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Figure skating - History |  | Figure skating - History: Encyclopedia II - Figure skating - History |  | While people have been ice skating for centuries, figure skating in its current form originated in the mid-19th century. The International Skating Union was founded in 1892. The first European Championship --for men only--- was held in 1891 and the first World Championship -- for men only -- was held in 1896 and won by Gilbert Fuchs. In 1902, a woman, Madge Syers, entered the competition for the first time, finishing second. The ISU quickly banned women from competing against men, but established a separate competition for "ladies" in 1906. ...
See also:Figure skating, Figure skating - Equipment, Figure skating - Disciplines, Figure skating - Jumps, Figure skating - Spins, Figure skating - Steps and turns, Figure skating - Competition format and scoring, Figure skating - History, Figure skating - Notable figure skaters, Figure skating - Navigation, Figure skating - Men, Figure skating - Ladies, Figure skating - Pairs, Figure skating - Ice Dance |  | | Figure skating, Figure skating - Competition format and scoring, Figure skating - Disciplines, Figure skating - Equipment, Figure skating - History, Figure skating - Ice Dance, Figure skating - Jumps, Figure skating - Ladies, Figure skating - Men, Figure skating - Navigation, Figure skating - Notable figure skaters, Figure skating - Pairs, Figure skating - Spins, Figure skating - Steps and turns, Artistic roller skating, Winter sport, Winter Olympic Games |  | |
|  |  | Figure skating: Encyclopedia II - Figure skating - History
Figure skating - History
While people have been ice skating for centuries, figure skating in its current form originated in the mid-19th century. The International Skating Union was founded in 1892. The first European Championship --for men only--- was held in 1891 and the first World Championship -- for men only -- was held in 1896 and won by Gilbert Fuchs. In 1902, a woman, Madge Syers, entered the competition for the first time, finishing second. The ISU quickly banned women from competing against men, but established a separate competition for "ladies" in 1906. Pairs skating was introduced at the 1908 World Championships, when the title was won by Anna Hübler & Heinrich Burger. The first Olympic figure skating competitions also took place in 1908.
On March 20, 1914 an international figure skating championship was held in New Haven, Connecticut which was the ancestor of both the United States and Canadian national championships. However, international competitions in figure skating were interrupted by World War I.
In the 1920s and 1930s, figure skating was dominated by Sonja Henie, who turned competitive success into a lucrative professional career as a movie star and touring skater. Henie also set the fashion for female skaters to wear short skirts and white boots. The top male skaters of this period included Gillis Grafström and Karl Schäfer.
Skating competitions were again interrupted for several years by World War II. After the war, with many European rinks in ruins, skaters from the United States and Canada began to dominate international competitions and to introduce technical innovations to the sport. Dick Button, 1948 and 1952 Olympic Champion, was the first skater to perform the double axel and triple loop jumps, as well as the flying camel spin.
The first World Championships in ice dancing were not held until 1952. In its first years, ice dance was dominated by British skaters. The first World title holders were Jean Westwood & Lawrence Demmy.
On February 15, 1961, the entire US figure skating team and their coaches were killed in the crash of Sabena Flight 548 in Brussels, Belgium en route to the World Championships in Prague. This tragedy sent the US skating program into a period of rebuilding.
At the same time, the Soviet Union rose to become a dominant power in the sport, especially in the disciplines of pairs skating and ice dancing. At every Winter Olympics from 1964 until the present day, a Soviet or Russian pairs duo has won gold, often considered the longest winning streak in modern sports history. (In 2002, Russians Yelena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze shared gold with Canadians Jamie Sale and David Pelletier, keeping the streak alive.)
Compulsory figures formerly accounted for up to 60% of the score in singles figure skating, which meant that skaters who could build up a big lead in figures could win competitions even if they were mediocre free skaters. As television coverage of skating events became more important, so did free skating. Beginning in 1968, the ISU began to progressively reduce the weight of figures, and in 1973, the short program was introduced. With these changes, the emphasis in competitive figure skating shifted to increasing athleticism in the free skating. By the time figures were finally eliminated entirely from competition in 1990, Midori Ito had landed the first triple axel by a woman, and Kurt Browning the first quadruple jump by a man.
Television also played a role in removing the restrictive amateur status rules that once governed the sport. In order to retain skaters who might otherwise have given up their eligibility to participate in lucrative professional events, in 1995 the ISU introduced prize money at its major competitions, funded by revenues from selling the TV rights to those events.
Figure skating is a very popular part of the Winter Olympic Games, in which the elegance of both the competitors and their movements attract many spectators. Unsurprisingly, the best skaters show many of the same physical and psychological attributes as gymnasts. Many of the best skaters currently come from Russia and the United States which are traditional powers in the sport.
