List of climbers

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This list of climbers includes both mountaineers and rock climbers, since many (though not all) climbers engage in both types of activities. The list also includes boulderers and ice climbers.

Contents: Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

[edit] A

[edit] B

[edit] C

[edit] D

  • Art Davidson United States. First winter ascent of Denali (1967) with Ray "Pirate" Genet and Dave Johnston. Author "Minus 148"
  • Johnny Dawes (1964-) United Kingdom. Rock climber, introduced 2 new grades in the British grading system for traditional climbs.
  • José Antonio Delgado (1965–2006) Venezuela. Five 8000m summits (1994-2006). Died descending Nanga Parbat July 22, 2006.
  • Catherine Destivelle (b. 1960) France. Sports climber and mountaineer. Nameless Tower (1990), Eigerwand (solo) (1992). Link
  • Clinton Thomas Dent (1850–1912) United Kingdom. Caucasus, Alps, first ascent of Lenzspitze (1870), Aiguille du Dru (1878).
  • Ardito Desio (1897–2001) Italy. Geologist and Mountaineer. Leader of K2 first ascent expedition in 1954.
  • Kurt Diemberger (b. 1932) Austria. First ascent Broad Peak (1957) with Wintersteller, Schmuck & Buhl. First ascent Dhaulagiri (1960) with Diener, Forrer, Schelbert, Nyima Dorji & Nawang Dorji. K2 (1986).
  • Peter Diener Germany. First ascent Dhaulagiri (1960) with Diemberger, Forrer, Schelbert, Nyima Dorji & Nawang Dorji.
  • Hans Christian Doseth (1958–1984) Norway. Sports climber and mountaineer. Climbed east face Great Trango Tower (1984) with Finn Dæhli. Summited, but both killed during descent.
  • Lord Francis Douglas (1847–1865). Scottish alpinist. Died on descent after first ascent of the Matterhorn.
  • Sean Duffy[2] United States of America. Mountaineer known for charity climbs, speed ascents, and developing Sawtooth routes.
  • Hans Dülfer (1892–1915) Leading German rock climber who died during World War I.
  • Günther Dyhrenfurth (1886–1975) Swiss. Mountaineer and Himalayan explorer. Led German expeditions to Kanchenjunga in 1930 and 1931. link
  • John Dunne (1968–) Established Parthian Shot (1990: E9, 7a). Other notable first ascents include Total Eclipse (9a) Malham, Divided Years (E10, 7a) Mourne Mountains.
  • Mal Duff (-1998) Legendary Scottish climber with few peers, also an Independent guide. An Himalayan climber who unusually, died at Everest Base Camp.

[edit] E

[edit] F

[edit] G

[edit] H

[edit] I

  • Marcel Ichac France. Member (cineast of the first French expedition in Himalaya (Karakoram, 1936) and of the second (Annapurna, 1950). One of the greatest mountain film maker of his time.
  • Toshio Imanishi Japan. First ascent Manaslu 1956 with Gyalzen Norbu.
  • Jeanne Immink (1853–1929), Dutch rock climber. One of the earliest female rock climbers. Several Dolomite peaks have been named after her.
  • Ulrich Inderbinen (1900-2004). Swiss guide. 371 Matterhorn ascents, last at age 90.
  • Alberto Iñurrategi, Basque climber, all eight-thousanders (1991-2002).
  • Andrew Irvine (1902–1924) United Kingdom. Died on Everest at approximately 8500m with George Mallory on 8 June 1924.

[edit] J

  • John Jackson United Kingdom. First ascent of Jackson's Route
  • Cicada Jenerik V10 at age 10 (Lowrider in Bishop,Ca)
  • Ray "Pirate" Jenet - First winter ascent of Denali with Art Davidson Died in avalanche while skiing.
  • Sepp Jöchler Austria. First ascent Cho Oyo (1954) with Herbert Tichy and Pasang Dawa Lama.

