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French Grand Prix

The French Grand Prix (French: Grand Prix de France), formerly known as the Grand Prix de l'ACF (Automobile Club de France), is an auto race held as part of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile's annual Formula One World Championship. It is one of the oldest motor races in the world as well as the first "Grand Prix". It ceased, shortly after its centenary, in 2008 with 86 races having been held, due to unfavourable financial circumstances and venues. The race returned to the Formula One calendar in 2018 with Circuit Paul Ricard hosting the race.

French Grand Prix
Circuit Paul Ricard
(2018–2019, 2021–2022)
Race information
Number of times held90
First held1906
Last held2022
Most wins (drivers) Michael Schumacher (8)
Most wins (constructors) Ferrari (17)
Circuit length5.842 km (3.630 miles)
Race length309.690 km (192.432 miles)
Laps53
Last race (2022)
Pole position
Podium
Fastest lap

Unusually even for a race of such longevity, the location of the Grand Prix has moved frequently with 16 different venues having been used over its life, a number only eclipsed by the 23 venues used for the Australian Grand Prix since its 1928 start. It is also one of four races (along with the Belgian, Italian and Spanish Grands Prix) to have been held as part of the three distinct Grand Prix championships (the World Manufacturers' Championship in the late 1920s, the European Championship in the 1930s and the Formula One World Championship since 1950).

The Grand Prix de l'ACF was tremendously influential in the early years of Grand Prix racing, leading the establishment of the rules and regulations of racing as well as setting trends in the evolution of racing. The power of the original organiser, the Automobile Club de France, established France as the home of motor racing organisation.

History

Origins

France was one of the first countries to hold motor racing events of any kind. The first competitive motor race, the Paris to Rouen Horseless Carriages Contest was held on 22 July 1894, and was organized by the Automobile Club de France (ACF). The race was 126 km (78 mi) long and was won by Count Jules-Albert de Dion in his De Dion Bouton steam powered car in just under 7 hours. This race was followed by races starting in Paris to various towns and cities around France such as Bordeaux, Marseille, Lyon and Dieppe, and also to various other European cities such as Amsterdam, Berlin, Innsbruck and Vienna. The 1901 Paris-Berlin race was noteworthy as the race winner, Henri Fournier averaged an astonishing 57 mph (93 km/h) in his Mors, but there were details of other incidents. A competitor driving a 40H.P. Panhard suddenly found the road blocked by a tram in the village of Metternich, and he deliberately ran into the vehicle to avoid the crowd of spectators. The tram was knocked off the rails; the car was hardly damaged. And in Reims, a future location of many French Grands Prix, another competitor in a Mors hit and killed a child who wandered onto the road.

But these races, held on public dirt roads that were not all closed to the public came to a halt in 1903. The Paris-Madrid race, a 1,307 km (812 mi) long competition from the French capital to the Spanish capital held in May of that year had over 300 entrants. Some of the cars were doing 140 km/h (87 mph)- an astonishingly fast speed for the time- not even rail locomotives were capable of hitting these speeds. It was not known at the time how safe these races would be or how these cars- made mostly of wood would perform, and development of the car had improved significantly over 9 years. The race was a disaster, with 8 people killed and over 15 injured in multiple accidents- and all this happened before any of the competitors reached the Spanish border. Crowds of onlookers would stand right on the edge of the track, and children were wandering into the roads which became very dusty and visibility was limited at best. The most notable fatality of this race was one Marcel Renault, one of the 3 brothers who founded the Renault car company. When Renault reached the village of Payré just south of Grand Poitiers he lost control of his 16HP Renault in poor visibility caused by excess dust. The car went into a gutter and crashed into a tree, and Renault sustained a horrific wound in the side of his head and dislocated his shoulder. Fellow competitor Leon Théry stopped his Decauville in order to help Renault and his riding-mechanic Vauthier, still trapped in their car. No doctors were on hand, but Théry found one at the next village and sent him to the place of accident- the doctor rode a bicycle to get to the accident. The doctor conveyed Renault back to the nearest hospital in Grand Poitiers, where Renault succumbed to his injuries two days later, while Vauthier survived with minor injuries. Accidents continued throughout the day; cars hit trees and disintegrated, they overturned and caught fire, axles broke and inexperienced drivers crashed on the rough roads. The race was eventually called off by the French government and there was no declared winner. The cars were impounded by the French authorities, towed to the nearest rail stations by horses and transported back to Paris by train. The race created a political uproar in France, and a French magazine did their own investigation into the race. Speed, dust created by the cars, poor organization and lack of crowd control were to blame for these tragedies and even French Prime Minister Émile Combes was held partially responsible because he was the ultimate authority on allowing the race to proceed.

Other races were organized by American newspaper publisher James Gordon Bennett called the Gordon Bennett Cup, 4 of which were in France. 3 city-to-city races in 1900, 1901 and 1902, all starting in Paris were organized by Bennett and they attracted top racers from the United States and Western Europe. But after the 1903 Paris-Madrid race, the French government banned point-to-point car races on open public roads, so Bennett moved the 1903 race to Ireland on a closed circuit 2 months after Paris-Madrid, the first of its kind. This race was won by Belgian Camille Jenatzy in a Mercedes, who was one of the bravest and most fearless racing drivers of his time. The 1904 race was held in western Germany while the last Gordon Bennett Cup race was held in an 137 km (85 mi) circuit in Auvergne in south-central France. The race started in Clermont-Ferrand, and was run over 4 laps, and was won by Théry in a Brasier.

The world's oldest Grand Prix

Closed public road courses

 
Georges Boillot winning the 1912 French Grand Prix in Dieppe, France

The French Grand Prix, open to international competition was first run on 26 June 1906 under the auspices of the Automobile Club de France in Sarthe with a starting field of 32 automobiles. The Grand Prix name ("Great Prize") referred to the prize of 45,000 French francs to the race winner.[1] The franc was pegged to the gold at 0.290 grams per franc, which meant that the prize was worth 13 kg of gold, or US$210,700 adjusted for inflation. The earliest French Grands Prix were held on circuits consisting of public roads near towns through northern and central France, and they usually were held at different towns each year, such as Le Mans, Dieppe, Amiens, Lyon, Strasbourg, and Tours. Dieppe in particular was an extremely dangerous circuit – 9 people (5 drivers, 2 riding mechanics, and 2 spectators) in total were killed at the three French Grands Prix held at the 79 km (49-mile) circuit.

The 1906 race was the first ever national race named "Grand Prix" (the "Grand Prix" mention appears in 1901 as the Grand Prix du Sud-Ouest); other, later, international events in the 1900s and 1910s in Europe and the United States had their own names with the term "Prize" in them, such as Grand Prize in America or Kaiserpreis (English: Emperor's Prize) in Germany. The French Grand Prix race was run on a very fast 66-mile (106 km) one-off anti-clockwise closed public road circuit east of the small western French city of Le Mans, starting in the village of Saint-Mars-la-Briere. It then went down the Route D323 and turned a hard left onto Route D357 near the commune of Yvre-l-Eveque onto a 4-mile straight towards the village of La Butte, then down a 15-mile straight through Bouloire and then into a twisty section in Saint-Calais. The circuit then went north on Route D1 through Berfay and then entered a purpose-built twisty section made of wooden logging track in a forest before Vibraye and then went north again, entering a series of fast corners in and near Lamnay, and then turned west at La Ferte-Bernard. The circuit then went down Route D323 again and down multiple straights 3 to 6 miles long with a few fast corners at Sceaux-sur-Huisne and Conerre, before returning to the pits at Saint-Mars-la-Briere. Circuits in Europe that went through multiple rural towns like this one became ever more common on public road circuits in France and other European countries. Long straights also became a staple of circuits in France, particularly at future iterations of the relocated Sarthe circuit at Le Mans- a city that would host another race that would become a fixed staple in motor racing circles. The Hungarian Ferenc Szisz won this very long 12‑hour race on a Renault from Italian Felice Nazzaro in a Fiat, where laps on this circuit took just under an hour and the horse carriage road surface was made of dirt; even so this did not stop the fastest lap average speed being 73.37 mph (118.09 km/h)- an astonishingly fast speed for the time. The 1908 race saw Mercedes humiliating the French organizers and finishing 1-2-3 at the lethal circuit at Dieppe, where no less than 4 people were killed during the weekend. The 1913 race was won by Georges Boillot on a one-off 19-mile (31 km) circuit near Amiens in northern France. Amiens was another deadly circuit – it had a 7.1 mile straight and 5 people were killed during its use during pre-race testing and the race weekend itself.

The 1914 race, run on a 23‑mile circuit near Lyon is perhaps the most legendary and dramatic Grand Prix of the pre‑WWI racing era. This circuit, which was popular with drivers and spectators had a twisty and demanding section down to the town of Le Madeline and then an 8.3 mile straight interrupted by a hairpin which returned to the pits. This race was a hard-fought battle between the French Peugeots and the German Mercedes. Although the Peugeots were fast and Boillot ended up leading for 12 of the 20 laps after Max Sailer in a Mercedes unexpectedly dropped out with engine failure on Lap 6, the Dunlop tyres they used wore out badly compared to the Continentials that the Mercedes cars were using. Boillot's four-minute lead was wiped out by Christian Lautenschlager in a Mercedes while Boillot stopped an incredible eight times for tyres. Although Boillot drove very hard to try to catch Lautenschlager, he had to retire on the last lap due to engine failure, and for the second time in 6 years Mercedes finished 1–2–3; a humiliating result for the organizers and Peugeot.

Thanks to World War I and the amount of damage it did to France, the Grand Prix was not brought back until 1921, and that race was won by American Jimmy Murphy with a Duesenberg at the Sarthe circuit at Le Mans, which was the now legendary circuit's first year of operation. Bugatti made its debut at the 1922 race at an 8.3‑mile (13 km) off-public road circuit near Strasbourg near the French-German border – which was very close to Bugatti's headquarters in Molsheim. It rained, and the muddy circuit was in a dreadful condition. This race became a duel between Bugatti and Fiat – and Felice Nazzaro won in a Fiat, although his nephew and fellow competitor Biagio Nazzaro was killed after the axle on his Fiat broke, threw a wheel and hit a tree; the 32-year old and his riding mechanic both suffered fatal head injuries. The 1923 race at another one-off circuit near Tours featured another new Bugatti – the Type 32. This car was insultingly dubbed the "Tank", owing to its streamlined shape and very short wheelbase. This car was fast on the straights of this high-speed public road circuit – but it handled badly and was outpaced by Briton Henry Segrave in a supercharged Sunbeam, supercharging being a common feature of Grand Prix cars during this period. Segrave won the race, and the Sunbeam would be the last British car to win an official Grand Prix until Stirling Moss's victory with a Vanwall at the 1957 British Grand Prix. Segrave, a known teetotaler was given a glass of champagne after his victory, because apparently there wasn't any water available in the pits area. The 1924 race was held again at Lyon, but this time on a shortened 14‑mile variant of the circuit used in 1914. Two of the most successful Grand Prix cars of all time, the Bugatti Type 35 and the Alfa Romeo P2 both made their debuts at this race. The Bugattis, with their advanced alloy wheels suffered tyre failure, and Italian Giuseppe Campari won in his Alfa P2.

