FISU World University Games

International multi-sport event for university athletes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The FISU World University Games, formerly the Universiade, is an international multi-sport event, organized for university athletes by the International University Sports Federation (FISU). The former name is a portmanteau of the words "University" and "Olympiad".

StatusActive
GenreSporting event
FrequencyBiennial
LocationVarious
Quick facts Status, Genre ...
FISU World University Games
The flag of the International University Sports Federation flag since 2021
StatusActive
GenreSporting event
FrequencyBiennial
LocationVarious
Inaugurated1959 (1959) (Summer)
1960 (1960) (Winter)
Organised byFISU
Websitefisu.net
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Former flag of International University Sports Federation

The Universiade is referred to in English as the World University Games or World Student Games; however, this latter term can also refer to competitions for sub-University grades students. In July 2020 as part of a new branding system by the FISU, it was stated that the Universiade was to be officially branded as the FISU World University Games.[1]

The most recent summer event was the 2025 Summer World University Games held in Rhine-Ruhr region, Germany held from 16-27 July 2025, while the most recent winter event was the 2025 Winter World University Games held in Turin, Italy from 13 to 23 January 2025.

Precursors

A student football match held at the 3rd World Festival of Youth and Students
During the 1989 Summer Universiade
During the 2011 Summer Universiade

The idea of a global international sports competition between student-athletes pre-dates the 1949 formation of the International University Sports Federation (FISU), which now hosts the Universiade, and even the first World University Games held in 1923. English peace campaigner Hodgson Pratt was an early advocate of such an event, proposing (and passing) a motion at the 1891 Universal Peace Congress in Rome to create a series of international student conferences in rotating host capital cities, with activities including art and sport. This did not come to pass, but a similar event was created in Germany in 1909 in the form of the Academic Olympia. Five editions were held from 1909 to 1913, all of which were hosted in Germany following the cancellation of an Italy-based event.[2]

Opening ceremony of the 2017 Summer Universiade

At the start of the 20th century, Jean Petitjean of France began attempting to organise a "University Olympic Games". After discussion with Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympic Games, Petitjean was convinced not to use the word "Olympic" in the tournament's name.[2] Petitjean, and later the Confederation Internationale des Etudiants (CIE), was the first to build a series of international events, beginning with the 1923 International Universities Championships. This was followed by the renamed 1924 Summer Student World Championships a year later and two further editions were held in 1927 and 1928. Another name change resulted in the 1930 International University Games. The CIE's International University Games was held four more times in the 1930s before having its final edition in 1947.[3][4]

A separate group organised an alternative university games in 1939 in Vienna, in post-Anschluss Germany.[3] The onset of World War II ceased all major international student sport activities and the aftermath also led to division among the movement, as the CIE was disbanded and rival organisations emerged. The Union Internationale des Étudiants (UIE) incorporated a university sports games into the World Festival of Youth and Students from 1947 to 1962, including one separate, unofficial games in 1954. This event principally catered for Eastern European countries.[5]

After the closure of the CIE and the creation of the first UIE-organised games, FISU came into being in 1949 and held its own first major student sport event the same year in the form of the 1949 Summer International University Sports Week. The Sports Week was held biennially until 1955. Like the CIE's games before it, the FISU events were initially Western-led sports competitions.[3]

Division between the largely Western European FISU and Eastern European UIE eventually began to dissipate among broadened participation at the 1957 World University Games. This event was not directly organised by either group, instead being organised by Jean Petitjean in France (which remained neutral to the split), but all respective nations from the groups took part. The FISU-organised Universiade became the direct successor to this competition, maintaining the biennial format into the inaugural 1959 Universiade. It was not until the 1957 World University Games that the Soviet Union began to compete in FISU events. That same year, what had previously been a European competition became a truly global one, with the inclusion of Brazil, Japan and the United States among the competing nations. The increased participation ultimately led to the establishment of the Universiade as the primary global student sport championship.[2][3]

Precursor events

Not recognized by FISU as Universiade or World University Games:

