- Paul Preuss (climber)
:"for the writer, see
Paul Preuss (author) "Paul Preuss (19 August 1886 –3 October 1913 ) was an Austrian climber who achieved recognition for his bold solo ascents and for the purity of his climbing style. Born inAltaussee , he attended Gymnasium inVienna and, later, studied at theUniversity of Vienna andMunich University , where he was awarded a Dr.Phil. degree in 1912. His major subject was the physiology of plants, but soon after gaining his degree he turned to empirical philosophy, hoping to become a university lecturer in that academic specialty.As a child he was very weak, but grew into slender, well-developed athlete, proficient in chess, tennis, fencing, and, of course, climbing. Still a boy, he became fascinated with a particular climb that had been done on the
Trisselwand near Aussee. After several weeks of studying the route, he soloed it – his first adventure on the heights. Working his way up the ladder of difficulty, he made a solitary ascent of the west face ofTodtenkirchl in 1911, taking only 2¾ hours, including a new variation in the upper section. He climbed more than 1,200 routes in the EasternAlps , including the northeast face ofCrozzon di Brenta and the east summit face ofGuglia di Brenta . He also did a cross traverse of theKleine Zinne , doing all four routes that existed at that time, in a period of one day.In the summers of 1912 and 1913 he journeyed to the Western Alps, where – under the tutelage of the English climber,
Oscar Eckenstein - he learned the skills ofice climbing . Once he felt confident, he began a series of climbs aroundMont Blanc , including the direct ascent of that peak via itsBrenva flank. He did several noteworthy traverses, including one of theGrandes Jorasses by its Hirondelles ridge.Preuss published several papers on climbing a year before his death. In one of these – "Künstliche Hilfsmittel auf Hochturen" – he delineates his philosophy of climbing in six "theorems", starting with the axiomatic assumption that a climber should only attempt climbs that are below his highest level of competence. The following are paraphrased versions of his rules:
*1. One should be more than equal to the demands of the proposed climb.
*2. One should ascend only those climbs that one can downclimb safely.
*3. Artificial aids are justified only in sudden dangerous situations.
*4.Piton s should be used only for emergencies, never as a basis of mountaineering.
*5. The rope is to be used to facilitate a climb, but never as the sole means for making a climb possible.
*6. The principle of safety derives from a reasonable estimate of what one is capable of, not from the use of artificial aids.Geoffrey Winthrop Young , the great British climber, echoed these sentiments years after Preuss was gone.Paul Preuss was said to be amiable and good-natured, and to be a faithful comrade in the most demanding of circumstances.
He died of a thousand foot fall in October 1913 while making a solo attempt of the north face of the
Mandlwand .References
* Freiherr Von Saar, Günther (1914). "Paul Preuss", "Journal of the Alpine Club"
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.