French Classic Races


The French Classic Races are a series of Group One Thoroughbred horse races run annually on the flat. The races were instituted in the nineteenth century, taking
the British Classic Races as a model.
In the original scheme, one race, the Poule d'Essai, served as the equivalent to the first two British classics, but was later divided into separate races for colts and fillies. The Grand Prix de Paris, for many years the most important and valuable of the French classics, had no British equivalent.
French ClassicFoundedBritish equivalent
Prix du Jockey Club1836Epsom Derby
Poule d'Essai18401000 Guineas & 2000 Guineas
Prix de Diane1843Epsom Oaks
Prix Royal-Oak1861St. Leger Stakes
Grand Prix de Paris1863none
Poule d'Essai des Poulains18832000 Guineas
Poule d'Essai des Pouliches18831000 Guineas

The Prix Royal-Oak was opened to older horses in 1979, making it no longer a direct parallel to the St. Leger, which remains open only to three-year-olds, and is similar to the fourth leg of the United States' Grand Slam, the Breeders' Cup Classic, first run in 1984. It distanced itself further from the St. Leger parallel in 1986, when it opened to geldings, becoming the only classic race in either France or Great Britain in which geldings are allowed to run.