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  2. Figure skating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure_skating

    Figure Skating, H.E. Vandervell and T. Maxwell Witham (1869), the first book to refer to the sport of "figure skating". [198] Spuren auf dem Eise (Tracings on the Ice), 1881. Written by three members of the Vienna Skating Club, it described the Viennese style of skating and was the most extensive technical book about figure skating published up ...

  3. History of figure skating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_figure_skating

    In the ancient world, ice skating was a form of transportation; as figure skating historian James R. Hines put it, passage over frozen surfaces "was a necessity for survival during harsh winter months". [2] Lidwina's fall, a 1498 woodcut. The Prose Edda (c. 1220) included mentions of ice skating. [3]

  4. Bunny hop jump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunny_hop_jump

    The bunny hop is typically one of the first jumps learned by beginning figure skaters.It is a non-rotational jump performed while skating forward in a straight line. [1] The name and the jump date back to at least the 1930s.

  5. In figure skating community, grief of plane crash spans ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/figure-skating-community-grief-plane...

    The figure skating community in the United States is spread out across nearly 900 member, high school and collegiate clubs, according to U.S. Figure Skating. But in recent years, many of the sport ...

  6. Figure skating lifts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure_skating_lifts

    A pair lift and twist lift is required in the short program of pair skating; a well-balanced free skating program in pair skating must include lifts. The ISU defines dance lifts as "a movement in which one of the partners is elevated with active and/or passive assistance of the other partner to any permitted height, sustained there and set down ...

  7. Compulsory figures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compulsory_figures

    Sonja Morgenstern skates a compulsory figure.. Compulsory figures or school figures were formerly a segment of figure skating, and gave the sport its name.They are the "circular patterns which skaters trace on the ice to demonstrate skill in placing clean turns evenly on round circles". [1]

  8. Figure skating jumps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure_skating_jumps

    According to figure skating historian James R. Hines, jumping in figure skating is "relatively recent". [2] Jumps were viewed as "acrobatic tricks, not as a part of a skater's art" [ 7 ] and "had no place" [ 8 ] in the skating practices in England during the 19th century, although skaters experimented with jumps from the ice during the last 25 ...

  9. Moves in the field - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moves_in_the_field

    Similar concepts are called field moves in the United Kingdom and skating skills in Canada. Following the abolition of compulsory figures from international competition in 1990, figure skating federations in several countries developed these drills to teach the same elements as compulsory figures within a free skating format. [ 2 ]

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