The Gazon du Faing is a granitic summit of the Vosges massif located on the ridge line between the Col du Bonhomme and the Col de la Schlucht.
Gazon du Faing | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Elevation | 1,306 m (4,285 ft)[1] |
Coordinates | 48°06′49″N 7°04′45″E / 48.11361°N 7.07917°E |
Geography | |
Location | Alsace, Lorraine, France |
Parent range | Vosges Mountains |
The panorama towards the Orbey valley and the Munster valley (Soultzeren-Stosswihr) is remarkable. The Black Forest, the Jura, and the Alps are also visible in clear weather.
Geography
editThis nearly flat summit with rounded edges, ranking among the ten highest in the massif, has a fairly steep slope on the Alsatian side, giving rise to a glacial cirque that harbors Lac Noir 350 meters below.[2]
The Soultzeren Eck, meaning the "boundary corner of Soultzeren," is a boundary point shared by three municipalities: Soultzeren and Orbey on the Alsatian side, and Plainfaing on the Lorraine side. This late toponymic formation, for altimetric identification purposes in the Belle Époque, follows the same linguistic genesis as that of the Ringbuhl.[3]
History
editThe vast mountain pasture, with its evocative name, which is now partly abandoned, stretched across the Lorraine slope, overlooking the Col du Louschbach and especially the upper valley of the River Meurthe nearly 600 meters below. It was allocated to the municipality of Plainfaing after the division of the high mountain pastures with the municipality of Le Valtin, during the Restoration period. Its farm-inn is located along the Route des Crêtes, at an altitude of 1,225 meters, south of the former pasture.[4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ IGN maps available on Géoportail
- ^ Encyclopédie de l'Alsace (in French). Editions Publitotal. 1984. p. 3276.
- ^ Walking in France. Lonely Planet. 2004. p. 328. ISBN 978-1-74059-243-7.
- ^ La Grande guerre dans les Vosges: sources et état des lieux : actes du colloque tenu à Epinal, du 4 au 6 septembre 2008 (in French). Conseil général des Vosges. 2009. p. 317. ISBN 978-2-86088-067-1.