European Karate Championships

The European Karate Championships are organised by the European Karate Federation each year.[1]

European Karate Championships
Competition details
Discipline Karate
Type team/individual limited and kata, Annual
Organiser European Karate Federation (EKF)
History
First edition 1966 in Paris, France

History edit

Events from 1966 to 1996 were organized by the European Karate Union. In 1961, Jacques Delcourt was appointed President of French Karate, which was at that stage, an associated member of the Judo Federation. In 1963, he invited six other known European federations (Italy, Great Britain, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland and Spain) to come to France for the first-ever international karate event. Great Britain and Belgium accepted the invitation.[2]

By 1965, the European Karate Union was created with Jacques Delcourt voted in as President.[3] The following year the first European Karate Championships were held in Paris. The event drew roughly three hundred spectators and was shown live on television. It drew criticism for being too violent as there were many facial injuries. The EKU council had differing opinions about the cause(s) of the injuries. With opinions ranging from excessive violations of rules to lack of conditioning and blocking skill, this problem was addressed in some part, at the first referee course held in Rome. At that time, the refereeing rules were harmonised using the JKA rules as a basis.[4]

The 2023 event was scheduled to be held in Moscow, Russia but the country was stripped of the right to host the event after the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[5]

Championships edit

EKU Championships (1966–1992) and EKF Championships (since 1993).[6] Para Karate was added to championships since 2018.[7][8][9][10][11]

Edition Year Host City Host Country Events
Organized by European Karate Union (EKU)
1 1966 Paris   France 2
2 1967 London   United Kingdom 2
3 1968 Paris   France 2
4 1969 London   United Kingdom 2
5 1970 Hamburg   Germany 2
6 1971 Paris   France 2
7 1972 Brussels   Belgium 5
8 1973 Valencia   Spain 5
9 1974 London   United Kingdom 5
10 1975 Ostend   Belgium 5
11 1976 Tehran   Iran 7
12 1977 Paris   France 7
13 1978 Geneva   Switzerland 7
14 1979 Helsinki   Finland 9
15 1980 Barcelona   Spain 12
16 1981 Venice   Italy 12
17 1982 Gothenburg   Sweden 15
18 1983 Madrid   Spain 15
19 1984 Paris   France 16
20 1985 Oslo   Norway 16
21 1986 Madrid   Spain 16
22 1987 Glasgow   United Kingdom 16
23 1988 Genoa   Italy 17
24 1989 Titograd   Yugoslavia 17
25 1990 Vienna   Austria 17
26 1991 Hanover   Germany 18
27 1992 's-Hertogenbosch   Netherlands 17
Organized by European Karate Federation (EKF)
28 1993 Prague   Czech Republic 17
29 1994 Birmingham   England 17
30 1995 Helsinki   Finland 17
31 1996 Paris   France 17
32 1997 Santa Cruz de Tenerife   Spain 17
33 1998 Belgrade   Yugoslavia 17
34 1999 Euboea   Greece 17
35 2000 Istanbul   Turkey 17
Edition Year Host City Host Country Events
36 2001 Sofia   Bulgaria 17
37 2002 Tallinn   Estonia 17
38 2003 Bremen   Germany 17
39 2004 Moscow   Russia 17
40 2005 Tenerife   Spain 17
41 2006 Stavanger   Norway 17
42 2007 Bratislava   Slovakia 17
43 2008 Tallinn   Estonia 17
44 2009 Zagreb   Croatia 16
45 2010 Athens   Greece 16
46 2011 Zürich   Switzerland 16
47 2012 Santa Cruz de Tenerife   Spain 16
48 2013 Budapest   Hungary 16
49 2014 Tampere   Finland 16
50 2015 Istanbul   Turkey 16
51 2016 Montpellier   France 16
52 2017 Kocaeli   Turkey 16
53 2018 Novi Sad   Serbia 16+6
54 2019 Guadalajara   Spain 16+6
55 2020 Baku   Azerbaijan Cancelled
56 2021 Poreč   Croatia 16+8
57 2022 Gaziantep   Turkey 16+8
58 2023 Guadalajara   Spain 16+8
59 2024 Zadar   Croatia
60 2025 Yerevan   Armenia
61 2026 TBC TBC
62 2027 Paris   France
63 2028 TBC   Serbia

Medals edit

Medals table Europe Cadet, Junior and U21 (2000–2023) edit

The following reflects the all-time medal counts as of the 2000 European Karate Cadet, Junior and U21 Championships:

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1   Spain 97 50 81 228
2   France 92 70 117 279
3   Turkey 92 50 129 271
4   Italy 81 74 114 269
5   Russia 32 34 74 140
6   Azerbaijan 29 8 30 67
7   Slovakia 24 30 65 119
8   Germany 22 31 67 120
9   Croatia 18 42 66 126
10   Ukraine 17 15 29 61
11   Greece 15 16 51 82
12   Bosnia and Herzegovina 14 26 32 72
13   Netherlands 14 10 20 44
14   Serbia 12 30 43 85
15   Great Britain 12 28 58 98
16   Hungary 12 17 32 61
17   Denmark 9 15 17 41
18   Belgium 8 13 28 49
19   North Macedonia 8 10 25 43
20   Montenegro 8 8 25 41
21   Switzerland 6 9 16 31
22   Portugal 5 10 25 40
23   Estonia 5 2 4 11
24   Latvia 4 5 8 17
  Luxembourg 4 5 8 17
26   Bulgaria 3 4 13 20
27   Austria 3 1 15 19
28   Belarus 2 11 25 38
29   Czech Republic 2 10 23 35
30   Poland 2 3 14 19
31   Georgia 2 3 6 11
32   Sweden 2 2 8 12
33   Moldova 2 1 0 3
34   Slovenia 1 10 15 26
35   Serbia and Montenegro 1 3 5 9
36   Scotland 1 2 1 4
37   Israel 1 1 4 6
  Kosovo 1 1 4 6
39   Cyprus 1 1 2 4
40   Romania 1 0 6 7
41   Albania 0 1 4 5
42   Armenia 0 1 3 4
43   Norway 0 0 19 19
44   Finland 0 0 3 3
Totals (44 entries) 665 663 1334 2662

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Karate: Ancient pursuit in need of new face: Whitney Limbaugh reports from Birmingham, U.. on a sport's desire to upgrade their image". The Independent. Retrieved 2014-11-06.
  2. ^ "WORLD KARATE FEDERATION - WKF History". Wkf-web.net. Archived from the original on 8 November 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  3. ^ Arriaza, Rafael (March 2009). "Chapter 16: Karate". In Kordi, Ramin; Maffulli, Nicola; Wroble, Randall R.; et al. (eds.). Combat Sports Medicine. Springer. p. 288. ISBN 9781848003545. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  4. ^ "Black Belt". August 1966. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  5. ^ Iveson, Ali (5 March 2022). "Moscow removed as host of 2023 European Karate Championships". InsideTheGames.biz. Retrieved 5 March 2022.
  6. ^ "47th European Senior Karate Championships : MEDALS TABLE" (PDF). Rfek.es. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  7. ^ "EKF Online Registration: EKF PARA-Karate Championships 2018".
  8. ^ "EKF Online Registration: EKF PARA-Karate Championships 2019 - Guadalajara".
  9. ^ "EKF Online Registration: EKF PARA-Karate Championships 2020 - Baku".
  10. ^ "EKF Online Registration: EKF PARA-Karate Championships 2021 - Porec".
  11. ^ "Para-Karate athletes set to shine at first European Championships".
  12. ^ "Set-Online WKF".
  13. ^ "Set-Online WKF".
  14. ^ "Set-Online WKF".

External links edit