Gustav Frištenský & 24967 Frištenský asteroid - Litovel, Czech Republic
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member vraatja
N 49° 42.158 E 017° 04.827
33U E 650012 N 5507646
Bronze statue of a Czech strongman, Greco-Roman wrestler and professional wrestler in front of a sports hall in Litovel & 24967 Frištenský asteroid
Waymark Code: WM12329
Location: Olomoucký kraj, Czechia
Date Posted: 02/13/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
Views: 14

Asteroid

Asteroid was named after a Czech wrestler Gustav Frištenský (1879-1957) was an amateur and professional European champion in Greco-Roman wrestling. During his almost half-a-century-long career, he won about 10,000 matches. A great Czech patriot, he supported widows of policemen killed in action and retired sportsmen without decent income. The asteroid was discovered on January 14, 1998 by L. Sarounova at Ondrejov observatory, Czech Republic.

Gustav Frištenský

The bronze statue of a Czech strongman, Greco-Roman wrestler and professional wrestler who competed in the first half of the 20th century, Gustav Frištenský can be found in Litovel, in front of local gymnasium hall to which Gustav Frištenský significantly contributed. The statue was unveiled on November 8, 2013 and its author is Jiri Finger. Gustav Fristensky was a citizen of city Litovel and he spent here 40 years (from 1917 to 1957). The almost life*size statue is located on about two meters high granite pedestal anf Gustav Frištenský is depicted here in a wrestler uniform with a ribbon with medals over his chest.

Biography


Gustav Frištenský (18 May 1879 – 6 April 1957) was a Czech strongman, Greco-Roman wrestler and professional wrestler who competed in the first half of the 20th century. During his career, he won almost 10,000 fights, the first one when he was just 19 years old and the last one when he was 72. He is considered the strongest Czech and a legendary symbol of strength for many Czechs.

Frištenský was born as one of six children of Katerina and Alois Frištenský in the village of Kamhajek, today a part of Krechor near Kolín. When he was seven years old he already rode the horses and plowed the fields. At fourteen, his parents sent him to learn to be a blacksmith. During a dispute in the workshop, one of his fellow apprentices passed him an incandescent horseshoe, which caused him serious burns of his hand. After three months of home remedies his father decided to let him learn to be a butcher. After training, he left for Brno, where he worked in the butchery of Moritz Soffer. While in Brno, he started to attend local Sokol and Hellas sports clubs. In 1900, The Hellas athletic club sent him to Vyškov to fight with the best wrestlers from Central Moravia. He won. The same year, he also won his first international competition, which was held in Prague. Three years later, he became the amateur European champion in Greco-Roman wrestling when he won in Rotterdam.

After returning home he found out that he had lost his job as a butcher's apprentice and decided to start a career as a professional wrestler. In the following years (before World War I), he travelled and competed across the world, including Southern and Northern America (he fought with Frank Gotch, George Lurich and Gus Schoenlein ("Americus"), among others). He lost some fights, but not too many. In 1917 he resided in Litovel, along with his wife Miroslava. In 1929, when he was almost 50 years old, he became the professional European champion when he won in Prague's Lucerna. He also appeared in the title role of the film Pražský kat (The Hangman of Prague). Along with his brother, he also purchased a farm in Lužice near Šternberk. The town was a part of the Sudetenland and their farm was confiscated by Germans after the Munich Agreement in 1938.

In 1943, during the World War II, Frištenský joined the resistance movement in Olomouc, however, he was imprisoned and his wife had to bribe a Nazi prison commander to free him. At the end of the war, their farm was ransacked when the soldiers of the Red Army resided there. It was later collectivized by the Communist authorities. In 1947, he became a widower. Frištenský was very impoverished in his later years and had to sell his trophies to survive. In 1956, he received the title Merited Master of Sports.

He died in April 1957 in Litovel, where he is buried.

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Celestial Body: Asteroid

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