Bergintrum was a place on the
Gallic side of the pass of the
Alpes Graiae, lying on the road marked in the
Antonine Itinerary between Mediolanum (modern
Milan) and Vienna (modern
Vienne, Isère).
Jean-Baptiste Bourguignon d'Anville (
Notice, etc.) placed it between Axima (modern
Aime) and Alpis Graia. The distance from Bergintrum to Axima, marked viiii M. P. The Alpis Graia, is usually identified with a settlement at the watershed on the
Pass of the Little Saint Bernard, which divides the waters that flow to the
Isère on the French side from those that flow to the
Dora Baltea on the Italian side. This is the place D'Anville calls L'Hôpital, on the authority of a manuscript map of the country. D'Anville first proposed the identification of Bergintrum with Bourg-Saint-Maurice; although he acknowledged that xii, the distance in the Table between Bergintrum and Alpis Graia, does not fit the distance between Bourg-Saint-Maurice and L'Hôpital, which is less. Modern scholarship confirms the identification. In the course of the
French Revolution, Bourg-Saint-Maurice was briefly renamed
Nargue-Sarde between 1794 and 1815. ==Geography==