Jean-Joseph Renaud Explained

Jean Joseph-Renaud
Birth Date:16 January 1873
Birth Place:Paris, France
Death Place:Paris, France
Sport:Fencing
Show-Medals:yes

Jean-Joseph Renaud (16 January 1873  - 7 December 1953) was a French épée and foil fencer.[1] He competed at the 1900 Summer Olympics.[2]

He was also a prolific journalist, author and playwright whose books La Défense dans la rue (Self Defence in the Street - 1912) and L'Escrime (Fencing - 1911) are recognised as an important contribution to early 20th century literature on those subjects. He was a proponent of the field of honor, saying: "From every point of view dueling is beneficent." He refereed many duels (including ones involving Clemenceau and Leon Blum) and fought at least 15 himself (being a fencing master, all but 4 were fought with pistols; he was victorious in all of them).

Notes

Afternoon in the Attic, by John Kobler, copyright 1943-1950

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jean-Joseph Renaud . Olympedia . 26 December 2020.
  2. Web site: Jean-Joseph Renaud Olympic Results . 1 April 2010 . sports-reference.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110909192143/http://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/re/jean-joseph-renaud-1.html . 9 September 2011.