Fencing Facts, History, and Trivia
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Fencing Trivia

  • Fencing is one of only four sports to be included in every modern Olympic Games, since the first in 1896. Fencing was also a sport in the original Olympic Games in ancient Greece.
  • Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the father of the modern Olympic Games, was a fencer.
  • The tip of the fencing weapon is the second fastest moving object in sport; the first is the marksman's bullet.
  • The end of the fencing strip represents the line drawn in the earth by duelists' seconds: to retreat behind this line during the duel indicated cowardice and loss of honor.
  • The 750 gram weight test used to ensure a touch is scored with sufficient force is based on the amount of tension required to break the skin. In a duel, honor was done when blood was first drawn -- even if from a minor wound such as a blister.
  • There was originally no time limit on a fencing bout, until a Masters Championship bout in New York in the 1930s lasted for seven hours. Thereafter, bouts were limited to 30 minutes. Today, the time-limit has been reduced to just 3 minutes for 5-touch bouts and 9 minutes for 15 touches.
  • Fencers wear white uniforms because before the advent of electronic scoring, touches were recorded on the white surface with a wad of ink-soaked cotton, or charcoal on the tips of the weapons.
  • Famous Fencers include: Bruce Dickinson, the lead singer of Iron maiden - foil. Neil Diamond, entertainer - sabre. P rince Albert of Monaco - sabre. Andrew Jackson fought a duel of honor with swords. General George Patton, competed in fencing in the 1912 Olympics and once owned a riding crop with a blade in the handle made by Georgio Santelli, New York fencing instructor and equipment manufacturer. Most recently, movie star Jerry O'Connell - saber.
  • The New York Fencers Club, founded in 1883, is the oldest continuous running fencing club in the U.S.
  • The first electronic scoring machine for fencing was invented in 1936 by Alfred Skrobisch, an engineering student at Columbia and a future U.S. Olympian.
  • In April 2003, Men's Saber Keeth Smart became the first United States Fencer to acheive a Number 1 World Ranking. He was quickly joined by Sada Jacobson, who claimed the Number 1 spot in Women's Saber.
  • Mariel Zagunis (Beaverton, Ore.) is the first fencer in the world to hold four World Championships titles in one season: 2001 Cadet World Champion, 2001 Junior World Champion, 2001 Junior Team Champion, and 2000 Women's Sabre Team World Champion.
  • Women's Foil was added to the events at the Olympic Games in 1924. Women's Epee was added in 1996. The 2004 Olympic Game in Athens, Greece will be the first time that Women's Sabre is an official part of the Olympic program.
  • At least one ancient Egyptian temple features a painting of a fencing match. The painting dates back to 1190 B.C.
Famous Fencers
  • Winston Churchill, won Public Schools Fencing championship in foil in his youth.
  • Harry Truman, fenced in his youth in Missouri.

Fencing Trivia
There was originally no time limit on a fencing bout, until a Masters Championship bout in New York in the 1930s lasted for seven hours.

Fencing Books & Accessories
Support SSC and learn more about fencing with books like these:
By the Sword
The Science of Fencing and more
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