More information #, Year ...
Precursor events
#YearEventBodyHost cityHost country
11923International Universities ChampionshipsCIEParis France
21924Summer Student World ChampionshipsCIEWarsaw Poland
31927Summer Student World ChampionshipsCIERome Italy
41928Summer Student World ChampionshipsCIEParis France
51930International University GamesCIEDarmstadt Germany
61933International University GamesCIETurin Italy
71935International University GamesCIEBudapest Hungary
81937International University GamesCIEParis France
91939International University GamesCIEMonte Carlo Monaco
101939International University GamesNSDStBVienna Germany
111947International University GamesCIEParis France
121947World Festival of Youth and StudentsUIEPrague Czechoslovakia
131949World Festival of Youth and StudentsUIEBudapest Hungary
141949Summer International University Sports WeekFISUMerano Italy
151951World Festival of Youth and StudentsUIEEast Berlin East Germany
161951Summer International University Sports WeekFISULuxembourg Luxembourg
171953World Festival of Youth and StudentsUIEBucharest Romania
181953Summer International University Sports WeekFISUDortmund West Germany
191955World Festival of Youth and StudentsUIEWarsaw Poland
201955Summer International University Sports WeekFISUSan Sebastián Spain
211957World Festival of Youth and StudentsUIEMoscow Soviet Union
221957World University GamesPUCParis France
231959World Festival of Youth and StudentsUIEVienna Austria
241962World Festival of Youth and StudentsUIEHelsinki Finland
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Editions

