Origins of Bandy and Ice Hockey in Europe: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "This page features the dates of the first '''organized ice hockey and bandy games in Europe''': ==List== {| class="wikitable" |Country |First Bandy Game |First Hockey Game |- |Armenia |1949 |~1962 |- |Austria |1899 |1909 (1922)* |- |Belarus |~1932 |~1932 |- |Belgium |— |1900 |- |Bohemia |1895 |1909 |- |Bosnia & Herzegovina |— |1953 |- |Bulgaria |— |1932 |- |Croatia |1917 |1924 |- |Denmark |1895 |1929 |- |England |~1813/14 |1879 |- |Estonia |1913 |1934 |- |Finland...")
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 23:45, 23 June 2024

This page features the dates of the first organized ice hockey and bandy games in Europe:

List

Country First Bandy Game First Hockey Game
Armenia 1949 ~1962
Austria 1899 1909 (1922)*
Belarus ~1932 ~1932
Belgium 1900
Bohemia 1895 1909
Bosnia & Herzegovina 1953
Bulgaria 1932
Croatia 1917 1924
Denmark 1895 1929
England ~1813/14 1879
Estonia 1913 1934
Finland 1899 1927
France 1891 1894
Georgia ~1962
Germany 1897 1908
Hungary 1899 1924
Iceland 1941
Ireland 1982
Italy 1908
Latvia 1911 1909 (1930)**
Liechtenstein 1996
Lithuania 1923
Luxembourg 1969
Moldova 2007
Netherlands 1891 1929
North Macedonia ~1959
Norway 1903 1933
Poland 1901 1912
Portugal 1996
Romania 1925
Russia 1898 1932 (1946)***
Scotland 1895 1909
Serbia 1940
Slovakia 1902 1921
Slovenia 1932
Spain 1922
Sweden 1901 1920
Switzerland 1894 1902
Ukraine 1905 1925

Note: The dates on this list denote when the first formal game was played in each respective country. Informal activities, practices, and club formations that predated any games are not included.

* One ice hockey game was played in Austria in 1909, but hockey was not played there regularly until 1922.

** One ice hockey game was played in Latvia in 1909, but the sport was not played there regularly until 1930.

*** A German team visited Moscow and played three games against local teams in 1932. Hockey was not formally introduced in Russia until 1946.

By examining the chart, it can be seen that hockey with a puck had become the preferred style of play throughout western Europe by around 1910. Bandy remained at the forefront in the Baltics, Nordics, Austria, Hungary, and Russia until the 1920s and, in some cases, beyond. Russia was the last country to embrace ice hockey, only picking up the sport they soon came to dominate in 1946.