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Hristo Prodanov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bulgarian mountaineer
In thisBulgarian name, thepatronymic is Ivanov and thefamily name is Prodanov.
Hristo Prodanov
Born24 February 1943
Disappeared21 April 1984 (aged 41)
Mount Everest
StatusMissing for 40 years, 11 months and 5 days
NationalityBulgarian
Occupationmountaineer
Known forBeing the first Bulgarian to climbMount Everest

Hristo Ivanov Prodanov also known asChristo Prodanov (Bulgarian:Христо Иванов Проданов; 24 February 1943 – disappeared 21 April 1984)[1][2] was aBulgarianmountaineer.[3] Prodanov was the first Bulgarian to climbMount Everest,[2] doing it via the most difficult way—the West Ridge—as well as alone and without oxygen. Prodanov was the first person to climb Everest in April, when the weather conditions are generally too bad for an expedition, and also the thirteenth person (first person from the West Ridge) to climb Everest without using bottled oxygen. Climbing the summit at 18:15 local time, he had to descend overnight and got lost shortly after that. On the next afternoon, he reported he had lost his gloves and soon would be unable to hold the radio button long enough to talk. His body was never found.

Prodanov was still a student when he became involved in mountaineering. He began work as ametallurgicalengineer inKremikovtzi AD in 1976. He had his first 7000 m ascent on 6 August 1967 when he climbedLenin Peak. He had previously climbed several peaks in theAlps.

His major successes were related toHindu Kush (1976) andLhotse. In 1981, he was the first Bulgarian to climb Lhotse without the use of supplementary oxygen.

Personal life

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His niece, Mariana Prodanova Maslarova,[4] attempted to climb Mt. Everest (without the use of supplemental oxygen) on the 20th anniversary of her uncle's death. Maslarova died of exposure at 8,700 meters, exactly 20 years and 30 days after her uncle.[5]

Climbs

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8000m ascents

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  • Lhotse (8516m) - 30 April 1981, solo, without oxygen
  • Everest (8848m) - 20 April 1984, solo, without oxygen

7000m ascents

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  • Lenin Peak (7134m) - 2 August 1975, 28 July 1982, 6 August 1982, 13 July 1983, 2 August 1983
  • Communism Peak, today known asIsmail Samani Peak (7495m) - 29 July 1980, 24 July 1983
  • Peak Korzhenevskaya (7105m) - 28 July 1979, 31 July 1979, 8 August 1982, 29 July 1983
  • Noshaq (7492m) - 30 July 1976

Alps

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Caucasus

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Awards

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Prodanov received several awards, including:

See also

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References

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  1. ^"EverestHistory.com: Christo Prodanov".www.everesthistory.com. Retrieved2021-03-19.
  2. ^ab"Mount Everest - Solo Climb, Himalayas, Nepal | Britannica".www.britannica.com. Retrieved2024-05-18.
  3. ^"Bulgarian found dead on Everest". 2004-05-24. Retrieved2021-03-19.
  4. ^"Bulgarian woman dies on Everest attempt".www.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved2021-03-19.
  5. ^"Bulgarian Everest Woman Declared Dead - Novinite.com - Sofia News Agency".www.novinite.com. Retrieved2021-03-19.

External links

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