EUROPE | TECH | BUSINESS | ARTS | TRAVEL | PHOTOS | CURRENT ISSUE

Inspirations & Explorers
ddd ddd ddd ddd
ddd
ddd ddd ddd ddd
ddd
ddd ddd ddd ddd
ddd
ddd Inspirations & Explorers ddd ddd
ddd
ddd d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
d d d d
d
Business & Culture;


This issue cover
carret 60 Years Of Heroes  
carret To Our Readers  
carret Table of Contents  
carret Subscribe to TIME  


ADVERTISEMENT
Inspirations & Explorers
Reinhold Messner
CHIEN-MIN CHUNG / GETTY IMAGES 
ADVENTURER: Messner with Mongolian nomads after a solo Gobi Desert trek

Reinhold Messner
The world's greatest mountaineer pushed the limits of human endurance

print article Subscribe email TIME Europe The peculiar greatness of Reinhold Messner is grounded in a pure form of selfishness. His pas de deux with the world's most inhospitable wildernesses have always been about measuring his own might, skill and especially will. "I am Sisyphus," he has written, "and the stone which I push
 
other stories »
 
Get The Magazine
Try 4 issues FREE
Get unlimited access to the TIME Archive and free delivery to your door
Give a gift of TIME
up the mountain is my own psyche."

He has carried that heavy burden to the literal ends of the earth. Messner, 62, is not only the greatest high-altitude mountaineer the world has ever known; he is probably the best it will ever know. His 1980 solo ascent of Mount Everest by "fair means" — without sherpas, crevasse ladders or supplemental oxygen — remains the most primal test conceivable of man against the earth.

That ascent, and Messner's subsequent conquest of the world's 13 other peaks of 8,000 m or more, set the gold standard for mountaineering. "He had nobody's footsteps to follow," says Ed Viesturs, an American climber who completed the fair-means ascent of all 14 of those peaks in spring 2005. "After Messner, the mystery of possibility was gone; there remained only the mystery of whether you could do it."

Messner's obsession was formed early in the Dolomites and other Alpine ranges — he was born in a narrow German-speaking valley of Italy's South Tyrol. His first venture to the Himalayas in 1970 ended in tragedy when his younger brother Günther died after summiting Nanga Parbat. Several members of that expedition accused Messner of abandoning his brother in an egotistical push to open a new route of descent, but the discovery of Günther's body last year confirmed Messner's contention that he had been killed by an avalanche.

Messner later traversed Greenland and the Gobi Desert, and tackled both poles by fair means. He served a term in the European Parliament for the Italian Green Party, and now heads a range of museums about the lure of mountains and raises a family back in South Tyrol, where it all began. He's been decried as arrogant, defensive and abrasive. But in answering to no one but himself, Messner obeys a higher calling. His achievements will inspire lone wolves and stubborn dreamers for generations to come.

« back: Jean-Claude Killy


TIME Europe's Heroes 2003
April 28, 2004
TIME Europe's Heroes 2004
October 11, 2004
TIME Europe's Heroes 2005
October 10, 2005


QUICK LINKS: Business & Culture | Inspirations & Explorers | Rebels & Leaders | Back to TIMEeurope.com Home

Copyright © Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Search | Write to Us | Letter to the Editor | Customer Service | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Press Releases