guide who remained anonymous in his accounts and in Valtournanche he almost hired Jean Antoine Carrel as well but disliking the looks of Carrel s uncle he changed his mind 39 The Carrels decided to give Matterhorn a try by themselves again and caught up with Whymper at nightfall Whymper now had a strong inclination to engage the pair but finally decided against it and the Carrels went alone to reach a new high on Matterhorn of 4 032 m 13 228 ft the next day Whymper and his guide camped one more night on the Col du lion Col Tournanche 3 479 m 11 414 ft and were forced to turn around only an hour above this pass the day after 39 The Carrel Hut 3 830 m on the Lion ridge In 1862 Whymper made further attempts still from the south side on the Lion ridge or Italian ridge where the route seemed easier than the Hornli ridge the normal route today On his own he reached above 4 000 metres but was injured on his way down to Breuil In July John Tyndall with Johann Joseph Bennen and another guide overcame most of the difficulties of the ridge that seemed so formidable from below and successfully reached the main shoulder but at a point not very far below the summit they were stopped by a deep cleft that defied their utmost efforts The Matterhorn remained unclimbed Whymper returned to Breuil in 1863 persuading Carrel to join forces with him and try the mountain once more via the Italian ridge On this attempt however a storm soon developed and they were stuck halfway to the summit They remained there for 26 hours in their tent before giving up Whymper did not make another attempt for two years In the decisive year 1865 Whymper returned with new plans deciding to attack the Matterhorn via its south face instead of the Italian ridge On 21 June Whymper began his ascent with Swiss guides but halfway up they experienced severe rockfall although nobody was injured they decided to give up the ascent This was Whymper s seventh attempt During the following weeks Whymper spent his time climbing other mountains in the area with his guides before going back to Breuil on 7 July Meanwhile the Italian Alpine Club was founded and its leaders Felice Giordano and Quintino Sella established plans to conquer the Matterhorn before any non Italian could succeed Felice Giordano hired Carrel as a guide He feared the arrival of Whymper now a rival and wrote to Quintino Sella 41 I have tried to keep everything secret but that fellow whose life seems to depend on the Matterhorn is here suspiciously prying into everything I have taken all the best men away from him and yet he is so enamored of the mountain that he may go with others He is here in the hotel and I try to avoid speaking to him The Matterhorn seen from the Valtournenche Valley Just as he did two years before Whymper asked Carrel to be his guide but Carrel declined Whymper was also unsuccessful in hiring other local guides from Breuil When Whymper discovered Giordano and Carrel s plan he left Breuil and crossed the Theodul Pass to Zermatt to hire local guides He encountered Lord Francis Douglas a Scottish mountaineer who also wanted to climb the Matterhorn They arrived later in Zermatt in the Monte Rosa Hotel where they met two other British climbers the Reverend Charles Hudson and his young and inexperienced companion Douglas Robert Hadow who had hired the French guide Michel Croz to try to make the first ascent These two groups decided to join forces and try the ascent of the Hornli ridge They hired another two local guides a father and son both named Peter Taugwalder First ascent Edit Main article First ascent of the Matterhorn Whymper and party left Zermatt early in the morning of 13 July 1865 heading to the foot of the Hornli ridge which they reached 6 hours later approximately where the Hornli Hut is situated today Meanwhile Carrel and six other Italian guides also began their ascent of the Italian ridge Despite its appearance Whymper wrote that the Hornli ridge was much easier to climb than the Italian ridge We were now fairly upon the mountain and were astonished to find that places which from the Riffel or even from the Furggen Glacier looked entirely impracticable were so easy that we could run about 42 The first ascent of the Matterhorn by Gustave Dore After camping for the night Whymper and party started on the ridge According to Whymper The whole of this great slope was now revealed rising for 3 000 feet like a huge natural staircase Some parts were more and others were less easy but we were not once brought to a halt by any serious impediment for when an obstruction was met in front it could always be turned to the right or left For the greater part of the way there was indeed no occasion for the rope and sometimes Hudson led sometimes myself At 6 20 we had attained a height of 12 800 feet and halted for half an hour we then continued the ascent without a break until 9 55 when we stopped for fifty minutes at a height of 14 000 feet 42 When the party came close to the summit they had to leave the ridge for the north face because the ridge was usually more rotten and steep and always more difficult than the face 42 At this point of the ascent Whymper wrote that the less experienced Hadow required continual assistance 42 Having overcome these difficulties the group finally arrived in the summit area with Croz and Whymper reaching the top first The slope eased off and Croz and I dashing away ran a neck and neck race which ended in a dead heat At 1 40 p m the world was at our feet and the Matterhorn was conquered Hurrah Not a footstep could be seen 42 Precisely at this moment Carrel and party were approximatively 400 metres below still dealing with the most difficult parts of the Italian ridge When seeing his rival on the summit Carrel and party gave up on their attempt and went back to Breuil The first descent of the Matterhorn by Gustave Dore After building a cairn Whymper and party stayed an hour on the summit Then they began their descent of the Hornli ridge Croz descended first then Hadow Hudson and Douglas the elder Taugwalder