Gottlieb Samuel Studer

Gottlieb Samuel Studer ( * August 5, 1804 in Langnau im Emmental, † December 14, 1890 in Bern ) was a Swiss mountaineer.

Life

The pioneer of mountaineering was also known as Panorama signatories and non-fiction author.

In September 1843, he ascended as the first climber Wildhorn, in July he could erstbesteigen the cow horn, in 1864 the first ascent of the Grand When the horn. Together with the chemist Rudolf Theodor Simler suggested Studer in 1862 as a response to the creation of the English Alpinist Association Alpine Club, the establishment of a Swiss counterparts on. The Swiss Alpine Club (SAC ) was then established in Olten on April 19, 1863.

From 1850 to 1868 Studer was government governor. 1869 to 1871 he published the three -volume work about ice and snow, in which he traces the history of climbing the highest peaks of Switzerland.

Samuel Studer was a cousin of the physicist and geologist Bernhard Studer. His estate and his father are kept in the Library of Bern Burger.

In the case of the oak forest plot at the junction of Neubrückstrasse and the ( named after Studer ) Studer Street in Berne, the so-called Studer stone in 1893 in honor of Studer, who had drawn from there a panorama of the Alps, was inaugurated.

Works

  • Gottlieb Studer, M. Ulrich, JJ Weilenmann, H. Zeller: mountain and glacier tours in the High Alps of Switzerland. First and second collection.. Friedrich Schulthess, Zurich in 1859 and 1863 VI, 365, 8 plates; VII, 347, 8 plates. (Facsimile ) Fines Mundi Verlag, Saarbrücken, 2008
  • Gottlieb Studer: Topographic Mittheilungen from the Alpine mountains. The icy wastes and rarely trodden high alpine mountain peaks and the canton of Bern and adjacent areas. With Atlas to Studer 's Topographic Mittheilungen, publisher of Huber and Comp. ( Körber ), Bern and St. Gallen, 1844. Xii, 172 With three illustrations and eight panoramas, of which four colored. (Facsimile ) Fines Mundi Verlag, Saarbrücken, 2008
  • Gottlieb Studer: About ice and snow. Bern, 1869-71 Volume 1: Northern Alps, 535 pages
  • Volume 2: Southern Alps, 580 pages
  • Volume 3: Southern Alps, Eastern Alps, 508 pages
  • Supplement 1883
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