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Olympic Diploma of Merit

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Olympic Diploma of Merit was an award given by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to recognise outstanding services to sports or a notable contribution to the Olympic Games. By 1974, the last time the awards were granted, just 58 people had received the award.[1][2]

History

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Pierre de Coubertin, the originator of the modern Olympic Games, created the honour during the Brussels Olympic Congress of 1905 for those who had made outstanding services to sports or to those who had a major contribution in promoting the Olympic ideals. Strangely, at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London, where red, blue and yellow vouchers were exchanged by the first three athletes for gold, silver and bronze medals respectively, a non-winning competitor's blue voucher could be exchanged for a 'Diploma of Merit' (equivalent of the Olympic Diploma).[3] Sports people who have won the award include Englishman Jack Beresford, winner of medals at five successive Olympics, Dane Ivan Osiier who took part in seven Olympic Games over 28 years, missing the 1936 Games as a protest against Nazism[4] and Frenchman Jean Borotra, Olympic bronze medallist in the Men's Doubles in 1924, winner of four different tennis Grand Slam titles and founder of the International Fair Play Committee.[1]

Sports administrators and promoters who have received the award include Sir Herbert Macdonald, four-time team manager for the Jamaican Olympic Team, and Sir Stanley Rous, former Secretary of The Football Association and the 6th President of FIFA (and one of the last three winners along with Jean Borotra).[1] The award has also gone to those working in the arts: architect Kenzō Tange received the award for his design of the Japanese National Gymnasium for the 1964 Olympics, and film director Kon Ichikawa received one for his celebrated, athlete-focused 1965 documentary film Tokyo Olympiad ((Tōkyō Orinpikku)).[5]

The IOC discontinued the Olympic Diploma of Merit, and three other awards, at the 75th IOC session in 1974. The two extant awards are the Olympic Order, created in 1975 for distinguished contributions to the Olympic movement, and the Olympic Cup, instituted in 1906 by Coubertin for organisations with a record of support for the Olympics and presented annually. [6]

List of recipients

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A listing of all 57 recipients:[7]

No. Recipient Country
1 President Theodore Roosevelt United States
2 Fridjhof Nansen Norway
3 Santos Dumont Brazil
4 Lord Desborough United Kingdom
5 The Duke of the Abruzzis Italy
6 Commandant Lancrenon France
7 Count Zeppelin Germany
8 Colonel Balck Sweden
9 Dr. Jean Charcot France
10 George Chavez Peru
11 H. M. King Alphonso XIII Spain
12 H. H. Crown Prince of Germany Germany
13 Alain Gerbault France
14 Colonel Charles Lindbergh United States
15 Captain Harry Pidgeon United States
16 Mr Hostin France
17 Leni Riefenstahl Germany
18 Angelos Bolanaki [el; ru; uk] Greece
19 Dr. Paul Martin Switzerland
20 Jack Beresford United Kingdom
21 Dr. Ivan Osiier Denmark
22 Guatemalan Olympic Committee Guatemala
23 Enfants de Neptune de Tourcoing [es; fr] France
24 Dr. Francis-Marius Messerli [fr] Switzerland
25 Bill Henry United States
26 Harry Neville Amos New Zealand
27 Alfréd Hajós Hungary
28 Jeanette Altwegg United Kingdom
29 Charles Denis France
30 Colonel Marco Perez Jimenez Venezuela
31 Dr. Carl Diem Germany
32 Antoine Hafner Switzerland
33 The Rt. Hon. R. G. Menzies Australia
34 Otto Mayer, Chancellor of the IOC Switzerland
35 Maurice Genevoix France
36 Nikolai Romanov [et; fi; ru; uk] USSR
37 H. R. H. Prince Axel Denmark
38 Victor Boin Belgium
39 Rudolf Hagelstange [ca; de; eo; it] Germany
40 Kenzo Tange Japan
41 Burhan Felek Turkey
42 Joseph Barthel Luxembourg
43 Joseph A. Gruss Czechoslovakia
44 Antonio Elola [arz; ca; es; eu] Spain
45 Kon Ichikawa Japan
46 Sir Herbert McDonald Jamaica
47 Vernon Morgan United Kingdom
48 Francisco José Nobre Guedes Portugal
49 Jean-Francois Brisson [fi; fr] France
50 Gaston Meyer [fr] France
51 Andres Merce Varela [ca] Spain
52 Frederick Ruegsegger United States
53 Epaminondas Petralias [el] Greece
54 Otl Aicher Germany
55 Sir Stanley Rous United Kingdom
56 The Rt. Hon. Lord Philip Noel-Baker United Kingdom
57 Jean Borotra France

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c 1974 Olympic Awards. "Three Olympic Diplomas of Merit" (PDF). la84.org. Retrieved 25 October 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ The Olympic Diploma of Merit. "Vernon Morgan" (PDF). LA84 Digital Library Collection. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  3. ^ Olympics (26 April 2008). "Photos of 1908 memorabilia". BBC. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  4. ^ International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. "Ivan Osiier". jewishsports.net. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  5. ^ Findling, John E.; Pelle, Kimberly D. (2004). Encyclopedia of the Modern Olympic Movement. Westport: Greenwood Press. p. 172.
  6. ^ Mallon, Bill; Heijmans, Jeroen (2015). Historical Dictionary of the Olympic Movement (5 ed.). Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 423.
  7. ^ Olympic Charter 1983. Comite International Olympique. 1983. pp. 142–143.

Further reading

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