Ludwig Vörg
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| Ludwig Vorg | |
| Born | 19.10.1911 Munich, Germany |
|---|---|
| Died | 22.06.1941 Siolo, Russian Front |
| Occupation | Mountaineer |
Ludwig 'Wiggerl' Vörg (born 19 October 1911, died 22 June 1941) was a notable German mountaineer. He was part of the famous group of climbers (Heinrich Harrer, Fritz Kasparek, and Anderl Heckmair) that succeeded in climbing the north face of the Eiger in 1938, which was regarded as unclimable at the time. He also made the first ascent of the West Face of Ushba in the Caucasus. Vörg died fighting on the Russian Front in the Second World War. [1]
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[edit] The 'Bivouac King'
Prior to attempting to north face of the Eiger, Vörg had been the first person to climb the west face of Ushba in the Caucasus. It was during this climb on the 7000ft high ice face that Vörg earned his nickname from his fellow climbers.
[edit] 1937 on the Eiger
[edit] Rescue on the Summit
Vorg along with Matthias Rebitsch, were the only team planning an attempt of the North Face in 1937 when news came that two Austrian climbers, Franz Primus and Bertl Gollackner, were stuck high on the North East face in ferocious conditions. Vorg and Rebitsch were immediately began their climb up the Lauper Wall, where they too were caught in the storm. The face was streaming with torrents of water, glazed rocks, and avalanches. They were forced to bivouac high on the face on a tiny perch of a Bivouac that they had made for themselves. In the morning they pushed on to the hut on the Mittellegi Ridge, taking a break to dry their clothes and rest. Late in the afternoon, two guides reported to the hut that they had brought a freezing exhausted Primas down from the ridge, but that Gollackner was dead 500ft below the summit. They volunteered to recover the body, and carried it down the knife edge of the Mittellegi Ridge. Vorg and Rebitsch had put their own lives at risk for the sake of others; it was a trait in Vorg that would come out again the following year.[2]
[edit] Vorg and Rebitsh Attempt the Nordwand
[edit] Climbing the Eiger
Vorg was attempting the Eiger with Anderl Heckmair, they had set off in pursuit of the preceding team in a race to the top. When they caught up with the German team of Heinrich Harrer and Fritz Kasparek (Vorg and Heckmair's superior 12-point crampons were more useful on the Eiger; Harrer didn't have any crampons at all) they decided to proceed as a four. When they reached the 'Spider' icefield high on the face, they were hit by a ferocious storm, avalanches pounding down upon them. Andreas Heckmair describes what happened when he slipped from the face.
I bore straight down on him in a lightning swift slide. Wiggerl let the rope drop and caught me with his hands, and one of the points of my crampons went through his palm. The force with which I came down on Wiggerl knocked him out of his holds, but he, too , had been able to save himself and there we were, standing about 4 feet below our stance on steep ice without any footholds. Our Friends...hadn't even noticed anything had happened. If we hadn't checked our fall we would have hurled them out from the face with us in a wide arc[3]
Vörg, it seems, saved the whole party from certain death, and without his bravery there would never have been the legendary tales of Heinrich Harrer. They went on to reach the top, and glory, on the 24th of July, 1938.
[edit] Death
Vorg was a gefreiter in the German Army when he fell on the 22 of June 1941 at Siolo on the Russian front. [4] He is registered in the memorial book at the German graveyard in Przemyśl, Poland.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Turnbull R., The Book of the Bivvy, p.27, 2001
- ^ H. Harrer, "The White Spider", pp.70-72 Harper Perennial
- ^ Heckmair A., Die Drei Letzen Probleme der Alpen, Bruckman Verlag, 1949
- ^ Gräbersuche
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