- Rudolf Kauschka
Rudolf Kauschka (
October 2 ,1883 in Fukov,Bohemia –April 2 ,1960 , Kempten,West Germany ) was a Germansportsman ,tourist , andmountaineer fromCzechoslovakia .Biography
He was born in 1883 in the town of Fukov (Fugau in German), which doesn't exist yet. In 1895, his family moved into Bílý Potok. Kauschka completed his studies in 1904 and became a
customs officer like his father. During that time, he made numerous trips and climbs in theJizera Mountains and their surroundings. From 1906 to the end ofWorld War II , he was a member ofLiberec (Reichenberg in German) section of the Alpenverein (Alpine club in German), making many trips to theAlps . DuringWorld War I , he served as a Third Lieutenant in the first unit ofmountain guide s in theOrtler mountain area. From 1920 until the end of World War II, he and his friends annually visited theLasörling area inEast Tyrol , where he played a role in building the New Liberec Chalet (Neue Reichenberger Hütte in German) that opened in 1926. From 1919 until the end of World War II, he made many "first ascents" in the Jizera mountains. In 1924, Kauschka wrote a book "Wandern und Klettern". AfterWorld War II , he was forced to leaveCzechoslovakia (see Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia…). Kauschka arrived in Kempten either in 1946 or 1947 and would die there in 1960.porting career
As a
luge r, Kauschka competed in three European luge championships, winning four medals. His first medals came at the inaugural 1914 championships in Reichenberg,Bohemia (now Liberec,Czech Republic ) where he won the gold in the men's singles and a silver in the men's doubles events. Kauschka followed up with a silver in the men's singles event atSchreiberhau ,Germany (nowSzklarska Poręba ,Poland ) in 1928, then with another silver in the men's doubles event the following year inSemmering, Austria .Tourism
Kauschka's tourism achievements were both in sports and in alpine mountaineering.
An example of this was one day, he started with friends at 2 am from Liberec to walk across Jizera mountains to
Sněžka-Śnieżka in theKarkonosze mountains (located at the Czech-Polish border). 17 hours later at 7 pm, they were back inHarrachov after resting on the top of Sněžka-Śnieżka for two hours.In 1922, Kauschka and his friends climbed the
Ještěd mountain summit twelve times starting at 7 pm one day and finishing at 5:45 pm the next day. During that day they reached an altitude over 5000 m high, using over 20 differentfootpath s.Ascents
From 1904 to 1928, Kasuchka did much climbing, starting with the Jizera mountains, including being the first to climb Zvon (a famous local rock tower) in 1921. He later climbed the Lusatian and Zittauer (part of the
Breiteberg chain) mountains, Bohemian Paradise (the first ascent on Draci zub in 1906) andSaxon Switzerland (Blocksstockes). He was also in the Alps, theDolomites (1907 - climbing the Vajolet Towers solo without a rope),Ortler (1908 - Königspitze in German), andWallis Alps (1928 -Matterhorn ,Mont Blanc ).Legacy
A peak in the Jizera Mountains, "Kauschkova vez", was named in his honor. A summit in the Alps 2903 m (9584 ft) high was also named in Kauschka's honor, the year before his death.
Family
Kauschka's son Manfred was also a climber, doing the first ascent on Kobyla in Příhrazy (famous route to the local well-known
sandstone tower) in 1937 with friends.References
* [http://jested-jizerky.wz.cz/jizerh/rkauschk.htm Biography on Kauschka] cs icon
* P. Fajgl, O. Simm, and M. Vrkoslav (1999). "Horolezecký průvodce Jizerské hory, Nakladatelství a vydavatelství" Milan Vrkoslav. cs icon
* [http://www.hruboskalsko.cz/historie/historie_view2.asp?uin=%7BBAA736D1-CAA7-474B-B430-7DCFC9A1CAF2%7D Petr Hejtmánek, Hruboskalsko - Dračí skály, Zámecká rokle, 1996] cs icon
* [http://spolek.org/pop/ju/wandern/ Study about Kauschka] cs icon
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