Gilbert Fuchs

Gilbert Fuchs
Born1871
Graz, Austria
Died1952
Germany
Figure skating career
Country Germany
Medal record
Representing  Germany
Men's Figure skating
World Championships
1896 St. PetersburgMen's singles
1906 MunichMen's singles
1901 StockholmMen's singles
1908 TroppauMen's singles
1898 LondonMen's singles
1907 ViennaMen's singles
European Championships
1901 ViennaMen's singles
1907 ViennaMen's singles
1909 BudapestMen's singles
1895 BudapestMen's singles
German Championships
1895 BonnMen’s Singles
1896 DarmstadtMen’s Singles
1909 MunichMen’s Singles

Gilbert Fuchs (1871–1952) was a German figure skater who won the first World Figure Skating Championships, held in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1896. He recaptured the world title ten years later in Munich.

Relations with his constant rival Ulrich Salchow were strained. In 1906, Salchow did not compete in Fuchs' hometown of Munich, because he expected that he would be judged unfairly. Likewise, Fuchs did not participate in the 1908 Olympics as he felt the judges favored Salchow. Only once did Fuchs place higher in a competition than Salchow, at the 1901 Europeans in Vienna; he did not win the event, however, finishing in second place to Gustav Hügel of Austria.

Fuchs mastered figure skating on his own, after learning gymnastics, weightlifting, and stone put. After finishing secondary school, he served in a cavalry regiment, later studying agriculture in Vienna. Still later, he moved to Munich in the German state of Bavaria, where he studied forestry. He practised figure skating on Germany's first artificial ice rink, "Unsöldsche Kunsteisbahn", which opened in 1892, and he represented Munich EV and Germany in competitions. Fuchs was a founding member of the Karlsruhe Ice Skating Club, founded in 1911. He wrote a book titled "Theory and Practice of Figure Skating" (German: "Theorie und Praxis des Kunstlaufes am Eise"), published in 1926.

Outside figure skating, Fuchs studied the morphology of the bark beetle (German: Borkenkäfer). In 1929, in his late fifties, he wrote his PhD thesis titled "European timber industry after the war" (German: "Europäische Holzwirtschaft der Nachkriegszeit") (the "war" referred to in the title is the First World War).