- The
Cottian Alps (/ˈkɒtiən ˈælps/; French:
Alpes Cottiennes [alp kɔtjɛn]; Italian: Alpi
Cozie [ˈalpi ˈkɔttsje]) are a
mountain range in the southwestern...
- The Kott (Kot)
language (Russian: Коттский язык) is an
extinct Yeniseian language that was
formerly spoken in
central Siberia by the
banks of the Mana...
- with the Dora Riparia, a
tributary of the Po River, at the foot of the
Cottian Alps, 51 km (32 mi) west of Turin. Susa (Latin: Segusio) was
founded by...
- term
country of
Cottius for the
Cottian Alps.
Vitruvius and
Suetonius used the
terms kingdom of the
Cottians and
Cottian kingdom respectively. Ammi****...
- Col de la Croix) is a
pedestrian p**** (el. 2,299 m / 7,541 ft) of the
Cottian Alps. Both in
Italian and in
French the name
means p**** of the Cross. The...
- Col du Fréjus (el. 2,542 metres) is a
mountain col path in the
Cottian Alps on the
border between France and Italy. List of
highest paved roads in Europe...
-
river in Italy. It
flows eastward across northern Italy,
starting from the
Cottian Alps. The river's
length is
either 652 km (405 mi) or 682 km (424 mi),...
- ëd Viso [ˈbrik əd ˈvizʊ] or
simply Viso) is the
highest mountain of the
Cottian Alps,
located in Piedmont, Italy,
close to the
French border.
Monte Viso...
- l'Argentière) (elevation 1996 m.) is a high
mountain p****
between the
Cottian Alps and the
Maritime Alps,
located on the
border between Italy and France...
- 8419 8420
Angrogna 1996 WQ Angrogna, an
Italian village nestled in the
Cottian Alps, Piedmont,
where the discoverer's
paternal ancestors were born and...