The Correspondence Chess Olympiad is a correspondence chess tournament in which teams from all over the world compete. International Correspondence Chess Federation organises the tournament.
width=13% | Event ! | width=15% | Gold ! | width=40% | Team ! | width=20% | Silver ! | width=20% | Bronze |
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1st (1949–1952)[1] | Janos Balogh, Gedeon Barcza, Miklós Szigeti/Jozsef Gonda, Lajos Monostori, Arpad Szücs and Dezsö Elekes. | Sweden | |||||||
2nd (1952–1955)[2] | |||||||||
3rd (1958–1961)[3] | |||||||||
4th (1962–1964)[4] | Sweden | ||||||||
5th (1965–1968)[5] | |||||||||
6th (1968–1972)[6] | |||||||||
7th (1972–1976)[7] | |||||||||
8th (1977–1982)[8] | |||||||||
9th (1982–1987)[9] | |||||||||
10th (1987–1995)[10] | Tõnu Õim, Vladimir Zagorovsky, Gennady Nesis, Aleksei Michailov, Grigory Sanakoev and Sergei Korolev | ||||||||
11th (1992–1999)[11] | CZE | Canada and | |||||||
12th (1998–2004)[12] | Latvia | ||||||||
13th (2004–2009)[13] | Poland | ||||||||
14th (2002–2006)[14] | United States | ||||||||
15th (2006–2009)[15] | Netherlands | ||||||||
16th (2010–2016)[16] | France | ||||||||
17th (2009–2012)[17] | Italy | ||||||||
18th (2012–2016)[18] | Spain |
width=2% | N° ! | width=8% | Years ! | width=15% | Gold ! | width=40% | Team ! | width=20% | Silver ! | width=20% | Bronze |
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1st[19] | 1974–1979 | ||||||||||
2nd[20] | 1980–1986 | Olga Rubtsova, Lora Yakovleva, Marta Litinskaya and Liudmila Belavenets | |||||||||
3rd[21] | 1986–1992 | Hungary | |||||||||
4th[22] | 1992–1997 | Poland | |||||||||
5th[23] | 1997–2003 | Czech Republic | |||||||||
6th[24] | 2003–2006 | Italy | |||||||||
7th[25] | 2007–2009 | Germany | |||||||||
8th[26] | 2008–2010 | Italy | |||||||||
9th[27] | 2011–2014 | Germany | |||||||||
10th[28] | 2015–2017 | ||||||||||