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Christian Stangl
Austrian mountain climber

Christian Stangl

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Austrian mountain climber
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Gender
Male
Place of birth
Landl, Liezen District, Styria, Austria
Age
58 years
Christian Stangl
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Christian Stangl (German: [ˈkʀɪsti̯an ˈʃtaŋl]; born on July 10, 1966 in Landl, Austria) is an Austrian alpine style mountaineer and mountain guide. He has become known as Skyrunner by numerous exceptionally fast ascents of high mountains. His major success was in 2013, when he became the first person to ascend the three highest mountains on all seven continents, the so-called Triple Seven Summits.

On January 15, 2013, he was the first person to ascent the Seven Second Summits, the second highest peaks of all seven continents. On August 23, 2013, after climbing Shkhara (5193m), he became the first person to have reached the third highest peaks on all seven continents. Because of measurement and definition issues Stangl climbed 30 peaks instead of only 21 to avoid any inaccuracy and misconception. On September 17, 2013, his achievement was certified by Guinness World Records in London.

Early career

Christian Stangl was born in 1966 in Landl (Styria), in the east of the Gesäuse National Park. After finishing school, he completed his education as an electrical engineer in a Higher Technical Institute. When he was 16, he began climbing and ventured into solo climbing, speed climbing, enchainment and winter climbing in the Alps.

In 1990, he began high-altitude mountaineering in the Andes and the Himalaya. In 1991, during an attempt to climb a new route in the south wall of the 7285m high Baintha Brakk, he was seriously injured in an avalanche. In 1998, Stangl reached the Shishapangma, his first 8000er via the southwest face, the so-called "British Route".

In 1995, Stangl started speed climbing („Skyrunning“) the high Andes peaks. In the following years he succeeded in his first series of skyruns, reaching nine 6000ers within 18 days. Over the next few years, he successfully completed several other challenges in the Andes: Ten 6000ers within 7 days (2005), three 6000ers within one day (2006), and four 6000ers within one day (2008).

Seven summits speed climbing

In 2001, he succeeded in a solo climb of Cho Oyu. At 7000m his new route meets the 1954 Tichy-Route.

In 2005 he did ABC (Tibet) to the top in 16 hours and 42 minutes in 2005, in league with the fastest times for this type of route.

In 2008, Stangl became famous after completing his speed climbing series of the Seven Summits. For reaching all seven summits it took him 58 hours and 45 minutes.

Specific times for single ascents:

  • Mount Everest: 16:42
  • Aconcagua: 4:25
  • Denali: 16:45
  • Elbrus: 5:18
  • Kilimanjaro: 5:36
  • Mount Vinson: 9:10
  • Carstensz Pyramid: 0:49

At the same time, he set new records for climbing Aconcagua, Elbrus, Mount Vinson and Carstensz Pyramid. The film The Skyrunner (2007) deals with Stangl’s 49-minute record ascent of the Carstensz Pyramid.

Second Seven Summits

As a continuation of the Seven Summits speed-project Stangl pursued the goal of skyrunning up the second highest peaks of each continent, the so-called Seven Second Summits, with the vision of being the first peson to complete the Seven Summits as well as the Seven Second Summits. In 2008, Stangl undertook his first expedition to K2, the second highest mountain of Asia (8611m). After the death of 11 mountaineers in an ice avalanche at the Bottleneck (approx. 8200m), Stangl, as well as most of the other mountaineers, aborted the expedition (see 2008 K2 disaster). In the same year, Stangl took part in an extensive Antarctica expedition and went up Mount Vinson, Mount Shinn and Mount Gardner again, and attempted to climb the north face of Mount Tyree.

In 2009, he managed to ascent Batian (5199m) in Africa and Dychtau (5224m) in the Caucasus region. Besides, he made a second summit attempt of K2 as part of an international team. At about 8300m, waist-deep snow prevented their success.

In 2010, Stangl climbed Puncak Trikora (4730m) in Oceania. He then ascended the second highest peak in North America, the 5959m high Mount Logan in Canada, and subsequently went to the Karakoram in order to climb K2. On August 10, he started another summit attempt from the basecamp. On August 12, he stated to have reached the summit. Shortly after, people raised doubts about his account. At a press conference, on September 12, he admitted that he did not actually reach the summit of K2. This sparked off a big scandal in German-speaking media.

In January 2013, Stangl finally succeeded in climbing all Second Seven Summits.

Triple Seven Summits

World map showing the three highest mountains of all seven continents, the Triple Seven Summits.