Whymper with the younger Taugwalder coming last They climbed down with great care only one man moving at a time Whymper wrote As far as I know at the moment of the accident no one was actually moving I cannot speak with certainty neither can the Taugwalders because the two leading men were partially hidden from our sight by an intervening mass of rock Poor Croz had laid aside his axe and in order to give Mr Hadow greater security was absolutely taking hold of his legs and putting his feet one by one into their proper positions From the movements of their shoulders it is my belief that Croz having done as I have said was in the act of turning round to go down a step or two himself at this moment Mr Hadow slipped fell on him and knocked him over 43 The weight of the falling men pulled Hudson and Douglas from their holds and dragged them down the north face The Taugwalders and Whymper were left alive when the rope linking Douglas to the elder Taugwalder broke They were stunned by the accident and for a time could not move until the younger Taugwalder descended to enable them to advance When they were together Whymper asked to see the broken rope and saw that it had been employed by mistake as it was the weakest and oldest of the three ropes they had brought They frantically looked but in vain for traces of their fallen companions They continued their descent including an hour in the dark until 9 30 p m when a resting place was found The descent was resumed at daybreak and the group finally reached Zermatt where a search of the victims was quickly organized The bodies of Croz Hadow and Hudson were found on the Matterhorn Glacier but the body of Douglas was never found Although the elder Taugwalder was accused of cutting the rope to save himself and his son the official inquest found no proof of this 44 Second ascent Edit Main article Second ascent of the Matterhorn South west side of the Matterhorn Tyndall shoulder on the foreground On 16 July two days after the first ascent and the catastrophe Jean Antoine Carrel set out to crown Whymper s victory by proving that the Italian side was not unconquerable He was accompanied by Ame Gorret a priest who had shared with him the first attempt on the mountain back in 1857 Jean Baptiste Bich and Jean Augustin Meynet completed the party Giordano would have joined them but Carrel refused absolutely to take him with them he said he would not have the strength to guide a traveller and could neither answer for the result nor for any one s life After hearing Sunday mass at the chapel of Breuil the party started Ame Gorret has described this ascent with enthusiasm At last we crossed the Col du Lion and set foot upon the pyramid of the Matterhorn On the following day the 17th they continued the ascent and reached Tyndall s flagstaff We were about to enter unknown country wrote Gorret for no man had gone beyond this point Here opinions were divided Gorret suggested ascending by the ridge and scaling the last tower straight up Carrel was inclined to traverse to the west of the peak and thence go up on the Zmutt side Naturally the wish of Carrel prevailed for he was the leader and had not lost the habit of command notwithstanding his recent defeat 45 They made the passage of the enjambee and traversed the west face to reach the Zmutt ridge A false step made by one of the party and a fall of icicles from above warned them to return to the direct line of ascent and the traverse back to the Lion ridge was one of the greatest difficulty A falling stone injured Gorret in the arm 45 At last they reached the base of the final tower We stood wrote Gorret in a place that was almost comfortable Although it was not more than two yards wide and the slope was one of 75 percent we gave it all kinds of pleasant names the corridor the gallery the railroad amp c amp c They imagined all difficulties were at an end but a rock couloir which they had hitherto not observed lay between them and the final bit of ridge where progress would be perfectly easy It would have been unwise for all four to descend into the couloir because they did not know where to fix the rope that would be needed on their return Time pressed it was necessary to reduce the numbers of the party Gorret sacrificed himself and Meynet stopped with him Very soon afterwards Carrel and Bich were finally on the top Meanwhile Giordano at Breuil was writing in his diary as follows Splendid weather at 9 30 saw Carrel and his men on the Shoulder after that saw nothing more of them Then much mist about the summit Lifted a bit about 3 30 and we saw our flag on the western summit of the Matterhorn 45 Other ascents Edit Ridges Edit The north and west faces with the snowy Zmutt ridge in the centre On the Zmutt ridge with north face in background c 3 900 m The first direct ascent of the Italian south west ridge as it is climbed today was by J J and J P Maquignaz on 13 September 1867 28 Julius Elliott made the second ascent via the Hornli north east ridge in 1868 and later that year the party of John Tyndall J J and J P Maquignaz was the first to traverse the summit by way of the Hornli and Italian ridges 28 On 22 August 1871 while wearing a white print dress Lucy Walker became the first woman to reach the summit of the Matterhorn 46 followed a few weeks later by her rival Meta Brevoort The first winter ascent of the Hornli ridge was by Vittorio Sella with guides J A Carrel J B Carrel and L Carrel on 17 March 1882 28 and its first solo ascent was made by W Paulcke in 1898 28 The first winter solo ascent of the Hornli ridge was by G Gervasutti in 1936 28 The Zmutt north west ridge was first climbed by Albert F Mummery Alexander Burgener J Petrus and A Gentinetta on 3 September 1879 Its first solo ascent was made by Hans Pfann in 1906 28 and the first winter ascent was made by H Masson and E Petrig on 25 March 1948 28 The last of the Matterhorn s four ridges to be ascended was the Furggen south east ridge M Piacenza with guides J J Carrel and J Gaspard on 9 September 1911 climbed most of the ridge but bypassed