Mediterranean Games

{{short description|Multi-sport event of the Mediterranean countries}}

{{for-multi|the most recent games|2022 Mediterranean Games|the upcoming games|2026 Mediterranean Games}}

{{Infobox Sporting Event Organization

| name =

| image = Mediterranean Games rings.svg

| caption = Official logo of the Games

| abbreviation =

| motto =

| formation = 1951 Mediterranean Games in Alexandria, Egypt

| recurrence = Four years

| last = 2022 Mediterranean Games in Oran, Algeria

| next = 2026 Mediterranean Games in Taranto, Italy

| purpose = Multi-sport event for nations on the Mediterranean Sea

| headquarters =

| leader_title = President

| leader_name = Davide Tizzano

| website = {{official URL}}

| remarks =

}}

{{Olympic Games infobox}}

{{Season sidebar

| title = Games

| list =

}}

The Mediterranean Games is a multi-sport event organised by the International Committee of Mediterranean Games (CIJM). It is held every four years among athletes from countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea in Africa, Asia and Europe. The first Mediterranean Games were held in 1951 in Alexandria, Egypt, while the most recent games were held in 2022 in Oran, Algeria.

History

The idea was proposed at the 1948 Summer Olympics by Muhammed Taher Pasha, chairman of the Egyptian Olympic Committee and vice-president of the International Olympic Committee (I.O.C.), assisted by the Greek member of the I.O.C. Ioannis Ketseas.{{cite web|title=History of the Mediterranean Games|url=http://www.cijm.org.gr/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=19&Itemid=27&lang=en|website=International Committee of Mediterranean Games|publisher=CIJM|access-date=21 June 2015}} Separate Mediterranean sports events preceded the games. From 1947 to 1949, the Mediterranean Athletics Championships were contested,[http://srv-web1.parliament.gr/display_doc.asp?item=44100&seg= εφ. "Αθλητική Ημέρα", Μάιος 1935.]{{cite web|url=http://www.gbrathletics.com/ic/mg.htm|title=Mediterranean Games|publisher=gbrathletics.com|access-date=21 December 2012|quote=The Mediterranean Games were first held in 1951, although an unofficial Games was previously held in 1949.}} and the Mediterranean Cup football competition was held in 1949 and 1950.[https://www.rsssf.org/tablesm/medgames.html Mediterranean Cup and Games]. RSSSF. Retrieved 2019-08-16. The first official Mediterranean Games were held in Egypt in 1951.

The Games were inaugurated in October 1951, in Alexandria, Egypt, in honour of Muhammed Taher Pasha, with contests being held in 13 sports along with the participation of 734 athletes from 10 countries. In 1955, in Barcelona, during the II Games, the set up was decided of a Supervisory and Controlling Body for the Games, a kind of Executive Committee. The decisions were finally materialized on 16 June 1961, and the said Body was named, upon a Greek notion, ICMG (International Committee for the Mediterranean Games). Twelve countries have hosted the Mediterranean Games: four from Africa: Egypt (1951), Tunisia (1967, 2001), Algeria (1975, 2022) and Morocco (1983); six from Europe: Spain (1955, 2005, 2018), Italy (1963, 1997, 2009), Turkey (1971, 2013), Yugoslavia (1979), Greece (1991) and France (1993) and two from Asia: Lebanon (1959) and Syria (1987).

The first eleven games took place one year before the Summer Olympic Games. Since 1993, games have been held the year after the Olympic Games. This transition means that the only time the Mediterranean Games were not held four years after the previous Games was in 1993, when Languedoc-Roussillon in France hosted the Games just two years after Athens. In 2018, the Mediterranean Games calendar was reset again when Tarragona hosted the Games in the mid-even year between the Summer Olympic Games (and the same year as the FIFA Men's World Cup).

Description

{{unreferenced section|date=August 2016}}

The Mediterranean Games, in terms of the preparation and composition of the National Delegation, are held under the auspices of the International Olympic Committee and the Hellenic Olympic Committee (HOC).

Athens is the permanent seat of the ICMG (regardless of who the President might be) and the committee's General Secretary is Greek. This comes as a further tribute to Greece, highlighting its leading role with regard to the function and strengthening of the institution. Except that Greece bailed out of its 2013 Mediterranean Games commitment when the two cities of Volos and Larissa were supposed to host the 2013 edition of the Games. But because of Greece's financial troubles, they had to give that up and the 2013 honors went instead to Turkey, with the city of Mersin rescuing the 2013 edition of the Games instead.

