European Junior Taekwondo Championships

European Junior Taekwondo Championships
Competition details
DisciplineTaekwondo
Typekyourugui, biennial
OrganiserEuropean Taekwondo Union (ETU)
History
First edition1978
Editions2025 (25)

European Taekwondo Junior Championships is a European biennial championship organized for juniors age category by European Taekwondo Union, first held in 1978.[1][2] The event is contested every two years.

History

Age Groups:

  1. U21: Since 2025 (18-21 Years)
  2. U18: Since 1996 (15-18 Years)
  3. U15: Since 2014 (12-15 Years)
  4. U12: Children

Editions

U21

Source: [3]

Number Edition Host City Country Champion Events
1 2009 (details) Vigo  Spain  Russia 18
2 2010 (details) Kharkiv  Ukraine  Turkey 16
3 2012 (details) Athens  Greece  Russia 16
4 2013 (details) Chișinău  Moldova  Russia 16
5 2014 (details) Innsbruck  Austria  Spain 16
6 2015 (details) Bucharest  Romania  Russia 16
7 2016 (details) Grozny  Russia  Russia 16
8 2017 (details) Sofia  Bulgaria  Russia 16
9 2018 (details) Warsaw  Poland  Russia 16
10 2019 (details) Helsingborg  Sweden  Russia 16

U18

Source:[4][5]

Edition Year Host city Country Date
1 1978 Munich  Germany
2 1980 Esbjerg  Denmark
3 1982 Rome  Italy
4 1984 Stuttgart  Germany
5 1986 Seefeld  Austria
6 1988 Ankara  Turkey
7 1990 Aarhus  Denmark
8 1992 Paris  France
9 1994 Bucharest  Romania
10 1996 Zagreb  Croatia
11 1997 Patras  Greece 15–17 September
12 1999 Paphos  Cyprus 15–17 April
13 2001 Pamplona  Spain 5–7 April
14 2003 Heraklion  Greece 28 February – 2 March
15 2005 Baku  Azerbaijan 26–28 May
16 2007 Baku  Azerbaijan 26–28 October
17 2009 Trelleborg  Sweden 28–30 May
18 2011 Paphos  Cyprus 6–8 October
19 2013 Porto  Portugal 26–29 September
20 2015 Daugavpils  Latvia 22–25 October
21 2017 Larnaca  Cyprus 2–5 November
22 2019 Marina d'Or  Spain 4–6 October
23 2021 Sarajevo  Bosnia and Herzegovina 12–15 November
24 2023 Tallinn  Estonia 24–26 August
25 2025 Aigle  Switzerland 19–21 November

U15

Source:[6]

  1. 2005 Palermo
  2. 2007 Budapest
  3. 2009 Zagreb
  4. 2011 Tbilisi
  5. 2013 Bucharest
  6. 2015 Strasbourg
  7. 2016 Bucharest
  8. 2017 Budapest
  9. 2018 Oropesa del Mar
  10. 2019 Oropesa del Mar
  11. 2020 Sarajevo
  12. 2021 Tallinn
  13. 2022 Pembroke
  14. 2023 Belgrade
  15. 2024 Tirana
  16. 2025 Athens

U12

Medals

U21

U18 (1978–2023)

Source:[7]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia643749150
2 Turkey574462163
3 Spain534078171
4 Germany363556127
5 Greece23195193
6 Italy22234085
7 Croatia17223978
8 France14134269
9 Great Britain13123055
10 Denmark13122348
11 Azerbaijan1262139
12 Netherlands10192958
13 Ukraine6122442
14 Serbia681226
15 Belarus5102035
16 Belgium532028
17 Hungary44614
18 Sweden371828
19 Slovenia3238
20 Austria26715
21 Bulgaria2237
22 Cyprus171321
23 Poland152228
24 Armenia14611
25 Israel13913
26 Switzerland1023
27 Moldova05611
28 Bosnia and Herzegovina02810
 Yugoslavia02810
30 Ireland0235
31 Romania0224
32 Finland0167
 Norway0167
 Portugal0167
35 Georgia0134
 Lithuania0134
37 Czech Republic0044
38 Latvia0033
Totals (38 entries)3753737431,491

U15

U12

See also

References