Schluderbach (Italian language: Carbonin) is a settlement in the municipality of Toblach in South Tyrol, Italy, until 1918 part of the Austro-Hungarian County of Tyrol. It is largely a holiday village.
In 1874, Georg Ploner's daughter Anna was the first woman to reach the summit of the Great Peak, the highest of the Three Peaks, and Ploner himself was a mountaineer, in 1879 making the first ascent of the Western Peak.Helmut Dumler, Drei Zinnen. Menschen - Berge - Abenteuer (Munich: F. Bruckmann, 1968), pp. 21–25Alexander Huber, Willi Schwenkmeier, Drei Zinnen (Munich: Bergverlag Rother, 2003, ), p. 33
The composer Gustav Mahler and his family spent much of the summer of 1907 at Schluderbach.Stephen E. Hefling, Julian Rushton, Song of the Earth (2000), p. 30
During the First World War, Austria and Italy fought each other, and the international border between them then ran about one kilometre south-east of Schluderbach. The present-day border between the South Tyrol and the province of Belluno was roughly the front line in the White War fought between the two countries from 1915 to 1917. During that war, both sides built railways to support their war effort, the Italians building the Dolomites Railway as far as Toblach, which reached Schluderbach in 1917. Dolomitenbahn, tmb.at, accessed 8 September 2022 After the general Italian retreat of 1917, the whole line fell into the hands of the Austrians, but the situation was reversed at the end of the war, in November 1918, when this mostly German-speaking area was occupied by the Kingdom of Italy, and in 1919 it was annexed by Italy.
The Dolomites Railway was closed in 1962.
Today Schluderbach has only a few houses, most of which are hotels and holiday homes, and is chiefly a holiday destination.
==Gallery==
Notes
Further reading
External links
|
|