Olympic Summer Games 1900 / Fencing

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Fencing at the
II Olympic Games
Olympic rings without rims.svg
Fencing pictogram.svg
information
venue FranceFrance Paris
Competition venue Tuileries Garden
Nations 19th
Athletes 276 (276 men)
date May 14 - June 27, 1900
decisions 7th
Athens 1896

In the French capital Paris during the World Fair ( Exposition Universelle et Internationale de Paris ) discharged international competitions for Physical Education and Sport (Concours Internationaux d'Exercices physiques et de Sports) included competitions in fencing , which are part of the Olympic Games 1900 (Games of the II. Olympiad) were.

The competitions in fencing also consisted of competitions by professional fencing masters. According to the requirements of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), professionals were not actually admitted to an Olympic competition, but fencing masters were an exception. Their profession was considered an honorable craft, because they taught fencing at universities and academies, a skill that was part of an appropriate education for noble pupils and in higher social circles.

The IOC assigned all seven fencing competitions to the Olympic program of the Games of the II Olympiad. Fencing was the sport with the largest field of participants and the most participating nations. 276 athletes took part, 264 of whom are known by name. There is now historical evidence that the participants had 19 nationalities. However, some participants are still listed as French in various lists because they had a residence in Paris for a long time and lived there.

All competitions in foil and saber took place in the large ballroom of the exhibition in the Tuileries , those in the sword on a terrace in front of it. They were held between May 14th and June 27th. The French won five of the seven competitions and took three quarters of all medal placements.

Medal table

space country silver bronze Third total
1 FranceFrance France 5 5 5 15th
2 ItalyItaly Italy 1 1 - 2
CubaCuba Cuba 1 1 - 2
4th Austria CisleithanienCisleithania Austria - - 2 2

Results

Foil for amateurs

space country athlete Victories
1 FranceFrance FRA Émile Coste 6: 1
2 FranceFrance FRA Henri Masson 5: 2
3 FranceFrance FRA Marcel Boulenger 4: 3
4th FranceFrance FRA Félix Debax 4: 3
5 FranceFrance FRA Pierre d'Hugues 3: 4
6th FranceFrance FRA Prospère Sénat 3: 4
7th FranceFrance FRA Georges Dillon-Cavanagh 2: 5
8th Austria CisleithanienCisleithania AUT Rudolf Brosch 1: 6

Date: May 14-21, 1900
54 participants from 9 countries

In several preliminary fights and qualifying rounds, the participants determined the eight best fencers who competed against each other in a final round. The winner was the athlete who won the most battles. The maximum duration of a battle was seven minutes.

Foil for fencing masters

space country athlete Victories
1 FranceFrance FRA Lucien Mérignac 6: 1
2 FranceFrance FRA Alphonse Kirchhoffer 6: 1
3 FranceFrance FRA Jean-Baptiste Mimiague 4: 3
4th Italy 1861Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946) ITA Antonio Conte 4: 3
5 FranceFrance FRA Jules Rossignol 3: 4
6th FranceFrance FRA Léopold Ramus 2: 5
7th Italy 1861Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946) ITA Italo Santelli 0: 7
8th FranceFrance FRA Adolphe Rouleau 3: 4

Date: May 22-29, 1900
60 participants from 8 countries

In several preliminary fights and qualifying rounds, the participants determined the eight best fencers who competed against each other in a final round. The winner was the athlete who won the most battles. The maximum duration of a battle was seven minutes. The first and third place had to be decided by a playoff.

The fencing master Léon Thiércelin lived and worked in Paris and took part in competitions for foil and epee . He had always been listed as French on all lists, but various sources have since indicated that Thiércelin was born in Haiti . However, the IOC continues to view the athlete as French.

Adolphe Rouleau was moved back to eighth place because he had not finished the last stand.

Epee for amateurs

space country athlete Victories
1 CubaCuba CUB Ramón Fonst 4: 2
2 Third French RepublicThird French Republic FRA Louis Perrée 4: 1
3 FranceFrance FRA Léon Sée 3: 2
4th FranceFrance FRA Georges de la Falaise 3: 3
5 ArgentinaArgentina ARG Eduardo Camet 2: 3
6th FranceFrance FRA Edmond Wallace 3: 3
7th FranceFrance FRA Gaston Alibert 2: 3
8th FranceFrance FRA Léon Thiébaut 2: 4
9 FranceFrance FRA Plommet 0: 6

Date: June 1st to 14th,
104 participants from 9 countries

In several preliminary fights and qualifying rounds, the participants determined the nine best fencers who had to fight at least five fights in a final round. The winner was the athlete who won the most battles. The maximum duration of a battle was five minutes. A playoff between Ramón Fonst and Louis Perrée had to decide the victory.

Participants also included Freydoun Malkom and Eduardo Camet , both of whom lived in Paris. They had always been listed as French on all lists, but various sources have since indicated that Malkom was an Iranian citizen and that Camet was an Argentinian . However, the IOC continues to view the two athletes as French. Camet made it to the final battle and finished fifth.