Other related archives1891, 1892, 1896, 1902, 1906, 1908, 1914, 1961, 1968, 1973, 1990, 1995, 2002 Olympic Winter Games, 2006 Winter Olympics, Alain Calmat, Aleksandr Gorshkov, Alena *Ája* Vrzáňová, Alexander Fadeev, Alexander Zaitsev, Alexander Zhulin, Alexei Urmanov, Alexei Yagudin, Anett Pötzsch, Angela Nikodinov, Angelika Buck, Anna Hübler, Anton Sikharulidze, Artistic roller skating, Axels, Barbara Ann Scott, Barbara Fusar-Poli, Barbara Underhill, Beatrix Schuba, Benjamin Agosto, Biellmann spins, Brian Boitano, Brian Joubert, Brian Orser, Brussels, Belgium, Canada, Carlo Fassi, Carol Heiss, Cecilia Colledge, Charles Tickner, Choctaws, Christine Errath, Christopher Dean, Claudia Kristofics-Binder, Claudia Leistner, Compulsory figures, David Jenkins, David Pelletier, Debi Thomas, Denise Biellmann, Dianne de Leeuw, Dick Button, Dorothy Hamill, Eduard Engelmann jr., Ekaterina Gordeeva, Elaine Zayak, Elena Valova, Elvis Stojko, Emmerich Danzer, Erich Buck, Ernst Baier, European Figure Skating Championships, Eva Pawlik, Eva Romanová, Evan Lysacek, Evelyn Großmann, Evgeny Platov, Evgeny Plushenko, February 15, Felix Kaspar, Figure skaters, Figure skating, Flips, Fumie Suguri, Gabriele Seyfert, Gay Games, Gennadi Karponossov, Gilbert Fuchs, Gillis Grafström, Gundi Busch, Gwendal Peizerat, Half Loops, Hana Maškova, Hans-Jürgen Bäumler, Hayes Alan Jenkins, Heinrich Burger, Hongbo Zhao, Ice Skating Institute, Ice dancing, Ilia Averbukh, Ilia Kulik, Ingo Steuer, Inside axels, International Skating Union, International Skating Union - ISU, Irina Lobacheva, Irina Rodnina, Irina Slutskaya, Isabelle Brasseur, Isabelle Duchesnay, Jamie Sale, Jamie Salé, Jan Hoffmann, Jaqueline du Bief, Jayne Torvill, Jeffrey Buttle, Jennifer Kirk, Jill Trenary, John Baldwin, John Curry, Julia Sebestyen, Karen Magnussen, Karl Schäfer, Karol E. Kennedy, Katarina Witt, Katy Taylor, Kristi Yamaguchi, Kurt Browning, Laszlo Nagy, Layback spins, Lily Kronberger, Linda Fratianne, Lloyd Eisler, Loops, Lu Chen, Ludmila Belousova, Ludowika Jakobsson, Lutzes, Lyudmila Pakhomova, Madge Syers, Madge Syers-Cave, Magda Julin, Mandy Wötzel, Manfred Schnelldorfer, March 20, Maria Butirskaya, Maria Jelinek, Maria Petrova, Marika Kilius, Marina Anissina, Marina Klimova, Maurizio Margaglio, Maxi Herber, Maxim Marinin, Michelle Kwan, Midori Ito, Mohawks, Naomi Lang, New Haven, Connecticut, Norbert Schramm, Oksana Baiul, Oksana Grishuk, Oleg Protopopov, Oleg Vasiliev, Olympic medalists in figure skating, Ondrej Nepela, One-foot axels, Otto Jelinek, Paul Falk, Paul Martini, Pavel Roman, Peggy Fleming, Per Thoren, Peter Tchernyshev, Petra Burka, Phyllis Johnson, Pierre Brunet, Prague, Randy Gardner, Regine Heitzer, Rena Inoue, Ria Baran, Richard Button, Robin Cousins, Roman Kostomarov, Rosalynn Sumners, Russia, Sabena Flight 548, Sabine Baeß, Salchows, Sarah Hughes, Scott Hamilton, Sergei Grinkov, Sergei Ponomarenko, Shae-Lynn Bourne, Shizuka Arakawa, Sjoukie Dijkstra, Sonja Henie, Soviet Union, Spiral, Stéphane Lambiel, Surya Bonaly, Switzerland, Synchronized skating, Tai Babilonia, Takeshi Honda, Tanith Belbin, Tara Lipinski, Tassilo Thierbach, Tatiana Malinina, Tatiana Navka, Tatiana Totmianina, Television, Tenley Albright, Three turns, Tim Wood, Todd Eldredge, Toe loops, Ulrich Salchow, United States, Victor Kraatz, Viktor Petrenko, Walley jumps, Walter Jakobsson, Wikipedia articles needing factual verification, Winter Olympic Games, Winter Olympics, Winter sport, World Championships, World Figure Skating Championships, World War I, World War II, Xue Shen, Yelena Berezhnaya, Yuka Sato, Yukina Ota, amateur, ballroom dance, hockey, ice skating, jumps, leggings, parabolic figure skating blades, spins, spread eagles, television, waltz jump
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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