the overhangs near the top to the south 28 Not until 23 September 1942 during the Second World War did Alfredo Perino along with guides Louis Carrel nicknamed The Little Carrel and Giacomo Chiara climb the complete ridge and the overhangs directly 47 In 1966 Rene Arnold and Joseph Graven made the first solo enchainement of the four Matterhorn ridges in 19 5 hours Beginning at the 3 300m Bossi Bivouac hut the pair followed the normal route up the Furggen Ridge and then descended the Hornli Ridge After crossing the Matterhorn Glacier at the base of the north face they ascended the Zmutt Ridge and then descended the Italian Lion Ridge to the village of Breuil In 1985 Marco Barmasse repeated their achievement but this time his route included the first solo ascent of the Furggen overhangs He completed the enchainement reaching the Abruzzi Hut after 15 hours 48 On 20 August 1992 Italian alpinist Hans Kammerlander and Swiss alpine guide Diego Wellig climbed the Matterhorn four times in just 23 hours and 26 minutes The route they followed was Zmutt ridge summit Hornli ridge descent Furggen ridge summit Lion ridge descent Lion ridge summit Hornli ridge descent Hornli ridge summit Hornli Hut descent 49 However the Italian route Lion Ridge was not climbed from Duca degli Abruzzi Refuge at 2802 m but from Carrel Hut at 3830 m both uphill and downhill 50 In 1995 Bruno Brunod climbed Matterhorn from the village Breuil Cervinia in 2 h 10 min 51 and from Breuil Cervinia to Matterhorn and back in 3 14 44 52 On 21 August 2013 the Spanish mountain runner Kilian Jornet broke Brunod s record as it took him 1 hour 56 min to the top from Breuil Cervinia a round trip time of 2 hours 52 minutes to return to his starting point 53 The north and east faces of the Matterhorn Faces Edit William Penhall and guides made the first partial ascent of the west face the Matterhorn s most hidden and unknown one hour after Mummery and party s first ascent of the Zmutt ridge on 3 September 1879 54 55 It was not until 1962 that the west face was completely climbed The ascent was made on 13 August by Renato Daguin and Giovanni Ottin 56 57 In January 1978 seven Italian alpine guides made a successful winter climb of Daguin and Ottin s highly direct and previously unrepeated 1962 route But a storm came during their ascent bringing two metres of snow to Breuil Cervinia and Zermatt and their accomplishment turned bitter when one of the climbers died during the descent 47 The north face before it was climbed in 1931 was one of the last great big wall problems in the Alps To succeed on the north face good climbing and ice climbing technique and route finding ability were required Unexpectedly it was first climbed by the brothers Franz and Toni Schmid on 31 July 1 August 1931 They reached the summit at the end of the second day after a night of bivouac Because they had kept their plans secret their ascent was a complete surprise In addition the two brothers had travelled by bicycle from Munich and after their successful ascent they cycled back home again 58 The first winter ascent of the north face was made by Hilti von Allmen and Paul Etter on 3 4 February 1962 28 Its first solo ascent was made in five hours by Dieter Marchart on 22 July 1959 28 Walter Bonatti climbed the North Face Direct solo on 18 22 February 1965 28 The same year Yvette Vaucher became the first woman to climb the north face 59 Bonatti s direct route was not repeated solo until 29 years later in winter 1994 by Catherine Destivelle Ueli Steck set the record time in climbing the north face Schmid route of Matterhorn in 2009 with a time of 1 hour 56 minutes 60 After Bonatti s climb the best alpinists were still preoccupied with one last great problem the Zmutt Nose an overhang lying on the right hand side of the north face In July 1969 two Italians Alessandro Gogna and Leo Cerruti attempted to solve the problem It took them four days to figure out the unusual overhangs avoiding however its steepest part In July 1981 the Swiss Michel Piola and Pierre Alain Steiner surmounted the Zmutt Nose by following a direct route the Piola Steiner 47 61 The first ascent of the south face was made by Enzo Benedetti with guides Louis Carrel and Maurice Bich on 15 October 1931 28 and the first complete ascent of the east face was made by Enzo Benedetti and G Mazzotti with guides Louis and Lucien Carrel Maurice Bich and Antoine Gaspard on 18 19 September 1932 28 Casualties on the Matterhorn Edit A climber standing on the summit The four men lost in 1865 have not been the only fatalities on the Matterhorn In fact several climbers die each year due to a number of factors including the scale of the climb and its inherent dangers inexperience falling rocks and overcrowded routes The Matterhorn is thus amongst the deadliest mountains in the world By the late 1980s it was estimated that over 500 people have died whilst attempting its summit since the 1865 ascent with an average of about 12 deaths each year 62 In the 2000s there was a trend of fewer people dying each year on the mountain This has been attributed partly to a greater awareness of the risks and also due to the fact that a majority of climbers now use local guides 63 However in the summer of 2018 at least ten people died on the mountain 64 Here is a list of people who died on the mountain whose bodies were not recovered until later 1954 French skier Henri le Masne went missing on the Matterhorn In 2005 remains were found identified as le Masne in 2018 65 1970 Two Japanese climbers missing remains found after 45 years in 2015 66 1979 British climber missing remains found after 34 years in 2014 67 2014 Japanese hiker missing remains found 2018 68 2016 Two British climbers missing remains found 2016 69 Legacy beginning of mountain culture Edit The first ascent of the Matterhorn changed mountain culture Whymper s book about his first ascent Scrambles Amongst the Alps published in 1871 was a worldwide bestseller Tourists began to visit Switzerland in the summer to see the Alps and often hired locals as guides