Kurt Albert | |
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Born | Nuremberg, Germany | January 28, 1954
Died | September 28, 2010 56) Erlangen, Bavaria, Germany | (aged
Nationality | German |
Occupation(s) | Climber and photographer |
Known for | Iconic figure in the history of the free climbing movement. |
Website | http://www.kurt-albert.de |
Kurt Albert (January 28, 1954 – September 28, 2010) was a German climber and photographer. He started climbing at the age of 14. Before he committed himself to a career of climbing in 1986, he was a mathematics and physics teacher.
Climbing career
At the age of seventeen, he climbed the Walker Spur in the Grandes Jorasses, and one year later he climbed the north face of the Eiger. After a visit to the Saxon Switzerland climbing area in Saxony, Germany in 1973 he recognized the potential of free climbing. He started to free climb in his home climbing area, the Frankenjura. In the routes, he would now try to ascend while free climbing, he would—in between attempts—paint a red 'X' on the rocks near pitons he did not need as holds or steps. Once he could place a red 'X' on all the pitons and hooks in the route, and was thus able to free climb the entire route, he would paint a red dot at the base of the route. From this comes the English term "redpoint", which is derived from the German Rotpunkt, meaning "redpoint". In many ways, this was the origin of the free climbing movement that led to the development of sport climbing some years later.
Death
Albert was severely injured in a climbing accident on September 26, 2010. He fell 18 metres (59 ft) while taking pictures at via ferrata Höhenglücksteig (near Hirschbach, Bavaria) and died two days later while hospitalised in Erlangen.[1][2]
Bibliography
References
- ↑ "Kurt Albert is dead. Goodbye to a climbing legend". September 29, 2010.
- ↑ "Rätselraten um Kurt Albert". Retrieved November 1, 2010.