The word "Aigoual" appears with different meanings: ad stratam Aigoaldi in 1228 refers to a route, marcha Algoaldi in 1238 names the limits of a territory, and mons Aigoaldi in 1249 is the name of the mountain. It seems that Aigoual comes from the word Algwarld, the name of a person in the region.[2]
Geography
Mont Aigoual has an elevation of 1,565 m (5,135 ft) and is the highest mountain in the Gard department and the second in the Lozère department and in the Cévennes mountains after Mont Lozère that is 1,699 m (5,574 ft) high. Mont Aigoual is within the Cévennes National Park (French: Parc national des Cévennes).
A well-known hiking route is the "Climbing of the 4,000 steps" that begins in Valleraugue and ends in the weather station.
The ski station (a place where people go to practice skiing) of Prat Peyrot is on the sides of the Aigoual. It is the biggest ski station of the Cévennes.
↑Mulon, Marianne (1963). "La forêt de l'Aigoual et l'origine de ce toponyme". Bulletin philologique et historique jusqu'à 1610 du Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques (in French). 1: 57–64. Retrieved 11 January 2017.