France's first permanent circuit and other public road circuits

 
Map of the French Grand Prix locations

In 1925, the first permanent autodrome in France was built, it was called Autodrome de Linas-Montlhéry, located 20 miles south of the centre of Paris. The 7.7‑mile (12.3 km) circuit included a 51‑degree concrete banking, an asphalt road course and then-modern facilities, including pit garages and grandstands. Purpose-built autodromes like Montlhéry were often built near the country's largest cities (with the exception of Indianapolis and the Nürburgring). After the construction of Brooklands near London in England in 1907, and Indianapolis in the United States in 1908 and after World War I, Monza near Milan in Italy was opened in 1922, and Stiges–Terramar near Barcelona in Spain was also opened in 1923. The French were then prompted to construct a purpose-built racing circuit at Montlhéry in the north and then Miramas in the south. The Nürburgring in western Germany followed in 1927, to complement eastern Germany's AVUS street circuit. Montlhery first held the Grand Prix de l'ACF in 1925 as part of the inaugural World Manufacturers' Championship, the first time Grands Prix were grouped together to form a championship. The circuit drew huge crowds and they were witnesses to the spectacular sight of fast cars racing on Montlhéry's steep banking and asphalt road course, which had many fast corners and long straights, and was located in a forest. The first race at Montlhéry was marred by the fatal accident of Antonio Ascari in an Alfa P2, when he crashed at a very fast left-hand kink returning to the oval portion. Miramas, a high-banked concrete oval track like Brooklands and part of Montlhéry was completed in 1926, and it played host to the Grand Prix that year. This race saw only three cars compete, all Bugattis, and was won by Frenchman Jules Goux, who had also won the Indianapolis 500 in 1913.

The 1927 race at Montlhéry was won by Frenchman Robert Benoist in a Delage. 1929 saw a brief return to Le Mans, which was won by William Grover-Williams in a Bugatti; this was the man who had won the first ever Monaco Grand Prix earlier in the year; Grover-Williams had also won the 1928 race in a Bugatti at the 17-mile (28 km) Saint-Gaudens circuit in the south, not far from Toulouse. The 1930 French Grand Prix, held at Pau back down in the south was one of the more memorable French Grands Prix of the pre-World War II period. This race, held in September on a one-off triangular 9.8‑mile (15.8 -km) public road circuit just a few kilometres away from the current Pau Grand Prix track saw a special supercharged version of the famous Bentley 4½ Litre called the Blower Bentley compete in the race with Briton and "Bentley Boy" Tim Birkin driving. The Bentley team had been dominating the 24 Hours of Le Mans, and this Blower Bentley had its headlights and mudguards removed, as these were not needed for this race, giving it the appearance of an open-wheel car. The Bentley, which was much larger and heavier than the small Bugattis around it performed well – at this very fast circuit which was made up of very long straights and tight hairpins actually suited the powerful Blower Bentley, and it enabled Birkin to pass the pits at 130  mph (208 km/h) (very fast for that time), and he overtook car after car – to the amazement of the crowd. But he finished second to Frenchman Philippe Étancelin in a Bugatti.

Montlhéry would also be part of the second Grand Prix championship era; the European Championship when it began in 1931. Other public road circuits also played host to French Grand Prix, such as the fast, straight and slow corner-dominated 4.8‑mile Reims-Gueux circuit in the Champagne wine region of Northern France 144 km (90 mi) east of Paris for 1932, where Italian legend Tazio Nuvolari won in an Alfa Romeo. But from 1933 to 1937 Montlhéry would become the sole host of the event. The 1934 French Grand Prix marked the return of Mercedes-Benz to Grand Prix racing after 20 years, with an all-new car, team, management, and drivers, headed by Alfred Neubauer. 1934 was the year where the German Silver Arrows debuted (an effort heavily funded by Hitler's Third Reich), with Auto Union having already debuted its powerful mid-engined Type–A car for a race at AVUS in Germany. Although the Monégasque driver Louis Chiron won in an Alfa, the Silver Arrows dominated the race. The high-tech German cars seemed to float over the rough concrete banking at Montlhéry where all the other cars seemed to be visibly affected by the concrete surface. Makeshift chicanes were placed at certain points on the high-speed circuit in an effort by the French to slow the very fast German cars down for the 1935 race, but this effort came to nothing as Mercedes superstar Rudolf Caracciola won that year's race.

Reims, Rouen and Charade

 
The Charade circuit, used in 1965, 1969, 1970 and 1972
 
The faster Reims circuit, used from 1953 to 1966
 
Rouen-Les-Essarts, used in 1952 (shortened), 1957, 1962, 1964 and 1968

The French Grand Prix returned to the Reims-Gueux circuit for 1938 and 1939, where the Silver Arrows continued their domination of Grand Prix racing. The Reims-Gueux circuit had its straights widened and facilities updated for the 1938 race. It was around this time that the French Grand Prix had some of its prestige transferred after 2 years of being a sportscar race- the Monaco Grand Prix had gained a huge amount of prestige and would become the premier French-related Grand Prix event, taking place in a tiny principality surrounded by France; but the French Grand Prix was still an important race now held traditionally on the first weekend of July. But when World War II began, the French Grand Prix did not come back until 1947, where it was held at the one-time Parilly circuit near Lyon, a race that was marred by an accident involving Pierre Levegh crashing into and killing 3 spectators. After that, Grand Prix racing returned to Reims-Gueux, where another manufacturer – Alfa Romeo – would dominate the event for 4 years. 1950 was the first year of the Formula One World Championship, but all the Formula One-regulated races were held in Europe. The race was won by Argentine Juan Manuel Fangio, who also won the next year's race – the longest Formula One race ever held in terms of distance covered, totalling 373 miles.

The prestigious French event was held for the first time at the Rouen-Les-Essarts circuit in 1952, where it would be held four more times over the next 16 years. Rouen was a very high speed circuit located in the northern part of the country, that was made up mostly of high speed bends. But the race returned to Reims in 1953, where the triangular circuit, which was originally made up of three long straights (with a few slight kinks) two tight 90 degree right hand corners and a very slow right hand hairpin had been modified to bypass the town of Gueux, making it slightly faster. Reims now had two straights (including the even longer back straight), three very fast bends and two very slow and tight hairpins. This race was a classic, with Fangio in a Maserati and Briton Mike Hawthorn in a Ferrari having a race-long battle for the lead, with Hawthorn taking the checkered flag. 1954 was another special event, and this marked Mercedes's return to top-flight road racing led by Alfred Neubauer, 20 years after their first return to Grand Prix racing – in France. After two wins for the works Maserati team that year at Buenos Aires and Spa, Fangio was now driving for Mercedes and he and teammate Karl Kling effectively dominated the race from start to finish with their advanced W196's. It was not a popular win – Mercedes, a German car manufacturer, had won on French soil – only 9 years after the German occupation of France had ended. The French Grand Prix was cancelled in 1955 because of the Le Mans disaster, and Mercedes withdrew from all racing at the end of that year. The race continued to be held at Reims in 1956, another spell at a lengthened Rouen-Les-Essarts in 1957 and back to Reims again from 1958 to 1961, 1963 and one last event in 1966 at this circuit, located where champagne is made. The 1956 race saw a one-off appearance by Bugatti- they entered a new mid-engined Grand Prix car (which was a novelty at the time, and only the second Grand Prix car ever to be designed this way after the 1930s Auto Unions) designed by renowned Italian engineer Colombo and driven by Maurice Trintignant, but the car was underpowered, overweight, and over-complicated, and it proved to be very difficult to drive; it retired early in the race. The 1958 race was marred by the fatal accident of Italian Luigi Musso, driving a works Ferrari, and it was also Fangio's last Formula One race. Hawthorn, who like many other F1 drivers at the time, held Fangio in very high regard; and was about to lap Fangio (driving in an outdated Maserati) on the last lap on the pit straight when he slowed down and let Fangio cross the line before him so the respected Argentine driver could complete the whole race distance. Hawthorn won, and Fangio finished fourth. 1961 saw the race being held in 100 °F (38 °C) weather, and the track broke up at the hairpins. The race came down to a slipstreaming battle between American Dan Gurney in a Porsche and Italian Giancarlo Baghetti in the sharknose Ferrari. Baghetti won the race- which astonishingly was his first ever championship Grand Prix by less than a car's length from Gurney.

Rouen-Les-Essarts hosted the event in 1962 and 1964, and Gurney won both these events, one in a Porsche and another in a Brabham. In 1965 the race was held at the 5.1 mile Charade Circuit in the hills surrounding Michelin's hometown of Clermont-Ferrand in central France. Unlike the long straights that made up Reims and the fast curves that made up Rouen, Charade was known as a mini-Nürburgring and was twisty, undulating and very demanding. The short Bugatti Circuit at Le Mans held the race in 1967, but the circuit was not liked by the Formula One circus, and it never returned. Rouen-Les-Essarts hosted the event in 1968, and it was a disastrous event; Frenchman Jo Schlesser crashed and was killed at the very fast Six Frères corner in his burning Honda, and Formula One did not return to the public-road circuit. Charade hosted two more events, and then Formula One moved to the newly built, modern Circuit Paul Ricard on the French riviera for 1971. Paul Ricard Circuit, located in Le Castellet, just outside Marseille and not far from Monaco, was a new type of modern facility, much like Montlhéry had been in the 1920s. It had run-off areas, a wide track and ample viewing areas for spectators. Charade hosted the event one last time in 1972; Formula One cars had become too fast for public road circuits; the circuit was littered with rocks and Austrian Helmut Marko was hit in the eye by a rock thrown up from Brazilian Emerson Fittipaldi's Lotus which ended his racing career.

