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Maladeta

Maladeta
Maladeta.jpg
Maladeta
Highest point
Elevation 3,312 m (10,866 ft)
Listing List of mountains in Aragon
Coordinates 42°38′50″N 0°38′22″E / 42.64722°N 0.63944°E / 42.64722; 0.63944Coordinates: 42°38′50″N 0°38′22″E / 42.64722°N 0.63944°E / 42.64722; 0.63944
Naming
Translation from "damned mountains" (Spanish)
Geography
Maladeta is located in Pyrenees
Maladeta
Maladeta
Location in the Pyrenees
Location Ribagorza, Aragon Spain
Parent range Pyrenees
Climbing
First ascent 28 September 1817

Maladeta (3,312 m) is a mountain in the Pyrenees, close to the highest peak in the range, Aneto. It is located in the Natural Park of Posets-Maladeta in the town of Benasque in Province of Huesca, Aragon, Spain. Its northern slope contains the 91-acre (37 ha) Maladeta Glacier, which is divided into the 15-acre (6 ha) Western Maladeta and the 77-acre (31 ha) Eastern Maladeta.

Maladeta was previously considered to be highest peak in the area, and attempts to reach its summit took priority over the other peaks in the range. The first successful ascent of the peak was made by Johann Jacob Friedrich Wilhelm Parrot with guide Pierre Barrau in 1817.

The name "Maladeta" comes from the Spanish montes malditos, which means "Damned Mountains". According to some authorities the local name for the massif was Mala hita ("bad rocks" or "bad upper regions"). When French travellers came to the region they translated the name into the French as "Maladette", on the basis that it was cognate with the Italian term Maladetta (feminine for "damned"). Subsequently the mountain became known as Maladeta, a term that encompasses the entire massif.

While not the highest peak in the local group of mountains, Maladeta was named for the entire group, which is also called Montes Malditos. It attracted the most interest from climbers, especially in the early nineteenth century, as its summit appears in the foreground from the natural entrance to the valley via the port of Benasque or when arriving from France. From this vantage point, the Cresta Portillones hides the true height of its eastern neighbour Aneto, which is taller and has more extensive glaciers. The first attempts to reach the peak were by Ramond in 1787, Ferrieres in 1801, and Louis Cordier in 1802. It wasn't until German naturalist Johann Jacob Friedrich Wilhelm Parrot, with guide Pierre Barrau, climbed to the summit of the mountain on 28 September 1817 that Aneto was discovered to be higher.


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