Sword for fencing masters

space country athlete Victories
1 Third French RepublicThird French Republic FRA Albert Ayat k. A.
2 FranceFrance FRA Gilbert Bougnol k. A.
3 FranceFrance FRA Henri Laurent k. A.
4th FranceFrance FRA Hippolyte-Jacques Hyvernaud k. A.
5 FranceFrance FRA Marie-Louis Damotte k. A.
6th FranceFrance FRA Brassart k. A.
7th FranceFrance FRA Lézard k. A.
8th FranceFrance FRA Georges Jourdan k. A.
9 FranceFrance FRA Bézy k. A.

Date: June 11-14, 1900
54 participants from 6 countries

In several preliminary fights and qualifying rounds, the participants determined the nine best fencers who had to fight at least five fights in a final round. The winner was the athlete who won the most battles. The maximum duration of a battle was five minutes.

The fencing master Léon Thiércelin lived and worked in Paris and took part in competitions for foil and epee . He had always been listed as French on all lists, but various sources have since indicated that Thiércelin was born in Haiti . However, the IOC still regards the athlete as French.

Epee for amateurs and fencing masters

space country athlete Victories
1 FranceFrance FRA Albert Ayat (Fm) 7-0
2 CubaCuba CUB Ramón Fonst (Am) 6: 1
3 FranceFrance FRA Léon Sée (Am) 4: 3
4th FranceFrance FRA Georges de la Falaise (Am) 3: 4
5 FranceFrance FRA Louis Perrée (Am) 2: 5
FranceFrance FRA Gilbert Bougnol (Fm)
FranceFrance FRA Henri Laurent (Fm)
FranceFrance FRA Hippolyte-Jacques Hyvernaud (Fm)
Albert Ayat

Date: June 15, 1900
8 participants from 2 countries

The open class was a joint competition for amateurs (Am) and fencing masters (Fm), in which only the first four of the two epee competitions were allowed to compete against each other. The winner was the athlete who won the most battles. The maximum duration of a battle was five minutes.

The fact that Ramón Fonst , the winner of the amateurs and runner-up in the open class, was a pupil of the fencing master and winner of the open class Albert Ayat is to be regarded as curious .

Sabers for amateurs

space country athlete Victories
1 FranceFrance FRA Georges de la Falaise 6: 1
2 FranceFrance FRA Léon Thiébaut 5: 2
3 Austria CisleithanienCisleithania AUT Siegfried Flesch 4: 3
4th Hungary 1867Hungary AUT Amon from Gregurich 4: 3
5 Hungary 1867Hungary AUT Gyula Iványi 3: 4
6th FranceFrance FRA Clement de Boissière 3: 4
7th Austria CisleithanienCisleithania AUT Heinrich von Tenner 2: 5
8th Austria CisleithanienCisleithania AUT Camillo Müller 1: 6

Date: June
19-25 , 23 participants from 7 countries

In several preliminary fights and qualifying rounds, the participants determined the eight best fencers who competed against each other in a final round. The winner was the athlete who won the most battles. The maximum duration of a battle was seven minutes.

Saber for fencing masters

space country athlete Victories
1 Italy 1861Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946) ITA Antonio Conte 7-0
2 Italy 1861Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946) ITA Italo Santelli 6: 1
3 Austrian EmpireEmpire of Austria AUT Milan Neralic 4: 3
4th FranceFrance FRA François Delibes 3: 4
5 Russian Empire 1883Russian Empire RUS Julian Michaux 3: 4
6th FranceFrance FRA Xavier Anchetti 2: 5
7th Russian Empire 1883Russian Empire RUS Pyotr Sakorovot 2: 5
8th BelgiumBelgium BEL Hébrant 1: 6
Italo Santelli

Date: June 23-27, 1900
29 participants from 7 countries

In several preliminary fights and qualifying rounds, the participants determined the eight best fencers who competed against each other in a final round. The winner was the athlete who won the most battles. The maximum duration of a battle was seven minutes.

Italo Santelli was born in Italy. In 1896 he moved to Budapest , where he took over fencing training at an officers' school. Santelli stayed in Hungary until his death . The IOC always regarded him as a Hungarian and therefore attributed his medal placement in the medal table to Hungary for several decades. Only in 2007 was the rating officially changed and the placement transferred to Italy.

literature

  • Volker Kluge : Summer Olympic Games. The Chronicle I. Athens 1896 - Berlin 1936. Sportverlag Berlin, Berlin 1997, ISBN 3-328-00715-6 .
  • Karl Lennartz , Walter Teutenberg: II. Olympic Games 1900 in Paris. Presentation and sources. AGON Sportverlag, Kassel 1995, ISBN 3-928562-20-7 .
  • Bill Mallon : The 1900 Olympic Games . McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina 1998, CIP 97-36094.

Web links