Valery Khrichtchatyi

Valery Khrichtchatyi

Khrichtchatyi in South Inylcheck, Kazakhstan, 1993
Born Valery Nikolaevich Khrichtchatyi
(1951-12-23)23 December 1951
Almaty, Kazakhstan, USSR
Died 4 August 1993(1993-08-04) (aged 41)
Khan Tengri, Kazakhstan
Cause of death Avalanche
Citizenship Kazakhstan
Signature

Valery Nikolaevich Khrichtchatyi (Russian: Валерий Никола́евич Хрищатый; born December 23, 1951, Alma-Ata, Kazakhstan – died August 4, 1993, Khan-Tengri, Tien-Shan, Kazakhstan) was a mountaineer from Kazakhstan. He made more than forty ascents above 7,000 meters (23,000 feet), including a string of hard winter firsts in the Pamirs and Tien Shan. He climbed Everest by a new south pillar route, Kanchenjunga without oxygen and with only one bivouac, and a new route on the west side of Dhaulagiri (8,172 meters).[1]

Mountaineering

Death

North wall of Khan Tengri

Valery Khrichtchatyi was killed in a massive ice fall/avalanche that struck off Chapayev peak on Semenovskii glacier on August 4, 1993 while attempting to summit Khan-Tengri (7,010 m). Khrichtchatyi’s long-time friend Ilia Iodes and two British climbers also met their deaths.[26] The body of one Englishman was recovered, but the others including Khrichtchatyi were never found. That same summer Khrichtchatyi was planning a solo speed climb of the north wall of Khan Tengri.

Writing

Valery published two books (1988,1995) which summarized his copious notes collected throughout his climbing carrier.

Commemoration

15 Kurmangazy, Almaty, Kazakhstan

Publications

Books

Articles

References

  1. Bonington, Chris (1994). Great Climbs. p. 206. ISBN 1-85732-573-7.
  2. Igor Stepanov. "39 Ascents to the Peak of Communism Made for the First Time".
  3. Elbrus race. "Valeriy Khrichtchatyi aka "Slim"".
  4. Kazbek Valiev. "If Extreme - is "a shape of your heart...".
  5. Bonington, Chris (2002). Chris Bonington's Everest. Weidenfield & Nicholson. p. 138. ISBN 1-84188-230-5.
  6. American Alpine Journal (Dimitri Botchkov) (2000). "Mountaineering in the Tien Shan: An Historical Survey " (PDF). p. 33.
  7. Igor Stepanov. "39 Ascents to the Peak of Communism Made for the First Time".
  8. Eduard Myslovski (1990). "Pik Pobedy in Winter".
  9. The Alpine Journal (Eduard Myslovski) (1990). "Kangchenjunga 1989" (PDF). p. 25.
  10. The Alpine Journal (Eduard Myslovski) (1990). "Kangchenjunga 1989" (PDF). pp. 24–28.
  11. The Alpine Journal (Vladimir Balyberdin) (1990). "Trekking on Tops A Kangchenjunga Diary" (PDF). pp. 18–24.
  12. American Alpine Journal (Eduard Myslovski) (1990). "Pik Pobedy in Winter".
  13. Bonington, Chris (1994). Great Climbs. p. 206. ISBN 1-85732-573-7.
  14. Andrey Verkhovod/Tina Sjogren (2015). "Winter climb 2015: Peak Pobeda, Kazakhstan".
  15. American Alpine Journal (Dimitri Botchkov) (2000). "Mountaineering in the Tien Shan: An Historical Survey " (PDF). p. 33.
  16. Denis Urubko (2010). "Dhaulagiri (8167) West face, 1991".
  17. Mountain.kz. "EXPEDITIONS".
  18. summitpost.org (Corax) (2006). "The Snow Leopards / First, most".
  19. "ExWeb Russia Special: brand new route on Pobeda, Elbrus race kick-off, Snow Leopards in numbers".
  20. Rodrigo Granzotto Peron. "SNOW LEOPARD PROGRAM – CURIOSITIES".
  21. American Alpine Journal, Vol 33 (Kazbek Valiev) (1991), American Alpine Journal, pp. 237–238
  22. Russian climb. "Memory is the life reached shining tops".
  23. American Alpine Journal (Józef Nyka) (1993). "Asia, CIS—Kirgizia, Khan Tengri, Tien Shan, First Winter Ascent". p. 294.
  24. The Alpine Journal (Jose Luis Bermudez & Paul Knott) (1995). "Russia And Central Asia 1992-94 " (PDF). p. 259.
  25. American Alpine Journal (Motomo Ohmiya & Valery Khrichtchatyi) (1993). "Everest's Northeast Ridge" (PDF). pp. 15–18.
  26. American Alpine Journal (Lindsay Griffin) (2005). "Asia, Kyrgyzstan, Tien Shan, Borkoldoy, Khan Tengri, Multiple Deaths". p. 341.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.