Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini

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Society of Tridentin mountaineers
Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini
S.A.T. Logo - Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini.svg
AbbreviationSAT
Formation2 September 1872
FounderNepomuceno Bolognini
HeadquartersTrento
Websitehttp://www.sat.tn.it/

The Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini (SAT) is an association operating in the Italian alpine province of Trento. It is the largest section of the Italian Alpine Club.[1][2][3]

History[]

SAT was founded in Madonna di Campiglio on 2 September 1872 under the name of Alpine Society of Trentino. The founding members intended to promote knowledge of the Trentino mountains, tourist development of the valleys, and the Italianity of Trentino. To pursue these goals, they constructed huts, created paths, financed hoteliers, organized mountain guides, climbed peaks, and published geographic and mountaineering writings.

SAT’s first president was (Bolbeno 1822 - Arch 1884); its first Vice President was Nepomuceno Bolognini (Pinzolo , 24 March 1823 - Milan, 18 July 1900). Members were summoned twice a year in a spring meeting and in at summer ''The congresses'' during which the mountaineering, geographic, naturalistic and historical reports were presented and the progress of the association was measured. The first congress took place in Madonna di Campiglioin 1872, in 1994 it was celebrated in Trento.

The SAT was not a group of mountaineers and hikers, but of a group of bourgeois irredentists who wanted to implement "cultural appropriation and the acquisition of material possession of the homeland". In fact, in 1874 the society was dissolved by the Austrian authorities for filo-Italian activities. Then, in 1877, it was renamed to Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini (Tridentini mountaineering company).

The nationalist character of the SAT led to the so-called refuge war, a clash in the mountain toponomastics, between the unaltered flags hidden on the peaks, and the constructions of "double" shelters built alongside each other. For example, during the inauguration of the Quintino Sella hut in 1906, the participants could observe the yard of the German competitor . But shortly afterwards the great war broke out and the SAT was dissolved again. Many of its militants were interned or forced to confine, others took refuge in Italy.

In 1920 SAT became a section of the Italian Alpine Club (CAI), maintaining autonomy. On 7 January 1921 the working subsection of SOSAT, a working group climber at the initiative of Nino Peterlongo, was formed, which in 1919 in Trento had founded a section of the Unione operai escursionisti italiani (Union of Workers Italian Walkers).

In 2012 SAT had over 27,000 members, divided into 82 sections and 10 groups. It has 34 shelters, 12 bivouacs and various support points and social huts, cares for the signage and maintenance of over 6,000 km of trails; Its alpine relief, founded in 1952, has 800 volunteers divided into 37 stations spread across the provincial territory with a cyanophilic and speleological unit.

The headquarters of the association is located in Trento in the palace Saracini-Cresseri (XVI century), which houses; The SAT museum, The historical archive, The SAT mountain library, The SAT section of Trento, The SUSAT (University Section), The SAT Chorus, The Provincial College of the Alpine Guides, The SAT Rock Cluster and the Giorgio Graffer Mountaineering and Mountaineering School.

SAT operates voluntarily in the Dolomites and the mountains of Trentino.

References[]

  1. ^ "www.ladigetto.it - La svolta della meteorologia italiana si discute a Rovereto". www.ladigetto.it. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  2. ^ "La Società Alpinisti Tridentini non molla: mountain bike bannate dai sentieri per escursionisti | Montagna.TV". www.montagna.tv (in Italian). Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  3. ^ Ambrosi, Claudio; Angelini, Bruno; tridentini, Società degli alpinisti (2002). La SAT centotrent'anni, 1872-2002: pubblicazione celebrativa del centotrentesimo di fondazione della Società degli alpinisti tridentini (in Italian). Società degli Alpinisti Tridentini.
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