IIHF European Women Championships: Difference between revisions
m (1 revision) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
!width="90"|Country host | !width="90"|Country host | ||
|- align=center | |- align=center | ||
|align=left|[[1989 Women | |align=left|[[1989 IIHF European Women Championships|1989]] | ||
|{{ihw|FIN}} | |{{ihw|FIN}} | ||
|{{ihw|SWE}} | |{{ihw|SWE}} | ||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
|{{ihw|GER}} | |{{ihw|GER}} | ||
|- align=center | |- align=center | ||
|align=left|[[1991 Women | |align=left|[[1991 IIHF European Women Championships|1991]] | ||
|{{ihw|FIN}} | |{{ihw|FIN}} | ||
|{{ihw|SWE}} | |{{ihw|SWE}} | ||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
|{{ihw|TCH}} | |{{ihw|TCH}} | ||
|- align=center | |- align=center | ||
|align=left|[[1993 Women | |align=left|[[1993 IIHF European Women Championships|1993]] | ||
|{{ihw|FIN}} | |{{ihw|FIN}} | ||
|{{ihw|SWE}} | |{{ihw|SWE}} | ||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
|{{ihw|DEN}} | |{{ihw|DEN}} | ||
|- align=center | |- align=center | ||
|align=left|[[1995 Women | |align=left|[[1995 IIHF European Women Championships|1995]] | ||
|{{ihw|FIN}} | |{{ihw|FIN}} | ||
|{{ihw|SWE}} | |{{ihw|SWE}} | ||
Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
|{{ihw|LAT}} | |{{ihw|LAT}} | ||
|- align=center | |- align=center | ||
|align=left|[[1996 Women | |align=left|[[1996 IIHF European Women Championships|1996]] | ||
|{{ihw|SWE}} | |{{ihw|SWE}} | ||
|{{ihw|RUS}} | |{{ihw|RUS}} | ||
Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Latest revision as of 20:46, 2 December 2016
The IIHF European Women Championships is a former international competition of women's ice hockey between nations in Europe. The competition was organized by International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) and was played from 1989 at 1996 in years when there was no World Championship. In 1997, this competition ceased because every year there would be either an IIHF World Women's Championships or an Olympic tournament.
Championship
Medal table
year | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Country host |
---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | Finland | Sweden | Germany | Germany |
1991 | Finland | Sweden | Denmark | Czechoslovakia |
1993 | Finland | Sweden | Norway | Denmark |
1995 | Finland | Sweden | Switzerland | Latvia |
1996 | Sweden | Russia | Finland | Russia |
External links
- (French) Hockey Archives - Championnats d'Europe féminins 1989
- (French) Hockey Archives - Championnats d'Europe féminins 1991
- (French) Hockey Archives - Championnats d'Europe féminins 1993
- (French) Hockey Archives - Championnats d'Europe féminins 1995
- (French) Hockey Archives - Championnats d'Europe féminins 1996
See also
International Ice Hockey Federation |
---|
Ice Hockey World Championships - U20 - U18 - IIHF World Women's Championships - U18 Olympic Games - Champions Hockey League - Continental Cup - IIHF Asia and Oceania Championship - IIHF Development Cup (Women's) Victoria Cup - European Champions Cup - Super Cup - European Championships - European Women Championships - European Junior Championships - Asian Oceanic U18 Championships - European Women's Champions Cup - Pan American Ice Hockey Tournament IIHF Centennial All-Star Team - IIHF Hall of Fame - IIHF World Ranking (List) - List of IIHF members - International Ice Hockey Association - Paul Loicq Award - Torriani Award - Player of the Year (Female, Male) |
This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors). |