[edit] K

[edit] L

  • Louis Lachenal (1921–1955). France. First ascent of Annapurna 1950, with Maurice Herzog. Died in a crevasse fall, while skiing in Chamonix 25 November 1955.
  • Constantin "Ticu" Lacatusu Romania. First Romanian ever to reach Mount Everest.
  • Jean-Christophe Lafaille (1965-2006). France. 11 8000m plus summits, all without auxiliary oxygen. Missing at 7,600 m on Makalu, January 26, 2006.
  • Raymond Lambert (1914–1997). Swiss. Member of the Swiss Mount Everest 1952 expedition. Reached 8611m with Tenzing Norgay, the highest point at that time.
  • Josef Larch Austria. First ascent of Gasherbrum II 1956 with Fritz Moravec and Hans Willenpart.
  • Marco Lavaggi (2003–2006) - Italian mountain climber. He have climb 631 mountain in 3 years. European 4000m
  • Craig Leubben - United States rock climber, guide, and writer. Currently lives in Golden, CO.
  • Pat Littlejohn OBE- Prolific British adventure climber and advocate of traditional climbing ethics.
  • Pete Livesey - Influential United Kingdom climber in the 1970s
  • Gerhard Lenser - first ascent of Pumori (1962)
  • John Long - United States rock climber and writer. Author of the "How to Rock Climb" series.
  • Erhard Loretan Swiss. 14 8000m plus summits (1982-1995).
  • Klem Loskot - Austrian rock climber and boulderer.
  • Alex Lowe, (1958–1999) United States. Great Trango Tower, Rakekniven - Antarctica & Sail Peak - Baffin Island. Killed in an avalanche on Xixabangma.
  • George Lowe (born 1953) Many first acents. Was on the 1983 expedition to the east face of Everest. First Acent of that route, considered Everest's hardest route.
  • Jeff Lowe (born 1949) United States. Many first ascents. Solo ascent South Face Ama Dablam, Direct Bonatti route on Grand Capucin, north face Mt. Temple. Creator of Ouray Ice Festival.
  • Fritz Luchsinger - first ascent of Lhotse (1956)
  • François Legrand - three times World Champion and winner of 20 UIAA World Cups

[edit] M

[edit] N

[edit] O

  • Alexander Odintsov (1957-). Russian. New routes on the Troll Wall, Bhagirathi North Face, Trango Tower West Face, Great Sail Peak, and Jannu North Face.
  • Cathy O'Dowd South African First woman in the world to climb Everest from both north and south sides (1999). Fourth woman in the world to climb Lhotse, the world's fourth highest mountain (2000).
  • Juan Oiarzabal (born 1956). All eight-thousanders without supplementary oxygen. Record 21 ascents of eight-thousanders.
  • Adam Ondra (born 1993) youngest climber to climb 5.14d
  • Dan Osman - United States, famous for dangerous solos. Killed whilst attempting his new sport of rope jumping.
  • James Outram - Canada, first ascent of Mount Assiniboine
  • Mohammad Oraaz (1969-2003). Iranian climber who conquested the Mount Everest in 1998 (first Iranian on Everest)
  • Attila Ozsvath (alpine climber) (1956-2002) Hungarian. First ascents: east face of Kedarnath Dome 1989, north face of Thalay Sagar, Spaltnik Golden Pillar 2000. Disappeared in 2002 in the K6 group of Karakorum. First successful Hungarian eight-thousander ascent in 1986, Shisha Pangma.