Le Castellet and Dijon-Prenois

 
The Paul Ricard short circuit, used from 1986 to 1990
 
Dijon-Prenois, alternated with Le Castellet from 1974 to 1984 (the short track was used in 1974)

Formula One returned to Paul Ricard in 1973; the French Grand Prix was never run on public road circuits like Reims, Rouen and Charade ever again. Paul Ricard circuit also had a driving school, the École de Pilotage Winfield, run by the Knight brothers and Simon Delatour, that honed the talents of people such as France's first (and so far only) Formula One World Champion Alain Prost, and Grand Prix winners Didier Pironi and Jacques Laffite. The event was run at the new fast, up-and-down Prenois circuit near Dijon in 1974, before returning to Ricard in 1975 and 1976. The race was originally scheduled to be run at Clermont-Ferrand for 1974 and 1975, but the circuit was deemed too dangerous for Formula One. The two venues alternated the venue until 1984, with Ricard getting the race in even-numbered years and Dijon in odd-numbered years (except 1983). 1977 saw a new part of the Dijon circuit built called the "Parabolique". This was done to increase lap times which had been very nearly below a minute in 1974, and the race featured a battle between American Mario Andretti and Briton John Watson; Andretti came out on top to win. Lotus teammates Andretti and Swede Ronnie Peterson dominated the race in 1978 with their dominant 79s, a car that dominated the field in a way not seen since the dominating Alfa Romeo and domineering Ferrari in the early 1950s. The 1979 race was another classic, with the famous end-of-race duel for second place between Frenchman René Arnoux in a 1.5-liter turbocharged V6 Renault and Canadian Gilles Villeneuve in a 3-liter Flat-12 Ferrari. It is considered to be one of the all-time great duels in motorsports, with Arnoux and Villeneuve banging wheels and cars around the fast Dijon circuit before Villeneuve came out on top. The race was won by Arnoux's French teammate Jean-Pierre Jabouille, which was the first race ever won by a Formula One car with a turbo-charged engine. 1980 saw rookie Prost qualify his slower McLaren seventh and Australian Alan Jones beat French Ligier drivers Laffite and Pironi on their home soil, and the 1981 race was the first of 51 victories by future 4-time world champion Prost; driving a Renault, the French marque won the next three French Grands Prix. The 1982 event at Ricard was a memorable one for France – it was a turbo-charged engine/French walkover and 4 French drivers finished in the top 4 positions – each of them driving a car with a turbo-charged engine. Renault driver René Arnoux won from his teammate Prost and Ferrari drivers Pironi and Patrick Tambay finished 3rd and 4th. But this French triumph was internally sour: Arnoux violated an agreement that if he was in front of Prost, he would let him by because Prost was better placed in the championship. Much to the chagrin of Prost and the French Renault team's management Arnoux did not do this, despite the management holding out pit boards ordering him to let Prost past. Prost won the next year at the same place, beating out Nelson Piquet in a Brabham with a turbocharged BMW engine; Piquet had led the previous year's race but retired with engine failure.

Dijon was last used in 1984, and by then turbo-charged engines were almost ubiquitous, save the Tyrrell team who were still using the Cosworth V8 engine. The international motorsports governing body at the time, FISA, had instituted a policy of long-term contracts with only one circuit per Grand Prix. The choice was between Dijon and Ricard – the small Prenois circuit had cars lapping in the 1 minute 1 second range, and Ricard was the main testing facility for Formula One at the time. So it was Ricard that was chosen, and it hosted the race from 1985 to 1990. From 1986 onwards Formula One used a shortened version of the circuit, after Elio de Angelis's fatal crash at the fast Verriere bends. De Angelis was not injured by the crash, however his car caught fire and there were no marshals to help him as it was a test session, and he died of smoke inhalation in hospital the next day. These two fast corners and the whole top section of the circuit was not used for the last five races. Prost won the final three races there, the 1988 one being a particularly dramatic win; he overtook his teammate Ayrton Senna at the Curbe de Signes at the end of the ultra fast Mistral Straight and held onto the lead all the way to the finish, and the 1990 (by which time turbo-charged engines had been banned) event was led for more than 60 laps by Italian Ivan Capelli and Brazilian Maurício Gugelmin in underfunded, Adrian Newey designed Leyton-House cars – two cars that had failed to qualify at the previous event in Mexico. Prost, now driving for Ferrari after driving for McLaren from 1984 to 1989, made a late-race charge and passed Capelli to take the victory; Gugelmin had retired earlier.

Magny-Cours

 
The Magny-Cours circuit, used from 1991 to 2008

In 1991, the race moved to the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, where it stayed for another 17 years. Magny-Cours was the seventh venue to host the French Grand Prix as a part of the Formula One World Championship,[2] and the sixteenth in total.[3] The move to Magny-Cours was an attempt to stimulate the economy of the area, but many within Formula One complained about the remote nature of the circuit. Highlights of Magny-Cours's time hosting the French Grand Prix include Prost's final of six wins on home soil in 1993, and Michael Schumacher's securing of the 2002 championship after only 11 races. The 2004 and 2005 races were in doubt because of financial problems and the addition of new circuits to the Formula One calendar. These races went ahead as planned, but it still had an uncertain future.

In 2007 it was announced by the FFSA, the race promoter, that the 2008 French Grand Prix was put on an indefinite "pause". This suspension was due to the financial situation of the circuit, known to be disliked by many in F1 due to the circuit's location.[4] Then Bernie Ecclestone confirmed (at the time) that the 2007 French Grand Prix would be the last to be held at Magny-Cours.[5] This turned out not to be true, because funding for the 2008 race was found, and this race at Magny-Cours was the last French Grand Prix for 10 years.

Absence

After various negotiations, the future of the race at Magny-Cours took another turn, with increased speculation that the 2008 French Grand Prix would return, with Ecclestone himself stating "We're going to maybe resurrect it for a year, or something like that".[6] On 24 July, Ecclestone and the French Prime Minister met and agreed to possibly maintain the race at Magny Cours for 2008 and 2009.[7] The change in fortune was completed on July, when the FIA published the 2008 calendar with a 2008 French Grand Prix scheduled at Magny-Cours once again.[8] The 2009 race, however, was again cancelled on 15 October 2008, with the official website citing "economic reasons".[9] A huge makeover of Magny-Cours ("2.0") was planned,[10][11] but cancelled in the end. The race's promoter FFSA then started looking for an alternative host. There were five different proposals for a new circuit: in Rouen with 3 possible layouts (a street circuit, in the dock area, or a permanent circuit near the airport),[12][13] a street circuit located near Disneyland Resort Paris,[14][15] Versailles,[16][17] and in Sarcelles (Val de France),[18] but all were cancelled. A final location in Flins-Les Mureaux, near the Flins Renault Factory was being considered[19] however that was cancelled as well on 1 December 2009.[20] In 2010 and 2011, there was no French Grand Prix on the Formula 1 calendar, although the Circuit Paul Ricard candidated itself for 2012.[21]

10 French drivers have won the French Grand Prix; 7 before World War I and II and 3 during the Formula One championship. French driver Alain Prost won the race six times at three different circuits; however German driver Michael Schumacher has won eight times – the joint most anybody has ever won any Grand Prix (Lewis Hamilton has since won the British and Hungarian Grands Prix eight times). Monégasque driver Louis Chiron won it five times, and the Argentine driver Juan Manuel Fangio and British driver Nigel Mansell both won four times.

Return to Le Castellet

In December 2016, it was confirmed that the French Grand Prix would return in 2018 at the Circuit Paul Ricard and it currently holds a contract to host the French Grand Prix until at least 2022.[22][23][24] In an announcement to the nation on 13 April 2020, Emmanuel Macron, the French president, said that restrictions on public events as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic would continue until mid-July, putting the 2020 French Grand Prix, scheduled for 28 June, at risk of postponement.[25] The race was later cancelled with no intention to reschedule for the 2020 championship.[26] The race returned for the 2021 season.

The promoters of the French Grand Prix confirmed that the race will not be on the 2023 calendar, stating that they aim for a rotational race deal, sharing its slot with other Grands Prix.[27]

Winners of the French Grand Prix

Repeat winners (drivers)

Drivers in bold are competing in the Formula One championship in the current season.
A yellow background indicates an event which was part of the pre-war European Championship.
A green background indicates an event which was part of the pre-war World Manufacturers' Championship.
A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship or any of the above mentioned championships.

Wins Driver Years
8   Michael Schumacher 1994, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006
6   Alain Prost 1981, 1983, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1993
5   Louis Chiron 1931,[2] 1934, 1937, 1947, 1949
4   Juan Manuel Fangio 1950, 1951[3], 1954, 1957
  Nigel Mansell 1986, 1987, 1991, 1992
3   Jack Brabham 1960, 1966, 1967
  Jackie Stewart 1969, 1971, 1972
2   Georges Boillot 1912, 1913
  Christian Lautenschlager 1908, 1914
  Felice Nazzaro 1907, 1922
  Robert Benoist 1925, 1927
  William Grover-Williams 1928, 1929
  Giuseppe Campari 1924, 1933
  Jean-Pierre Wimille 1936, 1948
  Mike Hawthorn 1953, 1958
  Dan Gurney 1962, 1964
  Jim Clark 1963, 1965
  Ronnie Peterson 1973, 1974
  Niki Lauda 1975, 1984
  Mario Andretti 1977, 1978
  Lewis Hamilton 2018, 2019
  Max Verstappen 2021, 2022
Sources:[28][29]

^ Louis Chiron won the 1931 race, but shared the win with Achille Varzi.
^ Juan Manuel Fangio won the 1951 race, but shared the win with Luigi Fagioli.

Repeat winners (constructors)

Teams in bold are competing in the Formula One championship in the current season.
A yellow background indicates an event which was part of the pre-war European Championship.
A green background indicates an event which was part of the pre-war World Manufacturers' Championship.
A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship or any of the above mentioned championships.

Repeat winners (engine manufacturers)

Manufacturers in bold are competing in the Formula One championship in the current season.
A yellow background indicates an event which was part of the pre-war European Championship.
A green background indicates an event which was part of the pre-war World Manufacturers' Championship.
A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship or any of the above mentioned championships.

* Built by Cosworth, funded by Ford.
** Built by Ilmor in 2000, funded by Mercedes.

