The idea of having an Athletics World Championships was around well before the competition's first event in 1983. In 1913, the IAAF decided that the
Olympic Games would serve as the World Championships for athletics. This was considered suitable for over 50 years until in the late 1960s the desire of many IAAF members to have their own World Championships began to grow. In 1976 at the IAAF Council Meeting in
Puerto Rico an Athletics World Championships separate from the Olympic Games was approved. Following bids from both
Stuttgart,
West Germany and
Helsinki, Finland, the IAAF Council awarded the inaugural competition to Helsinki, to take place in 1983 and be held in the
Helsinki Olympic Stadium (where the
1952 Summer Olympics had been held). Two IAAF world championship events preceded the inaugural edition of the World Championships in Athletics in 1983. The
1976 World Championships had just one event – the men's
50 kilometres walk which was dropped from the Olympic programme for the
1976 Summer Olympics and the IAAF responded by setting up their own contest. Four years later, the
1980 World Championships contained only two newly approved women's events, (
400 metres hurdles and
3000 metres), neither of which featured on the programme for the
1980 Summer Olympics. Over the years the competition has grown in size. In
1983 1,333 athletes from 153 countries participated. By the 2003 competition, in
Paris, it had grown to 1,679 athletes from 198 countries with coverage being transmitted to 179 countries. From 2019 to 2022 the championships were sponsored by
Qatar National Bank, which has been described as being part of
Qatar's soft power policy. There has also been a change in composition over the years, with several new events, all for women, being added. By
2005, the only differences were men's competition in the 50 km walk, and equivalent events in women's
100 m hurdles and
heptathlon to men's
110 m hurdles and
decathlon. Changes in the list of events were as follows: •
1987: women's
10,000 m and
10 km walk added •
1993: women's
triple jump added •
1995: women's 3,000 m replaced by
5000 m •
1999: women's
pole vault and
hammer added; women's
20 km walk replaced 10 km walk •
2005: women's
3000 m steeplechase added •
2017: women's
50 km walk added •
2019:
mixed 4 × 400 m relay added •
2022: men's and women's
35 km walk replaced 50 km walk ==Championships==