Summer Games

Locations of host cities of the Summer World University Games (excluding those in Europe)
Locations of host cities of the Summer World University Games (in Europe)
More information Edition, Year ...
Overview of Summer World University Games[6]
Edition Year Host Games dates /
Opened by
Sports Competitors Events Nations Top nation
Total Men Women
1 1959 Italy Turin 26 August – 6 September 1959
President Giovanni Gronchi
7 985 865 120 60 45  Italy
2 1961 Bulgaria Sofia 26 August – 3 September 1961
Chairman Dimitar Ganev
9 1,270 899 371 68 32  Soviet Union
3 1963 Brazil Porto Alegre 30 August – 8 September 1963
Minister Paulo de Tarso Santos
9 713 565 148 79 27  Hungary
4 1965 Hungary Budapest 20–30 August 1965
Chairman István Dobi
9 1,729 1,290 439 73 32  Hungary
5 1967 Japan Tokyo 27 August – 4 September 1967
Emperor Hirohito
10 938 698 240 87 36  United States
6 1970 Italy Turin[a] 26 August – 6 September 1970
President Giuseppe Saragat
9 2,084 1,542 542 81 58  Soviet Union
7 1973 Soviet Union Moscow 16–26 August 1973
Chairman Leonid Brezhnev
10 2,277 1634 643 111 70  Soviet Union
8 1975 Italy Rome[b] 18–21 August 1975
President Giovanni Leone
1[c] 468 336 132 35 38  Soviet Union
9 1977 Bulgaria Sofia 17–28 August 1977
President Todor Zhivkov
10 2,939 2,071 868 101 78  Soviet Union
10 1979 Mexico Mexico City 2–13 September 1979
President José López Portillo
10 2,974 2,262 712 97 94  Soviet Union
11 1981 Romania Bucharest 19–30 July 1981
President Nicolae Ceaușescu
10 2,912 2,071 841 124 86  Soviet Union
12 1983 Canada Edmonton 1–12 July 1983
Charles, Prince of Wales
10 2,382 1,651 7,31 117 73  Soviet Union
13 1985 Japan Kobe 24 August – 4 September 1985
Crown Prince Akihito
11 2,783 2,008 775 120 106  Soviet Union
14 1987 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zagreb 8–19 July 1987
President Lazar Mojsov
12 3,905 2,686 1,219 140 121  United States
15 1989 West Germany Duisburg[d] 22–30 August 1989
Chancellor Helmut Kohl
4 1,785 1,271 514 66 79  Soviet Union
16 1991 United Kingdom Sheffield 14–25 July 1991
Anne, Princess Royal
12 3,346 2,134 1,212 125 101  United States
17 1993 United States Buffalo 8–18 July 1993
Primo Nebiolo
12 3,547 2,385 1,162 138 117  United States
18 1995 Japan Fukuoka 23 August – 3 September 1995
Crown Prince Naruhito
13 3,949 2,636 1,313 145 162  United States
19 1997 Italy Sicily 20–31 August 1997
President Oscar Luigi Scalfaro
11 3,496 2,264 1,232 127 124  United States
20 1999 Spain Palma de Mallorca 3–13 July 1999
Infanta Elena, Duchess of Lugo
12 4,076 2,635 1,441 146 125  United States
21 2001 China Beijing 22 August – 1 September 2001
President Jiang Zemin
13 3,854 2,705 1,779 168 165  China
22 2003 South Korea Daegu 21–31 August 2003
President Roh Moo-hyun
14 4,460 2,622 1,838 185 174  China
23 2005 Turkey İzmir 11–21 August 2005
President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
15 5,346 3,187 2,159 196 131  Russia
24 2007 Thailand Bangkok 20–31 August 2007
Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn
18 6,093 3,389 2,704 236 152  China
25 2009 Serbia Belgrade 1–12 July 2009
Prime Minister Mirko Cvetković
15 5,566 3,203 2,363 203 122  Russia
26 2011 China Shenzhen 12–23 August 2011
President Hu Jintao
24 7,155 4,088 3,067 305 151  China
27 2013 Russia Kazan 6–17 July 2013
President Vladimir Putin
27 7,966 4,827 3,139 351 159  Russia
28 2015 South Korea Gwangju 3–14 July 2015
President Park Geun-hye
21 7,432 4,270 3,162 272 140  South Korea
29 2017 Chinese Taipei Taipei[e] 19–30 August 2017
President Tsai Ing-wen
21 7,377 4,189 3,188 271 134  Japan
30 2019 Italy Naples[f] 3–14 July 2019
President Sergio Mattarella
18 5,893 3,100 2,793 220 111  Japan
31 2021 China Chengdu 28 July – 8 August 2023[g]
President Xi Jinping
18 6,573 3,556 3,017 269 116  China
2023 Originally awarded to Russia Yekaterinburg. Cancelled due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine
32 2025[7] Germany Rhine-Ruhr 16–27 July 2025
Minister Bärbel Bas
18 6,233 3,260 2,973 234 102  Japan
33 2027 South Korea Chungcheong 1-12 August 2027
TBA
18 TBA TBA TBA 248 TBA TBA
34 2029[8] United States North Carolina 11-22 July 2029
TBA
18 TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA TBA
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  1. Originally scheduled for Lisbon, Portugal in 1969.
  2. Originally scheduled for Belgrade, Yugoslavia.
  3. Only athletics was featured.
  4. Originally scheduled for São Paulo, Brazil.
  5. The Taiwan Republic of China (Taiwan) is recognised as Chinese Taipei by the FISU and the majority of international organisations it participates in due to political considerations and Cross-Strait relations with the People's Republic of China.
  6. Originally scheduled for Brasília, Brazil.
  7. Originally scheduled to be held on 15–27 August 2021, but was postponed to 25 June–7 July 2022, and again to 2023 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. With the eventual cancellation of the 2023 Games in Yekaterinburg due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, this edition would replace the 2023 Games.