Participating countries

File:Partecipanti GdM.png

At present, 26 countries participate in the games:{{cite web|url=http://www.pescara2009.it/content.php?tipo=19&editing=Mod|title=Participating countries|website=pescara2009.it|access-date=15 March 2018}}

Kosovo was accepted as a member of the International Committee of Mediterranean Games in October 2015 and participated for the first time in the 2018 Mediterranean Games in Tarragona, Spain.[http://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1031327/exclusive-kosovo-accepted-as-member-of-international-committee-of-the-mediterranean-games Kosovo accepted as member of International Committee of the Mediterranean Games]. One athlete representing the Vatican City participated in an unofficial ("non-scoring") manner in the women's half marathon event at the 2022 Mediterranean Games in Oran, Algeria.{{cite web | url=https://www.infobae.com/aroundtherings/articles/2022/07/01/vatican-city-primed-for-debut-at-mediterranean-games/ | title=Vatican City primed for debut at Mediterranean Games | date=July 2022 }}

Of all the National Olympic Committees within the Olympic Movement bordering the Mediterranean Sea, Israel and Palestine have not participated in the games, nor has Great Britain who represents the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar and Akrotiri and Dhekelia.

In the case of Israel, Allen Guttman in The Games Must Go On argued that Israel's exclusion is both antisemitic and politically motivated due to antagonism towards Israel by the participating Muslim and Arab nations. The IOC's Avery Brundage was not supportive of Israel's desire to compete, saying: "I cannot understand why anyone wants to go where he is not wanted". The International Amateur Athletics Federation pushed the issue at the 1959 Mediterranean Games in Beirut by refusing to grant permission to hold an athletics competition unless Israel were allowed to compete. Lebanese games organizer Gabriel Gemayel conceded to this, but sidestepped the ruling by holding a parallel Lebanese Games comprising athletics events between the present nations alongside the official Mediterranean Games competitions.The games must go on: Avery Brundage and the Olympic movement, Allen Guttmann, [https://books.google.com/books?id=nA3g4BDCVrUC&dq=anti+israel+Mediterranean+Games&pg=RA1-PA224 page 225]. In September 2023, European Olympic Committees president Spyros Capralos called on the International Committee of Mediterranean Games to open a discussion about admitting both Israel and Palestine as members.{{cite web | url=https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1140765/capralos-call-icmg-open-israel-palestine | title=Capralos calls on ICMG to open discussion on membership of Israel and Palestine | date=13 September 2023 }}

There are countries not bordering the Mediterranean Sea which nonetheless participate: Portugal, Andorra, Kosovo, San Marino, Serbia and North Macedonia. Serbia, Kosovo and North Macedonia were all formerly part of Yugoslavia, which competed until its breakup and dissolution.{{citation needed|date=February 2024}}

The Hellenic Olympic Committee has suggested that nine more countries that do not satisfy geographic criteria could be allowed to participate, such as Bulgaria and Jordan.{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} Portugal competed in the 2018 Mediterranean Games after a decision which approved Portugal as effective National Olympic Committee.{{cite news|title=Participation of Portugal in the MG Tarragona 2017|url=http://www.cijm.org.gr/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=241%3Aparticipation-du-potrugal-aux-jm-tarragone-2017&catid=1%3Alatest-news&Itemid=79&lang=en|access-date=20 August 2016|work=cijm.org.gr}}{{cite news|title=Portugal new member of the ICMG|url=http://cijm.org.gr/portugal-new-member-of-the-icmg/|access-date=1 February 2018|work=cijm.org.gr}}

Flag

File:Mediterranean games logo.gif

The symbol of the Mediterranean Games consists of three rings representing Asia, Africa and Europe, the three continents involved in this competition.{{cite web |year=2008 |url = http://www.medgames.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=18&Itemid=26|title = Mediterranean Games History|publisher = Mediterranean Games Site| access-date = 2008-10-02 }} The rings dissolve in a wavy line in their lower part, as if they were immersed in the Mediterranean Sea. During the closing ceremony, the flag is transferred to the country of the city chosen to host the next Mediterranean Games.

Editions

All host cities have been coastal and all but one on the Mediterranean coast (Casablanca is on the Atlantic coast).

