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Women in Mountaineering: Pioneers Who Broke Every Barrier

From Victorian rebels to Himalayan record-setters

1 phút đọc 188 từ Summit Stories

Women in Mountaineering: Pioneers Who Broke Every Barrier

Women have been climbing mountains as long as men — they just weren't given the credit. From Henriette d'Angeville's 1838 Mont Blanc ascent to Junko Tabei's Everest, Wanda Rutkiewicz's eight-thousander campaigns, and Nimsdai Purja's all-female teams, this guide celebrates the women who shattered barriers at altitude.

Introduction

The Invisible History of Women Climbers

Victorian Era Pioneers

Henriette d'Angeville — Mont Blanc, 1838

Lucy Walker — The First Matterhorn Woman

Climbing in Skirts and Corsets

The Early 20th Century

Fanny Bullock Workman — Altitude Records

Women's Alpine Clubs

The Himalayan Breakthrough

Junko Tabei — First Woman on Everest (1975)

Phantog — First Woman on an 8,000er (Everest, 1975)

Wanda Rutkiewicz — K2 and the Quest for All 14

Modern Trailblazers

Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner — All 14 Without Oxygen

Pasang Lhamu Sherpa — Nepal's National Hero

Nimsdai Purja's All-Female Expeditions

Barriers That Remain

Funding Inequality

Equipment Design Gaps

Cultural Barriers in South Asia

The Future — An Equal Mountain

Thuật ngữ

Summit Eight-Thousander Base Camp Supplemental Oxygen Acclimatization Alpine Style

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