List of lineal boxing world champions

The Corbett-Fitzsimmons Fight, March 1897
The Cyber Boxing Zone (CBZ) website maintains an official list of lineal champions in professional boxing, with input from Tracy Callis of the International Boxing Research Organization. These were first published in 1994, and are retrospective to the introduction of the Queensberry Rules in 1885.[1][2] The Transnational Boxing Rankings Board, which promotes the concept of one world champion per weight division,[3][4] hands out the most complete version of lineal championship and is recognized by CBZ for maintaining the list of genuine lineal world champions.[5]
Heavyweight

John L. Sullivan in his prime during the 1890s

Bob Fitzsimmons in 1891

Muhammad Ali was the only three-time lineal heavyweight champion in boxing.
John L. Sullivan (1885-1892)
James J. Corbett (1892-1897)
Bob Fitzsimmons (1897-1899)
James J. Jeffries (1899-1905), retired
Marvin Hart (1905-1906)
Tommy Burns (1906-1908)
Jack Johnson (1908-1915)
Jess Willard (1915-1919)
Jack Dempsey (1919-1926)
Gene Tunney (1926-1928), retired
Max Schmeling (1930-1932)
Jack Sharkey (1932-1933)
Primo Carnera (1933-1934)
Max Baer (1934-1935)
James J. Braddock (1935-1937)
Joe Louis (1937-1949, retired)
Ezzard Charles (1949-1951)
Jersey Joe Walcott (1951-1952)
Rocky Marciano (1952-1956, retired)
Floyd Patterson (1956-1959)
Ingemar Johansson (1959-1960)
Floyd Patterson (1960-1962)
Sonny Liston (1962-1964)
Cassius Clay, changed name to Muhammad Ali (1964-1970, boxing licence suspended)
Joe Frazier (1970-1973)
George Foreman (1973-1974)
Muhammad Ali (1974-1978)
Leon Spinks (1978)
Muhammad Ali (1978-1979), retires 6/79
Larry Holmes (1980-1985)
Michael Spinks (1985-1988)
Mike Tyson (1988-1990)
James "Buster" Douglas (1990)
Evander Holyfield (1990-1992)
Riddick Bowe (1992-1993)
Evander Holyfield (1993-1994)
Michael Moorer (1994)
George Foreman (1994-1997)
Shannon Briggs (1997-1998)
Lennox Lewis (1998-2001)
Hasim Rahman (2001)
Lennox Lewis (2001-2004), retired
Wladimir Klitschko (2009-2015), from his win over Chagaev
Tyson Fury (2015–Present)
Cruiserweight

David Haye in 2006
Marvin Camel (1980)
Carlos DeLeon (1980-1982)
S.T. Gordon (1982-1983)
Carlos DeLeon (1983-1985)
Alfonso Ratliff (1985)
Bernard Benton (1985-1986)
Carlos DeLeon (1986-1988)
Evander Holyfield (1988), moved to heavyweight
O'Neil Bell (2006-2007)
Jean Marc Mormeck (2007)
David Haye (2007-2008), moved to heavyweight
Tomasz Adamek (2007–09); from the Cunningham win
Light heavyweight

Jack Root was the first light heavyweight champion of the world

Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier boxed in the first million-dollar gate

Battling Siki
Jack Root (1903)
George Gardner (1903)
Bob Fitzsimmons (1903-1905)
Philadelphia Jack O'Brien (1905; Never defended)
Jack Dillon (1914-1916)
Battling Levinsky (1916-1920)
Georges Carpentier (1920-1922)
Battling Siki (1922-1923)
Mike McTigue (1923-1925)
Paul Berlenbach (1925-1926)
Jack Delaney (1926-1927; Never defended)
Tommy Loughran (1927; Vacated title 1929)
Maxie Rosenbloom (1932-1934)
Bob Olin (1934-1935)
John Henry Lewis (1935-Jun 1939; Retired)
Billy Conn (1939; Vacated title May 1941)
Gus Lesnevich (1941-1948)
Freddie Mills (1948-1950)
Joey Maxim (1950-1952)
Archie Moore (1952-1962)
Harold Johnson (1962-1963)
Willie Pastrano (1963-1965)
José Torres (1965-1966)
Dick Tiger (1966-1968)
Bob Foster (1968; Retired September 16, 1974)
Michael Spinks (1983-September 1985; Vacated title)
Virgil Hill (1996 - 1997)
Dariusz Michalczewski (1997-2003)
Julio Cesar Gonzalez (2003-2004)
Zsolt Erdei (2004-2009; Vacated title)
Jean Pascal (2010-2011)
Bernard Hopkins (2011-2012)
Chad Dawson (2012-2013)
Adonis Stevenson (2013–Present)
Super middleweight

