Exploring competitions with regional and cultural inspirations
We tend to think of sporting championships as involving athletic efforts. Running, football, hockey and swimming all have championships - both national European and International.
What about other activities where people can compete against each other to create the biggest or best or do something the fastest?
Let's explore some more unusual championships which have been held around Europe.
World Hairdressing Championships
Cutting hair is an artform, mixing technique, fashion and style. The World Hairdressing Championships make it a sport.
In 1962, the championships were held in Amsterdam - the 7th World Championship for women's and men's hairdressers. This video reports from the event, including an interview with the Dutch champion Mrs Broekhuizen.
The photograph below shows Raymond Bessone, a winner of an International Hairdressing Contest held in London in January 1932.
Genoa Pesto World Championships
The Pesto World Championships have been held in Genoa, Italy at the Palazzo Ducale since 2007. Organised by PalatiFini, a cultural and gastronomic association, the competition aims to preserve and protect culinary traditions.
In the competition, 100 competitors from all over the world prepare Genovese Pesto exclusively with a pestle and mortar, using only traditional, authentic and genuine ingredients.
Logging and chainsaw championships
Scandinavian and Nordic countries are lands of forests. Logging has been an important part of industry there, so it may not come as a surprise that logging and chainsaw use has become a sport.
The World Logging Championship has been held in European countries since the 1970s, with Sweden and Denmark hosting the competition once, Finland hosting 3 times and Norway 5 times.
Whereas once these championships involved sawing by hand, the development of motorised chainsaws brought a new form of competition.
Parachute & skydiving championships
These photographs shows four women - Antonina Chmielarczyk, Maria Żak, Wanda Szteyn and Anna Franke - taking part in the second Parachute Championships of Poland, held in Białystok in September 1955 and another competition in Poznań in 1956.
The Polish parachuting championships have been held since 1954 at locations across Poland, with many of these women winning medals.
In 1958, at the Parachute World Championships in Bratislava, Anna Franke won the title of vice-champion of the world, and the Polish women's team took 2nd place in the team competition.
The feature image above is composed of 4 icons from The Noun Project, each with a CC BY licence.
This blog is part of the Europeana Sport project which showcases cultural treasures relating to sporting heritage in Europe.