Elvira Guerra


Elvira Guerra was an Italian equestrienne and circus performer, notable for competing at the 1900 Summer Olympics, the first Games at which women were allowed to compete. She was the first woman to represent Italy at the Olympics.

Early life

Guerra was born in Saint Petersburg around 1855, daughter of circus performer Rodolfo Guerra.
The Times mentions her in an 1882 article on Hengler's Grand Cirque. In 1890, she opened the Grand Hippodrome in Bordeaux.
In 1900, she competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics in the hacks and hunter combined atop her horse Libertin, one of only two female riders, finishing outside the top four.
She died in Marseille in 1937. A street in Bordeaux is named Rue Elvira Guerra in her honour.