[edit] P

  • Kelly Perkins - first heart tranplant recipient to successfully climb Mount Fuji (1998), Mount Kilimanjaro (2001), and the Matterhorn (2003)
  • Michel-Gabriel Paccard - first ascent of Mont Blanc (1786)
  • Dogan Palut - One of the most skilled climbers in Turkey.
  • Marie Paradis. France. First woman to ascend Mont Blanc, 1809
  • Young-seok Park South Korea. First grand slam of mountaineering in 2005
  • Edurne Pasaban (born 1973). Spain. Eight 8,000 m peaks. One of only three women alive that have climbed K2.
  • Pasang Dawa Lama (1912 - 1982). Almost reached the summit of K2 in 1939 with Fritz Wiessner. First ascent Cho Oyu with Herbert Tichy and Sepp Jöchler (1954).
  • Tom Patey (1932–1970) Scotland. First ascent Muztagh Tower 1956. First ascent Am Buachaille 1968. Killed in abseilling accident. Author of One Man's Mountains
  • Julius Payer (1841-1915). Czech-Austrian polar explorer who made many first ascents in the Adamello and Ortler mountains in the 1860s.
  • Jose Luis Pereyra (1962–2003) Argentine–Venezuelan rock climber. Specialist in climbing Tepuys (in the Venezuelan jungle) and in speed climbing in Yosemite.
  • Jim Perrin (born 1947) Over 200 notable first/free ascents in Britain. Winner of the Boardman Tasker prize for mountain literature.
  • William Perrin (1980 - 2004). Several new routes across the United Kingdom; redpointed several climbs in North Wales.
  • Oliver Perry-Smith (1884–1969). United States rockclimber active in Saxon Switzerland and the Dolomites before World War I
  • Petrarch (1304-1374), Italy. Climbed, with his brother, Mont Ventoux on April 26, 1336. .
  • Avadhut Phatarpekar (b. 1982), India. Shillong Climbing Association Amateur; Climbs include Doom Dooma, Kanheri, and Naya Kanga (2004-05).
  • Dean Potter United States. Innovated fast free climbing style; speed soloed El Cap in 4:17; speed soloed El Cap and Half Dome in one day.
  • Eneko Pou (b. 1974) and Iker Pou (b. 1977). Basque brothers. Top rock climbers, have several difficult and speed ascents. Working in their project "7 Walls, 7 continents", free climbing seven emblematic walls in the seven continents.
  • Chuck Pratt (1939–2000) United States. Rock climber. Yosemite pioneer.
  • Paul Preuss (1886–1913) Austria. Early promoter of free climbing. Climbed 1200 peaks in his short life.
  • Hristo Prodanov (1943–1984) Bulgaria. Lhotse unassisted 1981. Died on descent from unassisted climb of Everest in 1984.
  • Christophe Profit (b. 1962) France. Spectacular achievements in Alps and K2 between 1982 - 1992. Currently well known Alpine guide in Chamonix area.
  • Bonnie Prudden - (born 1914) - Pioneering United States rock climber and exercise advocate. 30 documented first ascents in the Gunks.
  • Karl Prusik - Austrian mountaineer. Introduced the widely used Prusik knot.
  • Ramón Julián Puigblanque (b. 1981) Spain. Rock climber
  • Ludwig Purtscheller, first ascent of Kilimanjaro in 1889

[edit] Q

[edit] R

[edit] S

[edit] T

[edit] U

  • James Ramsey Ullman (1908–1971) United States. Noted author, and mountaineer.
  • Ugur Uluocak (1962–2003) Turkey. Mountaineer, photographer and editor. Died while climbing Mount Alarcha in Kyrgyzstan.
  • Willi Unsoeld (1926–1979) United States. First ascent of the West Ridge of Everest 1963, with Tom Horbein. Killed in an avalanche on Mount Rainier on 22 May 1979.
  • Patxi Usobiaga(b. 1980) Basque. 2007 and 2006 sport climbing World Champion. link
  • Hong-gil Um (b. 1960) Republic of Korea. The first mountaineer to climb the highest 16 points on Earth.

[edit] V

  • Patrick Vallencant (June 9, 1946 - March 28, 1989) France. An alpinist/skier and pioneer in ski mountaineering.
  • Iván Vallejo (b. 1959) Ecuador. Sixteen 8000ers without artificial oxygen between Sep 1997 and May 2008 (Everest and Broad Peak twice).
  • Bob Van Belle United States. Invented the drop knee.
  • Erich Vanis (1928–2004) Austria. Mountaineer, alpinist, and author
  • Ed Viesturs (b. 1959) United States. First United States climber to climb all 14 of the world's 8,000-meter peaks; second person to climb them without supplementary oxygen
  • Antoine de Ville France. Artillery officer climbed Mont Aiguille in 1492
  • Jaime Viñals Guatemala. First Central American climber who reached: Mount Everest, The Seven Summits.
  • Ludwig Vörg Germany. First ascent of the Eiger.
  • Frits Vrijlandt Dutch. Prominent Dutch climber: Mount Everest, The Seven Summits

[edit] W

Adam Wilson (1983-present). Great Britain. K2 (2006), Mount Everest (2001).

[edit] Y

[edit] Z

[edit] References

[edit] External links