File:Edizioni gdm.png

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center; font-size: 85%"

!rowspan=2| No

!rowspan=2| Year

!rowspan=2| Host City

!rowspan=2| Dates

!rowspan=2| Opened by

!rowspan=2| Nations

!colspan=3| Competitors

!rowspan=2| Sports

!rowspan=2| Events

!rowspan=2| Top Country On
Medal Table

Men

! Women

! Total

1

| 1951

|align=left|{{flagicon|Egypt|1922}} Alexandria

|5 - 20 October

|align=left|Farouk I

| 10

| 734

| ---

| 734

| 14

| 91

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1951 Mediterranean Games}}

2

| 1955

|align=left|{{flagicon|Spain|1945}} Barcelona

|15 - 25 July

|align=left|Francisco Franco

| 10

| 1135

| ---

| 1135

| 20

| 102

|align=left|{{flagicon|FRA|at the 1955 Mediterranean Games}}

3

| 1959

|align=left|{{flagicon|Lebanon}} Beirut

|11 - 23 October

|align=left|Fuad Chehab

| 11

| 792

| ---

| 792

| 17

| 106

|align=left|{{flagicon|FRA|at the 1959 Mediterranean Games}}

4

| 1963

|align=left|{{flagicon|Italy}} Naples

|21 - 29 September

|align=left|Antonio Segni

| 13

| 1057

| ---

| 1057

| 17

| 93

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1963 Mediterranean Games}}

5

| 1967

|align=left|{{flagicon|Tunisia}} Tunis

|8 - 17 September

|align=left|Habib Bourguiba

|12

|1211

|38

|1249

|14

|93

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1967 Mediterranean Games}}

6

|1971

|align=left|{{flagicon|Turkey}} İzmir

|6 - 17 October

|align=left|Cevdet Sunay

|14

|1235

|127

|1362

|18

|137

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1971 Mediterranean Games}}

7

| 1975

|align=left|{{flagicon|Algeria}} Algiers

|23 August - 6 September

|align=left|Houari Boumédiène

| 15

| 2095

| 349

| 2444

| 19

| 160

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1975 Mediterranean Games}}

8

| 1979

|align=left|{{flagicon|Yugoslavia}} Split

|15 - 29 September

|align=left|Josip Broz Tito

| 14

| 2009

| 399

| 2408

| 26

| 192

|align=left|{{flagicon|YUG|at the 1979 Mediterranean Games}}

9

| 1983

|align=left|{{flagicon|Morocco}} Casablanca

|3 - 17 September

|align=left|Hassan II

| 16

| 1845

| 335

| 2180

| 20

| 162

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1983 Mediterranean Games}}

10

| 1987

|align=left|{{flagicon|SYR|1980}} Latakia

|11 - 25 September

|align=left|Hafez al-Assad

| 18

| 1529

| 467

| 1996

| 19

| 162

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1987 Mediterranean Games}}

11

| 1991

|align=left|{{flagicon|Greece}} Athens

|28 June - 12 July

|align=left|Konstantinos Karamanlis

| 18

| 2176

| 586

| 2762

| 24

| 217

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1991 Mediterranean Games}}

12

| 1993

|align=left|{{flagicon|France}} Languedoc-Roussillon

|16 - 27 June

|align=left|François Mitterrand

| 19

| 1994

| 604

| 2598

| 24

| 217

|align=left|{{flagicon|FRA|at the 1993 Mediterranean Games}}

13

| 1997

|align=left|{{flagicon|Italy}} Bari

|13 - 25 June

|align=left|Oscar Luigi Scalfaro

| 21

| 2166

| 790

| 2956

| 27

| 234

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 1997 Mediterranean Games}}

14

| 2001

|align=left|{{flagicon|Tunisia}} Tunis

|2 - 15 September

|align=left|Zine El Abidine Ben Ali

| 23{{cite web|url=http://www.cijm.org.gr/images/stories/pdf/JM2001.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2013-06-15 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130728092531/http://www.cijm.org.gr/images/stories/pdf/JM2001.pdf |archive-date=2013-07-28 }}