By year

 
The Magny-Cours circuit, used from 1992 to 2002
 
The Magny-Cours circuit, used in 1991
 
The Paul Ricard circuit, used from 1971 to 1985
 
The Le Mans Bugatti circuit used in 1967
 
The Lyon-Parilly circuit, used in 1947
 
The original Reims-Gueux circuit, used in 1932, 1938, 1939 and 1948 to 1951
 
The Montlhéry circuit, used from 1925 to 1937
 
The Le Mans road course, used in 1906

A yellow background indicates an event which was part of the pre-war European Championship.
A green background indicates an event which was part of the pre-war World Manufacturers' Championship.
A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship or any of the above mentioned championships.

Year Driver Constructor Location Report
1906   Ferenc Szisz Renault Le Mans Report
1907   Felice Nazzaro Fiat Dieppe Report
1908   Christian Lautenschlager Mercedes Report
1909

1911
Not held
1912   Georges Boillot Peugeot Dieppe Report
1913   Georges Boillot Peugeot Amiens Report
1914   Christian Lautenschlager Mercedes Lyon Report
1915

1920
Not held due to World War I
1921   Jimmy Murphy Duesenberg Le Mans Report
1922   Felice Nazzaro Fiat Strasbourg Report
1923   Henry Segrave Sunbeam Tours Report
1924   Giuseppe Campari Alfa Romeo Lyon Report
1925   Robert Benoist
  Albert Divo
Delage Montlhéry Report
1926   Jules Goux Bugatti Miramas Report
1927   Robert Benoist Delage Montlhéry Report
1928   William Grover-Williams Bugatti Saint-Gaudens Report
1929   William Grover-Williams Bugatti Le Mans Report
1930   Philippe Étancelin Bugatti Pau Report
1931   Louis Chiron
  Achille Varzi
Bugatti Montlhéry Report
1932   Tazio Nuvolari Alfa Romeo Reims Report
1933   Giuseppe Campari Maserati Montlhéry Report
1934   Louis Chiron Alfa Romeo Report
1935   Rudolf Caracciola Mercedes-Benz Report
1936   Jean-Pierre Wimille
  Raymond Sommer
Bugatti Report
1937   Louis Chiron Talbot Report
1938   Manfred von Brauchitsch Mercedes Reims Report
1939   Hermann Paul Müller Auto Union Report
1940

1946
Not held due to World War II
1947   Louis Chiron Talbot-Lago Lyon-Parilly Report
1948   Jean-Pierre Wimille Alfa Romeo Reims Report
1949[note 1]   Louis Chiron Talbot-Lago Report
  Charles Pozzi Delahaye Saint-Gaudens Report
1950   Juan Manuel Fangio Alfa Romeo Reims Report
1951   Luigi Fagioli
  Juan Manuel Fangio
Alfa Romeo Report
1952   Alberto Ascari Ferrari Rouen Report
1953   Mike Hawthorn Ferrari Reims Report
1954   Juan Manuel Fangio Mercedes Report
1955 Not held due to the 1955 Le Mans disaster
1956   Peter Collins Ferrari Reims Report
1957   Juan Manuel Fangio Maserati Rouen Report
1958   Mike Hawthorn Ferrari Reims Report
1959   Tony Brooks Ferrari Report
1960   Jack Brabham Cooper-Climax Report
1961   Giancarlo Baghetti Ferrari Report
1962   Dan Gurney Porsche Rouen Report
1963   Jim Clark Lotus-Climax Reims Report
1964   Dan Gurney Brabham-Climax Rouen Report
1965   Jim Clark Lotus-Climax Charade Report
1966   Jack Brabham Brabham-Repco Reims Report
1967   Jack Brabham Brabham-Repco Le Mans Report
1968   Jacky Ickx Ferrari Rouen Report
1969   Jackie Stewart Matra-Ford Charade Report
1970   Jochen Rindt Lotus-Ford Report
1971   Jackie Stewart Tyrrell-Ford Paul Ricard Report
1972   Jackie Stewart Tyrrell-Ford Charade Report
1973   Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford Paul Ricard Report
1974   Ronnie Peterson Lotus-Ford Dijon Report
1975   Niki Lauda Ferrari Paul Ricard Report
1976   James Hunt McLaren-Ford Report
1977   Mario Andretti Lotus-Ford Dijon Report
1978   Mario Andretti Lotus-Ford Paul Ricard Report
1979   Jean-Pierre Jabouille Renault Dijon Report
1980   Alan Jones Williams-Ford Paul Ricard Report
1981   Alain Prost Renault Dijon Report
1982   René Arnoux Renault Paul Ricard Report
1983   Alain Prost Renault Report
1984   Niki Lauda McLaren-TAG Dijon Report
1985   Nelson Piquet Brabham-BMW Paul Ricard Report
1986   Nigel Mansell Williams-Honda Report
1987   Nigel Mansell Williams-Honda Report
1988   Alain Prost McLaren-Honda Report
1989   Alain Prost McLaren-Honda Report
1990   Alain Prost Ferrari Report
1991   Nigel Mansell Williams-Renault Magny-Cours Report
1992   Nigel Mansell Williams-Renault Report
1993   Alain Prost Williams-Renault Report
1994   Michael Schumacher Benetton-Ford Report
1995   Michael Schumacher Benetton-Renault Report
1996   Damon Hill Williams-Renault Report
1997   Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report
1998   Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report
1999   Heinz-Harald Frentzen Jordan-Mugen-Honda Report
2000   David Coulthard McLaren-Mercedes Report
2001   Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report
2002   Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report
2003   Ralf Schumacher Williams-BMW Report
2004   Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report
2005   Fernando Alonso Renault Report
2006   Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report
2007   Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari Report
2008   Felipe Massa Ferrari Report
2009

2017
Not held
2018   Lewis Hamilton Mercedes Paul Ricard Report
2019   Lewis Hamilton Mercedes Report
2020 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic[30]
2021   Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing-Honda Paul Ricard Report
2022   Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing-RBPT Report
Sources:[28][29]
  1. ^ Two races which can be considered to be French Grand Prix were held in 1949. The race at Saint-Gaudens was organised by the ACF like all other French Grands Prix up to 1967, but was held for Sports Cars, whereas the race at Reims was organised as an alternative, and featured a much stronger grid.

Races sometimes considered to be French Grand Prix

Beginning in the early 1920s, French media represented eight races held in France before 1906 as being Grands Prix de l'Automobile Club de France, leading to the first French Grand Prix being known as the ninth Grand Prix de l'ACF. This was done to give the Grand Prix the appearance of being the world's oldest motor race.[31] The winners of these races, along with their original titles, are listed here.

References

  1. ^ Grand Prix century – The Telegraph, 10 June 2006
  2. ^ Smith, Damien (25 June 2018). "The 7 post‑war French Grand Prix venues". Goodwood Road & Racing Club. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  3. ^ "French Grand Prix: Adding To The History Of F1's Oldest Race". Pirelli. 15 June 2021. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  4. ^ ITV-F1.com 11 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine 2008 French Grand Prix "Pause"
  5. ^ ITV-F1.com 2 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Ecclestone Confirms Magny Cours Departure
  6. ^ ITV-F1.com 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Magny-Cours set for reprieve
  7. ^ BBC Sport Formula One hope for French Grand Prix
  8. ^ "FIA reveals 18-race calendar for 2008". formula1.com. 27 July 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2007.
  9. ^ "Grand Prix de France – Formule 1 : 28 juin 2009". Gpfrancef1.com. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  10. ^ "19 June 2008". Grandprix.com. 19 June 2008. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  11. ^ "automobilsport.comautomobilsport.com 20 June 2008". Automobilsport.com. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  12. ^ "20 June 2008". Motorlegend.com. 20 June 2008. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  13. ^ [1] grandprix.com 19 June 2008
  14. ^ . Asiaone.com. Archived from the original on 25 October 2011. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  15. ^ Noah Joseph (21 November 2008). "Disney Grand Prix plans shelved". Autoblog.com. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  16. ^ Versailles possible for French GP[permanent dead link]
  17. ^ "december 11 2007". Grandprix.com. 11 December 2007. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  18. ^ "Sarcelles bidding for a Grand Prix". Grandprix.com. 17 September 2008. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  19. ^ "More details emerge from Flins-Mureaux". GrandPrix.com. Inside F1, Inc. 16 March 2009. Retrieved 29 July 2010.
  20. ^ Noble, Jonathan (1 December 2009). "French GP plans suffer fresh blow". autosport.com. Haymarket Publications. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  21. ^ "Paul Ricard Confirme sa Candidature pour 2011". Autonewsinfo.com. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  22. ^ Billiotte, Julien (5 December 2016). . F1i.com (in French). Archived from the original on 7 December 2016. Retrieved 5 December 2016.
  23. ^ Benson, Andrew (5 December 2016). "French Grand Prix returns for 2018 after 10-year absence". BBC Sport. Retrieved 5 December 2016.
  24. ^ Balfour, Andrew (1 February 2019). "Race Facts - French Grand Prix". F1Destinations.com. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  25. ^ "Formula 1: French Grand Prix set to be postponed because of the coronavirus crisis". BBC Sport. 13 April 2020. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  26. ^ "Formula 1 plan to start season in Austria as French GP called off". BBC Sport. 27 April 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.
  27. ^ "French GP promoter aims for F1 return after 2023 on "rotation" deal". Racefans. 25 August 2022. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  28. ^ a b c d "French GP". ChicaneF1. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
    "ACF GP". ChicaneF1. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
  29. ^ a b c d Higham, Peter (1995). "French Grand Prix". The Guinness Guide to International Motor Racing. London, England: Motorbooks International. pp. 367–368. ISBN 978-0-7603-0152-4 – via Internet Archive.
  30. ^ de Menezes, Jack (27 April 2020). "French Grand Prix the 10th F1 race to be called off". The Independent. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
  31. ^ Hodges, David (1967). The French Grand Prix.
  32. ^ Diepraam, Mattijs; Muelas, Felix. "Grand Prix winners 1894–2019". Forix. Autosport. Retrieved 15 December 2020.

