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・ Henri Delaborde (painter)
・ Henri Delacroix
・ Henri Delannoy
・ Henri Delaunay
・ Henri Delavallée
・ Henri Delcellier
・ Henri Delmotte
・ Henri Deloge
・ Henri Deluy
・ Henri Dentz
・ Henri Depelchin
・ Henri Depireux
・ Henri Desbordes
・ Henri Descremps
・ Henri Desfontaines
Henri Desgrange
・ Henri Desmarets
・ Henri Desrivières
・ Henri Desroche
・ Henri Deterding
・ Henri Deutsch de la Meurthe
・ Henri Deverin
・ Henri Devillers
・ Henri Diamant-Berger
・ Henri Didon
・ Henri Dierickx
・ Henri Dikongué
・ Henri Ding
・ Henri Dirickx
・ Henri Disy


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Henri Desgrange : ウィキペディア英語版
Henri Desgrange


Henri Desgrange (31 January 1865, Paris – 16 August 1940) was a French bicycle racer and sports journalist. He set 12 world track cycling records, including the hour record of 35.325 kilometres on 11 May 1893. He was the first organiser of the Tour de France.
==Origins==
Henri Desgrange was one of two brothers, twins. Georges Desgrange was described as having "the air of a defrocked monk" and as "totally devoid of all ambition."〔Goddet, Jacques (1991) ''L'Équipée Belle'', Robert Laffont, France〕 The two were born into a comfortably prosperous middle-class family living in Paris.
Desgrange worked as a clerk at the Depeux-Dumesnil law office near the Place de Clichy in Paris and may have qualified as a lawyer.〔The first edition of ''L'Auto'' described Henri Desgrange as "a former advocate at the Court of Appeal.〕 Legend says he was fired from there either for cycling to work or for exposing the outline of his calves in tight socks as he did so.〔 Preferring a life in sport to life in law, he began a dedication to sport that lasted the rest of his life. Desgrange saw his first bicycle race in 1891 when he went to the finish of Bordeaux–Paris.〔 He began racing on the track but suffered by lacking a powerful acceleration. Endurance riding suited him better and he set the first recognised hour record when on 11 May 1893 he rode 35.325 km on the Buffalo velodrome in Paris.〔The previous 'hour record' had been set in 1876 when F. L. Dodds rode 26.508km on a penny-farthing. The Vélodrome Buffalo was near the Porte Maillot, at Neuilly-sue-Seine. It was built in 1893 and operated from 1895 by Tristan Bernard, the man who initiated the fashion of ringing a bell to denote the last lap. The track disappeared when it was used to build an aircraft factory in the first world war.〕 He also established records at 50 and 100 km and 100 miles and became a tricycle champion in 1893.〔Cited Truyers, Noël (1999); Henri Desgrange, De Eeclonaar, Belgium〕〔There had been previous records but these were the first to be ratified internationally.〕
He wrote a training book in 1894, ''La tête et les jambes'',〔''La tête et les jambes''(1894), L. Pochy, France, reprinted 1930, Henri Richard, France〕 in which he conducted a conversation with an unnamed younger rider thought to be his younger self. The book included the advice that an ambitious rider has no more need of a woman than an unwashed pair of socks. In 1894 he wrote another book, ''Alphonse Marcaux''.〔''Alphonse Marcaux'' (1899), L. Pochy, France〕
In 1897 he became director of the Parc des Princes velodrome and then in December 1903 of France's first permanent indoor track, the Vélodrome d'Hiver, near the Eiffel Tower.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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