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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arve Valley
Upper course of the Arve valley taken from the Aiguille du Midi.
Length105 km (65 mi) North West
Naming
Native nameLa Vallée de L'Arve (French)
Geology
TypeGlacial valley
Geography
Country France
RiverArve

The Arve Valley (La vallée de l'Arve) is an alpine valley located in the French Haute-Savoie department. The namesake of the valley is the river at the bottom: the Arve. The valley as a whole makes up the majority of Faucigny, one of the Natural Regions of France, and one of six that make up the Savoie region.[1]

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Geography

The Arve Valley consists of the upper reaches of the river Arve, whose source is in the Mont Blanc massif, on the Savoyard Col-du-Balme side. Down stream, the river passes through the plain of Annemassy, before emptying into the Rhône in the Swiss canton of Geneva.[2]

The Valley came into being during the last ice age when the Alpine glaciers extended beyond Geneva.

There is controversy over the true extent of the upper valley. The broadest definition makes the start upstream of Sallanches, including Passy and the valleys of Mégève, Montjoie, and Chamonix. This also describes the region of "Mont Blanc country" (Pays du Mont Blanc.) [3]

Some consider the upper valley to only include the valley of Chamonix. This valley stretches, from downstream, through the communes of Servoz, Les Houches, Chamonix-Mont-Blanc and Vallorcine.[4]

History

Historically, the valley was a part of Farcigny, which was ceded to the Count of Savoie during the reign of Amadeus VI in 1355.

Urbanisation

The bottom of the valley is heavily urbanised including the cities/towns of:

References

  1. ^ "– Unités paysagères de Haute-Savoie". www.paysages74.fr. Retrieved 2019-06-23.
  2. ^ "Moyenne vallée de l'Arve / Les territoires agricoles / Observatoire agricole / Agriculture en Haute-Savoie / Agriculture / Politiques publiques / Accueil - Les services de l'État en Haute-Savoie". www.haute-savoie.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2019-06-23.
  3. ^ Veyret, Paul; Veyret, Germaine (1964). "Petites et moyennes villes des Alpes". Revue de géographie alpine. 52 (1): 5–124. doi:10.3406/rga.1964.3159. ISSN 0035-1121.
  4. ^ Petit, Jérôme (2002). "Politique des déplacements et développement touristique; contraintes et innovations dans les vallées touristiques alpines". Revue de géographie alpine. 90 (1): 48–65. doi:10.3406/rga.2002.3072. ISSN 0035-1121.
This page was last edited on 7 January 2022, at 16:44
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