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Glacier Montanvert

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Glacier Montanvert was the common name in the 18th century for a portion of the Alps glacier, now known as Mer de Glace, on the northern slopes of the Mont Blanc massif . Alternative spellings of Montanvert include Montainvert and Montvers. The Glacier Montanvert was a popular tourist destination of European travellers and is referenced in numerous travel writings and novels of the time.

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Glacier Montanvert CrevasseGlacier Montanvert

South-eastern France including Corsica: handbook for travellers by Karl Baedeker

Glacier Montanvert Mer de Glace Montanvert Library of Congress

  • Travel writer Karl Baedeker includes Montanvert in his 1898 travel guide South-eastern France including Corsica: handbook for travellers. In his guide Bauedeker suggests visitors to Chamonix devote at least one day to ascending the Montanvert and to crossing the Mer de Glace, a journey he claims takes about four hours. Baedeker describes Montanvert as,
  • Voyages Dans les Alpes, Précédés d’un Essai sur l’Histoire Naturelle des Environs de Geneve by Horace-Bénedict De Saussure

    Glacier Montanvert Le Glacier de Montanvert et l39Aiguille des Grands Charmoz valle de

  • In 1786 Horace-Bénédict de Saussure published in French a collection of travel writings titled Voyages Dans les Alpes, Précédés d’un Essai sur l’Histoire Naturelle des Environs de Geneve (Travels in the Alps, Preceded by an essay on the natural history of Geneva and the surrounding area) in which he mentions Montanvert numerous times. De Saussure explains the popularity of Montanvert is a result of the magnificent views it affords of the Mer de Glace and the surrounding mountains. The view from Montanvert encompasses the Chamonix valley, the Arve river, many villages surrounded by trees and well cultivated fields.
  • Lettres d’un Voyageur Anglois sur la France, la Suisse et ’Allemagne by John Moore

    Glacier Montanvert A TRAMP ABROAD BY MARK TWAIN Part 7

  • In 1781 John Moore published (in French) a collection of travel writings titled Lettres d’un Voyageur Anglois sur la France, la Suisse et ’Allemagne (Letters from an English traveler on France, Switzerland and Germany) in which he recounts ascending Montanvert a journey of four hours that Moore claims could not be more beautiful. Moore describes the Mer de Glace as a sea agitated by a storm whose waves are all of a sudden stopped and fixed by a strong sudden freeze.
  • The Romance of the Forest by Ann Radcliffe

    Glacier Montanvert CHARTON SOUVENIRS PITTORESQUES DES GLACIERS DE CHAMOUNY

  • In Ann Radcliffe's 1791 gothic novel The Romance of the Forest, the heroine visits the glacier of Montanvert while in Switzerland.
  • Other references to Glacier Montanvert in literature

    Glacier Montanvert Samuel Birmann Mer de Glace vue du Montanvert 1826quot by Samuel Birmann

  • In the 1776 collection of travel writings by Marc Theodore Bourrit titled A relation of a journey to the glaciers in the Duchy of Savoy.
  • In the 1791 collection of travel writings by William Coxe titled Travels in Switzerland, and in the country of the Grisons: in a series of letters to William Melmoth.
  • In the 1796 collection of travel writings by John Owen titled Travels into different parts of Europe, in the years 1791 and 1792, with familiar remarks on places-men-and manners.
  • In the 1818 gothic novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley in which Victor Frankenstein ascends Montanvert where he meets his creation.
  • References

    Glacier Montanvert Wikipedia


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