
author
1799–1831
Best remembered as one of Europe’s earliest famous “taggers,” this Austrian traveler turned long walks across the Habsburg lands into legend. His lively travel writing and odd habit of leaving his name on walls and rocks made him a lasting folk curiosity.
Born in Vienna, Joseph (or Josef) Kyselak was an Austrian civil servant, mountaineer, and travel writer. Sources differ on his birth year, with some giving 1798 and others 1799, but they agree that he died in Vienna in 1831 while still a young man.
He became famous for hiking widely through the Austrian Empire and for the strange custom of writing his name in large letters on prominent places along the way. That habit made him notorious in his own time and helped keep his name alive long after his travels ended.
Kyselak also left behind a more serious legacy as an observer of the places he visited. His best-known work, Skizzen einer Fußreise durch Oesterreich, grew out of those journeys and records his interest in landscapes, towns, and everyday life across the region.