by
Hermann Schlagintweit, 1855 • In spring 1855, the
German explorer
Hermann von Schlagintweit travelled to Darjeeling but was not allowed to proceed further north due to the
Third Nepal–Tibet War. In May, he explored the
Singalila Ridge up to the peak of
Tonglo for a meteorological survey. • In 1879,
Sarat Chandra Das and Lama Ugyen-gyatso crossed into Tibet west of "Kanchanjinga" via eastern Nepal and the
Tashilhunpo Monastery en route to
Lhasa. They returned along the same route in 1881. • In 1883, a party of
William Woodman Graham together with two
Swiss mountaineers climbed in the area of Kangchenjunga. They were the first who ascended
Kabru within below the summit. They crossed the Kang La pass and climbed a peak of nearly from which they examined Jannu. They concluded it was too late in the year for an attempt and returned once again to Darjeeling. • Between October 1885 and January 1886, Rinzin Namgyal surveyed the unexplored north and west sides of Kangchenjunga. He was the first native surveyor to map the circuit of Kangchenjunga and provided sketches of each side of the peak and the adjoining valleys. He also defined the frontiers of Nepal, Tibet and Sikkim in this area. • In 1899, British mountaineer Douglas Freshfield set out with his party comprising the Italian photographer
Vittorio Sella. They were the first mountaineers to examine the lower and upper ramparts, and the great western face of Kangchenjunga, rising from the Kangchenjunga Glacier. Despite the insistence of one of the men that "the demon of Kangchenjunga was propitiated with the sacrifice", Crowley decided the accident and its ramifications made it impossible to continue the expedition. • In 1907, two
Norwegians set about climbing
Jongri via the Kabru glacier to the south, an approach apparently rejected by Graham's party. Progress was very slow, partly because of problems with supplies and porters, and presumably also lack of fitness and acclimatisation. However, from a high camp at about they were eventually able to reach a point below the summit before they were turned back by strong winds. • In May 1929, the American E. F. Farmer left Darjeeling with native porters, crossed the Kang La into Nepal and climbed up towards the
Talung Saddle. When his porters refused to go any further, he climbed alone further upwards through drifting mists but did not return. This reconnaissance led to the route used by the successful 1955 expedition.
First ascent On 25 May 1955,
Joe Brown and
George Band made the first ascent, followed by
Norman Hardie and
Tony Streather on 26 May. The full team also included team leader
Charles Evans,
John Angelo Jackson, John Clegg, Neil Mather and Tom Mackinnon. They stopped just short of Kangchenjunga's true summit, keeping a promise given to
Tashi Namgyal, the
Chogyal of the
Kingdom of Sikkim, that the top of the mountain would remain inviolate. Everyone was back to base camp by 28 May. • 1977: The second ascent of Kangchenjunga, by an Indian Army team led by
Colonel Narendra Kumar. They completed the northeast spur, the difficult ridge that defeated German expeditions in 1929 and 1931. • 1978: and made the first successful ascents of the summits
Kangchenjunga South on 19 May; and Wojciech Brański,
Zygmunt Andrzej Heinrich,
Kazimierz Olech on 22 May on Kangchenjunga Central. • 1979: The third ascent on 16 May, and the first without oxygen, by
Doug Scott,
Peter Boardman and
Joe Tasker, establishing a new route on the North Ridge. • 1983: First solo ascent, by Pierre Beghin. • 1985: The first winter attempt, by a team of three led by the American Chris Chandler, from the north side. Chandler died on the unsuccessful attempt. • 1986: The first ascent in winter, by Jerzy Kukuczka and Krzysztof Wielicki on 11 January 1986, they followed the route from the SW which was pioneered during the original first ascent. • 1992:
Carlos Carsolio made the only summit that year. It was in a solo climb without supplementary oxygen. • 1995:
Benoît Chamoux,
Pierre Royer and their Sherpa guide Riku disappeared on 6 October near the summit. • 1998:
Ginette Harrison was the first woman to climb Kangchenjunga's North Face. • 2009:
Edurne Pasaban, a Spanish mountaineer, reached the summit, becoming the first woman to summit twelve eight-thousanders. • In May 2009:
Kinga Baranowska was the first Polish woman to reach the summit of Kangchenjunga. • In 2011,
Tunç Fındık became the first Turkish man to reach the peak of Kangchenjunga, his seventh eight thousander, with Swiss partner Guntis Brandts via the British 1955 SW Face route. • In May 2011, Indian mountaineers Basanta Singha Roy and
Debasish Biswas successfully scaled Kangchenjunga Main. • In May 2013, five climbers including Hungarian
Zsolt Erőss and Péter Kiss reached the summit, but disappeared during the descent. • In May 2014, Bulgarian
Boyan Petrov reached the peak without the use of supplemental oxygen. • In May 2014,
Chhanda Gayen was the first Indian woman to summit. She was killed by an avalanche on the descent. • In May 2022, Indian Narayanan Iyer died during a summit push on the mountain. • In May 2023, German
Luis Stitzinger, after having reached the summit, died during an attempted ski descent. Despite improved climbing gear, the fatality rate of climbers attempting to summit Kanchenjunga is high. Since the 1990s, more than 20% of people have died while climbing Kanchenjunga's main peak. ==In myth==