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Monaco Grand Prix dans la Principauté de Monaco

Sites - Attractions
Circuit Automobile

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1890
Fondation du Sport Vélocipédique de Monaco
14 avril 1929
First edition of the Grand Prix
21 mai 1950
Integration into the F1 World Championship
1955
Permanent return to F1 calendar
1967
Lorenzo Bandini fatal accident
2020
VOCID-19 Pandemic Cancellation
26 mai 2024
First victory of a Monegasque in F1
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Antony Noghès - Creator of the Grand Prix Son of the president of the ACM, designer of the circuit.
Prince Louis II - Institutional support Support the project as early as 1929.
William Grover-Williams - Winner of the first edition British driver on Bugatti in 1929.
Ayrton Senna - Recordman of victories (6) Of which five consecutive successes (1989–1993).
Charles Leclerc - First Monegasque winner in F1 Historical victory in 2024 after his pole.
Juan Manuel Fangio - Winner of the 1950 edition First round of the World Championship.

Origin and history

The Monaco Grand Prix was born in 1929 under the leadership of Antony Noghès, son of the president of the Automobile Club of Monaco (ACM). The latter, seeking the international recognition of the ACM by the International Sports Commission, proposes to organize a race in the very streets of Monaco, a technical challenge on this territory of 1.5 km2. Prince Louis II supports the project, inspired by American urban races like Santa Monica. The route, designed around the Port Hercule and the districts of Monte-Carlo and La Condamine, was inaugurated on 14 April 1929. Britain's William Grover-Williams won over Bugatti after 100 laps at 80 km/h.

The event is part of the history of the ACM, founded in 1890 under the name of Sport Vélocipédique de Monaco before becoming the Automobile Club in 1925. The Monte-Carlo rally, created in 1911 by Antony Noghès, was already a reference, but its European course was not enough to validate the ACM's membership in the AIACR (ancestor of the FIA). The Grand Prix fills this gap. After a break in World War II (1938–1947), the race resumed in 1948 and in 1950 joined the first ever Formula 1 World Championship as the second round after Silverstone. In 1955, it became permanent on the calendar, despite occasional editions in sports cars (as in 1952).

The circuit, assembled and disassembled every year in 90 days, is renowned for its requirement: protection rails without clearance, tight turns (such as the chicane of the port or the Bureau de Tobacco), and narrow width making overtaking rare. Improvements follow, such as the 2010 resurfacing or enhanced vibrators. In 2025, new rules imposed two stops at the stands to boost the race. Ayrton Senna (6 wins, including 5 consecutive wins), was the record winner in F1, while Charles Leclerc became the first Monegasque home winner in 2024 since 1950.

The race is inseparable from its unique organization: testing on Thursdays (to free the streets on Fridays), assembly of the circuit in six weeks, and award ceremony historically in the royal lodge until 2017. The most notable editions include the 1950 carboil (10 abandons in the first round), the victory of Jean-Pierre Beltoise in the rain in 1972, or the 2020 cancellation due to the VOCID-19 pandemic — a first in 65 years. The Grand Prix also embodies dramas, such as the death of Lorenzo Bandini in 1967 (an accident at the port's chicane) or the accident of Alberto Ascari in 1955, saved in extremis from the waters.

Culturally, the event surpasses the competition: the Nazionale Piloti, a football team of drivers, has played a charitable game there since 1981. The circuit, described as a "magnificent puzzle" by Jean Todt, mobilizes cranes to evacuate the rugged monoseaters, so space is limited. The stands, stands, and gateways — stored in the Alpes-Maritimes — turn Monaco into an ephemeral arena, where each centimeter counts. In 2024, the pole position record returned to Lando Norris (1 min 9 s 954), while the best lap in the race was held by Lewis Hamilton (1 min 12 s 909 in 2021).

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