la-grande-guerra ©Archive Istitut Ladin

Walking the paths of memory

The First World War in the Dolomites

Explore the Dolomites’ World War I history: trenches, forts, and the challenging front where soldiers endured harsh winters and faced the hardships of war.

Discover more

The Dolomites became one of the most dramatic and inhospitable fronts of the First World War. Here, soldiers fought not only against each other but also against nature itself — amid towering peaks, freezing temperatures, and relentless snowstorms.

Memories carved in stone

The war on the Dolomites front left indelible traces on the mountains surrounding Camping Sass Dlacia. The Valparola Pass is the ideal starting point to explore the remains of the front line and visit the WWI museum Forte Tre Sassi, a restored Austrian fort once called “Intrá I Sas” (“between the mountains” in Ladin).

From here, several trails lead through well-preserved trenches, military posts, and tunnels, some still accessible today. The fort lies between the Sas de Stria, with its maze of trenches, and the restored Edelweiss stationing. The route continues along the Setsas/Settsass front line to Col di Lana, whose summit was destroyed by the Italians with five tons of dynamite, killing 150 Austrian soldiers.

Across the Valparola and Falzarego passes rises Lagació/Lagazuoi Mountain, its slopes crossed by kilometres of Italian and Austrian tunnels

la-grande-guerra ©Archive Istitut Ladin