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Fencing Info
Olympic fencing
Fencing is one of only four sports that have
been on every
modern Olympic program since 1896. The men's foil and
saber events were on the 1896 program and the epee was added in 1900.
But, because of major disagreements about the rules, France and Italy
refused to compete in 1912. The Fédération Internationale d'Escrime,
founded in 1913 to standardize rules, is the governing body for
international fencing, including the Olympics.
The women's foil competion has been on the
Olympic program since 1924. For many years, women fenced only with
foils, but the epee was added to the Olympic program in 1996.
There are different sets of rules for the three
weapons, reflecting the differences in technique that grew out of their
historical background. In foils and epee, a touch can be made only with
the point of the weapon. The entire body is a valid target for the epee,
but in foils a touch can be scored only on a limited target area. In
saber fencing, a hit may be made with the point, the cutting edge, or
the forward third of the back edge.
Fencing is a difficult sport to judge, since
it's necessary to determine, first, whether a hit was made and, second,
which came first when the two fencers score hits almost simultaneously.
The electrical epee was introduced at the 1936 to score hits
automatically. Electrical scoring for the foil was added at the 1956
Olympics and for the saber at the 1992 Olympics.
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