Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

European Taekwondo Championships

European Taekwondo Championships
Current event or competition:
2024 European Taekwondo Championships
Competition details
DisciplineTaekwondo
Typekyourugui, biennial
OrganiserEuropean Taekwondo Union (ETU)
Divisions
Current weight divisionsMen (8)
Women (8)
History
First edition22 May 1976 in Barcelona, Spain
Editions26 (2024)

The European Taekwondo Championships are the European senior championships in Taekwondo, first held in Barcelona in 1976. The event is held every two years and is organized by the European Taekwondo Union, the continental affiliate of World Taekwondo, which organises and controls Olympic style taekwondo. An additional event, the G4 Extra European Taekwondo Championships were exceptionally held in 2019.

The championships should not be confused with:

In addition to the kyorugi (full contact fighting) Championships, there are also Para European Championships[2][3] as well as Poomsae and Para Poomsae Championships held every two years.[4][5]

Editions

# Year Dates Host Champion Events
1 1976 (details) 22 May Spain Barcelona, Spain  Netherlands 8
2 1978 (details) 20–22 October Germany Munich, West Germany  West Germany 8
3 1980 (details) 14–17 October Denmark Esbjerg, Denmark  West Germany 17
4 1982 (details) 23–26 September Italy Rome, Italy  West Germany 18
5 1984 (details) 26–28 October Germany Stuttgart, West Germany  West Germany 18
6 1986 (details) 3–5 October Austria Seefeld, Austria  Netherlands 16
7 1988 (details) 26–29 May Turkey Ankara, Turkey  Turkey 16
8 1990 (details) 18–21 October Denmark Aarhus, Denmark  Turkey 16
9 1992 (details) 18–25 May Spain Valencia, Spain  Spain 16
10 1994 (details) 28–30 October Croatia Zagreb, Croatia  Spain 16
11 1996 (details) 26–27 October Finland Helsinki, Finland  Spain 16
12 1998 (details) 23–25 October Netherlands Eindhoven, Netherlands  Spain 16
13 2000 (details) 4–7 May Greece Patras, Greece  Turkey 16
14 2002 (details) 1–5 April Turkey Samsun, Turkey  Netherlands 16
15 2004 (details) 1–5 May Norway Lillehammer, Norway  Spain 16
16 2005 (details) 6–9 October Latvia Riga, Latvia  Turkey 16
17 2006 (details) 26–28 May Germany Bonn, Germany  Spain 16
18 2008 (details) 10–13 April Italy Rome, Italy  Turkey 16
19 2010 (details) 12–15 May Russia St. Petersburg, Russia  Turkey 16
20 2012 (details) 3–6 May United Kingdom Manchester, United Kingdom  France 16
21 2014 (details) 1–4 May Azerbaijan Baku, Azerbaijan  Croatia 16
22 2016 (details) 19–22 May Switzerland Montreux, Switzerland  Great Britain 16
23 2018 (details) 10–13 May Russia Kazan, Russia  Russia 16
24 2021 (details) 8–11 April Bulgaria Sofia, Bulgaria  Russia 16
25 2022 (details) 19–22 May United Kingdom Manchester, United Kingdom  Turkey 16
26 2024 (details) 10–12 May Serbia Belgrade, Serbia Turkey Turkey 16
27 2026 (details) ~4 June[6] Germany Nuremberg, Germany tbd 16


Extra European Championships

The G4 Extra European Taekwondo Championships were held in November 2019 as a form of compensation for European athletes to provide them the chance to collect ranking points for the 2020 Olympic Games after taekwondo was dropped from the 2019 European Games program.[7] World Taekwondo Europe (WTE) president referred to it as the continental flagship event.[8]

Edition Year Date City and host country Overall champion Events
1 2019 (details) 1–3 November Italy Bari, Italy  Great Britain[9] 10

U21

Source:[10]

Team ranking

Team Points Rules:[11][12][13]

1976-2018: Each Registered (weight-in) player 1 Point + Each win 1 Point + Gold medal 7 point + silver medal 3 point + bronze medal 1 point

2021-Ongoing: Each Registered (weight-in) player 1 Point + Each win 1 Point + Gold medal 120 point + silver medal 50 point + bronze medal 20 point

If the points are equal, the medals will choose the best team.

