Apennine Mountains

This is about the terrestrial mountain range. There is also a lunar mountain range named the Montes Apenninus.
The Apennine Mountains (Italian: Appennini) stretch 1000 km from the north to the south of Italy along its east coast, forming the spine of the country. They lend their name to the Apennine peninsula which forms the major part of Italy. The mountains are mostly green and wooded, although one side of the highest peak, Corno Grande (2,912 m), is partially covered by the southernmost glacier in Europe. The eastern slopes down to the Adriatic Sea are steep, while the western slopes form a plain on which most of Italy's historic cities are located.
   

Historical Significance

In the Italian Campaign of World War II, the Germans used the Apennines as a defensive barrier known to the Allies as the Gothic Line. The Allies attacked the line unsuccessfully in September 1944. Another line of defence, the Barbara Line, crossed the southern Apennines.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
warwick
marie joseph anglique
christian death
johann gottfried jakob hermann
otfried mller
john william donaldson
tawny owl
piano sonata in c major (mozart)
charles webster leadbeater
dhrupad
casablanca class escort carrier
rondo
raga
perennial philosophy
mound builders
sonicblue
khama iii
antoine leonard de chzy
khyal
ibn arabi
henry maitland wilson
field marshal
edward backhouse eastwick
barbara line
vulturno river
garigliano river
trigno river
bernhardt line
mignano gap
winter line
henry thomas colebrooke
sangro
mark clark
alban hills
anzio
albert kesselring
british coin two pounds
georg friedrich creuzer
ss n 22 sunburn
concerto for orchestra (bartk)
hmas melbourne
malleefowl
concerto for orchestra
johann heinrich voss