Before the FFR was established, football,
rugby union and other sports in France were regulated by the
Union des Sociétés Françaises de Sports Athlétiques (USFSA). Founded in November 1890, the USFSA was initially headquartered in Paris, but its membership soon expanded to include sports clubs from throughout France. The FFR was formed in 1919 and is affiliated to
World Rugby, the sport's governing body. In 1934 the FFR set up the
Fédération internationale de rugby amateur, now known as
Rugby Europe, in an attempt to organise rugby union outside the authority of World Rugby, then known as the International Rugby Football Board (IRFB). It included the national teams of
Italy,
France,
Catalonia,
Czechoslovakia,
Romania and
Germany. Following German occupation, FFR officials closely associated with the Vichy government lobbied to have certain "un-French" sports banned. Between the end of 1940 and the middle of 1942, one semi-professional and at least six French Amateur Sport Federations were banned and destroyed by the Vichy regime. These actions were independently verified by the French government in 2002. In 1978 the federation became a member of the IRFB, which later became the International Rugby Board and is now
World Rugby. ==Presidents==