In the footsteps of: Wilhelm (Willi) Rickmer Rickmers
Willi Rickmer Rickmers was a German mountaineer, skier and explorer, born in Hanover in 1873. Following an apprenticeship at his father’s shipping company, Rickmers attended the University of Vienna to study animal and plant science. He was also an expert skier and a keen climber, making ascents of 3,000-4,000 metre peaks in Switzerland at the age of 17.
Between 1894 and 1906 he led several expeditions to Central Asia and the Caucasus, first visiting Bokhara and Samarkand, Uzbekistan, before exploring deeper into the mountains east of Bukhara, reaching the upper Jachsu Valley in Tajikistan via Dushanbe, Baljuan and Khovaling. In 1906, he travelled with his wife and fellow mountaineer, C. Mabel Duff Rickmers, journeying to the foothills of the Pamir range in eastern Tajikistan. In 1913 and 1928 he led the Alai-Pamir (C. Asia) Russo-German expeditions, successfully carrying out the first precise surveys of part of the NW Pamirs and determining the length of the Fedchenko glacier, Tajikistan – the largest glacier outside of the polar regions.
In 1935 he was awarded the RGS Patron’s Medal for his ‘long and continued travels in the Caucasus and Russian Turkistan’.