Correspondence Chess Olympiad
The Correspondence Chess Olympiad is a correspondence chess tournament in which teams from all over the world compete. International Correspondence Chess Federation organises the tournament.
Correspondence Chess Olympiads
| Event | Gold | Team | Silver | Bronze | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st (1949–1952)[1] | .svg.png) Hungary | Janos Balogh, Gedeon Barcza, Miklós Szigeti/Jozsef Gonda, Lajos Monostori, Arpad Szücs and Dezsö Elekes. |  Czechoslovakia |  Sweden | 
| 2nd (1952–1955)[2] |  Czechoslovakia | Vit Paroulek, Juraj Hukel, Karel Kausek, Valt Borsony, Vilém Olexa and Mirko Skrovina |  Sweden |  West Germany | 
| 3rd (1958–1961)[3] |  Soviet Union | Igor Bondarevsky, Georgy Borisenko, Alexander Konstantinopolsky, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Mikhail Yudovich and Piotr Atiashev |  Hungary | .svg.png) Yugoslavia | 
| 4th (1962–1964)[4] |  Soviet Union | Igor Bondarevsky, Peter Dubinin, Georgy Borisenko, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Mikhail Yudovich and Leon Masseiev |  East Germany |  Sweden | 
| 5th (1965–1968)[5] |  Czechoslovakia | Josef Snadjr, Frantisek Smrcka, Miroslav Urbanec, Jaroslav Hybl, Milan Weiner and Josef Nun |  Soviet Union |  West Germany | 
| 6th (1968–1972)[6] |  Soviet Union | Mikhail Yudovich, Peter Dubinin, Oleg Moiseev, Yuri Sakharov, Abram Khasin and Nikolai Kopylov |  Czechoslovakia |  East Germany | 
| 7th (1972–1976)[7] |  Soviet Union | Oleg Moiseev, Abram Khasin, Mikhail Yudovich, Yuri Sakharov, Nikolai Kopylov and Lev Omelchenko | .svg.png) Bulgaria |  Great Britain | 
| 8th (1977–1982)[8] |  Soviet Union | Yakov Estrin, Oleg Moiseev, Abram Khasin, Mikhail Yudovich, Peter Dubinin and Lev Omelchenko |  Hungary |  Great Britain | 
| 9th (1982–1987)[9] |  Great Britain | Jonathan Penrose, Adrian Hollis, Simon Webb, John Footner, John Toothill and Cris Shephard |  West Germany |  Soviet Union | 
| 10th (1987–1995)[10] |  Soviet Union | Tõnu Õim, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Gennady Nesis, Aleksei Michailov, Grigory Sanakoev and Sergei Korolev |  England |  East Germany | 
| 11th (1992–1999)[11] |  Czech Republic &  Germany | CZE: Jindrich Zapletal, Alois Lanc, Igor Privara, Milan Mraz, Jindřich Trapl and Jiri Goth/Rudolf Sevecek. GER: Heinrich Burger, Hans Palm, Karl Maeder, Fritz Baumbach, Volker Anton and Martin Kreuzer | .svg.png) Canada and  Scotland | |
| 12th (1998–2004)[12] |  Germany | Joachim Neumann, Manfred Nimtz, Volker Anton, Martin Kreuzer, Stephan Busemann and Karl Maeder | .svg.png) Lithuania |  Latvia | 
| 13th (2004–2009)[13] |  Germany | Fritz Baumbach, Siegfried Kluve, Martin Kreuzer, Robert von Weizsäcker, Roland Pfretzschner and Matthias Kribben |  Czech Republic |  Poland | 
| 14th (2002–2006)[14] |  Germany | Peter Hertel, Frank Gerhardt, Stephan Busemann, Andreas Brenke, Horst Broß and Hans Hofstetter |  Lithuania |  United States | 
| 15th (2006–2009)[15] |  Norway | Ivar Bern, Raymond Boger, Petter Stigar, Arild Haugen, Morten Lilleoren and Tor-Arne Klausen |  Germany |  Netherlands | 
| 16th (2010–2016)[16] |  Czech Republic | Roman Chitilek, Jiri Dufek, David Vrkoc and Jiri Vosáhlik |  Germany |  France | 
| 17th (2009–2012)[17] |  Germany | Maximilian Voss, Peter Hertel, Arno Nickel, Stephan Busemann, Hans Wunderlich and Gerhard Müller |  Spain |  Italy | 
| 18th (2012–2016)[18] |  Germany | Peter Hertel, Matthias Kribben, Maximilian Voss, Arno Nickel, Hans Wunderlich and Reinhard Moll |  Slovenia |  Spain | 
Ladies Correspondence Chess Olympiads
| N° | Years | Gold | Team | Silver | Bronze | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st[19] | 1974–1979 |  Soviet Union | Olga Rubtsova, Marta Litinskaya, Ljuba Kristol/Tamara Zaitseva and Liudmila Belavenets |  West Germany |  Czechoslovakia | 
| 2nd[20] | 1980–1986 |  Soviet Union | Olga Rubtsova, Lora Yakovleva, Marta Litinskaya and Liudmila Belavenets |  Czechoslovakia | .svg.png) Yugoslavia | 
| 3rd[21] | 1986–1992 |  Soviet Union | Merike Rõtova, Marta Litinskaya, Liudmila Belavenets and Nadezida Krasikova |  Czechoslovakia |  Hungary | 
| 4th[22] | 1992–1997 |  Czech Republic | Eva Mozná, Mariola Babulová, Hana Kubiková and Vlasta Horácková |  Russia |  Poland | 
| 5th[23] | 1997–2003 |  Russia | Irina Perevertkina, Svetlana Khlusevich, Tamara Zaitseva and Elena Rufitskaya |  Germany |  Czech Republic | 
| 6th[24] | 2003–2006 |  Lithuania | Vilma Dambrauskaité, Vineta Kveinys, Vigante Milasiuté and Jelizaveta Potapova |  Germany |  Italy | 
| 7th[25] | 2007–2009 |  Slovenia | Maia Nadvesnik, Lara Kozarski, Eva Korosec and Anica Horvat |  Lithuania |  Germany | 
| 8th[26] | 2008–2010 |  Poland | Barbara Skonieczna, Alicla Szczepaniak, Bronislawa Lubas and Bozena Wojcik-Wojtkowiak |  Bulgaria |  Italy | 
| 9th[27] | 2011–2014 |  Russia | Olga Sukhareva, Larisa Morokova, Oksana Zhak and Svetlana Lobanova |  Lithuania |  Germany | 
| 10th[28] | 2015–2017 |  Germany | Svetlana Kloster, Barbara Boltz, Kristin Achatz and Irene Neuburger |  Lithuania |  Russia | 
See also
- Chess Olympiad
- ICCF national member federations—Short articles about the federations
- ICCF numeric notation
- World Correspondence Chess Championship
- International Correspondence Chess Federation
- European Team Chess Championship
References
- ^ "ol-01 Final".
- ^ "ol-02 Final".
- ^ "ol-03 Final".
- ^ "ol-04 Final".
- ^ "ol-05 Final".
- ^ "ol-06 Final".
- ^ "ol-07 Final".
- ^ "ol-08 Final".
- ^ "ol-09 Final".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ Cross Table
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".
- ^ "Cross Table".