History of Rowing Victoria Inc
- Introduction
- 1: Rowing in a young Victoria 1838-1859
- 2: Formation of the Association 1860-1875
- 3: Growth of the Sport 1876-1889
- 4: Years of great success 1890-1899
- 5: The rise of Australian Henley1900-1909
- 6: The War Years 1910-1919
- 7: Women's rowing and the modern era 1920-1929
- 8: The Depression Rebuild 1930-1939
- 9: War and rebuilding 1940-1949
- 10: Expansion years 1950-1959
- 11: The search for international success 1960-1969
- 12: Combining the Associations and lightweight success 1970-1979
- 13: The new national program 1980-1989
- 14: Golden years 1990-1999
- 15: Professionalism 2000-2009
- 16: Yet More Growth 2010-2019
- 17: Challenging Times 2020-2026
- 1: Life Membership and other important awards
- 2: Patrons and Presidents
- 3: Office Bearers
- 4: Clubs and their histories
- 5: The Oarsmen's Centotaph and WWI Roll of Honour
- 6: WWII Roll of Honour
- 7: Premierships
- 8: State Championships
- 9: Hall of Fame Inductees
- 10: Victorian Olympians
- 11: International representation
- 12: Intercolonial and Interstate Racing
- 13: School rowing
- 14: University rowing
- 15: Histories of Victorian Rowing
- 16: Annual Reports
11. International Representatives
This page is under construction
Olympic Games
The Victorian Olympic representatives can be found in appendix 10.
World Championships
There have been too many Victorian World Championship representatives to name on this page. However they are clearly identified on the following pages:
- 1962–Lucerne, Switzerland
- 1966–Bled, Yugoslavia
- 1970–St Catharines, Canada
- 1974– Lucerne, Switzerland
- 1975–Nottingham, UK
- 1976–Villach, Austria (Lightweights)
- 1977–Amsterdam, Netherlands
- 1978–Lake Karapiro, New Zealand
- 1978–Copenhagen, Denmark (Lightweights)
- 1979–Bled, Yugoslavia
- 1980–Hazewinkel, Belgium (Lightweights)
- 1981–Munich, Germany
- 1982–Lucerne, Switzerland
- 1983–Duisburg, Germany
- 1984–Montreal, Canada (Lightweights)
- 1985–Hazewinke,l Belgium
- 1986–Nottingham, UK
- 1987–Copenhagen, Denmark
- 1988–Milan, Italy (Lightweights)
- 1989–Bled, Yugoslavia
- 1990–Lake Barrington, Australia
- 1991–Vienna, Austria
- 1992–Montreal, Canada (Lightweights)
- 1993–Roudnice, Czech Republic
- 1994–Indianapolis, USA
- 1995–Tampere, Finland
- 1996–Strathclyde, Scotland (Non-Olympic events)
- 1997–Aiguebelette, France
- 1998–Cologne, Germany
- 1999–St Catharines, Canada
- 2000–Zagreb, Croatia (Non-Olympic events)
- 2001–Lucerne, Switzerland
- 2002–Seville, Spain
- 2003–Milan, Italy
- 2004–Banyoles, Spain (Non-Olympic events)
- 2005-Gifu, Japan
- 2006-Eton, UK
- 2007-Munich, Germany
- 2008- Linz Ottensheim, Austria (non-Olympic events)
- 2009 - Poznan, Poland
- 2010 - Lake Karapiro, New Zealand
- 2011 - Bled, Slovenia
- 2012 - Plovdiv, Bulgaria (non-Olympic events)
- 2013 - Chungju, Korea
- 2014 - Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- 2015 - Aiguebelette, France
- 2016 - Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Commonwealth Games
Victorian representative at the Commonwealth Games can be found at:
- 1930–Hamilton Canada 16-23 Aug
- 1938–Sydney Australia 5-12 Feb
- 1950–Auckland New Zealand 4-11 Feb
- 1954–Vancouver Canada 30 Jul - 7 Aug
- 1958–Cardiff Wales 18-26 Jul
- 1962–Perth Australia 21 Nov - 1 Dec
- 1986–Edinburgh Scotland 24 Jul - 2 Aug
World Under 23 Championships (including Nations Cup & Match des Seniors)
Victorian representative at these events can be found at:
- 1981—Essen, West Germany
- 1982—Vienna, Austria
- 1983—Turin, Italy
- 1984—Copenhagen, Denmark
- 1985—Banyoles, Spain
- 1987—Aigubelette, France
- 1990—Ottensheim, Austria
- 1992 - Strathclyde, Great Britain
- 1993 - Ioannina, Greece
- 1994—Paris, France
- 1995—Groningen, Holland
- 1996—Hazewinkel, Belgium
- 1997—Milan, Itlay
- 1998—Ioannina, Greece
- 1999—Hamburg, Germany
- 2000—Copenhagen, Denmark
- 2001—Linz, Austria
- 2002—Genoa, Italy
- 2003—Belgrade, Serbia
- 2004—Poznan, Poland
- 2005—Amsterdam, Netherlands
- 2006—Hazewinkel, Belgium
- 2007—Strathclyde, Great Britain
- 2008—Brandenburg, Germany
- 2009 - Racice, Czech Republic
- 2010 - Brest, Belarus
- 2011 - Amsterdam, Netherlands
- 2012 - Trakai Lithuania
- 2013 - Linz Austria
- 2014 - Varese Italy
- 2015 - Plovdiv Bulgaria
- 2016 - Rotterdam, Netherlands
World Junior Championships
Victorian representative at these Championships can be found at:
- 1970-1972 (no Australian representation)
- 1973—Nottingham
- 1974-1979 (no Australian representation)
- 1980—Hazewinkel
- 1981—Pantcharevo
- 1982—Piediluco
- 1983—Vichy
- 1984—Jonkoping
- 1985—Brandenburg
- 1986—Roudnice
- 1987—Cologne
- 1988—Milan
- 1989—Szeged
- 1990—Aiguebelette
- 1991—Banyoles
- 1992—Montreal
- 1993—Aarungen
- 1994—Munich
- 1995—Poznan
- 1996—Strathclyde
- 1997—Hazewinkel
- 1998—Ottensheim
- 1999—Plovdiv
- 2000—Zagreb
- 2001—Duisburg
- 2002—Trakai
- 2003—Athens
- 2004—Banyoles
- 2005—Brandenburg
- 2006—Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- 2007—Bejing, China
- 2008—Linz Ottensheim, Austria
- 2009—Brive-la-Gaillarde, France
- 2010—Racice, Czech Republic
- 2011—Eton, Great Britain
- 2012—Plovdiv, Bulgaria
- 2013 - Trakai, Lithuania
- 2014 - Hamburg, Germany
- 2015 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- 2016 - Rotterdam, The Netherlands