With the beginning of alpine skiing in the early 20th century tourists began traveling to Switzerland in winter also Mountaineering in part helped transform Switzerland s mountain regions from poor rural areas to tourist destinations This combination of mountain climbing skiing and tourism was used in the western United States creating Sun Valley Vail Jackson Hole and other mountain towns around the world 70 Climbing routes Edit Trail to the Hornli Hut Today all ridges and faces of the Matterhorn have been ascended in all seasons and mountain guides take a large number of people up the northeast Hornli route each summer In total up to 150 climbers attempt the Matterhorn each day during summer By modern standards the climb is fairly difficult AD Difficulty rating but not hard for skilled mountaineers according to French climbing grades There are fixed ropes on parts of the route to help Still it should be remembered that several climbers may die on the mountain each year The usual pattern of ascent is to take the Schwarzsee cable car up from Zermatt hike up to the Hornli Hut elev 3 260 m 10 700 ft a large stone building at the base of the main ridge and spend the night The next day climbers rise at 3 30 am so as to reach the summit and descend before the regular afternoon clouds and storms come in The Solvay Hut located on the ridge at 4 003 m 13 133 ft can be used only in a case of emergency Other popular routes on the mountain include the Italian Lion ridge AD Difficulty rating and the Zmutt ridge D Difficulty rating The four faces as well as the Furggen ridge constitute the most challenging routes to the summit The north face is amongst the six most difficult faces of the Alps as well as The Trilogy the three hardest of the six along with the north faces of the Eiger and the Grandes Jorasses TD Difficulty rating Overcrowding on the several routes have become an issue and guides and local authorities have struggled with how to regulate the numbers In 2015 the Hornli hut became the first mountain shelter in Europe to limit beds 71 Routes Start Time of ascent DifficultyRidges Hornli Hornli Hut 6 hours AD III Zmutt Hornli Hut or Schonbiel Hut 7 hours 10 hours D IVLion Carrel Hut 5 hours AD IIIFurggen Bivacco Bossi 7 hours TD V Faces North Hornli Hut 14 hours TD VWest Schonbiel Hut 12 hours TD V South Rifugio Duca degli Abruzzi 15 hours TD V East Hornli Hut 14 hours TDHistory EditAegidius Tschudi one of the earliest Alpine topographers and historians was the first to mention the region around the Matterhorn in his work De Prisca ac Vera Alpina Raethi published in Basel in 1538 He approached the Matterhorn as a student when in his Alpine travels he reached the summit of the Theodul Pass but he does not seem to have paid any particular attention to the mountain itself 72 Theodulpass c 1800 The Matterhorn remained unstudied for more than two centuries until a geologist from Geneva Horace Benedict de Saussure travelled to the mountain which filled him with admiration However de Saussure was not moved to climb the mountain and had no hope of measuring its altitude by taking a barometer to its summit Its precipitous sides he wrote which give no hold to the very snows are such as to afford no means of access Yet his scientific interest was kindled by the proud peak which rises to so vast an altitude like a triangular obelisk that seems to be carved by a chisel His mind intuitively grasped the causes which gave the peak its present precipitous form the Matterhorn was not like a perfected crystal the centuries had laboured to destroy a great part of an ancient and much larger mountain On his first journey de Saussure had come from Ayas to the Col des Cimes Blanches from where the Matterhorn first comes into view descending to Breuil he ascended to the Theodul Pass On his second journey in 1792 he came to the Valtournanche studying and describing it he ascended to the Theodul Pass where he spent three days analysing the structure of the Matterhorn whose height he was the first to measure and collecting stones plants and insects He made careful observations from the sparse lichen that clung to the rocks to the tiny but vigorous glacier fly that fluttered over the snows and whose existence at such heights was mysterious At night he took refuge under the tent erected near the ruins of an old fort at the top of the pass During these days he climbed the Klein Matterhorn 3 883 metres which he named the Cime Brune du Breithorn 72 The first inquirers began to come to the Matterhorn There is a record of a party of Englishmen who in the summer of 1800 crossed the Great St Bernard Pass a few months after the passage of Bonaparte they came to Aosta and thence to Valtournenche slept at the chalets of Breuil and traversed the Theodul Pass which they called Monte Rosa The Matterhorn was to them an object of the most intense and continuous admiration 72 The Matterhorn by Edward Theodore Compton 1879 The Matterhorn is mentioned in a guide book to Switzerland by Johann Gottfried Ebel which was published in Zurich towards the end of the eighteenth century and translated into English in 1818 The mountain appeared in it under the three names of Silvius Matterhorn and Mont Cervin and was briefly described as one of the most splendid and wonderful obelisks in the Alps On Zermatt there was a note A place which may perhaps interest the tourist is the valley of Praborgne Zermatt it is bounded by huge glaciers which come right down into the valley the village of Praborgne is fairly high and stands at a great height above the glaciers its climate is almost as warm as that of Italy and plants belonging to hot countries are to be found there at considerable altitudes above the ice 72 William Brockedon who came to the region in 1825 considered the crossing of the Theodul Pass from Breuil to Zermatt a difficult undertaking He gave however expression to his enthusiasm on the summit When he arrived exhausted on the top of the pass he gazed on the beautiful pyramid of the Cervin more wonderful than aught