Karl Schelenz Explained
Karl Schelenz (or Carl Schelenz, born 6 February 1890 in Berlin; died 7 February 1956) was a German sports teacher. He is famous as the "father" of modern handball.
Life
Schelenz worked as a sports teacher in Berlin and in Flensburg. As an author, he wrote books on the modern sport of handball. In 1917 he, Erich Konigh, and Max Heiser published the first modern set of rules for handball[1] on 29 October in Berlin, which is seen as the date of birth of the sport.[2] [3] Schelenz modified the rules in 1919.[1]
In 1916 and in 1917, he was the German champion in long jump.[4] He was third in the German championship in high jump. Schelenz was a member of the German sport team Berliner Turner-Verein von 1850 e. V. in Berlin.[5]
Best marks
1.80 m, on 27 June 1920 in Stettin and on 4 July 1921 in Berlin
7.23 m, on 24 July 1921 in Berlin
14.07 m, on 28 July 1921 in Hamburg
39.22 m, on 29 May 1921 in Cologne
Works by Schelenz
- Das Handballspiel: Bearb. f. Theorie u. Praxis 1922 Deutsche Sportbehörde für Leichtathletik, Munich (as Carl Schelenz)
- Deutschlands Olympiakämpfer 1928 in Wort u. Bild 1928 W. Limpert, Dresden (as Carl Schelenz) together with Karl Scharping
- Lehrbuch des Handballspiels: Technik ; Taktik 1943 Limpert, Berlin (as Karl Schelenz)
- Handball: Training und Leistung 1949 Antäus-Verlag, Lübeck (as Karl Schelenz)
External links
References
- Book: Laver, L. . Landreau . P. . Seil . R. . Popovic . N. . Handball Sports Medicine: Basic Science, Injury Management and Return to Sport . Springer Berlin Heidelberg . 2018 . 978-3-662-55892-8 . 2022-05-14 . 25.
- Web site: Pazen. Björn. 31 October 2017. Handball in Germany celebrates 100th anniversary. 5 March 2020. European Handball Federation. en.
- Web site: Handball: Will the winter fairytale last?. Nestler. Stefan. 24 January 2019. DW.com. en-GB. 5 March 2020.
- Web site: Leichtathletik - Deutsche Meisterschaften (Weitsprung - Herren). www.sport-komplett.de.
- Web site: Berliner Turner-Verein von 1850 e. V., :-> Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg, Berliner Bezirkslexikon von A-Z. berlingeschichte.de.