
King Albert I: the mountaineering monarch
King Albert I of Belgium was a keen and experienced mountain climber. He scaled many Swiss peaks and even completed a first ascent in 1907. Tragically, despite his mountaineering skills, a climbing accident ended his life.
That is as regrettable as it is unjust, as the Belgian blue blood (1875-1934) had some memorable adventures in Switzerland. When Albert was 26 and had just married Bavarian princess Elisabeth, he attended a lecture by Ernest Solvay, who provided the funding for the Solvay Hut at the Hörnli ridge on the Matterhorn, which ignited the young royal’s passion for mountain climbing. He had also spent summers residing at the family’s Villa Haslihorn in Horw, where he used to marvel at the Swiss mountains on the other side of Lake Lucerne.




A straw bed fit for a king




Disaster in Belgium
Then the rumours started – it could have been an assassination or suicide; an official report fed the rumour mill by stating that the position of the corpse was atypical for a fall... There was also a blood-covered stone two to three metres from the corpse. Forensic experts revisited the case 70 years later. Using modern analysis methods they concluded that the king had met with an accident. The cliff overhang to which his rope was attached broke off, and Albert fell 18 metres, hitting his head on a stone.
Subsequently, Walter Amstutz, former director of the St Moritz tourist board and a climbing partner for the king on more than one occasion, organised a lasting memorial to the royal mountain climber. In 1993, he and some others launched The King Albert I Memorial Foundation. Based in Zurich and dedicated to the memory of King Albert, the foundation’s aim is “to recognise extraordinary services to alpinism”. Every other year, it confers awards so that Albert’s contribution to alpinism is not forgotten.
Visiting Royals – From Sisi to Queen Elizabeth
Although Switzerland has no royal tradition, royal families have long held a certain fascination for the Swiss. All royal visits, whether by an emperor, empress, king, queen, prince or princess, and for whatever reason, whether politics, business or personal, had one thing in common: they triggered – both then and now – immense excitement and fascination among the Swiss public. The exhibition demonstrates this through many pictures and exclusive possessions of these bluebloods.


