Jerzy Kukuczka
Jerzy Kukuczka on Mount Everest, 1980 | |
| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | Polish |
| Born | 24 March 1948 Katowice, Poland |
| Died | 24 October 1989 (aged 41) Lhotse, Nepal |
| Website | Virtual Museum of Jerzy Kukuczka |
| Climbing career | |
| Known for |
|
| First ascents | Gasherbrum II East, Biarchedi, Manaslu East, Yebokalgan Ri, Shishapangma West
|
| Major ascents | Four winter ascents on the eight-thousanders |
Józef Jerzy Kukuczka (Polish: [ˈju.zɛf ˈjɛ.ʐɨ kuˈkut͡ʂ.ka]; 24 March 1948 – 24 October 1989) was a Polish mountaineer, regarded as one of the greatest high-altitude climbers in history. In 1987, he became the second man (after Reinhold Messner) to climb all 14 eight-thousanders in the world, a feat known as the "Crown of the Himalayas." He accomplished this feat in less than eight years, and climbed all, except for Lhotse, by new routes or in winter. He is the only person to have climbed two eight-thousanders in one winter, and his ascents of Cho Oyu, Kangchenjunga and Annapurna were the first winter ascents. His ascent of K2 in 1986, in alpine style with Tadeusz Piotrowski, is now known as the Polish Line. No other mountaineers have attempted an ascent using the route since.
Reinhold Messner, upon hearing that Kukuczka had completed all 14 eight-thousanders, wrote, "You are not second, you are great." The line was reproduced as the epigraph of Kukuczka's book and the Polish translation forms the title of a biography of him published in 2021. He died in 1989 while attempting to climb the south face of Lhotse.