LEN European Aquatics Championships

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European Aquatics Championships
Statusactive
Genresporting event
Date(s)mid-year
Frequencybiennial
Countryvarying
Inaugurated1926 (1926)

The European Aquatics Championships is the continental Aquatics championship for Europe, which is organised by LEN—the governing body for aquatics in Europe. The Championships are currently held every two years (in even years); and since 2022, they have included 5 aquatics disciplines: Swimming (long course/50m pool), Diving, Synchronised swimming, Open water swimming and High diving. Prior to 1999, the championships also included Water polo, which beginning in 1999 LEN split-off into a separate championships. The open water events are not held during the Olympic year.

The Championships are generally held over a two-week time-period in mid-to-late Summer; however, in the most recent Summer Olympics years (2004, 2008, 2012, 2016 and 2020), the Championships were moved to the Spring to be moved away from the Summer Olympic Games.

The swimming portion of these championships is considered one of the pre-eminent swimming competitions in the world. Note however that LEN also conducts an annual short-course (25 meters) swimming championship, which is a completely separate and a completely distinct event (typically held in early December).

Championships

Historically, the Championships were first held in 1926, and included water polo prior to 1999 when the discipline was moved to the European Water Polo Championship. From 1973-1999 Europeans were held in years without a Summer Olympics or World Championships, save 1979 (1973 being the inception year of the World Championships; and 1999 being the last year before Worlds moved from even-years between Summer Olympics to every-odd year beginning in 2001). Women were first allowed to participate at the second Championships in 1927[1]

Number Year Host city Country Events Dates First in the Medal Table Second in the Medal Table Third in the Medal Table
1 1926 Budapest  Hungary 9 18–22 August 1926  Germany  Sweden  Hungary
2 1927 Bologna  Italy 16 31 August – 4 September 1927  Germany  Sweden  Netherlands
3 1931 Paris  France 16 23–30 August 1931  Hungary  Germany  Netherlands
4 1934 Magdeburg  Germany 16 12–19 August 1934  Germany  Netherlands  Hungary
5 1938 London  Great Britain 16 6–13 August 1938 Nazi Germany Germany  Denmark  Netherlands
6 1947 Monte Carlo  Monaco 16 10–14 September 1947  France  Denmark  Hungary
7 1950 Vienna  Austria 16 20–27 August 1950  France  Netherlands  West Germany
8 1954 Turin  Italy 18 31 August – 5 September 1954  Hungary  Soviet Union  East Germany
9 1958 Budapest  Hungary 20 31 August – 6 September 1958  Soviet Union  Great Britain  Netherlands
10 1962 Leipzig  East Germany 23 18–25 August 1962  Netherlands  East Germany  Soviet Union
11 1966 Utrecht  Netherlands 23 20–27 August 1966  Soviet Union  East Germany  Netherlands
12 1970 Barcelona  Spain 34 5–13 September 1970  East Germany  Soviet Union  West Germany
13 1974 Vienna  Austria 37 18–25 August 1974  East Germany  West Germany  Great Britain
14 1977 Jönköping  Sweden 37 14–21 August 1977  East Germany  Soviet Union  West Germany
15 1981 Split  Yugoslavia 37 4–12 September 1981  East Germany  Soviet Union  Great Britain
16 1983 Rome  Italy 38 22–27 August 1983  East Germany  Soviet Union  West Germany
17 1985 Sofia
Oslo
 Bulgaria
 Norway
39 4–11 August 1985
12–18 August 1985
 East Germany  Soviet Union  West Germany
18 1987 Strasbourg  France 41 16–23 August 1987  East Germany  Soviet Union  West Germany
19 1989 Bonn  West Germany 43 15–20 August 1989  East Germany  Soviet Union  France
20 1991 Athens
Terracina
 Greece
 Italy
47 18–25 August 1991
14–15 September 1991
 Soviet Union  Germany  Hungary
21 1993 Sheffield
Slapy
 Great Britain
 Czech Republic
47 3–8 August 1993
28–29 August 1993
 Germany  Russia  Hungary
22 1995 Vienna  Austria 47 22–27 August 1995  Russia  Germany  Hungary
23 1997 Seville  Spain 51 19–24 August 1997  Russia  Germany  Hungary
24 1999 Istanbul  Turkey 55 26 July – 1 August 1999  Germany  Russia  Netherlands
25 2000 Helsinki  Finland 55 3–9 July 2000  Russia  Germany  Italy
26 2002 Berlin  Germany 57 29 July – 4 August 2002  Germany  Russia  Italy
27 2004 Madrid  Spain 58 5–16 May 2004  Ukraine  Russia  Italy
28 2006 Budapest  Hungary 58 26 July – 6 August 2006  Russia  Germany  France
29 2008 Eindhoven  Netherlands 54 13–24 March 2008  Russia  Italy  France
30 2010 Budapest  Hungary 61 4–15 August 2010  Russia  Germany  France
31 2012 Debrecen
Eindhoven
 Hungary
 Netherlands
55 15–27 May 2012  Hungary  Germany  Italy
32 2014 Berlin  Germany 64 13–24 August 2014  Great Britain  Russia  Italy
33 2016 London  Great Britain 64 9–22 May 2016  Great Britain  Hungary  Russia
34 2018[a] Glasgow
Edinburgh
 Great Britain 72 2–12 August 2018  Russia  Great Britain  Italy
35 2020 Budapest  Hungary 73 10–23 May 2021  Russia  Great Britain  Italy
36 2022 Rome  Italy 77 11–21 August 2022  Italy  Great Britain  Ukraine
37 2024 Belgrade  Serbia 74 10–23 June 2024
38 2026 Paris  France 25 July – 8 August 2026

