hidden pixel

Jeux de la Francophonie Information

The Jeux de la Francophonie (Canadian English:Francophonie Games; British English:Francophone Games (French-speakers' Games)) are a combination of artistic and sporting events for the Francophonie, mostly French speaking nations, held every four years since 1989, partly as a counterweight to the Commonwealth Games.

Contents

Editions

Year Edition Date Host city No. of Athletes (nations)
1989 I 8–22 July Casablanca/Rabat, Morocco
1994 II 5–13 July Paris/Évry-Bondoufle, France
1997 III 27 August – 6 September Antananarivo, Madagascar
2001 IV 14–24 July Ottawa-Gatineau, Canada
2005 V 7–17 December Niamey, Niger
2009 VI 27 September – 6 October Beirut, Lebanon
2013 VII 6–15 September Nice, France

Events

Sports

There were four sports at the inaugural event in 1989: athletics, basketball, association football and judo. Handisport, handball, table tennis and wrestling were added to the competition programme in 1994. None of these four sports featured at the 1997 Jeux de la Francophonie, and boxing and tennis were introduced to the programme instead. Eight sports featured in 2001: the four inaugural sports, boxing and table tennis were included. Furthermore, handisport and beach volleyball competitions were held as demonstration events. Neither of these demonstration sports were included in 2005, with traditional style wrestling being demonstrated in addition to the six more established sports. The 2009 programme re-introduced beach volleyball.

Cultural

In 2001, street art featured as a demonstration event.

Participation

Jeux de la Francophonie are open to athletes and artists of the 55 member nations, 3 associate member nations and 12 observer nations of the Francophonie. Canada is represented by three teams: Quebec, New Brunswick (the only officially bilingual Canadian province) and another team representing the rest of the country. The Belgian team is restricted to athletes from the French-speaking areas of the country.

Participation has so far varied between 1,700 and 3,000 athletes and artists.

55 Member Nations or Governments

3 Associate Member Nations

12 Observer Nations

See also

References

External links

Jeux de la Francophonie

1989 | 1994 | 1997 | 2001 | 2005 | 2009 | 2013

Multi-sport events
Global
Olympic GamesParalympic GamesWorld Games
Associations Commonwealth GamesInter-Allied Games1Island GamesJeux de la FrancophonieLusophony Games
Communities Islamic Solidarity Games • Gay Games • Maccabiah GamesPan-Armenian GamesWomen's Islamic GamesWorld Outgames
Disabled sport DeaflympicsDéfi sportifExtremity GamesSpecial OlympicsWorld Wheelchair and Amputee Games
Professions Military World GamesWorld Police and Fire Games
Youth and students Australian Youth Olympic FestivalCommonwealth Youth GamesCPLP GamesWorld Festival of Youth and StudentsYouth Olympic GamesGymnasiadeSELL Student GamesUniversiadeWorld Interuniversity Games
Other sport World Mind Sports GamesX Games
Olympic alternatives1 Friendship GamesGames of the New Emerging ForcesGoodwill GamesOlympic Boycott GamesPeople's Olympiad
Regional
Africa African Youth Games • All-Africa GamesCentral African Games
Americas Bolivarian GamesCANUSA GamesCentral American and Caribbean GamesCentral American GamesNorth American Indigenous GamesPan American GamesParapan American GamesSouth American Games
Asia ASEAN ParaGamesAsian Beach GamesAsian GamesAsian Indoor Games1Asian Indoor-Martial Arts GamesAsian Martial Arts Games1Asian Para GamesAsian Youth GamesChildren of Asia International Sports GamesEast Asian GamesCentral Asian GamesSoutheast Asian GamesSouth Asian GamesWest Asian Games
Europe Black Sea GamesEuroGamesEuropean Youth Olympic FestivalGames of the Small States of Europe
Inter-continental Afro-Asian GamesArafura GamesArctic Winter GamesFESPIC Games1Indian Ocean Island GamesMediterranean GamesNordic GamesPan Arab Games
National
Asia IndiaIndian Empire1IndonesiaJapanMalaysiaPeople's Republic of China (rural; amateur) • Thailand (youth) • Singapore
Americas Canada (western) • ColombiaUnited States (amateur juniors; seniors)
Europe Albania1Nazi Germany1NetherlandsPoland (youth)Soviet Union (youth)1
Oceania Western Australia (high school)2
National Congress of State Games2 Alabama · Arizona · California · Colorado · Connecticut · Florida · Georgia · Hawai'i · Idaho (summer; winter) · Illinois · Indiana · Iowa · Kansas · Kentucky · Maine · Massachusetts · Minnesota · Mississippi · Missouri · Montana · Nebraska · New Hampshire · New Jersey · New Mexico · New York · North Carolina · North Dakota · Oklahoma · Oregon · Pennsylvania · Texas · Utah (summer; winter) · Virginia · Washington · Wisconsin · Wyoming
1Defunct. 2Sub-national. 351 component games in 36 U.S. states. Category:Multi-sport events · List of Multi-sport events Portal:Multi-sport events · WikiProject Multi-sport events

Categories: Jeux de la Francophonie | La Francophonie

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Fri Jul 22 06:53:37 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.