External links

  • [dead link]
  • Site officiel du Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours
  • Official Website of the French Grand Prix

french, grand, prix, this, article, about, formula, race, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, remov. This article is about the Formula One race For other uses see French Grand Prix disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources French Grand Prix news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The French Grand Prix French Grand Prix de France formerly known as the Grand Prix de l ACF Automobile Club de France is an auto race held as part of the Federation Internationale de l Automobile s annual Formula One World Championship It is one of the oldest motor races in the world as well as the first Grand Prix It ceased shortly after its centenary in 2008 with 86 races having been held due to unfavourable financial circumstances and venues The race returned to the Formula One calendar in 2018 with Circuit Paul Ricard hosting the race French Grand PrixCircuit Paul Ricard 2018 2019 2021 2022 Race informationNumber of times held90First held1906Last held2022Most wins drivers Michael Schumacher 8 Most wins constructors Ferrari 17 Circuit length5 842 km 3 630 miles Race length309 690 km 192 432 miles Laps53Last race 2022 Pole positionCharles LeclercFerrari1 30 872Podium1 M VerstappenRed Bull Racing RBPT1 30 02 112 2 L HamiltonMercedes 10 587 3 G RussellMercedes 16 495Fastest lapCarlos Sainz Jr Ferrari1 35 781Unusually even for a race of such longevity the location of the Grand Prix has moved frequently with 16 different venues having been used over its life a number only eclipsed by the 23 venues used for the Australian Grand Prix since its 1928 start It is also one of four races along with the Belgian Italian and Spanish Grands Prix to have been held as part of the three distinct Grand Prix championships the World Manufacturers Championship in the late 1920s the European Championship in the 1930s and the Formula One World Championship since 1950 The Grand Prix de l ACF was tremendously influential in the early years of Grand Prix racing leading the establishment of the rules and regulations of racing as well as setting trends in the evolution of racing The power of the original organiser the Automobile Club de France established France as the home of motor racing organisation Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 The world s oldest Grand Prix 1 2 1 Closed public road courses 1 2 2 France s first permanent circuit and other public road circuits 1 2 3 Reims Rouen and Charade 1 2 4 Le Castellet and Dijon Prenois 1 2 5 Magny Cours 1 3 Absence 1 4 Return to Le Castellet 2 Winners of the French Grand Prix 2 1 Repeat winners drivers 2 2 Repeat winners constructors 2 3 Repeat winners engine manufacturers 2 4 By year 2 5 Races sometimes considered to be French Grand Prix 3 References 4 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit France was one of the first countries to hold motor racing events of any kind The first competitive motor race the Paris to Rouen Horseless Carriages Contest was held on 22 July 1894 and was organized by the Automobile Club de France ACF The race was 126 km 78 mi long and was won by Count Jules Albert de Dion in his De Dion Bouton steam powered car in just under 7 hours This race was followed by races starting in Paris to various towns and cities around France such as Bordeaux Marseille Lyon and Dieppe and also to various other European cities such as Amsterdam Berlin Innsbruck and Vienna The 1901 Paris Berlin race was noteworthy as the race winner Henri Fournier averaged an astonishing 57 mph 93 km h in his Mors but there were details of other incidents A competitor driving a 40H P Panhard suddenly found the road blocked by a tram in the village of Metternich and he deliberately ran into the vehicle to avoid the crowd of spectators The tram was knocked off the rails the car was hardly damaged And in Reims a future location of many French Grands Prix another competitor in a Mors hit and killed a child who wandered onto the road But these races held on public dirt roads that were not all closed to the public came to a halt in 1903 The Paris Madrid race a 1 307 km 812 mi long competition from the French capital to the Spanish capital held in May of that year had over 300 entrants Some of the cars were doing 140 km h 87 mph an astonishingly fast speed for the time not even rail locomotives were capable of hitting these speeds It was not known at the time how safe these races would be or how these cars made mostly of wood would perform and development of the car had improved significantly over 9 years The race was a disaster with 8 people killed and over 15 injured in multiple accidents and all this happened before any of the competitors reached the Spanish border Crowds of onlookers would stand right on the edge of the track and children were wandering into the roads which became very dusty and visibility was limited at best The most notable fatality of this race was one Marcel Renault one of the 3 brothers who founded the Renault car company When Renault reached the village of Payre just south of Grand Poitiers he lost control of his 16HP Renault in poor visibility caused by excess dust The car went into a gutter and crashed into a tree and Renault sustained a horrific wound in the side of his head and dislocated his shoulder Fellow competitor Leon Thery stopped his Decauville in order to help Renault and his riding mechanic Vauthier still trapped in their car No doctors were on hand but Thery found one at the next village and sent him to the place of accident the doctor rode a bicycle to get to the accident The doctor conveyed Renault back to the nearest hospital in Grand Poitiers where Renault succumbed to his injuries two days later while Vauthier survived with minor injuries Accidents continued throughout the day cars hit trees and disintegrated they overturned and caught fire axles broke and inexperienced drivers crashed on the rough roads The race was eventually called off by the French government and there was no declared winner The cars were impounded by the French authorities towed to the nearest rail stations by horses and transported back to Paris by train The race created a political uproar in France and a French magazine did their own investigation into the race Speed dust created by the cars poor organization and lack of crowd control were to blame for these tragedies and even French Prime Minister Emile Combes was held partially responsible because he was the ultimate authority on allowing the race to proceed Other races were organized by American newspaper publisher James Gordon Bennett called the Gordon Bennett Cup 4 of which were in France 3 city to city races in 1900 1901 and 1902 all starting in Paris were organized by Bennett and they attracted top racers from the United States and Western Europe But after the 1903 Paris Madrid race the French government banned point to point car races on open public roads so Bennett moved the 1903 race to Ireland on a closed circuit 2 months after Paris Madrid the first of its kind This race was won by Belgian Camille Jenatzy in a Mercedes who was one of the bravest and most fearless racing drivers of his time The 1904 race was held in western Germany while the last Gordon Bennett Cup race was held in an 137 km 85 mi circuit in Auvergne in south central France The race started in Clermont Ferrand and was run over 4 laps and was won by Thery in a Brasier The world s oldest Grand Prix Edit Closed public road courses Edit Georges Boillot winning the 1912 French Grand Prix in Dieppe France The French Grand Prix open to international competition was first run on 26 June 1906 under the auspices of the Automobile Club de France in Sarthe with a starting field of 32 automobiles The Grand Prix name Great Prize referred to the prize of 45 000 French francs to the race winner 1 The franc was pegged to the gold at 0 290 grams per franc which meant that the prize was worth 13 kg of gold or US 210 700 adjusted for inflation The earliest French Grands Prix were held on circuits consisting of public roads near towns through northern and central France and they usually were held at different towns each year such as Le Mans Dieppe Amiens Lyon Strasbourg and Tours Dieppe in particular was an extremely dangerous circuit 9 people 5 drivers 2 riding mechanics and 2 spectators in total were killed at the three French Grands Prix held at the 79 km 49 mile circuit The 1906 race was the first ever national race named Grand Prix the Grand Prix mention appears in 1901 as the Grand Prix du Sud Ouest other later international events in the 1900s and 1910s in Europe and the United States had their own names with the term Prize in them such as Grand Prize in America or Kaiserpreis English Emperor s Prize in Germany The French Grand Prix race was run on a very fast 66 mile 106 km one off anti clockwise closed public road circuit east of the small western French city of Le Mans starting in the village of Saint Mars la Briere It then went down the Route D323 and turned a hard left onto Route D357 near the commune of Yvre l Eveque onto a 4 mile straight towards the village of La Butte then down a 15 mile straight through Bouloire and then into a twisty section in Saint Calais The circuit then went north on Route D1 through Berfay and then entered a purpose built twisty section made of wooden logging track in a forest before Vibraye and then went north again entering a series of fast corners in and near Lamnay and then turned west at La Ferte Bernard The circuit then went down Route D323 again and down multiple straights 3 to 6 miles long with a few fast corners at Sceaux sur Huisne and Conerre before returning to the pits at Saint Mars la Briere Circuits in Europe that went through multiple rural towns like this one became ever more common on public road circuits in France and other European countries Long straights also became a staple of circuits in France particularly at future iterations of the relocated Sarthe circuit at Le Mans a city that would host another race that would become a fixed staple in motor racing circles The Hungarian Ferenc Szisz won this very long 12 hour race on a Renault from Italian Felice Nazzaro in a Fiat where laps on this circuit took just under an hour and the horse carriage road surface was made of dirt even so this did not stop the fastest lap average speed being 73 37 mph 118 09 km h an astonishingly fast speed for the time The 1908 race saw Mercedes humiliating the French organizers and finishing 1 2 3 at the lethal circuit at Dieppe where no less than 4 people were killed during the weekend The 1913 race was won by Georges Boillot on a one off 19 mile 31 km circuit near Amiens in northern France Amiens was another deadly circuit it had a 7 1 mile straight and 5 people were killed during its use during pre race testing and the race weekend itself The 1914 race run on a 23 mile circuit near Lyon is perhaps the most legendary and dramatic Grand Prix of the pre WWI racing era This circuit which was popular with drivers and spectators had a twisty and demanding section down to the town of Le Madeline and then an 8 3 mile straight interrupted by a hairpin which returned to the pits This race was a hard fought battle between the French Peugeots and the German Mercedes Although the Peugeots were fast and Boillot ended up leading for 12 of the 20 laps after Max Sailer in a Mercedes unexpectedly dropped out with engine failure on Lap 6 the Dunlop tyres they used wore out badly compared to the Continentials that the Mercedes cars were using Boillot s four minute lead was wiped out by Christian Lautenschlager in a Mercedes while Boillot