else in sight rising from its bed of ice to a height of 5 000 feet a spectacle of indescribable grandeur In this immense natural amphitheatre enclosed from time immemorial by snow clad mountains and glaciers ever white in the presence of these grand walls the mind is overwhelmed not indeed that it is unable to contemplate the scene but it staggers under the immensity of those objects which it contemplates Those who made their way up through the Valtournanche to the foot of the mountain were few in number W A B Coolidge a diligent collector of old and new stories of the Alps mentions that during those years besides Brockedon only Hirzel Escher of Zurich who crossed the Theodul Pass in 1822 starting from Breuil accompanied by a local guide The greater number came from the Valais up the Visp valley to Zermatt In 1813 a Frenchman Henri Maynard climbed to the Theodul Pass and made the first ascent of the Breithorn he was accompanied by numerous guides among them J M Couttet of Chamonix the same man who had gone with de Saussure to the top of the Klein Matterhorn in 1792 The writings of these pioneers make much mention of the Matterhorn the bare and inert rock is gradually quickened into life by men s enthusiasm Stronger minds remarked Edward Whymper felt the influence of the wonderful form and men who ordinarily spoke or wrote like rational beings when they came under its power seemed to quit their senses and ranted and rhapsodised losing for a time all common forms of speech 72 Among the poets of the Matterhorn during these years 1834 to 1840 were Elie de Beaumont a famous French geologist Pierre Jean Edouard Desor a naturalist of Neuchatel who went up there with a party of friends two of whom were Louis Agassiz and Bernhard Studer Christian Moritz Engelhardt who was so filled with admiration for Zermatt and its neighbourhood that he returned there at least ten times from 1835 to 1855 described these places in two valuable volumes drew panoramas and maps and collected the most minute notes on the mineralogy and botany of the region Zermatt was at that time a quiet little village and travellers found hospitality at the parish priest s or at the village doctor s 72 The Matterhorn by John Ruskin 1849 In 1841 James David Forbes professor of natural philosophy at the University of Edinburgh came to see the Matterhorn A philosopher and geologist and an observant traveller he continued the work of De Saussure in his journeys and his writings He was full of admiration for the Matterhorn calling it the most wonderful peak in the Alps unsealed and unscalable These words pronounced by a man noted among all his contemporaries for his thorough knowledge of mountains show what men s feelings then were towards the Matterhorn and how at a time when the idea of Alpine exploration was gaining ground in their minds the Matterhorn stood by itself as a mountain apart of whose conquest it was vain even to dream And such it remained till long after this as such it was described by John Ball twenty years later in his celebrated guide book Forbes ascended the Theodul Pass in 1842 climbed the Breithorn and came down to Breuil as he descended from the savage scenery of the Matterhorn the Italian landscapes of the Valtournanche seemed to him like paradise Meanwhile Gottlieb Samuel Studer the geographer together with Melchior Ulrich was describing and mapping the topographical features of the Zermatt peaks 72 73 Rodolphe Topffer who first accompanied and guided youth to the Alps for purposes of education and amusement began his journeys in 1832 but it is only in 1840 that he mentions the Matterhorn Two years later Topffer and his pupils came to Zermatt He has described this journey of his in a chapter entitled Voyage autour du Mont Blanc jusqu a Zermatt here he sings a hymn of praise to the Matterhorn comparing its form with a huge crystal of a hundred facets flashing varied hues that softly reflects the light unshaded from the uttermost depths of the heavens Topffer s book was illustrated by Alexandre Calame his master and friend with drawings of the Matterhorn executed in the romantic style of the period It is an artificial mountain a picture corresponding rather with the exaggerated effect it produces on the astonished mind of the artist than with the real form of the mountain 72 About this time there came a man who studied the Matterhorn in its structure and form and who sketched it and described it in all its parts with the curiosity of the artist and the insight of the scientist This was John Ruskin a new and original type of philosopher and geologist painter and poet whom England was enabled to create during that period of radical intellectual reforms which led the way for the highest development of her civilisation Ruskin was the Matterhorn s poet par excellence He went to Zermatt in 1844 and it is to be noticed as a curious fact that the first time he saw the Matterhorn it did not please him The mountain on its lofty pedestal in the very heart of the Alps was perhaps too far removed from the ideal he had formed of the mountains but he returned studied and dreamt for long at its feet and at length he pronounced it the most noble cliff in Europe Ruskin was no mountaineer nor a great friend to mountaineering he drew sketches of the mountains merely as an illustration of his teaching of the beauty of natural forms which was the object of his whole life In his work on Modern Painters he makes continual use of the mountains as an example of beauty and an incentive to morality The publication of Ruskin s work certainly produced a great impression at the time on educated people in England and a widespread desire to see the mountains 72 It is a fragment of some size a group of broken walls one of them overhanging crowned with a cornice nodding some hundred and fifty feet over its massive flank three thousand above its glacier base and fourteen thousand above the sea a wall truly of some majesty at once the most precipitous and the strongest mass in the whole chain of the Alps the Mont Cervin 72 