Winter Games

Locations of host cities of the Winter World University Games (excluding those in Europe)
More information Edition, Year ...
Overview of Winter World University Games events[9]
Edition Year Host Games dates /
Opened by
Sports Competitors Events Nations Top nation
Total Men Women
1 1960 France Chamonix 28 February – 6 March 1960
President Charles de Gaulle
5 151 106 45 12 15  France
2 1962 Switzerland Villars 6–12 March 1962
President Paul Chaudet
6 273 212 61 14 22  West Germany
3 1964 Czechoslovakia Špindlerův Mlýn 11–17 February 1964
President Antonín Novotný
5 285 206 79 17 21  West Germany
4 1966 Italy Sestriere 5–13 February 1966
President Giuseppe Saragat
6 434 355 79 19 29  Soviet Union
5 1968 Austria Innsbruck 21–28 January 1968
President Franz Jonas
7 424 351 73 23 26  Soviet Union
6 1970 Finland Rovaniemi 3–9 April 1970
President Urho Kekkonen
7 421 326 95 25 25  Soviet Union
7 1972 United States Lake Placid 26 February – 5 March 1972
President Richard Nixon
7 351 279 72 28 22  Soviet Union
8 1975 Italy Livigno 6–13 April 1975
President Giovanni Leone
2 143 95 48 14 15  Soviet Union
9 1978 Czechoslovakia Špindlerův Mlýn 5–12 February 1978
President Gustáv Husák
4 260 179 81 15 21  Soviet Union
10 1981 Spain Jaca 25 February – 4 March 1981
King Juan Carlos I
5 394 287 107 19 28  Soviet Union
11 1983 Bulgaria Sofia 17–27 February 1983
Chairman Todor Zhivkov
7 535 409 126 24 31  Soviet Union
12 1985 Italy Belluno 16–24 February 1985
President Sandro Pertini
7 538 381 157 27 29  Soviet Union
13 1987 Czechoslovakia Štrbské Pleso 21–28 February 1987
President Gustáv Husák
6 596 442 154 22 28  Czechoslovakia
14 1989 Bulgaria Sofia 2–12 March 1989
Chairman Todor Zhivkov
8 681 467 214 40 32  Soviet Union
15 1991 Japan Sapporo 2–10 March 1991
Crown Prince Naruhito
8 668 461 207 45 34  Japan
16 1993 Poland Zakopane 6–14 February 1993
President Lech Wałęsa
8 668 454 214 41 41  Japan
17 1995 Spain Jaca 13–26 February 1995
King Juan Carlos I
8 765 542 223 36 41  South Korea
18 1997 South Korea MujuChonju 24 January – 2 February 1997
President Kim Young-sam
9 877 609 268 53 48  Japan
19 1999 Slovakia Poprad-Tatry 22–30 January 1999
President Rudolf Schuster
9 929 644 285 53 40  Russia
20 2001 Poland Zakopane 7–17 February 2001
President Aleksander Kwaśniewski
9 1,007 701 306 52 41  Russia
21 2003 Italy Tarvisio 16–26 January 2003
President Renzo Tondo
10 1,266 856 410 57 46  Russia
22 2005 Austria InnsbruckSeefeld 12–22 January 2005
President Heinz Fischer
12 1,449 957 492 71 50  Austria
23 2007 Italy Turin 17–27 January 2007
FISU President George Killian
11 1,638 964 674 71 48  South Korea
24 2009 China Harbin 18–28 February 2009
State councillor Liu Yandong
12 1,545 864 681 81 44  China
25 2011 Turkey Erzurum 27 January – 6 February 2011
President Abdullah Gül
11 1,593 920 673 64 52  Russia
26 2013 Italy Trentino[a] 11–21 December 2013
President Ugo Rossi
12 1,698 1,035 663 78 50  Russia
27 2015 Slovakia Štrbské PlesoOsrblie[b] 24 January – 1 February 2015
President Andrej Kiska
11 1,546 938 608 68 42  Russia
Spain Granada 4–14 February 2015
King Felipe VI
28 2017 Kazakhstan Almaty 29 January – 8 February 2017
President Nursultan Nazarbayev
12 1,620 984 636 85 57  Russia
29 2019 Russia Krasnoyarsk 2–12 March 2019
President Vladimir Putin
11 1,692 967 725 76 58  Russia
30 2021 Originally awarded to Switzerland Lucerne. Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
31 2023 United States Lake Placid 12–22 January 2023
Governor Kathy Hochul
12 1,417 824 593 85 46  Japan
32 2025 Italy Turin 13–23 January 2025
Minister Andrea Abodi
11 1,503 90 54  France
33 2027 China Changchun[10] 15–25 January 2027
TBA
12 TBA TBA TBA 95 TBA TBA
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  1. Originally scheduled for Maribor, Slovenia.
  2. Due to environmental problems in Granada, the Nordic skiing events were transferred to Slovakia.