stopped an incredible eight times for tyres Although Boillot drove very hard to try to catch Lautenschlager he had to retire on the last lap due to engine failure and for the second time in 6 years Mercedes finished 1 2 3 a humiliating result for the organizers and Peugeot Thanks to World War I and the amount of damage it did to France the Grand Prix was not brought back until 1921 and that race was won by American Jimmy Murphy with a Duesenberg at the Sarthe circuit at Le Mans which was the now legendary circuit s first year of operation Bugatti made its debut at the 1922 race at an 8 3 mile 13 km off public road circuit near Strasbourg near the French German border which was very close to Bugatti s headquarters in Molsheim It rained and the muddy circuit was in a dreadful condition This race became a duel between Bugatti and Fiat and Felice Nazzaro won in a Fiat although his nephew and fellow competitor Biagio Nazzaro was killed after the axle on his Fiat broke threw a wheel and hit a tree the 32 year old and his riding mechanic both suffered fatal head injuries The 1923 race at another one off circuit near Tours featured another new Bugatti the Type 32 This car was insultingly dubbed the Tank owing to its streamlined shape and very short wheelbase This car was fast on the straights of this high speed public road circuit but it handled badly and was outpaced by Briton Henry Segrave in a supercharged Sunbeam supercharging being a common feature of Grand Prix cars during this period Segrave won the race and the Sunbeam would be the last British car to win an official Grand Prix until Stirling Moss s victory with a Vanwall at the 1957 British Grand Prix Segrave a known teetotaler was given a glass of champagne after his victory because apparently there wasn t any water available in the pits area The 1924 race was held again at Lyon but this time on a shortened 14 mile variant of the circuit used in 1914 Two of the most successful Grand Prix cars of all time the Bugatti Type 35 and the Alfa Romeo P2 both made their debuts at this race The Bugattis with their advanced alloy wheels suffered tyre failure and Italian Giuseppe Campari won in his Alfa P2 France s first permanent circuit and other public road circuits Edit Map of the French Grand Prix locations In 1925 the first permanent autodrome in France was built it was called Autodrome de Linas Montlhery located 20 miles south of the centre of Paris The 7 7 mile 12 3 km circuit included a 51 degree concrete banking an asphalt road course and then modern facilities including pit garages and grandstands Purpose built autodromes like Montlhery were often built near the country s largest cities with the exception of Indianapolis and the Nurburgring After the construction of Brooklands near London in England in 1907 and Indianapolis in the United States in 1908 and after World War I Monza near Milan in Italy was opened in 1922 and Stiges Terramar near Barcelona in Spain was also opened in 1923 The French were then prompted to construct a purpose built racing circuit at Montlhery in the north and then Miramas in the south The Nurburgring in western Germany followed in 1927 to complement eastern Germany s AVUS street circuit Montlhery first held the Grand Prix de l ACF in 1925 as part of the inaugural World Manufacturers Championship the first time Grands Prix were grouped together to form a championship The circuit drew huge crowds and they were witnesses to the spectacular sight of fast cars racing on Montlhery s steep banking and asphalt road course which had many fast corners and long straights and was located in a forest The first race at Montlhery was marred by the fatal accident of Antonio Ascari in an Alfa P2 when he crashed at a very fast left hand kink returning to the oval portion Miramas a high banked concrete oval track like Brooklands and part of Montlhery was completed in 1926 and it played host to the Grand Prix that year This race saw only three cars compete all Bugattis and was won by Frenchman Jules Goux who had also won the Indianapolis 500 in 1913 The 1927 race at Montlhery was won by Frenchman Robert Benoist in a Delage 1929 saw a brief return to Le Mans which was won by William Grover Williams in a Bugatti this was the man who had won the first ever Monaco Grand Prix earlier in the year Grover Williams had also won the 1928 race in a Bugatti at the 17 mile 28 km Saint Gaudens circuit in the south not far from Toulouse The 1930 French Grand Prix held at Pau back down in the south was one of the more memorable French Grands Prix of the pre World War II period This race held in September on a one off triangular 9 8 mile 15 8 km public road circuit just a few kilometres away from the current Pau Grand Prix track saw a special supercharged version of the famous Bentley 4 Litre called the Blower Bentley compete in the race with Briton and Bentley Boy Tim Birkin driving The Bentley team had been dominating the 24 Hours of Le Mans and this Blower Bentley had its headlights and mudguards removed as these were not needed for this race giving it the appearance of an open wheel car The Bentley which was much larger and heavier than the small Bugattis around it performed well at this very fast circuit which was made up of very long straights and tight hairpins actually suited the powerful Blower Bentley and it enabled Birkin to pass the pits at 130 mph 208 km h very fast for that time and he overtook car after car to the amazement of the crowd But he finished second to Frenchman Philippe Etancelin in a Bugatti Montlhery would also be part of the second Grand Prix championship era the European Championship when it began in 1931 Other public road circuits also played host to French Grand Prix such as the fast straight and slow corner dominated 4 8 mile Reims Gueux circuit in the Champagne wine region of Northern France 144 km 90 mi east of Paris for 1932 where Italian legend Tazio Nuvolari won in an Alfa Romeo But from 1933 to 1937 Montlhery would become the sole host of the event The 1934 French Grand Prix marked the return of Mercedes Benz to Grand Prix racing after 20 years with an all new car team management and drivers headed by Alfred Neubauer 1934 was the year where the German Silver Arrows debuted an effort heavily funded by Hitler s Third Reich with Auto Union having already debuted its powerful mid engined Type A car for a race at AVUS in Germany Although the Monegasque driver Louis Chiron won in an Alfa the Silver Arrows dominated the race The high tech German cars seemed to float over the rough concrete banking at Montlhery where all the other cars seemed to be visibly affected by the concrete surface Makeshift chicanes were placed at certain points on the high speed circuit in an effort by the French to slow the very fast German cars down for the 1935 race but this effort came to nothing as Mercedes superstar Rudolf Caracciola won that year s race Reims Rouen and Charade Edit The Charade circuit used in 1965 1969 1970 and 1972 The faster Reims circuit used from 1953 to 1966 Rouen Les Essarts used in 1952 shortened 1957 1962 1964 and 1968 The French Grand Prix returned to the Reims Gueux circuit for 1938 and 1939 where the Silver Arrows continued their domination of Grand Prix racing The Reims Gueux circuit had its straights widened and facilities updated for the 1938 race It was around this time that the French Grand Prix had some of its prestige transferred after 2 years of being a sportscar race the Monaco Grand Prix had gained a huge amount of prestige and would become the premier French related Grand Prix event taking place in a tiny principality surrounded by France but the French Grand Prix was still an important race now held traditionally on the first weekend of July But when World War II began the French Grand Prix did not come back until 1947 where it was held at the one time Parilly circuit near Lyon a race that was marred by an accident involving Pierre Levegh crashing into and killing 3 spectators After that Grand Prix racing returned to Reims Gueux where another manufacturer Alfa Romeo would dominate the event for 4 years 1950 was the first year of the Formula One World Championship but all the Formula One regulated races were held in Europe The race was won by Argentine Juan Manuel Fangio who also won the next year s race the longest Formula One race ever held in terms of distance covered totalling 373 miles The prestigious French event was held for the first time at the Rouen Les Essarts circuit in 1952 where it would be held four more times over the next 16 years Rouen was a very high speed circuit located in the northern part of the country that was made up mostly of high speed bends But the race returned to Reims in 1953 where the triangular circuit which was originally made up of three long straights with a few slight kinks two tight 90 degree right hand corners and a very slow right hand hairpin had been modified to bypass the town of Gueux making it slightly faster Reims now had two straights including the even longer back straight three very fast bends and two very slow and tight hairpins This race was a classic with Fangio in a Maserati and Briton Mike Hawthorn in a Ferrari having a race long battle for the lead with Hawthorn taking the checkered flag 1954 was another special event and this marked Mercedes s return to top flight road racing led by Alfred Neubauer 20 years after their first return to Grand Prix racing in France After two wins for the works Maserati team that year at Buenos Aires and Spa Fangio was now driving for Mercedes and he and teammate Karl Kling effectively dominated the race from start to finish with their advanced W196 s It was not a popular win Mercedes a German car manufacturer had won on French soil only 9 years after the German occupation of France had ended The French Grand Prix was cancelled in 1955 because of the Le Mans disaster and Mercedes withdrew from all racing at the end of that year The race continued to be held at Reims in 1956 another spell at a lengthened Rouen Les Essarts in 1957 and back to Reims again from 1958 to 1961 1963 and one last event in 1966 at this circuit located where champagne is made The 1956 race saw a one off appearance by Bugatti they entered a new mid engined Grand Prix car which was a novelty at the time and only the second Grand Prix car ever to be designed this way after the 1930s Auto Unions designed by renowned Italian engineer Colombo and driven by Maurice Trintignant but the car was underpowered overweight and over complicated and it proved to be very difficult to drive it retired early in the race The 1958 race was marred by the fatal accident of Italian Luigi Musso driving a works Ferrari and it was also Fangio s last Formula One race Hawthorn who like many other F1 drivers at the time held Fangio in very high regard and was about to lap Fangio driving in an outdated Maserati on the last lap on the pit straight when he slowed down and let Fangio cross the line before him so the respected Argentine driver could complete the whole race distance Hawthorn won and Fangio finished fourth 1961 saw the race being held in 100 F 38 C weather and the track broke up at the hairpins The race came down to a slipstreaming battle between American Dan Gurney in a Porsche and Italian Giancarlo Baghetti in the sharknose Ferrari Baghetti won the race which astonishingly was his first ever championship Grand Prix by less than a car s length from Gurney Rouen Les Essarts hosted the event in 1962 and 1964 and Gurney won both these events one in a Porsche and another in a Brabham In 1965 the race was held at the 5 1 mile Charade Circuit in the hills surrounding Michelin s hometown of Clermont Ferrand in central France Unlike the long straights that made up Reims and the