Year Host Men Women
1 2 3 1 2 3
1976  Spain  Spain  West Germany  Turkey
1978  West Germany  West Germany  Netherlands  Spain
1980  Denmark  Italy  Denmark  Great Britain  Italy  Germany  Netherlands
1982  Italy  Germany  Spain  Italy  Spain  Turkey  Italy
1984  West Germany  Germany  Turkey  Italy  Spain  Germany  Netherlands
1986  Austria  Turkey  Germany  Denmark  Germany  Turkey  Spain
1988  Turkey  Turkey  Spain  Germany  Turkey  Spain  Netherlands
1990  Denmark  Denmark  Turkey  Germany  Turkey  Spain  Italy
1992  Spain  Spain  Denmark  Turkey  Spain  Turkey  Germany
1994  Croatia  Spain  Denmark  Italy  Spain  Greece  Great Britain
1996  Finland  Spain  France  Turkey  Spain  Netherlands  Germany
1998  Netherlands  Turkey  Spain  France  Russia  Spain  Denmark
2000  Greece  Spain  Turkey  Germany  Russia  Spain  Turkey
2002  Turkey  Turkey  Spain  Azerbaijan  Turkey  Spain  Russia
2004  Norway  Spain  France  Azerbaijan  Spain  Turkey  France
2005  Latvia  Turkey  France  Azerbaijan  Spain  Russia  Turkey
2006  Germany  Netherlands  Azerbaijan  Russia  Spain  Turkey  Germany
2008  Italy  Turkey  Greece  Germany  Germany  Turkey  Spain
2010  Russia  Turkey  Russia  Germany  France  Spain  Great Britain
2012  Great Britain  Great Britain  Russia  Turkey  France  Turkey  Croatia
2014  Azerbaijan  Russia  Azerbaijan  Turkey  Croatia  France  Russia
2016  Switzerland  Belgium  Portugal  Russia  Great Britain  Turkey  Serbia
2018  Russia  Russia  Croatia  Spain  Turkey  Great Britain  Russia
2021  Bulgaria  Russia  Spain  Belarus  Great Britain  Croatia  Russia
2022  Great Britain  Turkey  Spain  France  Turkey  France  Spain

Medals (1976-2022)

Source:[14][15]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Spain635682201
2 Turkey626459185
3 Germany483477159
4 Russia29224394
5 France262860114
6 Netherlands262848102
7 Great Britain24143775
8 Italy222263107
9 Croatia21143772
10 Denmark18193269
11 Greece9122647
12 Azerbaijan8131839
13 Belgium521623
14 Sweden4102842
15 Belarus411419
16 Serbia381324
17 Austria371727
18 Portugal3069
19 Ukraine26816
20 Poland251623
21 Hungary2248
22 Israel13711
23 Switzerland1337
24 Moldova1146
25 Armenia1113
26 Isle of Man1001
27 Slovenia0358
28 Bosnia and Herzegovina0303
29 Finland022123
30 Norway02911
31 Czech Republic0112
 Ireland0112
 Latvia0112
 Romania0112
35 Cyprus0044
36 Bulgaria0022
37 North Macedonia0011
  Refugee Team0011
Totals (38 entries)3893897661,544

Multiple gold medalists

The table shows those who have won at least three gold medals.[16]

