Mont Chaberton

Mont Chaberton
Southeast face of Chaberton
Highest point
Elevation3,131 m (10,272 ft)
Prominence1,281 m (4,203 ft)
Parent peakPic de Rochebrune
Isolation12.21 km (7.59 mi)
ListingAlpine mountains above 3000 m
Coordinates44°57′53″N 6°45′04″E / 44.96472°N 6.75111°E / 44.96472; 6.75111
Geography
Mont Chaberton
France
LocationHautes-Alpes, France
Parent rangeCottian Alps

Mont Chaberton (French pronunciation: [mɔ̃ ʃabɛʁtɔ̃]) is a 3,131 metres (10,272 ft) peak in the French Alps in the group known as the Massif des Cerces in the département of Hautes-Alpes.

Before World War I, Italy built Europe's highest fortress on the top. The French destroyed it in 1940, and acquired the whole mountain by Peace Treaty of 1947. Fort and mountain became a popular tourist destination as the deteriorating military road to the top could be used legally until 1987 even with some offroad cars. Access by offroad motorcycles was prevented by landslides in the late 2010s.