fast curves that made up Rouen Charade was known as a mini Nurburgring and was twisty undulating and very demanding The short Bugatti Circuit at Le Mans held the race in 1967 but the circuit was not liked by the Formula One circus and it never returned Rouen Les Essarts hosted the event in 1968 and it was a disastrous event Frenchman Jo Schlesser crashed and was killed at the very fast Six Freres corner in his burning Honda and Formula One did not return to the public road circuit Charade hosted two more events and then Formula One moved to the newly built modern Circuit Paul Ricard on the French riviera for 1971 Paul Ricard Circuit located in Le Castellet just outside Marseille and not far from Monaco was a new type of modern facility much like Montlhery had been in the 1920s It had run off areas a wide track and ample viewing areas for spectators Charade hosted the event one last time in 1972 Formula One cars had become too fast for public road circuits the circuit was littered with rocks and Austrian Helmut Marko was hit in the eye by a rock thrown up from Brazilian Emerson Fittipaldi s Lotus which ended his racing career Le Castellet and Dijon Prenois Edit The Paul Ricard short circuit used from 1986 to 1990 Dijon Prenois alternated with Le Castellet from 1974 to 1984 the short track was used in 1974 Formula One returned to Paul Ricard in 1973 the French Grand Prix was never run on public road circuits like Reims Rouen and Charade ever again Paul Ricard circuit also had a driving school the Ecole de Pilotage Winfield run by the Knight brothers and Simon Delatour that honed the talents of people such as France s first and so far only Formula One World Champion Alain Prost and Grand Prix winners Didier Pironi and Jacques Laffite The event was run at the new fast up and down Prenois circuit near Dijon in 1974 before returning to Ricard in 1975 and 1976 The race was originally scheduled to be run at Clermont Ferrand for 1974 and 1975 but the circuit was deemed too dangerous for Formula One The two venues alternated the venue until 1984 with Ricard getting the race in even numbered years and Dijon in odd numbered years except 1983 1977 saw a new part of the Dijon circuit built called the Parabolique This was done to increase lap times which had been very nearly below a minute in 1974 and the race featured a battle between American Mario Andretti and Briton John Watson Andretti came out on top to win Lotus teammates Andretti and Swede Ronnie Peterson dominated the race in 1978 with their dominant 79s a car that dominated the field in a way not seen since the dominating Alfa Romeo and domineering Ferrari in the early 1950s The 1979 race was another classic with the famous end of race duel for second place between Frenchman Rene Arnoux in a 1 5 liter turbocharged V6 Renault and Canadian Gilles Villeneuve in a 3 liter Flat 12 Ferrari It is considered to be one of the all time great duels in motorsports with Arnoux and Villeneuve banging wheels and cars around the fast Dijon circuit before Villeneuve came out on top The race was won by Arnoux s French teammate Jean Pierre Jabouille which was the first race ever won by a Formula One car with a turbo charged engine 1980 saw rookie Prost qualify his slower McLaren seventh and Australian Alan Jones beat French Ligier drivers Laffite and Pironi on their home soil and the 1981 race was the first of 51 victories by future 4 time world champion Prost driving a Renault the French marque won the next three French Grands Prix The 1982 event at Ricard was a memorable one for France it was a turbo charged engine French walkover and 4 French drivers finished in the top 4 positions each of them driving a car with a turbo charged engine Renault driver Rene Arnoux won from his teammate Prost and Ferrari drivers Pironi and Patrick Tambay finished 3rd and 4th But this French triumph was internally sour Arnoux violated an agreement that if he was in front of Prost he would let him by because Prost was better placed in the championship Much to the chagrin of Prost and the French Renault team s management Arnoux did not do this despite the management holding out pit boards ordering him to let Prost past Prost won the next year at the same place beating out Nelson Piquet in a Brabham with a turbocharged BMW engine Piquet had led the previous year s race but retired with engine failure Dijon was last used in 1984 and by then turbo charged engines were almost ubiquitous save the Tyrrell team who were still using the Cosworth V8 engine The international motorsports governing body at the time FISA had instituted a policy of long term contracts with only one circuit per Grand Prix The choice was between Dijon and Ricard the small Prenois circuit had cars lapping in the 1 minute 1 second range and Ricard was the main testing facility for Formula One at the time So it was Ricard that was chosen and it hosted the race from 1985 to 1990 From 1986 onwards Formula One used a shortened version of the circuit after Elio de Angelis s fatal crash at the fast Verriere bends De Angelis was not injured by the crash however his car caught fire and there were no marshals to help him as it was a test session and he died of smoke inhalation in hospital the next day These two fast corners and the whole top section of the circuit was not used for the last five races Prost won the final three races there the 1988 one being a particularly dramatic win he overtook his teammate Ayrton Senna at the Curbe de Signes at the end of the ultra fast Mistral Straight and held onto the lead all the way to the finish and the 1990 by which time turbo charged engines had been banned event was led for more than 60 laps by Italian Ivan Capelli and Brazilian Mauricio Gugelmin in underfunded Adrian Newey designed Leyton House cars two cars that had failed to qualify at the previous event in Mexico Prost now driving for Ferrari after driving for McLaren from 1984 to 1989 made a late race charge and passed Capelli to take the victory Gugelmin had retired earlier Magny Cours Edit The Magny Cours circuit used from 1991 to 2008 In 1991 the race moved to the Circuit de Nevers Magny Cours where it stayed for another 17 years Magny Cours was the seventh venue to host the French Grand Prix as a part of the Formula One World Championship 2 and the sixteenth in total 3 The move to Magny Cours was an attempt to stimulate the economy of the area but many within Formula One complained about the remote nature of the circuit Highlights of Magny Cours s time hosting the French Grand Prix include Prost s final of six wins on home soil in 1993 and Michael Schumacher s securing of the 2002 championship after only 11 races The 2004 and 2005 races were in doubt because of financial problems and the addition of new circuits to the Formula One calendar These races went ahead as planned but it still had an uncertain future In 2007 it was announced by the FFSA the race promoter that the 2008 French Grand Prix was put on an indefinite pause This suspension was due to the financial situation of the circuit known to be disliked by many in F1 due to the circuit s location 4 Then Bernie Ecclestone confirmed at the time that the 2007 French Grand Prix would be the last to be held at Magny Cours 5 This turned out not to be true because funding for the 2008 race was found and this race at Magny Cours was the last French Grand Prix for 10 years Absence Edit After various negotiations the future of the race at Magny Cours took another turn with increased speculation that the 2008 French Grand Prix would return with Ecclestone himself stating We re going to maybe resurrect it for a year or something like that 6 On 24 July Ecclestone and the French Prime Minister met and agreed to possibly maintain the race at Magny Cours for 2008 and 2009 7 The change in fortune was completed on July when the FIA published the 2008 calendar with a 2008 French Grand Prix scheduled at Magny Cours once again 8 The 2009 race however was again cancelled on 15 October 2008 with the official website citing economic reasons 9 A huge makeover of Magny Cours 2 0 was planned 10 11 but cancelled in the end The race s promoter FFSA then started looking for an alternative host There were five different proposals for a new circuit in Rouen with 3 possible layouts a street circuit in the dock area or a permanent circuit near the airport 12 13 a street circuit located near Disneyland Resort Paris 14 15 Versailles 16 17 and in Sarcelles Val de France 18 but all were cancelled A final location in Flins Les Mureaux near the Flins Renault Factory was being considered 19 however that was cancelled as well on 1 December 2009 20 In 2010 and 2011 there was no French Grand Prix on the Formula 1 calendar although the Circuit Paul Ricard candidated itself for 2012 21 10 French drivers have won the French Grand Prix 7 before World War I and II and 3 during the Formula One championship French driver Alain Prost won the race six times at three different circuits however German driver Michael Schumacher has won eight times the joint most anybody has ever won any Grand Prix Lewis Hamilton has since won the British and Hungarian Grands Prix eight times Monegasque driver Louis Chiron won it five times and the Argentine driver Juan Manuel Fangio and British driver Nigel Mansell both won four times Return to Le Castellet Edit In December 2016 it was confirmed that the French Grand Prix would return in 2018 at the Circuit Paul Ricard and it currently holds a contract to host the French Grand Prix until at least 2022 22 23 24 In an announcement to the nation on 13 April 2020 Emmanuel Macron the French president said that restrictions on public events as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic would continue until mid July putting the 2020 French Grand Prix scheduled for 28 June at risk of postponement 25 The race was later cancelled with no intention to reschedule for the 2020 championship 26 The race returned for the 2021 season The promoters of the French Grand Prix confirmed that the race will not be on the 2023 calendar stating that they aim for a rotational race deal sharing its slot with other Grands Prix 27 Winners of the French Grand Prix EditRepeat winners drivers Edit Drivers in bold are competing in the Formula One championship in the current season A yellow background indicates an event which was part of the pre war European Championship A green background indicates an event which was part of the pre war World Manufacturers Championship A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship or any of the above mentioned championships Wins Driver Years8 Michael Schumacher 1994 1995 1997 1998 2001 2002 2004 20066 Alain Prost 1981 1983 1988 1989 1990 19935 Louis Chiron 1931 2 1934 1937 1947 19494 Juan Manuel Fangio 1950 1951 3 1954 1957 Nigel Mansell 1986 1987 1991 19923 Jack Brabham 1960 1966 1967 Jackie Stewart 1969 1971 19722 Georges Boillot 1912 1913 Christian Lautenschlager 1908 1914 Felice Nazzaro 1907 1922 Robert Benoist 1925 1927 William Grover Williams 1928 1929 Giuseppe Campari 1924 1933 Jean Pierre Wimille 1936 1948 Mike Hawthorn 1953 1958 Dan Gurney 1962 1964 Jim Clark 1963 1965 Ronnie Peterson 1973 1974 Niki Lauda 1975 1984 Mario Andretti 1977 1978 Lewis Hamilton 2018 2019 Max Verstappen 2021 2022Sources 28 29 Louis Chiron won the 1931 race but shared the win with Achille Varzi Juan Manuel Fangio won the 1951 race but shared the win with Luigi Fagioli Repeat winners constructors Edit Teams in bold are competing in the Formula One championship in the current season A yellow background indicates an event which was part of the pre war European Championship A green background indicates an event which was part of the pre war World Manufacturers Championship