Aerial photography by Eduard Spelterini in 1910 Other men of high attainments followed but in the years 1850 scientists and artists were about to be succeeded by real climbers and the passes and peaks around Zermatt were explored little by little In the preface to the first volume of the Alpine Journal which appeared in 1863 the editor Hereford Brooke George wrote that While even if all other objects of interest in Switzerland should be exhausted the Matterhorn remains who shall say for how long unconquered and apparently invincible Whymper successfully reached the summit in 1865 but four men perished on the descent The English papers discussed it with bitter words of blame a German newspaper published an article in which Whymper was accused of cutting the rope between Douglas and Taugwalder at the critical moment to save his own life 72 In 1890 the Federal Government was asked simultaneously by the same contractor for a concession for the Zermatt Gornergrat railway and for a Zermatt Matterhorn one The Gornergrat railway was constructed in 1896 1898 and has been working since August 1898 but there has been no more talk of the other The project essentially consisted of a line which went up to the Hornli and continued thence in a rectilinear tunnel about two kilometres long built under the ridge and issuing near the summit on the Zmutt side 72 Sixty years later in 1950 Italian engineer Count Dino Lora Totino planned a cable car on the Italian side from Breuil Cervinia to the summit But the Alpine Museum of Zermatt sent a protest letter with 90 000 signatures to the Italian government The latter declared the Matterhorn a natural wonder worthy of protection and refused the concession to the engineer 74 2015 marked the 150th anniversary of the first ascent Events and festivities were held throughout the year A completely renewed Hornli Hut opened the same year in the month of July 75 76 In 2020 during the COVID 19 pandemic light artist Gerry Hofstetter started projecting country flags and messages of endurance onto the mountain peak as part of a nightly series designed to show support and spread hope for everyone suffering and those fighting the pandemic 77 Other mountains EditHundreds of other mountains have been compared with the Matterhorn either for their resemblance to it or because of their apparent inaccessibility 78 79 80 Mountains named after the Matterhorn Edit Little Matterhorn 1 480 m Australia Matterhorn 1 600 m in Antarctica Matterhorn 3 305 m in Nevada Matterhorn Peak 3 744 m in California Matterhorn Peak 4 144 m in Colorado Matterhorn Peak 2 636 m in British Columbia Neny Matterhorn 1 125 m AntarcticaIn culture Edit 1908 Swiss poster Emil Cardinaux 1935 Italian poster anonymous Poster created by Cardinaux for Toblerone in the 1920s During the 20th century the Matterhorn and the story of the first ascent in particular inspired various artists and film producers such as Luis Trenker and Walt Disney 81 82 Large scale replicas can be found at Disneyland and Window of the World In 2021 a Matterhorn related attraction opened in the Swiss Museum of Transport enabling visitors to climb it virtually from the Solvay Hut to the summit 83 Designed in 1908 by Emil Cardinaux a leading poster artist of the time the Matterhorn poster for the Zermatt tourist office is often considered the first modern poster It has been described as a striking example of a marriage of tourism patriotism and popular art It served as decoration in many Swiss military hospices during the war in addition to be found in countless middle class living rooms Another affiche depicting the Matterhorn was created by Cardinaux for the chocolate brand Toblerone in the 1920s The image of the Matterhorn first appeared on Toblerone chocolate bars in 1960 84 Since then the Matterhorn has become a reference that still inspires graphic artists today and has been used extensively for all sort of publicity and advertising 85 86 87 88 89 Paintings Edit The Matterhorn 1849 John Ruskin The Matterhorn 1867 Albert Bierstadt Matterhorn 1879 Edward Theodore Compton Le Cervin 1892 Felix VallottonCoins Edit Swiss Commemorative coin 2004 CHF 10 Swiss Commemorative coin 2004 CHF 50Filmography Edit Struggle for the Matterhorn 1928 The Mountain Calls 1938 The Challenge 1938 Climbing the Matterhorn 1947 Third Man on the Mountain 1959 Im Banne des Berges 2015 90 Soarin Around the World Soaring Over the Horizon 2016 The Horn 2016 Documentary series following the mountain rescue teams in the Swiss Alps 91 Bibliography EditGuido Rey The Matterhorn translated J E C Eaton London 1907 note 6 Beat P Truffer Matterhorn DVD 1 18 Film 1 001 Photos 17 E Books 1 Audiobook Aroleit Verlag Zermatt 2015 ISBN 978 3 905097 24 5 www matterhornworld ch Charles Gos Le Cervin Attinger 1948 Yvan Hostettler Matterhorn Alpine Top Model Olizane Edition Geneva 2006 The use of the Matterhorn in advertisement publicity movies painting and arts R L G Irving Ten Great Mountains London J M Dent amp Sons 1940 note 7 Beat P Truffler The History of the Matterhorn First Ascents Projects and Adventures 7th ed Aroleit Verlag Zermatt 2015 ISBN 978 3 905097 22 1 Translation of Die Geschichte des Matterhorns from the German by Mirjam Steinmann Edward Whymper Scrambles Amongst the Alps 1871 The book Banner in the Sky by James Ramsey Ullman is based on Edward Whympers ascent Notes and references EditNotes Edit Despite its prominence in a local sense the Matterhorn is not among the top 100 mountains in the Alps measured by topographic prominence Its close neighbors Monte Rosa the Dom Liskamm and the Weisshorn have higher summits See a panoramic photograph of the view from Finsteraarhorn to the north The key col is Col Durand at 3 436 metres 11 273 ft between the Matterhorn and the Weisshorn Retrieved from Google Earth The nearest point of higher elevation is the Western Liskamm There are several different Romansh dialects each with its own slight variation on the name for the Matterhorn Sometimes the mountain is simply known in Romansh as Matterhorn pronounced mɐˈtɛrorn