The idea was proposed at the
1948 Summer Olympics by
Muhammed Taher Pasha, chairman of the
Egyptian Olympic Committee and vice-president of the
International Olympic Committee (I.O.C.), assisted by the Greek member of the I.O.C.
Ioannis Ketseas. Separate Mediterranean sports events preceded the games. From 1947 to 1949, the
Mediterranean Athletics Championships were contested, and the
Mediterranean Cup football competition was held in 1949 and 1950. The first official Mediterranean Games were held in
Egypt in 1951. The Games were inaugurated in October 1951, in
Alexandria,
Egypt, in honour of
Muhammed Taher Pasha, with contests being held in 13 sports along with the participation of 734 athletes from 10 countries. In 1955, in
Barcelona, during the II Games, the set up was decided of a Supervisory and Controlling Body for the Games, a kind of Executive Committee. The decisions were finally materialized on 16 June 1961, and the said Body was named, upon a Greek notion, ICMG (International Committee for the Mediterranean Games). Twelve countries have hosted the Mediterranean Games: four from Africa:
Egypt (1951),
Tunisia (1967, 2001),
Algeria (1975, 2022) and
Morocco (1983); six from Europe:
Spain (1955, 2005, 2018),
Italy (1963, 1997, 2009),
Turkey (1971, 2013),
Yugoslavia (1979),
Greece (1991) and
France (1993) and two from Asia:
Lebanon (1959) and
Syria (1987). The first eleven games took place one year before the
Summer Olympic Games. Since 1993, games have been held the year after the Olympic Games. This transition means that the only time the Mediterranean Games were not held four years after the previous Games was in 1993, when
Languedoc-Roussillon in France hosted the Games just two years after
Athens. In 2018, the Mediterranean Games calendar was reset again when Tarragona hosted the Games in the mid-even year between the Summer Olympic Games (and the same year as the FIFA Men's World Cup). == Description ==