Arnold Lunn: Difference between revisions
Glacier109 (talk | contribs) Kandahar brackets |
Mild copy-edit |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
He attended [[Harrow School]], [[Balliol College]], [[University of Oxford]], and while he was there, founded the [[Oxford University Mountaineering Club]]. |
He attended [[Harrow School]], [[Balliol College]], [[University of Oxford]], and while he was there, founded the [[Oxford University Mountaineering Club]]. |
||
Originally he followed his father's Methodism |
Originally he followed his father's Methodism and, in fact, was at first a public opponent of [[Catholicism]]. After a debate with [[Ronald Knox]], he gradually but completely changed his religious convictions, eventually embracing the same Catholic beliefs he once had deplored. In 1933, Knox himself received Lunn into the Catholic Church. Lunn remained a prolific and effective writer of Catholic apologetics for the rest of his long life, and won the applause of fellow Catholic authors like [[Hilaire Belloc]]. |
||
His writings include: |
His writings include: |
Revision as of 18:56, 24 December 2006
Sir Arnold Lunn (born April 18, 1888 in Madras, India; died June 2 1974 in London, England) was a famous skier, mountaineer and writer. His father Henry Simpson Lunn (1859–1939, Methodist reverend and founder of Lunn's Travel agency that would become Lunn Poly) encouraged tourism in the Swiss Alps in the tradition of Thomas Cook's famous travel agency in the early 20th century. Introduced to skiing by his father, Arnold Lunn became a renowed skier and invented the slalom skiing race in 1922. He initiated in collaboration with the Austrian skiing pioneer Hannes Schneider the famous Arlberg Kandahar Challenge Cup in honour of Lord Roberts of Kandahar (Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts).
He attended Harrow School, Balliol College, University of Oxford, and while he was there, founded the Oxford University Mountaineering Club.
Originally he followed his father's Methodism and, in fact, was at first a public opponent of Catholicism. After a debate with Ronald Knox, he gradually but completely changed his religious convictions, eventually embracing the same Catholic beliefs he once had deplored. In 1933, Knox himself received Lunn into the Catholic Church. Lunn remained a prolific and effective writer of Catholic apologetics for the rest of his long life, and won the applause of fellow Catholic authors like Hilaire Belloc.
His writings include:
- The Harrovians, 1913.
- The Mountains of Youth, 1924.
- Switzerland and the English, 1944.
- Mountains and Memory, 1948.
- The Kandahar-Story, 1969.