borrowed from German influence Considering summits with at least 300 metres prominence it is the 6th highest in the Alps and Europe outside the Caucasus Mountains On 14 July 1865 he set forth from this hotel with his companions and guides and completed the first successful ascent of the Matterhorn Rey s Il Monte Cervino was first published in Italian and appeared in English in 1907 in a translation by J E C Eaton a revised edition with two further chapters by R L G Irving was published in Oxford by Basil Blackwell 1946 and reprinted in 1949 The climbing history up to 1939 of the Matterhorn Snowdon Ben Nevis Ushba Mount Logan Everest Nanga Parbat Kanchenjunga Mount Cook and Mont Blanc References Edit Commune Zermatt Map Matterhorn peak digital ed 1 10 0000 National Map 1 10 000 Wabern Switzerland Federal Office of Topography swisstopo Retrieved 2018 01 23 via map geo admin ch a b Lunn Arnold 1965 Matterhorn Centenary Allen amp Unwin p 25 Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Jones Daniel 2011 Roach Peter Setter Jane Esling John eds Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 15255 6 Messner Reinhold September 2001 The big walls from the North Face of the Eiger to the South Face of Dhaulagiri The Mountaineers Books p 46 ISBN 978 0 89886 844 9 Retrieved 13 July 2011 Grave of the Unknown Climber zermatt ch Zermatt Tourism Retrieved 4 April 2021 The Grave of the Unknown Climber is located in the Mountaineers Cemetery It reminds us of the more than 500 deaths which have taken place on the Matterhorn since 1865 And of the missing and dead who could not be found or completely removed after their fall Gieri Venzin ed 2 April 2015 Literatur zum Berg der Berge in German Zurich Switzerland SRF Retrieved 2016 09 21 Harper Douglas Matterhorn Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 2022 09 06 Deguise le Mont Cervin 24 heures 17 October 2008 Archived from the original on 29 June 2012 Swiss Mountains Names www swissworld org Archived from the original on 2008 03 18 Retrieved 2007 11 26 Bulletin of the Italian Alpine Club vol ii 1867 p 107 Caesar De Bello Gallico book iii a b Rey Guido 1907 The Matterhorn Oxford B Blackwell Silvia Tenderini 2002 La montagna per tutti ospitalita sulle Alpi nel Novecento in Italian p 40 Matterhorn myswitzerland com Archived from the original on 2009 06 05 Retrieved 2011 01 23 A list of 109 world Matterhorns CERVIN top model des Alpes Archived 2007 10 17 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 15 October 2007 in French Nuova antologia Nuova antologia 1907 Key dates in the history of Zermatt Zermatt tourism permanent dead link Retrieved on 2009 10 16 No change in the height of the Matterhorn PDF leica geosystems com Retrieved 30 August 2020 Col Durand 1 25 000 Map Swisstopo Retrieved 2015 02 15 Liskamm 1 25 000 Map Swisstopo Retrieved 2015 02 15 After Mont Blanc and the Liskamm Mountain Classification UIAA International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation UIAA Retrieved 30 August 2020 Journey through time Maps map geo admin ch Swisstopo Retrieved 2015 12 11 Cherbuliez Joel 1840 Bibliotheque universelle de Geneve Volume 27 p 346 The Vispa formed by the Matter Vispa and Saaser Vispa runs only a few kilometres before its ends in the Rhone Key dates in the history of Zermatt permanent dead link Retrieved on 2009 10 19 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Robin G Collomb Pennine Alps Central London Alpine Club 1975 pp 241 59 Marthaler Michel Rougier Henri 2021 An Outstanding Mountain The Matterhorn in Landscapes and Landforms of Switzerland World Geomorphological Landscapes ResearchGate Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2021 Retrieved 15 January 2022 Edward Whymper Scrambles amongst the Alps 6th edition London John Murray 1936 p 80 The Matterhorn Really from Africa PDF Internides Institute of Geology and Palaeontology University of Lausanne Archived from the original on September 22 2009 Histoire du BVZ Zermatt Bahn Archived 2007 10 21 at the Wayback Machine mgbahn ch Retrieved on 2009 10 16 Investments and projects Matterhorn Zermatt www matterhornparadise ch Zermatt Bergbahnen AG Projects Retrieved on 2009 10 22 Hilary Sharp Tour of the Matterhorn Cicerone Swiss Move to Reduce Stress on the Matterhorn The New York Times July 13 2015 Retrieved 2018 11 04 a b c Pierre Staelen La Conquete du Cervin Retrieved 2010 01 18 a b c d e Whymper Edward 1880 The Ascent of the Matterhorn J Murray pp 46 57 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Matterhorn Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 895 Roger W Patillo The Canadian Rockies Pioneers Legends and True Tales p 176 a b c d e Edward Whymper Scrambles amongst the Alps 6th edition London John Murray 1936 pp 309 13 The Times 08 08 1865 p 9 Whymper Edward 2002 Scrambles Amongst the Alps in the Years 1860 1869 Washington DC National Geographic Society pp 369 378 ISBN 9780792269236 a b c Guido Rey The Matterhorn translated J E C Eaton London 1908 p 140 Janet Adam Smith Lucy Walker 1836 1916 Oxford University Press a b c Herve Barmasse and Luca Maspes July 2006 The Matterhorn Alpinist 16 Griffin Lindsay 14 April 2014 New speed link up on the Matterhorn in winter www thebmc co uk Retrieved 31 August 2020 La Stampa 08 21 1992 p 12 Quattro volte sul Cervino in sole 24 ore corriere it August 1992 Ascent Races and Records ISF FSA recognised Archived 2014 04 22 at the Wayback Machine skyrunning com Races and Records ISF FSA recognised Archived 2014 04 23 at the Wayback Machine skyrunning com MacDonald Dougald 22 August 2013 Kilian Jornet Shatters Matterhorn Speed Record Climbing Magazine Retrieved 31 August 2020 Helmut Dumler and Willi P Burkhardt The High Mountains of the Alps London Diadem 1994 p 151 William Penhall The Matterhorn from the Zmutt Glacier Alpine Journal Vol IX reprinted in Peaks Passes and Glaciers ed Walt Unsworth London Allen Lane 1981 pp 64 72 Matterhorn in German French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland Guide des Alpes Valaisannes du Col Collon