The top level of open-wheel single-seater formula racing automobiles is called Formula One and is run by the Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) (FIA).
The World Drivers’ Championship, subsequently known as the FIA Formula One World Championship, has been one of the most prestigious racing series in the world since its debut in 1950.
The name’s use of the term “formula” alludes to the requirements that must be met by each participant car. The requirements that each participating automobile must adhere to are referred to as the “formula.”
Grands Prix, a series of competitions that make up a Formula One season, are staged all over the world on both specially designed race courses and closed public roads.
The first non-championship races were held in 1946 under the new format known as Formula One. The 1946 Turin Grand Prix served as the debut event for Formula 1.
Before World War II, a number of Grand Prix racing organizations had established the regulations for a global championship, but because racing was halted during the war, the World Drivers’ Championship was not formally established until 1947.
At Silverstone in the United Kingdom, the first world championship event was held in 1950. In 1950, Giuseppe Farina, driving an Alfa Romeo, narrowly beat his teammate Juan Manuel Fangio to claim the first World Championship for Drivers.
However, Fangio took home the title in 1951, 1954, 1955, 1956, and 1957. (Michael Schumacher’s sixth championship in 2003 broke his record of five World Championship victories, which stood for 45 years.) Fangio’s winning streak was broken by Ferrari’s two-time champion Alberto Ascari after getting hurt.
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