European Karate Championships
Competition details
DisciplineKarate
Typeteam/individual limited and kata, Annual
OrganiserEuropean Karate Federation (EKF)
History
First edition1966 in Paris, France

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

History

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

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 1966Paris France2
2 1967London United Kingdom2
3 1968Paris France2
4 1969London United Kingdom2
5 1970Hamburg Germany2
6 1971Paris France2
7 1972Brussels Belgium5
8 1973Valencia Spain5
9 1974London United Kingdom5
10 1975Ostend Belgium5
11 1976Tehran Iran7
12 1977Paris France7
13 1978Geneva  Switzerland7
14 1979Helsinki Finland9
15 1980Barcelona Spain12
16 1981Venice Italy12
17 1982Gothenburg Sweden15
18 1983Madrid Spain15
19 1984Paris France16
20 1985Oslo Norway16
21 1986Madrid Spain16
22 1987Glasgow United Kingdom16
23 1988Genoa Italy17
24 1989Titograd Yugoslavia17
25 1990Vienna Austria17
26 1991Hannover Germany18
27 1992Den Bosch Netherlands17
Organized by European Karate Federation (EKF)
28 1993Prague Czech Republic17
29 1994Birmingham England17
30 1995Helsinki Finland17
31 1996Paris France17
32 1997Tenerife Spain17
33 1998BelgradeFederal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia17
34 1999Euboea Greece17
35 2000Istanbul Turkey17
Edition Year Host City Host Country Events
36 2001Sofia Bulgaria17
37 2002Tallinn Estonia17
38 2003Bremen Germany17
39 2004Moscow Russia17
40 2005Tenerife Spain17
41 2006Stavanger Norway17
42 2007Bratislava Slovakia17
43 2008Tallinn Estonia17
44 2009Zagreb Croatia16
45 2010Athens Greece16
46 2011Zurich  Switzerland16
47 2012Tenerife Spain16
48 2013Budapest Hungary16
49 2014Tampere Finland16
50 2015Istanbul Turkey16
51 2016Montpellier France16
52 2017Kocaeli Turkey16
53 2018Novi Sad Serbia16+6
54 2019Guadalajara Spain16+6
55 2020Baku AzerbaijanCancelled
56 2021Poreč Croatia16+8
57 2022Gaziantep Turkey16+8
58 2023Guadalajara Spain16+8
59 2024Zadar Croatia
60 2025Baku Azerbaijan
61 2026TBCTBC
62 2027Paris France
63 2028TBC Serbia

Medals

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

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

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Spain975081228
2 France9270117279
3 Turkey9250129271
4 Italy8174114269
5 Russia323474140
6 Azerbaijan2983067
7 Slovakia243065119
8 Germany223167120
9 Croatia184266126
10 Ukraine17152961
11 Greece15165182
12 Bosnia and Herzegovina14263272
13 Netherlands14102044
14 Serbia12304385
15 Great Britain12285898
16 Hungary12173261
17 Denmark9151741
18 Belgium8132849
19 North Macedonia8102543
20 Montenegro882541
21  Switzerland691631
22 Portugal5102540
23 Estonia52411
24 Latvia45817
 Luxembourg45817
26 Bulgaria341320
27 Austria311519
28 Belarus2112538
29 Czech Republic2102335
30 Poland231419
31 Georgia23611
32 Sweden22812
33 Moldova2103
34 Slovenia1101526
35 Serbia and Montenegro1359
36 Scotland1214
37 Israel1146
 Kosovo1146
39 Cyprus1124
40 Romania1067
41 Albania0145
42 Armenia0134
43 Norway001919
44 Finland0033
Totals (44 entries)66566313342662

See also

References

  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".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.