Pragelato

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Pragelato
Prajalats
Comune di Pragelato
Parish church.
Parish church.
Coat of arms of Pragelato
Location of Pragelato
Map
UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
10060
Dialing code0122
WebsiteOfficial website

Pragelato (also Pragelà;[4] Vivaro-Alpine: Prajalats, French: Prajalats) is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Turin in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 60 kilometres (37 mi) west of Turin, in the upper Val Chisone. The name Pragelato, meaning "icy meadow", has been derived from the harsh climate and the fact that the ground is covered with ice for long periods.[4][5] On both sides of the Chisone, extensive forests of pine and larch provide protection from the avalanches which are a common occurrence in the winter season: for this reason in the nineteenth century the people of Pragelato were only permitted to fell trees close to the mountain summits, and even then only with the permission of the communal administration.[5]

Pragelato borders the following municipalities: Exilles, Oulx, Salbertrand, Usseaux, Fenestrelle, Sauze d'Oulx, Massello, Sestriere, Sauze di Cesana, Salza di Pinerolo, Prali.

History

Pragelato was part of the

Treaty of Utrecht of the latter, it became a possession of the House of Savoy
.

In 1747 the nearby Assietta Pass was the stage of the eponymous battle. During the 19th and 20th century, much of the population emigrated to France.

On 19 April 1904, an avalanche struck the miners barracks of the Beth copper mine in the nearby Troncea Valley, killing 81 people.[6] A memorial plaque in the small cemetery of the Laval hamlet remembers the victims of the avalanche.

Pragelato was the site of three sports hosted during the 2006 Winter Olympics. Its ski jump hosted the ski jumping and the ski jumping part of the Nordic combined events of the 2006 Winter Olympics.[7] The flat part of the venue hosted the cross-country skiing and cross country skiing part of the Nordic combined events for those same games.[8]

Ski area

Pragelato is well equipped for cross-country skiing. Its Olympic course – the Pragelato Plan – has a snow-making system over 10 kilometres (6 mi), and a tourist course winds along Val Troncea Natural Park.

The ski-jumping stadium presents the Olympic heritage, which highlights the tourist-sport development of this resort.

Pragelato has his own alpine skiing areas with about 50 kilometres (31 mi) of slopes and is linked to the

Cesana
.

Natural parks

References

  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. Istat
    .
  3. ^ "Popolazione Residente al 1° Gennaio 2018". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  4. ^ a b 'Pragelato' in Dizionario topografico dei comuni compresi entro i confini naturali dell'Italia, ed. by Attilio Zuccagni-Orlandini (Florence: Società Editrice di Patrii Documenti Storico-Statistici, 1864).
  5. ^ a b Dizionario geografico, storico, statistico, commerciale degli stati di S.M. il re di Sardegna, ed. by Goffredo Casalis, 28 vols (Turin: G. Maspero, 1833–56) XV (1847), 707–709.
  6. ^ "Le Miniere del Beth". Parco Naturale della Val Troncea (in Italian).
  7. ^ 2006 Winter Olympics official report. Volume 3. pp. 70-1.
  8. ^ 2006 Winter Olympics official report. Volume 3. pp. 72-3.

External links