Medal tables (1926–2024)

Updated after Day 10 of the 2024 European Aquatics Championships.

Overall

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia19711687400
2 Germany175164133472
3 East Germany14311568326
4 Italy130158205493
5 Hungary12711589331
6 Great Britain112120137369
7 Soviet Union978779263
8 France9210196289
9 Netherlands909892280
10 Sweden707873221
11 Ukraine687268208
12 West Germany413349123
13 Spain385951148
14 Denmark29233284
15 Poland19212666
16 Austria14202357
17 Romania13263271
18 Finland1381233
19 Greece10162753
20 Norway68519
21 Israel641121
22 Czech Republic611623
23 Switzerland5131836
24 Belarus5101732
25 Belgium571628
26 Ireland56112
27 Serbia5128
28 Lithuania451120
29 Slovakia311418
30 Bulgaria34916
31 Yugoslavia2141329
32 Croatia27716
33 Czechoslovakia251118
34 Slovenia251017
35 Portugal1146
36 Estonia1102
37 Bosnia and Herzegovina1012
38 Faroe Islands0303
39 Iceland0213
40 Turkey0145
41 Yugoslavia0101
42 Armenia0011
Totals (42 entries)1542154015414623

Note: The table includes medals won in swimming (since 1926), diving (since 1926), synchronized swimming (since 1974), open water swimming (since 1991), high diving (since 2022) and water polo since 1926 until and including 1997 when the discipline was part of the event. From 1999 the water polo event was separated and got its own independent tournament as European Water Polo Championship.

As of 2022, Albania, Andorra, Azerbaijan, Cyprus, Georgia, Gibraltar, Kosovo, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Malta, Moldova, Monaco, Montenegro and San Marino have yet to win a medal.

Swimming (1926–2024)[2]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 East Germany13210055287
2 Hungary1079673276
3 Germany948771252
4 Russia795746182
5 Italy7690108274
6 Great Britain7392112277
7 France706463197
8 Netherlands658275222
9 Sweden625864184
10 Soviet Union615552168
11 Ukraine35302388
12 West Germany352742104
13 Denmark27232878
14 Spain23262877
15 Poland18202563
16 Romania12253269
17 Finland116825
18 Greece891936
19 Austria7101128
20 Norway68519
21 Israel64818
22 Belgium571325
23 Belarus571022
24 Ireland56112
25 Czech Republic511016
26 Serbia5117
27 Switzerland48820
28 Lithuania451120
29 Slovakia311216
30 Croatia27716
31 Slovenia251017
32 Bulgaria23712
33 Yugoslavia17917
34 Czechoslovakia13913
35 Portugal1135
36 Estonia1102
37 Bosnia and Herzegovina1012
38 Faroe Islands0303
39 Iceland0213
40 Turkey0145
Totals (40 entries)1054104810553157

Diving (1926–2024)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Germany595646161
2 Russia534333129
3 Soviet Union27262477
4 Great Britain25221966
5 Italy24232875
6 Ukraine17223473
7 East Germany11141338
8 Sweden817934
9 France761023
10 Austria46515
11 Spain44412
12 West Germany4329
13 Netherlands4127
14 Finland2248
15 Denmark2046
16 Hungary15713
17 Czechoslovakia1124
18 Poland1113
19 Bulgaria1102
20 Belarus0257
21 Switzerland0202
22 Armenia0011
Totals (22 entries)255257253765

