Aostatal

Aosta Valley, is a mountainous autonomous region in north western Italy. It is an Alpine valley with its side valleys includes the Italian slopes of Mont Blanc, Monte Rosa and the Matterhorn; its highest peak is the Mont Blanc, which is about 4810 meters high. From these peaks in the past have slipped huge valley glaciers, which created beautiful valleys where nature has manifested itself in all its beauty. Tourist visiting here from any part of the world are sure to enjoy the most excellent vacation that will recall them every year to visit here again for such relaxation and fun.

In Valle d'Aosta tourism is highly developed, of course in mountaineering and skiing, but great importance is the presence, in the southern region of the Gran Paradiso National Park, established in 1922 to protect trees and certain species of animals endangered as ibex, chamois, marmots and ermines. The most famous example, rooted in the collective memory of the Aosta Valley, is one that sees the protagonist as King Vittorio Emanuele, who went into the reserves of the Gran Paradiso to devote himself to the hunting. The changing fortunes of the park straddling the two world wars had reduced the ibex population of just 400 copies, but after the establishment dell'Ente Gran Paradiso National Park, the situation is restored.