Designed by Feng Yuan. /CGTN
From the first Winter Olympics in 1924 with only 11 female athletes to the first female flag bearer at the third Winter Olympics in 1932 and the first female athlete to take an oath on behalf of all athletes at the seventh Winter Olympic Games in 1956, the Winter Games have witnessed the growing power and role of women.
The Beijing 2022 Olympics was the most gender-balanced Winter Olympic Games in history, with more than 1,300 female athletes – a record number – competing at the events, accounting for more than 45 percent of all athletes.
Here are some female athletes whose achievements in Beijing were an inspiration to the world.
Therese Johaug. /CFP
Therese Johaug
Norwegian great Therese Johaug won three gold medals at the Beijing Winter Olympics, the most among all athletes. The 33-year-old cross-country skier won the 30km mass start race, the skiathlon – the first gold medal of the Olympics – as well as the 10km classic race.
Gu Ailing. /CFP
Gu Ailing
Team China's teenage sensation Gu Ailing, 18, is the youngest athlete to win three individual medals at a Winter Olympics and the first freestyle skier to win three medals at a single Winter Olympics. The freeski prodigy won gold medals in halfpipe and big air as well as a slopestyle silver on her Olympic debut.
Suzanne Schulting. /CFP
Suzanne Schulting
Suzanne Schulting of the Netherlands made history at the Beijing Winter Olympics as the first woman to earn four short track speed skating medals at a single Games. Viktor Ahn is the only male who had done so, for South Korea in 2006.
The defending champion lowered the world record to 1:26.514 in the quarterfinals en route to winning the women's 1000m title. The 24-year-old also took home gold in the 3000m relay, a silver from the 500m and a bronze in 1500m.
Alexandra Trusova. /CFP
Alexandra Trusova
Russia's figure skating silver medalist Alexandra Trusova, 17, stunned the world with five quadruple jumps during free skate at the Beijing Winter Olympics. No woman had ever attempted five quads in an Olympic competition, and only the world’s top male figure skaters had previously done such tricks.
Claudia Pechstein. /CFP
Claudia Pechstein
Germany's Claudia Pechstein became the oldest woman to compete at the Winter Olympics when the decorated speed skater competed at the age of 49 years and 348 days in Beijing on February 5. She is also the only woman to have taken part in eight editions of the Winter Games.
Great Britain's women curling team. /CFP
Great Britain's women curling team
Great Britain's women curling team won the country's only gold medal by defeating Japan 10-3 on the last day of Beijing Winter Olympics. This was also Britain's first curling gold since 2002, when women's curling made its official Olympic debut in Salt Lake City. Curling is known in Britain – and especially Scotland, where the sport and all the curlers in the British team were born – as the "Stone of Destiny."
Jaqueline Mourao. /CFP
Jaqueline Mourao
Brazilian athlete Jaqueline Mourao completed her second Beijing Olympics – taking part in both 2008 Summer and 2022 Winter Games. The 46-year-old is a cyclist, a biathlete and a cross-country skier, and her experience has inspired many young sportswomen in Brazil.
Almida de Val. /CFP
Almida de Val
When an email auto-reply of the 24-year-old Swedish IT engineer Almida de Val circulated on Chinese social media, saying she had to take a leave from her company to prepare for the Beijing Winter Olympics, netizens were in awe of how she balanced work and being an Olympian. De Val, together with teammate Oskar Eriksson, won a curling mixed doubles bronze medal at the inaugural event, and she is reportedly already back at work in Sweden.