Artistic swimming (1974–2024)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia533056
2 Ukraine15191145
3 Great Britain135624
4 Spain11241247
5 France919937
6 Italy4223763
7 Soviet Union4318
8 Netherlands36817
9 Austria34613
10 Greece15612
11 Germany1203
12 West Germany0336
13 Switzerland01910
14 Belarus0123
15 Israel0033
16 Slovakia0022
17 Hungary0011
 Serbia0011
Totals (18 entries)117117117351

Open water swimming (1991–2024)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Italy21232569
2 Germany20161450
3 Netherlands138425
4 Russia1211730
5 Hungary76619
6 France6111229
7 Greece1225
8 Switzerland1214
9 Great Britain1102
10 Czech Republic1067
11 Ukraine1001
12 Spain0459
13 Czechoslovakia0101
14 Bulgaria0022
15 Portugal0011
Totals (15 entries)848585254

High diving (2022)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Romania1102
2 Germany1001
3 Ukraine0101
4 Italy0022
Totals (4 entries)2226

Water polo (1926–1997)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Hungary128222
2 Soviet Union53210
3 Netherlands5139
4 Italy50510
5 West Germany2024
6 Yugoslavia17412
7 Germany0325
8 Sweden0303
9 Russia0213
10 France0123
 Spain0123
12 East Germany0101
 Yugoslavia0101
14 Belgium0033
15 Austria0011
Totals (15 entries)30312990

Multiple medalists in swimming (long course)

  Still active

Update after the 2022 European Aquatics Championships.[3][4]

Men

# Athlete Country 1st place, gold medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Total
1 Alexander Popov  Soviet Union
 Russia
21 3 2 26
2 Adam Peaty  Great Britain 16 0 0 16
3 László Cseh  Hungary 14 4 5 23
4 Michael Gross  West Germany 13 4 2 19
5 Pieter van den Hoogenband  Netherlands 10 5 4 19
6 Emiliano Brembilla  Italy 10 3 0 13
7 Filippo Magnini  Italy 9 5 5 19
8 Peter Nocke  West Germany 9 1 0 10
9 Tamás Darnyi  Hungary 8 0 0 8
10 Duncan Scott  Great Britain 7 4 0 11
11 Oleh Lisohor  Ukraine 7 3 3 13
12 James Guy  Great Britain 7 2 3 12

Women

# Athlete Country 1st place, gold medalist(s) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Total
1 Franziska van Almsick  Germany 18 3 0 21
2 Sarah Sjöström  Sweden 17 7 4 28
3 Katinka Hosszú  Hungary 15 6 4 25
4 Heike Friedrich  East Germany
 Germany
11 2 0 13
5 Therese Alshammar  Sweden 10 7 4 21
6 Fran Halsall  Great Britain 10 3 4 17
7 Yana Klochkova  Ukraine 10 2 4 16
8 Sandra Völker  Germany 9 4 4 17
9 Krisztina Egerszegi  Hungary 9 4 0 13
9 Astrid Strauss  East Germany 9 4 0 13
11 Freya Anderson  Great Britain 9 3 4 16
12 Laure Manaudou  France 9 1 3 13
13 Kristin Otto  East Germany 9 1 1 11
14 Ute Geweniger  East Germany 9 1 0 10
15 Simona Quadarella  Italy 8 1 1 10
16 Federica Pellegrini  Italy 7 6 7 20
17 Yuliya Yefimova  Russia 7 4 2 13
18 Mette Jacobsen  Denmark 7 3 8 18
19 Daniela Hunger  East Germany
 Germany
7 3 0 10
20 Ágnes Kovács  Hungary 7 2 4 13
21 Boglárka Kapás  Hungary 7 2 3 12
22 Lucy Hope  Great Britain 7 2 0 9
22 Britta Steffen  Germany 7 2 0 9

Championships records

See also

References

  1. ^ European Championships, 17 April 2011
  2. ^ "LEN European Championships aquatic finalists - All time medals tables" (PDF). len.eu. p. 203. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
  3. ^ "EUROPEAN CHAMPIONSHIPS AQUATIC FINALISTS 1926 – 2016 – by Kelvin Juba" (PDF). len.eu. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
  4. ^ "Female swimmer with the most medals in the history of Euro Aquatics Championships". Swimming Stats. Retrieved 23 May 2021.

External links