Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The recorded history of climbing of the Eiger mountain in Switzerland starts in the 1800s. It is split between the Eiger pre-north face era, when the main summits and easier ridges and faces were climbed, and the post-north face era, when it became one of the greatest prizes in mountaineering. At least sixty-four climbers have died while ...
The Eiger, 1974, by Dougal Haston, London: Cassell; The 1982 book Eiger, Wall of Death by Arthur Roth is a historical account of the first ascents of the North Face. [25] The 1982 book Traverse of The Gods by Bob Langley is a World War II spy thriller where a group escaping from Nazi Germany is trapped and the only possible exit route is via ...
The Eiger. Charles Barrington (1834 – 20 April 1901), an Irishman from Fassaroe, Bray County Wicklow, was a merchant with little or no mountaineering experience who led the first team to successfully climb the Eiger on 11 August 1858.
Eiger: 3967: Alps: Christian Almer and Peter Bohren guiding Charles Barrington [71] 11 Sep 1858: Dom: 4545: Alps: Johann Zumtaugwald, Johann Krönig, Hieronymous Brantschen and John Llewelyn Davies [72] 18 Jun 1859: Aletschhorn: 4193: Alps: Johann Joseph Bennen , Peter Bohren, Victor Tairraz and Francis Fox Tuckett [73] 30 Jul 1859: Grand ...
Many of his exploits, such as the Eiger ascent [8] and the Matterhorn ascent, [8] have been filmed by award-winning cameraman Leo Dickinson. Jones and Dickinson, with two other climbers, made the first complete film of the Eiger climb in 1970, with Jones' first British solo ascent following in 1981, resulting in the acclaimed film Eiger Solo.
Timeline of climbing the Eiger; Timeline of climbing the Matterhorn; Timeline of Cornish history; Timeline of European Union history; Timeline of Middle Eastern history; Timeline of New Zealand's links with Antarctica; Timeline of Northumbria and Northumberland; Timeline of sovereign states in North America; Timeline of the Commonwealth of Nations
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
After a deadly and unsuccessful German attempt [1] in 1935, ten climbers from Austria and Germany travelled to the still-unclimbed north face of the Eiger in 1936, but, before serious summit attempts could get underway, one climber was killed during a training climb. The weather was so bad that after waiting for a change and seeing none on the ...