au Theodulpass 1992 Swiss Alpine Club Reinhold Messner The big walls from the North Face of the Eiger to the South Face of Dhaulagiri p 41 Birkett Bill Peascod Bill 1990 Women Climbing 200 Years of Achievement The Mountaineers Breaking boundaries one perilous face at a time Swissinfo Retrieved on 2012 12 09 Le Nez de Zmutt Archived from the original on November 1 2010 Black Lee 2014 Mountaineering Edina United States ABDO Publishing Company p 29 ISBN 9781629680101 Curtis Malcolm 13 October 2013 Increased use of guides cuts Matterhorn deaths The Local ch Retrieved 22 Jan 2019 Sharp rise in mountain deaths in Swiss Alps Half year figures SWI swissinfo ch 16 Sep 2018 Retrieved 22 Jan 2019 Quinn Rob July 30 2018 His Brother Vanished on a Skiing Trip 64 Years Ago He Finally Knows What Happened Newser Remains of two Japanese climbers on Matterhorn identified after 45 years news yahoo com Remains of UK climber found on Matterhorn www thelocal ch February 11 2014 Remains of missing Japanese hiker found on Matterhorn news yahoo com Two Britons found dead on Matterhorn BBC News August 6 2016 Jenkins Mark August 1 2019 How the pursuit of one European peak gave rise to modern mountaineering National Geographic News Retrieved 2022 06 26 McMillan Kelley July 13 2015 Swiss Move to Reduce Stress on the Matterhorn The New York Times a b c d e f g h i j k l Rey Guido The Matterhorn translated J E C Eaton London 1908 Available on the Internet Archive Sydney Spencer Mountaineering p 27 1934 Tragodien am Matterhorn Archived 2011 07 23 at the Wayback Machine Johannes Schweikle Merian de 150 years since first Matterhorn ascent Zermatt Tourism Archived from the original on 2014 12 19 Retrieved 2014 08 20 The Matterhorn Trek outdooractive Retrieved 2020 04 21 Light projections on the Matterhorn Zermatt Tourism 2020 03 24 Archived from the original on 2020 04 17 Retrieved 2020 04 21 Pyatt Edward The Matterhorn Image PDF Alpine Journal With all this tremendous emphasis it is not surprising to find that mountains elsewhere of similar steep clean pyramidal lines and similarly isolated should be likened to it and dubbed the Matterhorn of their particular country district or range There is perhaps one other consideration involved The Matterhorn long enjoyed a reputation for inaccessibility such that many mountainers would not even attempt it A mountain might earn its sobriquet on the grounds that it looked difficult or impossible to climb a category into which many columnar type mountains might also fall Jouty Sylvain 2009 Dictionnaire de la montagne Place des editeurs ISBN 9782258082205 tandis que des centaines de Cervin et de Matterhorn attestent de par le monde la renommee inouie de cette montagne while hundreds of Cervino and Matterhorn attest to the incredible fame of this mountain throughout the world Musa Ghazali Higham James Thompson Carr Anna 2015 Mountaineering Tourism Routledge p 114 ISBN 9781317668749 Not inconsequentially new Matterhorns could suddenly be found in all the major ranges as well Ushba for example became the Matterhorn of the Caucasus Ama Dablam the Matterhorn of the Himalayas the Matterhorn of India was Shivling Mt Assiniboine was the Matterhorn of North America and Mt Aspiring Tititea in New Zealand became the Matterhorn of the South Hans Michael Bock Tim Bergfelder The Concise Cinegraph Encyclopaedia of German Cinema p 480 MichaelBarrier com Essays Zermatt michaelbarrier com Pinol Christophe 8 June 2021 Sueurs froides au sommet du Cervin Cold sweats at the top of the Matterhorn Le Temps Lausanne Retrieved 16 June 2021 Il faudra alors entrer dans une reconstitution du refuge Solvay situe a 4003 m d altitude sur le fil de l arete est du Cervin pour commencer a s equiper des capteurs aux mains et aux pieds le sac a dos abritant la technique et enfin le casque VR It will then be necessary to enter a reconstruction of the Solvay refuge located at an altitude of 4 003 m on the edge of the east ridge of the Matterhorn to start equipping sensors on the hands and feet the backpack housing the technique and finally the VR headset Matterhorn the Swiss Toblerone Chocolate Mountain Zermatterhorn Retrieved 2019 06 22 The first Swiss Posters travel posters Archived 2011 07 06 at the Wayback Machine admin ch Publicite Toblerone Archived 2014 03 14 at the Wayback Machine toblerone ch David Scott Poetics of the Poster The Rhetoric of Image Text p 94 Hans Ulrich Jost From Liotard to Le Corbusier 200 years of Swiss painting 1730 1930 p 19 Hilary Sharp Tour of Monte Rosa p 54 Focus Matterhorn Im Banne des Berges www focus matterhorn ch The Horn 17 October 2016 via www imdb com La conquete du Cervin Pierre StaelenExternal links EditMatterhorn at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Texts from Wikisource Travel information from Wikivoyage Alps portal Mountains portalMatterhorn from the Zermatt Tourism official website 150th anniversary from the Zermatt Tourism official website Matterhorn Webcams from the Breuil Cervinia Tourism official website Virtual ascent of the Hornli Ridge with 360 degree panoramas Landscape Artist Attempts to Climb Matterhorn detailed story of the first ascent Chronology of climbs in German Climbing and trekkingMatterhorn on Summitpost Matterhorn on Peakware Matterhorn on Hikr Matterhorn on GeoFinder chMatterhorn on 4000er de in German Matterhorn Tour guidebook 2018 BBC story of skier lost near Matterhorn 1954 found 2005 identified 2018 BBC July 29 2018VideosDer Berg ruft is available for free download at the Internet Archive subtitles in French film based on the first ascent story The Challenge on YouTube remake of Der Berg ruft The Matterhorn on YouTube documentary featuring the climb on the Hornli ridge The Matterhorn Summit 150y on YouTube traverse of the very sharp summit ridge by two Polish climbers A Wojcik Y Trokhymenko Portals Mountains Italy Switzerland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Matterhorn amp oldid 1151969467, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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