In the aftermath of K2-scandal, Stangl underwent a fundamental change of mindset and stayed out of the limelight. Nevertheless, after an interruption of his mountaineering activities, he continued to climb the peaks of the seven continents. He expanded his plan of climbing the Seven Second Summits and planned to become the first person to ever climb the three highest mountains of each continent, the so-called Triple Seven Summits. This made him turn away from speed climbing. Now, to be more effective, he put emphasis on precise documentation of his activities, using photos, videos, and GPS tracking. In Spring 2011, Stangl cycled from the Indian ocean to the Himalayas on a simple military bicycle, then walked for 11 days to the base camp of Kangchenjunga (8586m) and then, after a total of 76 days, reached the summit of the third highest mountain of Asia. In summer 2011, he went to K2 again, but as in the years before, since 2008, also in this season, not a single climber could reach the summit on the Pakistani side of the mountain.

For the end of 2011, Stangl planned an expedition to Mount Tyree (4852m) to climb the second highest mountain of Antarctica. As for Stangl, climbing the Seven Second Summits became a milestone along the way climbling the world’s 21 highest mountains. He invited his competitor from South Tyrol, Hans Kammerlander to climb Mount Tyree with him. On January 3, 2012, all three expedition members, Stangl, Kammerlander and the Austrian Robert Miller reached the peak of Mount Tyree via the east wall and the northeast ridge.

In the summer of 2012, Stangl started a new expedition to K2 at which the conditions were considerably better than in the years before. Late in the evening of July 12, Stangl and his fellow polish climber Adam Bielecki, started their crucial ascent from base camp III (7400m) and reached the peak of the second highest mountain in the world at around 16:00. The climbers completed the climb successfully without any bottled oxygen and returned to base camp III 23 hours later. After the success of ascending K2, Stangl was now able to concentrate on the outstanding mountains of his Triple Seven Summits project. In January 2013, Stangl climbed Sumantri (4870m) in Oceania, as well as the three highest mountains of mainland Australia, Mount Kosciuszko (2228m), Mount Townsend (2209m), and Mount Twynam (2195m) in the Snowy Mountains and in New South Wales, in order to ascend the highest peaks according to the Bass list. For the completion of the project, Stangl travelled to the Kaukasus region to climb the 5193m high Shkara via the south face on August 23, 2013, together with the Georgian Archil Badriashvili and the Austrian Michael Haidn. The third highest mountain in Europe was the last of the Triple Seven Summits.

Subsequently, Stangl’s success was approved by the chronicler Eberhard Jurgalski, the expert commission of the Guinness World Records and numerous other alpine journalists.

The Guinness World Records awarded Stangl three Alpine records:

  • The first person to successfully climb the "Triple Seven Summits" (within seven years – Mount Everest 2006 – Shkhara 2013)
  • The first person to successfully climb the "Seven Second Summits" (within six years – Ojos del Salado 2007 – Sumantri 2013)
  • The first person to successfully climb the "Seven Third Summits" (within five years – Mount Shinn 2008 – Shkhara 2013)

Table of the Triple Seven Summits

The table shows the key data of the ascents of the Triple Seven Summits project. It is mainly based upon a list of Eberhard Jurgalski, created 2013. The numbering shows more than the actual 21 mountains, acknowledging two different lists of alpinistic tradition, the Bass version (B), and more challenging Messner version (M).

