Karawanks
Karawanks | |
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Karavankas, Karavanks | |
View to Eastern Karawanks from Mt. Stol/Hochstuhl | |
Highest point | |
Peak | Hochstuhl/Veliki Stol |
Elevation | 2,236 m (7,336 ft) |
Coordinates | 46°26′3″N 14°10′24″E / 46.43417°N 14.17333°E |
Dimensions | |
Length | 120 km (75 mi) |
Geography | |
Countries | Slovenia and Austria |
Range coordinates | 46°25′N 14°25′E / 46.42°N 14.42°ECoordinates: 46°25′N 14°25′E / 46.42°N 14.42°E |
Parent range |
Southern Limestone Alps Carinthian-Slovenian Alps |
The Karawanks[1][2] or Karavankas[3][4] or Karavanks[5][6] (Slovene: Karavanke, German: Karawanken) are a mountain range of the Southern Limestone Alps on the border between Slovenia to the south and Austria to the north. With a total length of 120 kilometres (75 mi) in an east-west direction, the Karawanks chain is one of the longest ranges in Europe.[7] It is traversed by important trade routes and has a great tourist significance. Geographically and geologically, it is divided into the higher Western Karawanks and the lower-lying Eastern Karawanks. It is traversed by the Periadriatic Seam, separating the Apulian tectonic plate from the Eurasian Plate.
Geography
The Karawanks form the continuation of the Carnic Alps east of the Slizza stream near the tripoint of Austria, Slovenia and Italy at Arnoldstein. They are confined by the Drava Valley in the north (called Rosental/Rož) and the Sava in the south, separating it from the adjacent Julian Alps. In the east, they border on the Kamnik–Savinja Alps and Pohorje ranges.
A number of mountain passes on important trade routes cross the range, like Wurzen (Koreno), Loibl (Ljubelj) or Seeberg (Jezero), which have been used since prehistory. Nowadays the Austrian Karawanken Autobahn (A11) runs from Villach to the Karavanke motorway tunnel, which traverses the Western Karawanks connecting it with the Slovenian A2 motorway at Jesenice. A parallel railway line crosses the range through the Karawanks railway tunnel.
The Karawanks are a popular mountaineering area with numerous mountain huts. Many of the peaks offer a good view of the Klagenfurt basin on the Austrian side and the Ljubljana basin on the Slovene side. The northern Austrian side is rocky and precipitous while the Slovenian side is less steep, covered with spruce forests and low bushy pine at lower elevations with grass higher up.
History
The Karawanks were settled already in the Stone Age, as indicated particularly by findings from the Potok Cave. In Roman times, they represented the southern border of the Noricum province, and later, of the Slavic principality of Carantania. The ancient geographer Claudius Ptolemy mentioned the Karwankas mountains about 150 AD. The name probably is derived from Celtic karv ("deer"), a tradition that has survived in the Košuta (Slovene for "hind") massif.
From the first half of the 11th century, the Karawanks formed the border between the territory of the Duchy of Carinthia and the adjacent March of Carniola in the south. After Carniola had been elevated to a duchy in 1364, both lands became part of Inner Austria and were crown lands of the Habsburg Monarchy from 1526 up to World War I. The northern slopes of the Karawanks were a historic settlement area of Carinthian Slovenes, nevertheless in October 1920, the crest was decided with the Carinthian Plebiscite as the border between the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later Yugoslavia); only the municipality of Jezersko had already passed from Carinthia to Yugoslavia.
After World War II the Karawanks remained the border between Austria and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and finally the independent Slovenia from 1991. Since the entry of Slovenia to the Schengen Area in 2007, a free movement of people and goods across the Karawanks has been allowed and the two countries started to aim for an economic integration of their border areas.[8]
Notable peaks
Several place names also have German names, and today the peaks along the main chain of the Karawanks are usually displayed in Slovene and German on hiking maps:
- Hochstuhl/Veliki Stol: 2,236 m (7,336 feet)
- Mittagskogel/Kepa: 2,143 m (7,031 feet)
- Petzen/Peca: 2,125 m (6,943 feet)
- Golica/Kahlkogel: 1,836 m (6,023 feet)
- Vertratscha/Vrtača (2,181 m)
- Koschuta/Košuta (2,133 m)
- Begunjščica (2,060 m)
- Košutica (1,968 m)
- Olševa (1,929 m)
- Frauenkogel/Dovška Baba (1,891 m)
- Klek (1,753 m)
See also
References
- ↑ Flügel, Helmut W., & Peter Faupl (eds.). 1987. Geodynamics of the Eastern Alps. Vienna: Franz Deuticke, p. 374.
- ↑ McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, vol. 6. 2002. New York: McGraw Hill Higher Education, p. 708.
- ↑ Murray, John. 1871. Handbook for Travellers in Southern Germany. London: John Murray, p. 369.
- ↑ Raos, Ivan, & Miodrag Stojanović. 1966. The Beauties of Yugoslavia. Ljubljana: Delo.
- ↑ Pavlakovich-Kochi, Vera, Barbara Jo Morehouse, & Doris Wastl-Walter. 2004. Challenged Borderlands: Transcending Political and Cultural Boundaries Aldershot: Ashgate, p. 58.
- ↑ Kmecl, Matjaž, & Joco Žnidaršič. 1987. Treasure Chest of Slovenia. Ljubljana: Cankarjeva založba.
- ↑ http://www.karavanke.eu/
- ↑ 2013_21-12-2007_en.pdf "Operational Programme: Cross-Border Cooperation Slovenia–Austria 2007–2013" Check
value (help) (PDF). European Territorial Co-operation SI-AT. December 2007. Retrieved 19 April 2012.|url=
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Karawanks. |
- Karawanks on Hiking Trail
- Karawanks. More Information about Karawanks (German)
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