| 1972

| 1019

| 2991

| 23

| 230

|align=left|{{flagicon|FRA|at the 2001 Mediterranean Games}}

15

| 2005

|align=left|{{flagicon|Spain}} Almería

|24 June - 3 July

|align=left|Juan Carlos I

| 21

| 2126

| 1077

| 3203

| 27

| 258

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 2005 Mediterranean Games}}

16

| 2009

|align=left|{{flagicon|Italy}} Pescara

|25 June - 5 July

|align=left|Renato Schifani

| 23

| 2183

| 1185

| 3368

| 28

| 244

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 2009 Mediterranean Games}}

17

| 2013

|align=left|{{flagicon|Turkey}} Mersin

|20 - 30 June

|align=left|Recep Tayyip Erdoğan

| 24

| 1994

| 1070

| 3064

| 27

| 264

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 2013 Mediterranean Games}}

18

| 2018

|align=left|{{flagicon|Spain}} Tarragona

|22 June - 1 July

|align=left|Felipe VI

| 26

| 2180

| 1468

| 3648

| 28

| 246

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 2018 Mediterranean Games}}

19

| 2022

|align=left|{{flagicon|Algeria}} Oran

|25 June - 6 July

|align=left|Abdelmadjid Tebboune

| 26

| 2014

| 1284

| 3298

| 24

| 244

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA|at the 2022 Mediterranean Games}}

20

| 2026

|align=left|{{flagicon|Italy}} Taranto

|23 August - 3 September

|align=left|President of Italy (expected)

|colspan=8|Future Event

21

| 2030

|align=left|{{flagicon|Kosovo}} Pristina

|24 July - 4 August

|align=left|President of Kosovo (expected)

|colspan=8|Future Event

;Notes

{{notelist-ua}}

All-time medal table

[https://cijm.org.gr/medal-tables/ Medal Table 1951–2022]

class="wikitable sortable" style="margin-top:0em; text-align:center; font-size:90%"

! Rank

! Team

! Games

! style="background-color:gold; width:4em;" | Gold

! style="background-color:silver; width:4em;" | Silver

! style="background-color:#cc9966; width:4em;" | Bronze

! style="width:5em;"|Total

rowspan="1"| 1align=left| {{flagIOC2|ITA|Mediterranean Games}}199247917472462{{cite web|url=http://cijm.org.gr/medals-table-per-country-and-per-games/|title=Medals table per country and per Games}}
rowspan="1"| 2align=left| {{flagIOC2|FRA|Mediterranean Games}}196526005691821
rowspan="1"| 3align=left| {{flagIOC2|TUR|Mediterranean Games}}19384269314967
rowspan="1"| 4align=left| {{flagIOC2|ESP|Mediterranean Games}}193454745691388
rowspan="1"| 5align=left| {{flagIOC2|GRE|Mediterranean Games}}19200257349806
rowspan="1"| 6align=left| {{flagIOC2|YUG|Mediterranean Games}}*12199177182558
rowspan="1"| 7align=left| {{flagIOC2|EGY|Mediterranean Games}}17156209255620
rowspan="1"| 8align=left| {{flagIOC2|TUN|Mediterranean Games}}1789101159349
rowspan="1"| 9align=left| {{flagIOC2|ALG|Mediterranean Games}}158676131293
rowspan="1"| 10align=left| {{flagIOC2|MAR|Mediterranean Games}}177290116278
rowspan="1"| 11align=left| {{flagIOC2|CRO|Mediterranean Games}}8576979205
rowspan="1"| 12align=left| {{flagIOC2|SLO|Mediterranean Games}}8556499218
rowspan="1"| 13align=left| {{flagIOC2|SRB|Mediterranean Games}}5545158163
rowspan="1"| 14align=left| {{flagIOC2|SYR|Mediterranean Games}}17324276150
rowspan="1"| 15align=left| {{flagIOC2|UAR|Mediterranean Games}}**123213074
rowspan="1"| 16align=left| {{flagIOC2|CYP|Mediterranean Games}}1119212565
rowspan="1"| 17align=left| {{flagIOC2|ALB|Mediterranean Games}}1011191848
rowspan="1"| 18align=left| {{flagIOC2|LIB|Mediterranean Games}}1810234275
rowspan="1"| 19align=left| {{flagIOC2|POR|Mediterranean Games}}210182149
rowspan="1"| 20align=left| {{flagIOC2|BIH|Mediterranean Games}}8682539
rowspan="1"| 21align=left| {{flagIOC2|KOS|Mediterranean Games}}261310
rowspan="1"| 22align=left| {{flagIOC2|SMR|Mediterranean Games}}10510823
rowspan="1"| 23align=left| {{flagIOC2|MNE|Mediterranean Games}}4481022
rowspan="1"| 24align=left| {{flagIOC2|MKD|name=North Macedonia|Mediterranean Games}}332914
rowspan="1"| 25align=left| {{flagIOC2|LBA|Mediterranean Games}}13211417
rowspan="1"| 26align=left| {{flagIOC2|MLT|Mediterranean Games}}191449
rowspan="1"| 27align=left| {{flagIOC2|MON|Mediterranean Games}}151315
rowspan="1"| 28align=left| {{flagIOC2|AND|Mediterranean Games}}50000
rowspan="1"| 29align=left| {{flagIOC2|JOR|Mediterranean Games}}***10000
colspan="2"| Total|| 19 || 3408 || 3409 || 3914 || 10731