Nr.MountainDateAltitudeContinentAscent seriesMBComments
01 !1Everest !Mount Everest2006-05-25 !May 25, 20067003884800000000000♠8,848 mAsia !Asia1 !Seven SummitsNorth route, Skyrun in 16:42h, without additional oxygen
02 !2Aconcagua !Aconcagua2007-11-23 !November 13, 20077003696200000000000♠6,962 mSouth America !South America1 !Seven Summits1990, 2002, 2007. Skyrun 4:25h (Record in 2002)
03 !3Denali !Denali2007-05-26 !Mai 26, 20077003619400000000000♠6,194 mNorth America !North America1 !Seven SummitsWest Buttress route, Skyrun 16:45h
04 !4Kibo2009-02-13 !February 13, 20097003589500000000000♠5,895 mAfrica !Africa1 !Seven SummitsRongai route, Skyrun 5:36h (2004)
05 !5Elbrus2012-06-03 !June 3, 20127003564200000000000♠5,642 mEurope !Europe1 !Seven Summits2004, 2006, 2012. Skyrun 5:18h (Record in 2006)
06 !6Vinson !Mount Vinson2007-12-07 !December 7, 20077003489200000000000♠4,892 mAntarctica !Antarctica1 !Seven Summits2007, 2009. Skyrun 9:10h (Record in 2007)
07 !7aCarstensz Pyramid !Carstensz Pyramid2007-04-08 !April 8, 20077003488400000000000♠4,884 mOceania !Oceania / Australia1 !Seven SummitsNorth face, Harrer route, Skyrun 0:49h (Record)
08 !7bKosciuszko !Mount Kosciuszko2013-01-27 !January 27, 20137003222800000000000♠2,228 mOceania !Oceania / Australia1 !Seven Summits
09 !8K22012-07-31 !July 31, 20127003861100000000000♠8,611 mAsia !Asia2 !Seven Second SummitsSouth east ridge (Abruzzi), without additional oxygen
10 !9Ojos del Salado2007-02-24 !February 24, 20077003689300000000000♠6,893 mSouth America !South America2 !Seven Second SummitsSummits: 1996, 2007. Skyrun 3:44h (2007)
11 !10Logan !Mount Logan2010-05-22 !May 22, 20107003595900000000000♠5,959 mNorth America !North America2 !Seven Second SummitsKing Trench route
12 !11Dychtau2009-09-06 !September 6, 20097003520500000000000♠5,205 mEurope !Europe2 !Seven Second SummitsNorth west ridge
13 !12Batian2009-02-06 !February 6, 20097003519900000000000♠5,199 mAfrica !Africa2 !Seven Second SummitsNelion east face, ridge passage to Batian
14 !13Tyree !Mount Tyree2012-01-03 !January 3, 20127003485200000000000♠4,852 mAntarctica !Antarctica2 !Seven Second SummitsRoute via north east ridge and east face
15 !14aSumantri2013-01-15 !January 15, 20137003487000000000000♠4,870 mOceania !Ozeania / Australia2 !Seven Second SummitsSouth face, traverse from Ngga Pulu and Sumantri
16 !14bTownsend !Mount Townsend2013-01-28 !January 28, 20137003220900000000000♠2,209 mOceania !Oceania / Australia2 !Seven Second Summits
17 !15Kangchenjunga2011-05-20 !May 20, 20117003858600000000000♠8,586 mAsia !Asia3 !Seven Third SummitsSouth west face, without additional oxygen
18 !16Pissis !Monte Pissis2008-12-21 !December 21, 20087003679500000000000♠6,795 mSouth America !South America3 !Seven Third SummitsRoute via north face
19 !17Orizaba !Pico de Orizaba2010-12-16 !December 16, 20107003563600000000000♠5,636 mNorth America !North America3 !Seven Third SummitsRoute via Refugio Piedra Grande
20 !18Shkhara2013-08-23 !August 23, 20137003519300000000000♠5,193 mEurope !Europe3 !Seven Third SummitsSouth east face
21 !19Mawenzi2009-02-12 !February 12, 20097003514800000000000♠5,148 mAfrica !Africa3 !Seven Third SummitsÖhler route variation
22 !20Shinn !Mount Shinn2008-11-25 !November 25, 20087003466000000000000♠4,660 mAntarctica !Antarctica3 !Seven Third SummitsFirst ascent, South face direct, solo
23 !21aMandala !Puncak Mandala2012-02-28 !February 28, 20127003475800000000000♠4,758 mOceania !Oceania / Australia3 !Seven Third SummitsNew route via north west face
24 !21bTyree !Mount Twynam2013-01-28 !January 28, 20137003219500000000000♠2,195 mOceania !Oceania / Australia3 !Seven Third Summits

In addition to the 21 mountains of the Messner version, Stangl ascended further nine summits on three continents to also meet the requirements of the Bass version. This includes ascending the three highest peaks of Australian mainland Mount Ksciuszko, Mount Townsend and Mount Twynam. In course of the project, he anew climbed the three highest peaks of the Alps, Mont Blanc (4,810 m), Dufourspitze (4,634 m), and Dom (4,545 m), in 2013. According to one of multiple acknowledged scholary opinions, the border between Europe and Asia is to be located north of Caucasus, alongside the Kuma–Manych Depression. Considering that, the Alps would be the highest mountain range of Europe, making Mont Blanc, Dufourspitze and Dom the highest summits of the continent. Due to potential uncertainties regarding the measurement accuracy of altitudes, Stangl also climbed three additional mountains, Ngga Pulu (2007) und Puncak Trikora (2010) in Oceania, and Rwenzori (Margherita Peak) in Africa (2012).

Further ventures / personal life

Since younger days, Christian Stangl undertakes extended bicycle treks. In 1985, he cycled across the Alps in 28 days, climbing Matterhorn, Mont Blanc, Eiger, Piz Palü, Cevedale, Königsspitze, and Ortler, on the way. In 2005, he traversed Atacama desert solo, north to south, covering a distance of 900 kilometers. For training matters, Stangl goes for long bicycle treks, for instance cycling from Admont to Gibraltar within 21 days, in 2001. In course of the Triple Seven Summits project, he rode from Austria to Caucasus and back, carrying the entire expedition luggage.

Christian Stangl now lives in Hall bei Admont, and works as state-approved mountain guide and project manager. He gives speeches and does presentations about his mountaineering ventures, and holds special workshops for executives.

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The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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