Sports

Summer Games

Since the second edition held in 1961, it has been up to the Organizing Committee and the National University Sports Federation of the host country to choose sports or optional competitions. According to their demands, there is a list of mandatory sports that are defined by the International University Sports Federation and could be reviewed at the end of each edition. The event also serves as the World University Championship. At the first edition, only 8 sports were in the program (athletics, basketball, fencing, gymnastics, swimming, tennis, volleyball and water polo). The first sport to be considered optional was diving, which was added to the second edition in 1961. In addition, optional events were added in basketball and volleyball when women's tournaments were played. In 1963, the women's basketball was dropped from the sporting program. In 1967, the third World University Judo Championship was held in Tokyo and was integrated into the fifth edition of the Summer Universiade as an optional sport, thus gaining the status of an optional sport and thus inaugurating a new type of sport at the event, which is that of the optional sport. Therefore, the sport with this status is not part of the fixed program and could be in the current edition, but not necessarily in the next one.

Compulsory sports

Team sports
  1. Basketball at the Summer World University Games
  2. Volleyball at the Summer World University Games
  3. Water polo at the Summer World University Games
Individual sports
  1. Athletics at the Summer World University Games
  2. Swimming at the Summer World University Games: Swimming has been a compulsory event since the first edition in 1959. Open water events were held in 2011, 2013, 2015 and 2017.
  3. Diving at the Summer World University Games
  4. Gymnastics at the Summer World University Games (artistic and rhythmic): Artistic Gymnastics was an optional sport in 1961, turned compulsory in 1963. Rhythmic Gymnastics was an optional sport in 1991, 1995 and 1997, turned compulsory in 2001. An aerobics event was held as an optional event in 2011.
  5. Fencing at the Summer World University Games
  6. Tennis at the Summer World University Games
  7. Table tennis at the Summer World University Games – Compulsory since 2007. Optional sport in 2001.
  8. Judo at the Summer World University Games – Compulsory since 2007. Optional sport in 1967, 1985, 1995, 1999, 2001 and 2003.
  9. Taekwondo at the Summer World University Games – Compulsory since 2017. Optional sport in 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2011 and 2015.
  10. Archery at the Summer World University Games – Compulsory since 2019. Optional sport in 2003, 2005, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2015 and 2017.
  11. Badminton at the Summer World University Games – Compulsory since 2021. Optional sport in 2007, 2011, 2013, 2015 and 2017.

Optional sports

Team sports
  1. Baseball at the Summer World University Games – 4 times (1993, 1995, 2015, 2017, scheduled for 2029)
  2. Beach volleyball at the Summer World University Games – 3 times (2011, 2013, 2025, scheduled for 2027)
  3. Field hockey at the Summer World University Games – 2 times (1991, 2013)
  4. Rugby sevens at the Summer World University Games – 2 times (2013, 2019 and scheduled for 2029)
  5. Basketball at the Summer World University Games (3x3 basketball) – 1 time (2025)
  6. Handball at the Summer World University Games – 1 time (2015)
  7. Softball at the Summer World University Games – 1 time (2007, scheduled for 2029)
Individual sports
  1. Rowing at the Summer World University Games – 7 times (1987, 1989, 1993, 2013, 2015, 2021, 2025 and scheduled for 2027)
  2. Shooting at the Summer World University Games – 6 times (2007, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2019 and 2021)
  3. Wrestling at the Summer World University Games – 5 times (1973, 1977, 1981, 2005, 2013)
  4. Golf at the Summer World University Games – 4 times (2007, 2011, 2015, 2017 and scheduled for 2027)
  5. Sailing at the Summer World University Games – 4 times (1999, 2005, 2011, 2019)
  6. Weightlifting at the Summer World University Games – 3 times (2011, 2013, 2017)
  7. Canoeing at the Summer World University Games – 2 times (1987, 2013)
  8. Chess at the Summer World University Games – 2 times (2011, 2013)
  9. Cycling at the Summer World University Games – 2 times (1983, 2011)
  10. Wushu at the Summer World University Games – 2 times (2017, 2021)
  11. Belt wrestling at the Summer World University Games – 1 time (2013)
  12. Boxing at the Summer World University Games – 1 time (2013)
  13. Roller sports at the Summer World University Games – 1 time (2017)
  14. Sambo at the Summer World University Games – 1 time (2013)
  15. Synchronized swimming at the Summer World University Games – 1 time (2013)
Removed sports
  1. Football at the Summer World University Games – Obsolescent since 2019, after the creation of the FISU University World Cup Football. Optional sport in 1979, compulsory from 1985 to 2019.

