Ticino (river)
Ticino | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | Switzerland, Italy |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | |
• location | , Ticino, Switzerland |
• elevation | about 2,478 m (8,100 ft) |
Mouth | Po |
• location | south-east of Pavia, Italy |
• coordinates | 45°08′38″N 9°14′12″E / 45.14389°N 9.23667°ECoordinates: 45°08′38″N 9°14′12″E / 45.14389°N 9.23667°E |
Length | 248 km (154 mi) |
Basin size | 7,228 km2 (2,791 sq mi) |
Discharge | |
• average | 348 m3/s or 12,300 cu ft/s |
• minimum | 54 m3/s or 1,900 cu ft/s |
• maximum | 5,000 m3/s or 180,000 cu ft/s |
Discharge | |
• location | Bellinzona |
• average | 70 m3/s or 2,500 cu ft/s (MQ) |
• minimum | 14.5 m3/s or 510 cu ft/s (1Q) |
• maximum | 906 m3/s or 32,000 cu ft/s (mHQ), 1,500 m3/s or 53,000 cu ft/s (HHQ) |
Basin features | |
Progression | Po→ Adriatic Sea |
The river Ticino (/tɪˈtʃiːnoʊ/ titch-EE-noh, Italian: [tiˈtʃiːno]; Lombard: Tesín; French and German: Tessin; Latin: Ticīnus) is the most important perennial left-bank tributary of the Po. It has given its name to the Swiss canton through which its upper portion flows.
It is one of the four major rivers taking their source in the Gotthard region, along with the Rhône, Reuss and Rhine.
Course[]
The river rises in the Val Bedretto in Switzerland at the frontier between the cantons of Valais and Ticino, is fed by the glaciers of the Alps and later flows through Lake Maggiore, before entering Italy. The Ticino joins the Po a few kilometres downstream (along the Ticino) from Pavia. It is about 248 kilometres (154 mi) long. The highest point of the drainage basin is the summit of Grenzgipfel (a subpeak of Monte Rosa), at 4,618 metres (15,151 ft). Beneath it flows the Anza, a right-bank tributary of the Ticino.
The river is dammed in Switzerland in order to create hydroelectricity, while in Italy it is primarily used for irrigation.
History[]
The legendary Gallic leader Bellovesus was said to have defeated the Etruscans here in circa 600 BC. Ticino was the location of the Battle of Ticinus, the first battle of the Second Punic War fought between the Carthaginian forces of Hannibal and the Romans under Publius Cornelius Scipio in November 218 BC.
The Ticino was in the territory of the Duchy of Milan during much of the later medieval and early modern period, although its upper portion as far as Bellinzona in 1500 and as far as the shores of Lago Maggiore in 1513, fell to the Old Swiss Confederacy as a result of the Swiss campaigns in the Italian Wars.
Towns and tributaries[]
Val Bedretto[]
Val Bedretto, a narrow alpine valley named after the village of Bedretto, culminates in Nufenen Pass, Italian Passo della Novena, at 2,478 m (8,130 ft) located between Pizzo Gallina and Nufenstock. Through it runs the border between the cantons of Valais and Ticino. A road constructed in 1964 goes over the pass ultimately leading to the Rhône Valley on the other side. French is mainly spoken in Valais but near the Pass, German is spoken. The population of Ticino speaks Italian.
The road up the Val is fairly straight until it approaches the pass, where it becomes hairpin. On the slope below the first hairpin at about 2,478 m (8,130 ft) is an area of springs from which the Ticino originates. Subsequently, it becomes a mountain brook flowing straight down the Val to the village of All'Acqua or All'Acqua Ospizio at 1,614 m (5,295 ft), named for the hospice for travellers located there at the previous end of the road in former centuries. Currently, it is a base for skiing and hiking. Below it is Ronco at 1,487 m (4,879 ft) and Bedretto at 1,402 m (4,600 ft).[1] The Val is subject to avalanches and snow can remain on the ground as late as September.
Below Bedretto the Ri di Cristallina, "Cristallina stream", comes in from the right at Ossasco, and further down Fontana, still in Bedretto. The entire area is laced with hiking trails and mountain huts.
Valle Leventina[]
Other[]
- in Switzerland: Bellinzona, Locarno (on Lake Maggiore).
- in Italy: Stresa (on Lake Maggiore), Vigevano, Pavia.
Tributaries[]
The Ticino has the following tributaries (R on the right bank, L on the left, looking downstream):
References[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ticino (river). |
- ^ Reynolds, Kev (1992). "Val Bedretto". Walking in Ticino, Switzerland: A Walking Guide (illustrated ed.). Milnthorpe: Cicerone Press Limited. pp. 32–43. ISBN 978-1-85284-098-3.
External links[]
- Tributaries of the Po (river)
- Ticino (river)
- Ticino basin
- Rivers of Ticino
- Waterways of Italy
- Rivers of the Province of Novara
- Rivers of the Province of Varese
- Rivers of the Province of Milan
- Rivers of the Province of Pavia
- International rivers of Europe
- Tributaries of Lake Maggiore
- Rivers of Italy
- Rivers of Switzerland
- Braided rivers in Italy