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Fascinating Voids: Alexander von Humboldt and the Myth of Chimborazo

from Part II - Beckoning Heights: Summits Near and Far in the Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

Oliver Lubrich
Affiliation:
University of Bern in Switzerland
Sean Ireton
Affiliation:
University of Missouri
Caroline Schaumann
Affiliation:
Emory University
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Summary

When Alexander von Humboldt reached the village of Calpi in the Andes on 22 June 1802, he was greeted with reverence and enthusiasm. Triumphal arches adorned with cotton, cloth, and silver decorated his path. The natives performed a dance in festive dress. A singer praised the explorer's expedition, which had departed three years earlier from the Spanish port of La Coruña. Like Odysseus on the isle of the Phaeacians, the traveler listened to a local rhapsodist singing about his heroic deeds. Before his adventure ended, it had already spun a popular myth.

This episode, which Humboldt recorded in his diary, occurred at a significant moment. One day later, the “Second Discoverer of America” rose to even greater fame on an excursion marking in more ways than one the climax of his enterprise. Humboldt set out to climb Chimborazo (6,310 m/20,702 ft.), the mountain then thought to be the highest in the world. He was accompanied by the French botanist Aimé Bonpland (1773–1858) and the Creole nobleman and future activist Carlos Montúfar (1780–1816), as well as native guides and assistants. They climbed to heights never reached before, setting a new record and catapulting Humboldt to fame on both continents.

Myths

The ascent of Chimborazo had a great symbolic significance. A man of the Enlightenment reaching uncharted altitudes inspired contemporary artists such as Friedrich Georg Weitsch (1810) and Karl von Steuben (1812/21) to paint Humboldt in promixity to the mountain.

Type
Chapter
Information
Heights of Reflection
Mountains in the German Imagination from the Middle Ages to the Twenty-First Century
, pp. 153 - 175
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2012

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