Winter Games

Since 1960 until 1989, limited and fixed sports were held. Since the 1991 Winter Universiade the host is allowed to choose some sports that are approved by FISU as optional sports.

Compulsory sports

Team sports
  1. Curling at the Winter World University Games – Compulsory since 2007. Optional sport in 2003.
  2. Ice hockey at the Winter World University Games – Compulsory since 1966. Optional sport in 1962.
Individual sports
  1. Alpine skiing at the Winter World University Games
  2. Biathlon at the Winter World University Games – Compulsory since 1997. Optional sport in 1983, 1989, 1993, 1997 and 1999.
  3. Cross-country skiing at the Winter World University Games
  4. Figure skating at the Winter World University Games – Compulsory since 1981. Optional sport in 1960, 1962, 1964, 1966 and 1968.
  5. Freestyle skiing at the Winter World University Games – Compulsory since 2023. Optional sport in 2005, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2017 and 2019.
  6. Snowboarding at the Winter World University Games – Compulsory since 1999. Optional sport in 1995 and 1997.
  7. Ski-orienteering at the Winter World University Games – Compulsory since 2027. Optional sport in 2019, gained special status in 2025.
  8. Short track speed skating at the Winter World University Games – Compulsory since 1997. Optional sport in 1985, 1989, 1991, 1993 and 1995.

Optional sports

Team sports
  1. Bandy at the Winter World University Games – 1 time (2019)
Individual sports
  1. Nordic combined at the Winter World University Games – 27 times (1960–1970, 1978, 1981–2023). Compulsory sport from 1960 to 1970, and from 1981 to 2007; optional in 1972, 1978, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2017 and 2023.
  2. Ski jumping at the Winter World University Games – 25 times (1960–1972, 1978, 1981–2017). Compulsory sport from 1960 to 1970, and between 1981 and 2007; optional in 1972, 1978, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2017 and 2023.
  3. Ski mountaineering at the Winter World University Games – 2 times (2025, 2027)
  4. Skeleton at the Winter World University Games – 1 time (2005)
Special sport status
  1. Speed skating at the Winter World University Games – 12 times (1968–2023). Sport with special status (1968, 1970, 1972, 1991, 1997, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2017, 2023,2027).

Medals

Summer Games

More information Rank, NUSF ...
RankNUSFGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 China (CHN)5763743091,259
2 United States (USA)5404804481,468
3 Russia (RUS)4333644171,214
4 Japan (JPN)4123905041,306
5 Soviet Union (URS)*409337251997
6 South Korea (KOR)281228286795
7 Italy (ITA)224236301761
8 Ukraine (UKR)186191184561
9 Romania (ROU)149132150431
10 Hungary (HUN)121116129366
Totals (10 entries)3,3312,8482,9799,158
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Winter Games

More information Rank, NUSF ...
RankNUSFGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia (RUS)208189173570
2 South Korea (KOR)1279186304
3 Japan (JPN)122131112365
4 Soviet Union (URS)*1039870271
5 China (CHN)807079229
6 France (FRA)756476215
7 Italy (ITA)616772200
8 Poland (POL)606774201
9 Austria (AUT)565656168
10 Czechoslovakia (TCH)*525027129
Totals (10 entries)9448838252,652
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See also

References

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