- Yugoslavia competed in 1997 and 2001 as FR Yugoslavia.{{cite web|url=http://cijm.org.gr/|title=International Committee of the Mediterranean Games}}

- Serbia competed in 2005 as Serbia and Montenegro.

  • (*) Yugoslavia participated in the Games before its breakup and the establishment of the constituent republics
  • (**) The UAR included at the time Egypt and Syria
  • (***) Honorary participation in the MG Tunis 2001

=Doping=

Changes by Doping:

  1. Nurcan Taylan - Weightlifting at the 2009 Mediterranean Games - 53 kg Women - 2 Gold
  2. Gülcan Mıngır - Athletics at the 2013 Mediterranean Games – Results - 3000m Steeplechase Women - 1 Bronze

Competitions

Throughout the history of the Mediterranean Games, 34 different sports have been presented.

style="margin:auto"|left

!valign=top|

{| class=wikitable

!Sport

!Years

25px 3x3 basketball

|Since 2018

25px Archery

|Since 1971

25px Athletics

|Since 1951

25px Badminton

|Since 2013

25px Basketball

|Since 1951

25px Beach volleyball

|Since 2005

25px Bocce

|Since 1997

25px Boxing

|Since 1951

25px Canoeing

|Since 1979

25px Cycling

|Since 1955

25px Diving

|Since 1951

25px Equestrian

|Since 1955

!valign=top|

class=wikitable

!Sport

!Years

25px Fencing

|Since 1951

25px Field hockey

|Since 1955

25px Football

|Since 1951

25px Golf

|Since 1983

25px Gymnastics

|Since 1951

25px Handball

|Since 1967

25px Judo

|Since 1971

25px Karate

|Since 1993

25pxRoller hockey

|Since 1955

25px Rowing

|Since 1951

25px Rugby union

|Since 1955

25px Sailing

|Since 1955

!valign=top|

class=wikitable

!Sport

!Years

25px Shooting

|Since 1951

25px Swimming

|Since 1951

25px Table tennis

|Since 1971

25px Taekwondo

|Since 2013

25px Tennis

|Since 1963

25px Volleyball

|Since 1959

25px Water polo

|Since 1951

25px Waterskiing

|Since 2009

25px Weightlifting

|Since 1951

25px Wrestling

|Since 1951

|}

Mediterranean Sports Federations

19 Federations in 2018:https://cijm.org.gr/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/confederations-mediterraneennes_2018.pdf {{Bare URL PDF|date=May 2025}}

  1. Confédération Méditerranéenne d'Escrime (COMES)
  2. Confédération Méditerranéenne d'Haltérophilie (MWC)
  3. Confédération Méditerranéenne de Handball (MHC)
  4. Mediterranean Committee of Associated Wrestling Styles (CMLA)
  5. Union Européenne et Méditerranéenne de Tir a l'arc (EMAU)
  6. Confederation of Mediterranean Badminton (COMEBA)
  7. Confédération Méditerranéenne de Wakeboard et Ski Nautique (MWWC)
  8. Ligue Méditerranéenne de Football
  9. Mediterranean Karate Federations Union
  10. Union Méditerranéenne de Voile
  11. Conféderation Méditerranéenne de Natation (C.O.ME.N.)
  12. Union Méditerranéenne de Tennis de Table (UMTT)
  13. Union méditerranéenne de Taekwondo
  14. Confédération Méditerranéenne de Gymnastique
  15. Fédération Méditerranéenne de WUSHU
  16. Union de la Méditerranée des sports de Boules
  17. Union Méditerranéenne d'Athlétisme
  18. Union des Fédérations Méditerranéennes des Activités Subaquatiques
  19. Confederation of Mediterranean Orienteering Federations (COMOF)

See also

References

{{Reflist}}