- 1953 First ascent of Nanga Parbat, 8126 metres (26,660 ft) (solo and without oxygen)
- 1957 First ascent of Broad Peak, 8047 metres (26,400 ft)
Before his successful Nanga Parbat expedition, 31 people had died trying to make the first ascent.
Buhl is the only mountaineer to have made the first ascent of an eight-thousander solo. Just a few weeks after the successful first ascent of Broad Peak (with Fritz Wintersteller and Marcus Schmuck), Buhl and Kurt Diemberger made an attempt on nearby, unclimbed Chogolisa peak (7654 m) in alpine style. Buhl died when he fell through a cornice on the southeast ridge near the summit of Chogolisa. His body was never found.
Early life
Buhl was born in Innsbruck, the youngest of four children. After the death of his mother, he spent years in an orphanage. Before Scouting was banned in Austria Hermann Buhl was a Cub Scout in Innsbruck. In the 1930s, as a sensitive (and not very healthy) teenager, he began to climb the Austrian Alps. In 1939, he joined the Innsbruck chapter of the Deutscher Alpenverein (the German Alpine association) and soon mastered climbs up to category 6.World War II interrupted his commercial studies, and he joined the Alpine troops, mostly on the Monte Cassino. After being taken prisoner by American troops, he returned to Innsbruck and earned his living doing odd jobs. At the end of the 1940s, he finally completed his training as a mountain guide.
Publications
* *See also
External links
- Team Member of the Austrian OEAV Karakoram Expedition 1957
- Hermann Buhl Biography
- Hermann Buhl and Nanga Parbat
- Hermann Buhl Page with biography nad many photos, in German
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Last updated on Thursday September 25, 2008 at 12:34:38 PDT (GMT -0700)
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