Gaston RĂ©buffat (7 May 1921, Marseille â 31 May 1985, Paris) was a French alpinist, mountain guide, and author. He is well known as a member of the first expedition to summit Annapurna 1 in 1950 and the first man to climb all six of the great north faces of the Alps. In 1984, he was made an officer in the French Legion of Honour for his service as a mountaineering instructor for the French military. At the age of 64, Gaston RĂ©buffat died of cancer in Paris, France. The climbing technique Gaston was named after him. A photo of RĂ©buffat atop the Aiguille du Roc in the French Alps is on the Voyager Golden Records. Gaston RĂ©buffat was born on 7 May 1921 in Marseilles, France. He began climbing at the age of 14 in the Calanques near Marseilles. At the age of 16, he became a member of the Club Alpin Français (French Alpine Club), where he was introduced to high altitude mountaineering. There he met Lionel Terray, a French mountaineer who would join RĂ©buffat on the 1950 Annapurna asc...
When the Mountaineers Make Their Cinema
2000
The World of Gaston Rébuffat
2009
Perilous Assignment
1959
Chamonix - Mont Blanc, Une histoire de conquĂȘtes
2015
Maurice Baquet, The Accorded
2023
Baquet's Comeback
1988
Victories on the Himalayas
1960
Roped, 200 Years In The Eyes Of Chamonix Guides
2021
Entre Terre et Ciel
1961
Des Hommes Et Des Montagnes
1953
Victory over Annapurna
1953
Stars and Storms
1955
Les Horizons Gagnés
1974
Flammes De Pierres
1947