Fredric Landelius

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fredric Landelius medal table

Sport shooting

SwedenSweden Sweden
Olympic games
silver Antwerp 1920 Serial Deer double shot
silver Antwerp 1920 Serial Deer double shot (M)
bronze Antwerp 1920 Trap (M)
silver Paris 1924 Serial Deer single shot (M)
bronze Paris 1924 Serial Deer double shot (M)
World championships
gold Stockholm 1929 Serial Deer single shot (M)
silver Stockholm 1929 Serial Deer double shot (M)
silver Stockholm 1929 Trap

Per Fredric Landelius (born October 8, 1884 in Eksjö , † September 2, 1931 in Borås ) was a Swedish sports shooter .

successes

Fredric Landelius took part in the Olympic Games in Antwerp in 1920 and in Paris in 1924 . He won the bronze medal with the trap team in 1920: together with Per Kinde , Erik Lundqvist , Erik Sökjer-Petersén , Alfred Swahn and Karl Richter , he came third behind the Americans and the Belgians. After a sixth place in the single shot at the running deer, he also won the silver medal in the single competition of the double shot behind Ole Lilloe-Olsen and ahead of Einar Liberg . In the team competition he also secured the silver medal in a double shot alongside Edward Benedicks , Bengt Lagercrantz , Alfred Swahn and Oscar Swahn . Four years later he was without a medal in the trap when he narrowly missed the podium with the team in fourth. He finished the individual competition in 14th place. On the running deer he reached 17th place in the single shot and fourth place in the double shot in the individual competitions. Medal wins followed in both team competitions. In the single shot he secured silver with Otto Hultberg , Mauritz Johansson and Alfred Swahn, in the double shot with Axel Ekblom , Mauritz Johansson and Alfred Swahn bronze.

In 1929 Landelius was runner-up in the individual trap competition in Stockholm . He had already won the European Championship in this discipline two years earlier. On the running deer, he also won silver with the team in 1929 in double shots and became world champion in single shot. A total of six times he was Swedish champion in various disciplines.

Web links