Pass of Piedrasluengas


The pass of Piedrasluengas, at 1.355 m, is a mountain pass between the province of Palencia and Cantabria, which crosses the Cantabrian mountain range, linking the Palencian town of Cervera de Pisuerga with the Cantabrian town of Potes, in the Liébana region. From the high part of the pass there is also a road that heads towards the Cantabrian valley of Polaciones. The pass reaches a maximum altitude of 1,390 m above sea level, via the road known as CL-627 for Castile and León and CA-184 for Cantabria.

Etymology

The unusual adjective ‘luengo’ comes from the Latin longus, which means ‘vast’ or ‘large’, so the meaning of the toponym is ‘pass of large stones’. In any case, the toponym comes from the nearby Palencia hamlet of the same name ; and indeed, next to it, some large stones that form curious shapes are very striking.

History

Its route gives rise to two ancient routes such as the old Roman road that evolved into the Royal Way of La Valdavia and the Roman road of Burejo, which also left from and crossed the Cantabrian mountain range through this pass. The valley formed by the river serves as a natural pass through the mountains, and a large part of the route runs parallel to it. Some studies maintain that this pass was used by one of the three columns of the Roman Empire that carried out the definitive campaign against the Cantabri, proof of which is the siege at the head of of.

Location

From south to north, although the ascent itself does not begin until a few km. further on, it is usually considered to begin in Cervera de Pisuerga, at 1005 m a.s.l. along the CL-627 road, reaching its maximum altitude at 1390 m a.s.l., exactly at point 43°02′45″N 4°27′05″W, and ends a few km. before the Cantabrian village of Potes, at 291 m a.s.l., after covering 56.2 km.

Description of the route

Of the 40.8 km of the pass itself, 15.3 km are on the Palencia side and 25.5 km on the Cantabrian side. It starts, from S to N, in, at 1100 m above sea level, crossing the Palencia towns of, and, and the Cantabrian towns of, Pesaguero, Puente Asnil, Cabezón de Liébana and, to reach, at 300 m above sea level. The Palencia part of the route has a difference in altitude of 290 m and the Cantabrian part a difference in altitude of 1090 m. The top of the pass is in the province of Palencia, a few kilometres from the provincial border.

Characteristics