A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship or any of the above mentioned championships Wins Constructor Years won17 Ferrari 1952 1953 1956 1958 1959 1961 1968 1975 1990 1997 1998 2001 2002 2004 2006 2007 20088 Williams 1980 1986 1987 1991 1992 1993 1996 20037 Lotus 1963 1965 1970 1973 1974 1977 1978 Mercedes 1908 1914 1935 1938 1954 2018 20196 Bugatti 1926 1928 1929 1930 1931 1936 Alfa Romeo 1924 1932 1934 1948 1950 1951 Renault 1906 1979 1981 1982 1983 20055 McLaren 1976 1984 1988 1989 20004 Brabham 1964 1966 1967 19852 Peugeot 1912 1913 Fiat 1907 1922 Delage 1925 1927 Talbot Lago 1947 1949 Maserati 1933 1957 Tyrrell 1971 1972 Benetton 1994 1995 Red Bull 2021 2022Sources 28 29 Repeat winners engine manufacturers Edit Manufacturers in bold are competing in the Formula One championship in the current season A yellow background indicates an event which was part of the pre war European Championship A green background indicates an event which was part of the pre war World Manufacturers Championship A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship or any of the above mentioned championships Wins Manufacturer Years won17 Ferrari 1952 1953 1956 1958 1959 1961 1968 1975 1990 1997 1998 2001 2002 2004 2006 2007 200811 Ford 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1976 1977 1978 1980 1994 Renault 1906 1979 1981 1982 1983 1991 1992 1993 1995 1996 20058 Mercedes 1908 1914 1935 1938 1954 2000 2018 20196 Bugatti 1926 1928 1929 1930 1931 1936 Alfa Romeo 1924 1932 1934 1948 1950 19515 Honda 1986 1987 1988 1989 20214 Climax 1960 1963 1964 19652 Peugeot 1912 1913 Fiat 1907 1922 Delage 1925 1927 Talbot Lago 1947 1949 Maserati 1933 1957 Repco 1966 1967 BMW 1985 2003Sources 28 29 Built by Cosworth funded by Ford Built by Ilmor in 2000 funded by Mercedes By year Edit The Magny Cours circuit used from 1992 to 2002 The Magny Cours circuit used in 1991 The Paul Ricard circuit used from 1971 to 1985 The Le Mans Bugatti circuit used in 1967 The Lyon Parilly circuit used in 1947 The original Reims Gueux circuit used in 1932 1938 1939 and 1948 to 1951 The Montlhery circuit used from 1925 to 1937 The Le Mans road course used in 1906 A yellow background indicates an event which was part of the pre war European Championship A green background indicates an event which was part of the pre war World Manufacturers Championship A pink background indicates an event which was not part of the Formula One World Championship or any of the above mentioned championships Year Driver Constructor Location Report1906 Ferenc Szisz Renault Le Mans Report1907 Felice Nazzaro Fiat Dieppe Report1908 Christian Lautenschlager Mercedes Report1909 1911 Not held1912 Georges Boillot Peugeot Dieppe Report1913 Georges Boillot Peugeot Amiens Report1914 Christian Lautenschlager Mercedes Lyon Report1915 1920 Not held due to World War I1921 Jimmy Murphy Duesenberg Le Mans Report1922 Felice Nazzaro Fiat Strasbourg Report1923 Henry Segrave Sunbeam Tours Report1924 Giuseppe Campari Alfa Romeo Lyon Report1925 Robert Benoist Albert Divo Delage Montlhery Report1926 Jules Goux Bugatti Miramas Report1927 Robert Benoist Delage Montlhery Report1928 William Grover Williams Bugatti Saint Gaudens Report1929 William Grover Williams Bugatti Le Mans Report1930 Philippe Etancelin Bugatti Pau Report1931 Louis Chiron Achille Varzi Bugatti Montlhery Report1932 Tazio Nuvolari Alfa Romeo Reims Report1933 Giuseppe Campari Maserati Montlhery Report1934 Louis Chiron Alfa Romeo Report1935 Rudolf Caracciola Mercedes Benz Report1936 Jean Pierre Wimille Raymond Sommer Bugatti Report1937 Louis Chiron Talbot Report1938 Manfred von Brauchitsch Mercedes Reims Report1939 Hermann Paul Muller Auto Union Report1940 1946 Not held due to World War II1947 Louis Chiron Talbot Lago Lyon Parilly Report1948 Jean Pierre Wimille Alfa Romeo Reims Report1949 note 1 Louis Chiron Talbot Lago Report Charles Pozzi Delahaye Saint Gaudens Report1950 Juan Manuel Fangio Alfa Romeo Reims Report1951 Luigi Fagioli Juan Manuel Fangio Alfa Romeo Report1952 Alberto Ascari Ferrari Rouen Report1953 Mike Hawthorn Ferrari Reims Report1954 Juan Manuel Fangio Mercedes Report1955 Not held due to the 1955 Le Mans disaster1956 Peter Collins Ferrari Reims Report1957 Juan Manuel Fangio Maserati Rouen Report1958 Mike Hawthorn Ferrari Reims Report1959 Tony Brooks Ferrari Report1960 Jack Brabham Cooper Climax Report1961 Giancarlo Baghetti Ferrari Report1962 Dan Gurney Porsche Rouen Report1963 Jim Clark Lotus Climax Reims Report1964 Dan Gurney Brabham Climax Rouen Report1965 Jim Clark Lotus Climax Charade Report1966 Jack Brabham Brabham Repco Reims Report1967 Jack Brabham Brabham Repco Le Mans Report1968 Jacky Ickx Ferrari Rouen Report1969 Jackie Stewart Matra Ford Charade Report1970 Jochen Rindt Lotus Ford Report1971 Jackie Stewart Tyrrell Ford Paul Ricard Report1972 Jackie Stewart Tyrrell Ford Charade Report1973 Ronnie Peterson Lotus Ford Paul Ricard Report1974 Ronnie Peterson Lotus Ford Dijon Report1975 Niki Lauda Ferrari Paul Ricard Report1976 James Hunt McLaren Ford Report1977 Mario Andretti Lotus Ford Dijon Report1978 Mario Andretti Lotus Ford Paul Ricard Report1979 Jean Pierre Jabouille Renault Dijon Report1980 Alan Jones Williams Ford Paul Ricard Report1981 Alain Prost Renault Dijon Report1982 Rene Arnoux Renault Paul Ricard Report1983 Alain Prost Renault Report1984 Niki Lauda McLaren TAG Dijon Report1985 Nelson Piquet Brabham BMW Paul Ricard Report1986 Nigel Mansell Williams Honda Report1987 Nigel Mansell Williams Honda Report1988 Alain Prost McLaren Honda Report1989 Alain Prost McLaren Honda Report1990 Alain Prost Ferrari Report1991 Nigel Mansell Williams Renault Magny Cours Report1992 Nigel Mansell Williams Renault Report1993 Alain Prost Williams Renault Report1994 Michael Schumacher Benetton Ford Report1995 Michael Schumacher Benetton Renault Report1996 Damon Hill Williams Renault Report1997 Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report1998 Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report1999 Heinz Harald Frentzen Jordan Mugen Honda Report2000 David Coulthard McLaren Mercedes Report2001 Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report2002 Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report2003 Ralf Schumacher Williams BMW Report2004 Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report2005 Fernando Alonso Renault Report2006 Michael Schumacher Ferrari Report2007 Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari Report2008 Felipe Massa Ferrari Report2009 2017 Not held2018 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes Paul Ricard Report2019 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes Report2020 Not held due to the COVID 19 pandemic 30 2021 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing Honda Paul Ricard Report2022 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing RBPT ReportSources 28 29 Two races which can be considered to be French Grand Prix were held in 1949 The race at Saint Gaudens was organised by the ACF like all other French Grands Prix up to 1967 but was held for Sports Cars whereas the race at Reims was organised as an alternative and featured a much stronger grid Races sometimes considered to be French Grand Prix Edit Beginning in the early 1920s French media represented eight races held in France before 1906 as being Grands Prix de l Automobile Club de France leading to the first French Grand Prix being known as the ninth Grand Prix de l ACF This was done to give the Grand Prix the appearance of being the world s oldest motor race 31 The winners of these races along with their original titles are listed here Year Race Title Driver Constructor Location Report1895 Paris Bordeaux Paris race Paul Koechlin Peugeot Paris Bordeaux Paris Report1896 Paris Marseille Paris race Emile Mayade Panhard Paris Marseille Paris Report1898 Paris Amsterdam Paris race Fernand Charron Panhard Paris Amsterdam Paris Report1899 Tour de France Rene de Knyff Panhard Paris Paris Report1900 Paris Toulouse Paris race Levegh Mors Paris Toulouse Paris Report1901 Paris Berlin race Henri Fournier Mors Paris Berlin Report1902 Paris Vienna race Marcel Renault Renault Paris Vienna Report1903 Paris Madrid race Fernand Gabriel Mors Paris Madrid ReportSource 32 References Edit Grand Prix century The Telegraph 10 June 2006 Smith Damien 25 June 2018 The 7 post war French Grand Prix venues Goodwood Road amp Racing Club Retrieved 17 June 2021 French Grand Prix Adding To The History Of F1 s Oldest Race Pirelli 15 June 2021 Retrieved 17 June 2021 ITV F1 com Archived 11 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine 2008 French Grand Prix Pause ITV F1 com Archived 2 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Ecclestone Confirms Magny Cours Departure ITV F1 com Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Magny Cours set for reprieve BBC Sport Formula One hope for French Grand Prix FIA reveals 18 race calendar for 2008 formula1 com 27 July 2007 Retrieved 27 July 2007 Grand Prix de France Formule 1 28 juin 2009 Gpfrancef1 com Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 27 November 2011 19 June 2008 Grandprix com 19 June 2008 Retrieved 27 November 2011 automobilsport comautomobilsport com 20 June 2008 Automobilsport com Retrieved 27 November 2011 20 June 2008 Motorlegend com 20 June 2008 Retrieved 27 November 2011 1 grandprix com 19 June 2008 Euro Disney the next venue for French GP Asiaone com Archived from the original on 25 October 2011 Retrieved 27 November 2011 Noah Joseph 21 November 2008 Disney Grand Prix plans shelved Autoblog com Retrieved 27 November 2011 Versailles possible for French GP permanent dead link december 11 2007 Grandprix com 11 December 2007 Retrieved 27 November 2011 Sarcelles bidding for a Grand Prix Grandprix com 17 September 2008 Retrieved 27 November 2011 More details emerge from Flins Mureaux GrandPrix com Inside F1 Inc 16 March 2009 Retrieved 29 July 2010 Noble Jonathan 1 December 2009 French GP plans suffer fresh blow autosport com Haymarket Publications Retrieved 1 December 2009 Paul Ricard Confirme sa Candidature pour 2011 Autonewsinfo com Retrieved 27 November 2011 Billiotte Julien 5 December 2016 Le Grand Prix de France confirme au Ricard F1i com F1i com in French Archived from the original on 7 December 2016 Retrieved 5 December 2016 Benson Andrew 5 December 2016 French Grand Prix returns for 2018 after 10 year absence BBC Sport Retrieved 5 December 2016 Balfour Andrew 1 February 2019 Race Facts French Grand Prix F1Destinations com Retrieved 16 May 2019 Formula 1 French Grand Prix set to be postponed because of the coronavirus crisis BBC Sport 13 April 2020 Retrieved 14 April 2020 Formula 1 plan to start season in Austria as French GP called off BBC Sport 27 April 2020 Retrieved 27 April 2020 French GP promoter aims for F1 return after 2023 on rotation deal Racefans 25 August 2022 Retrieved 25 August 2022 a b c d French GP ChicaneF1 Retrieved 9 December 2021 ACF GP ChicaneF1 Retrieved 9 December 2021 a b c d Higham Peter 1995 French Grand Prix The Guinness Guide to International Motor Racing London England Motorbooks International pp 367 368 ISBN 978 0 7603 0152 4 via Internet Archive de Menezes Jack 27 April 2020 French Grand Prix the 10th F1 race to be called off The Independent Retrieved 9 December 2021 Hodges David 1967 The French Grand Prix Diepraam Mattijs Muelas Felix Grand Prix winners 1894 2019 Forix Autosport Retrieved 15 December 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to French Grand Prix French Grand Prix Results Live Timing Quiz amp Discussion dead link Site officiel du Circuit de Nevers Magny Cours Official Website of the French Grand Prix Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French Grand Prix amp oldid 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