Young upper-class Romanians, encouraged by British and French sports club models, created select gentlemen's clubs in the second part of the nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries. They practised sports as they observed and travelled to countries they admired for study and leisure. Romanian sports clubs embraced important benefits, including health, socialization, and leisure pursuits, creating a platform for male and female participants to compete in sports matches. Following World War I, women from both the upper and elite middle classes, as well as those from the lower middle class, contributed to women's emancipation by participating in national and international sports competitions. This article examines an overlooked subject in the literature, concentrating on the progress of women and the development of gender roles in sports in Romania during the interwar period.
Cosmin-Ştefan Dogaru (Wed,) studied this question.