The biography of pierre de coubertin medal

  • Pierre de coubertin medal for sportsmanship
  • Pierre de coubertin olympic motto
  • Pierre de coubertin olympics
  • Pierre De Coubertin Awards

    The Pierre dem Coubertin Award is a prestigious award which recognises secondary school students who demonstrate values which are consistent with the Olympic Movement through participation in sporting activities.

    Proudly supported by the Department of Education and Training and presented by the Victorian Olympic Council, the awards are named after the founder of the Modern Olympic Games. 
    Each year, secondary school teachers are invited to nominate one recipient to receive the Pierre de Coubertin Award from year 10, 11 or 12. The nominee must participate actively in the school's physical education program with a consistently positive attitude and must have represented the school in a sport.

    To nominate your school’s award recipient, please follow the four steps below:
    1.Click HERE to access the online nomination form
    2.Enter your school and contact details and press NEXT
    3.Enter your student and nomination details and pre
  • the biography of pierre de coubertin medal
  • Pierre de Coubertin Medal

    Recipient Country Accomplishment(s) Date Place
    Juan Antonio Samaranch SpainSeventh President of the International Olympic Committee6 September 1997[11][12]Lausanne, Switzerland
    Leon Štukelj Slovenia12 November 1999[a][13]Maribor, Slovenia
    Raymond Gafner  Switzerland1999[14][15]
    Rainier III, Prince of Monaco Monaco2000[16]
    João Havelange Brazil2000[16]
    Gianni Agnelli Italy2000[16]
    Alain Danet [fr; pl] France2000[16]
    Kurt Furgler  Switzerland2000[16]
    Henry Kissinger United States2000[16]
    Yoshiaki Tsutsumi Japan2000[16]
    Emil Zátopek Czechoslovakia1952 Summer Olympics6 December 2000[a

    De Coubertin, the father of the modern Olympics, is a figure who probably deserves his own post. A French aristocrat who became an academic and educator, he was obsessed with the English concept—or at least his idea of the concept—that idrott builds character. He admired the way sport culture in the English public schools could create “moral and social strength,” and credited it with…well, just about everything, including England’s vast international influence. France’s humiliation in the Franco-Prussian war influenced his work, in that he thought a more robust, athletic country would be better able to win such wars. He also worshipped ancient Greece, and thought their own athletic culture had been revived in the English model. He was never able to establish such a curriculum in French school, which at one time was the central uppdrag of his life, but considering his passions, it’s no surprise that he managed to revive the Olympic games.

    (One in