Fencing at the Games of the II Olympiad | |
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Venue | Tuileries Garden |
Dates | 14 May – 27 June 1900 |
No. of events | 7 (7 men, 0 women) |
Competitors | 260 from 19 nations |
Fencing at the 1900 Summer Olympics | |
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Épée | men |
Masters épée | men |
Amateurs-masters épée | men |
Foil | men |
Masters foil | men |
Sabre | men |
Masters sabre | men |
At the 1900 Summer Olympics, seven fencing events were contested. 260 fencers from 19 nations competed. [1] [2] The events took place at the Tuileries Garden. [3]
Games | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Épée, Individual | Ramón Fonst Cuba | Louis Perrée France | Léon Sée France |
Épée, Masters | Albert Robert Ayat France | Émile Bougnol France | Henri Laurent France |
Épée, Amateurs-Masters | Albert Robert Ayat France | Ramón Fonst Cuba | Léon Sée France |
Foil, Individual | Émile Coste France | Henri Masson France | Marcel Boulenger France |
Foil, Masters | Lucien Mérignac France | Alphonse Kirchhoffer France | Jean-Baptiste Mimiague France |
Sabre, Individual | Georges de la Falaise France | Léon Thiébaut France | Siegfried Flesch Austria |
Sabre, Masters | Antonio Conte Italy | Italo Santelli Italy | Milan Neralić Austria |
The fencing events were spread out over a good deal of time. The competitions began on Monday, 14 May.
A total of 260 fencers from 19 nations (including 3 nations not recognized by the IOC) competed at the Paris Games: [1]
|
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | France (FRA) | 5 | 5 | 5 | 15 |
2 | Cuba (CUB) | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
Italy (ITA) | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 | |
4 | Austria (AUT) | 0 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
Totals (4 entries) | 7 | 7 | 7 | 21 |
Ramón Fonst Segundo was a Cuban fencer who competed in the early 20th century. He was one of the greatest world fencers, individual and by team; he was born and died in Havana.
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The men's foil was a fencing event held as part of the fencing programme at the 1904 Summer Olympics. It was the third time the event was held at the Olympics. The competition was held on September 7, 1904. Nine fencers from three nations competed. The medals were swept by "Cuban" fencers; only Fonst was actually Cuban, but the other two men were marked as Cuban by the IOC despite being American. The mistake was corrected after more than 100 years in the early 2020s.
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