Men
Athlete Country Total
Geremia Di Costanzo  Italy 5 0 1 6
Servet Tazegül  Turkey 5 0 0 5
Seyfula Magomedov  Russia 4 1 2 7
Pascal Gentil  France 3 3 0 6
Aaron Cook  Great Britain  Isle of Man  Moldova 3 1 1 5
Gabriel Esparza  Spain 3 1 0 4
Levent Tuncat  Germany 3 1 0 4
Joseph Salim  Denmark 3 0 3 6
Gergely Salim  Denmark 3 0 0 3
Jesper Roesen  Denmark 3 0 0 3
Women
Athlete Country Total
Coral Bistuer  Spain 5 0 0 5
Bianca Walkden  Great Britain 4 1 1 6
Brigitte Yagüe  Spain 4 1 1 6
Sarah Stevenson  Great Britain 4 0 2 6
Gwladys Épangue  France 3 3 1 7
Jade Jones  Great Britain 3 1 3 7
Nataša Vezmar  Croatia 3 1 1 5
Lucija Zaninović  Croatia 3 0 1 4
Anastasia Baryshnikova  Russia 3 0 0 3
Natalia Ivanova  Russia 3 0 0 3
Tatiana Kudashova  Russia 3 0 0 3

European Poomsae Championships

Edition Year Host Country[17]
6 2005 (details)  Finland, Turku
7 2007 (details)  Turkey, Antalya
8 2009 (details)  Portugal, Portimão
9 2010 (details)  Uzbekistan, Tashkent
10 2011 (details)  Italy, Genoa
11 2013 (details)  Spain, La Nucia
12 2015 (details)  Serbia, Belgrade[18]
13 2017 (details)  Greece, Rhodes[19]
14 2019 (details)  Turkey, Antalya[20]
15 2021 (details)  Portugal, Seixal[21]
16 2023 (details)  Austria, Innsbruck[22]
17 2025 (details)  Estonia, Tallinn

See also

References

  1. ^ ITF is a smaller international federation unaffiliated to either WTF or IOC, and competing under slightly modified rules including the wearing of padded gloves and footwear.
  2. ^ "[World Taekwondo] European Championships Mark a New Era in Para Taekwondo". m.worldtaekwondo.org. Retrieved 2024-06-30.
  3. ^ https://europetaekwondo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Time-Table-PARA.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ https://europetaekwondo.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/eventDocuments_b85d17c5-7613-4969-96de-fc8a7d8ba93e.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ https://www.dtu.de/fileadmin/Events/Europameisterschaft_Poomsae_2023/Outline_EC_Poomsae_2023_final.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  6. ^ "Deutsche Taekwondo Union e.V.: Termine". www.dtu.de. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  7. ^ "WTE secretary general thanks organisers for delivering successful G4 Extra European Taekwondo Championships". Inside the Games. 2019-11-12.
  8. ^ "World Taekwondo 2020 Magazine". No. 107. p. 231. Europe remains the leading CU in the world with a record number of athletes participating in our events and a record number of 28 G-ranked events on our continent, including European Championships in eight different member countries. Our flagship event, G4 Extra European Championships for seniors in Italy was a huge success. Not only did we see the best of the best competing... {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  9. ^ "Medallists G4 Extra European Taekwondo Championships Bari, Italy" (PDF). taekwondo-oezer.de.
  10. ^ "TaekwondoData". TaekwondoData. Retrieved 2018-05-18.
  11. ^ "아시아태권도연맹".
  12. ^ "아시아태권도연맹".
  13. ^ "아시아태권도연맹".
  14. ^ es:Campeonato Europeo de Taekwondo#Medallero histórico
  15. ^ "TaekwondoData".
  16. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2017-09-11. Retrieved 2018-05-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ "Taekwondo Poomsae". Retrieved 2024-06-30.
  18. ^ "[wtu] 12th European Poomsae Championships 2015 Closing". wtu. 2015-06-30. Retrieved 2024-06-30.
  19. ^ "European Poomsae Championships 2017 successfully open in Rhodes". www.insidethegames.biz. 2017-05-07. Retrieved 2024-06-30.
  20. ^ https://www.tpss.eu/results/1547/Day%201%20-%20Elimination%20Drawsheets.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  21. ^ "Deutsche Taekwondo Union e.V.: Europameisterschaft Poomsae". Retrieved 2024-06-29.
  22. ^ Author L. F (2023-11-22). "2023 European Poomsae Championships and 1st European Poomsae Para Taekwondo Championships – Europe Taekwondo". Retrieved 2024-06-29. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)