Joe Calzaghe in 2007
Chong-Pal Park (1984-1988)
Fulgencio Obelmejias (1988-1989)
In-Chul Baek (1989-1990)
Christophe Tiozzo (1990-1991)
Victor Cordoba (1991-1992)
Michael Nunn (1992-1994)
Steve Little (1994)
Frank Liles (1994-1999)
Byron Mitchell (1999-2000)
Bruno Girard (2000-2001, Vacated)
Joe Calzaghe (2006-2008; Vacated)
Andre Ward (2011-2015; Vacated)
Middleweight

"Nonpareil" Jack Dempsey

Harry Greb

Robinson being held aloft by Gene Fullmer and Carmen Basilio in 1965

"Marvelous" Marvin Hagler
Jack "Nonpareil" Dempsey (1884-1891)
Bob Fitzsimmons (1891, Fitz vacated the title 1895)
Tommy Ryan (1898-1906, vacated title)
Stanley Ketchel (1907-1908)
Billy Papke (1908)
Stanley Ketchel (1908, Ketchel was shot and killed, October 15, 1910)
Frank Klaus (1913)
George Chip (1913-1914)
Al McCoy (1914-1917)
Mike O'Dowd (1917-1920)
Johnny Wilson (1920-1923)
Harry Greb (1923-1926)
Tiger Flowers (1926)
Mickey Walker (1926-1931, vacated title to campaign as heavyweight)
Tony Zale (1941-1947)
Rocky Graziano (1947-1948)
Tony Zale (1948)
Marcel Cerdan (1948-1949)
Jake LaMotta (1949-1951)
Sugar Ray Robinson (1951)
Randy Turpin (1951)
Sugar Ray Robinson (1951-1952)
Carl Olson (1952-1955)
Sugar Ray Robinson (1955-1957)
Gene Fullmer (1957)
"Sugar" Ray Robinson (1957)
Carmen Basilio (1957-1958)
Sugar Ray Robinson (1958-1960)
Paul Pender (1960-1961)
Terry Downes (1961-1962)
Paul Pender (1962-1963, Retired)
Dick Tiger (1963)
Joey Giardello (1963-1965)
Dick Tiger (1965-1966)
Emile Griffith (1966-1967)
Nino Benvenuti (1967)
Emile Griffith (1967)
Nino Benvenuti (1968-1970)
Carlos Monzon (1970-1977, Retired)
Rodrigo Valdez (1977-1978)
Hugo Corro (1978-1979)
Vito Antuofermo (1979-1980)
Alan Minter (1980)
Marvin Hagler (1980-1987)
Sugar Ray Leonard (1987, Vacated)
Michael Nunn (1989-1991)
James Toney (1991-1993, Vacated)
Bernard Hopkins (2001- 2005)
Jermain Taylor (2005-2007)
Kelly Pavlik (2007-2010)
Sergio Martinez (2010-2014)
Miguel Angel Cotto (2014-2015)
Canelo Álvarez (2015–present)
Light middleweight

Kim Ki-soo was South Korea's first world boxing champion

Sugar Ray Leonard in 1984
Emile Griffith (claimed title on Oct. 17, 1962, but defended just once)
Denny Moyer (claimed title on Oct. 20, 1962; had lost to Griffith 8/1962)
Ralph Dupas (1963)
Sandro Mazzinghi (1963-1965)
Nino Benvenuti (1965-1966)
Ki-Soo Kim (1966-1968)
Sandro Mazzinghi (1968, title vacated after "NC" tko loss)
Freddie Little (1969-1970)
Carmelo Bossi (1970-1971)
Koichi Wajima (1971-1974)
Oscar Albarado (1974-1975)
Koichi Wajima (1975)
Jae-Do Yuh (1975-1976)
Koichi Wajima (1976)
Jose Manuel Duran (1976)
Miguel Angel Castellini (1976-1977)
Eddie Gazo (1977-1978)
Masashi Kudo (1978-1979)
Ayub Kalule (1979-1981)
Sugar Ray Leonard (vacates title 7/81)
Thomas Hearns (Jun 1984 to Oct 1986, vacates title)
Terry Norris (1995-1997)
Keith Mullings (1997-1999)
Javier Castillejo (1999-2001)
Oscar De La Hoya (2001-2003)
Shane Mosley (2003-2004)
Ronald "Winky" Wright (2004-2005; moves to middleweight)
Floyd Mayweather Jr. (2013-2015; Retired)
Welterweight

Mysterious Billy Smith

William "Matty" Matthews

Joe Walcott

Jimmy McLarnin
Young Jack Thompson

Henry Armstrong in 1937
Paddy Duffy (1888-1890; died 7/10/1890, not 7/19/1890)
"Mysterious" Billy Smith (1892-1894)
Tommy Ryan (1894-1898; Vacated title)
"Mysterious" Billy Smith (1898-1900)
William "Matty" Matthews (1900)
Eddie Connolly (1900)
James "Rube" Ferns (1900)
William "Matty" Matthews (1900-1901)
James "Rube" Ferns (1901)
Joe Walcott (1901-1904)
Dixie Kid (1904; outgrew division)
Billy "Honey" Mellody (1906-1907)
Mike "Twin" Sullivan (1907-1908; vacated title)
Waldemar Holberg (1914)
Tom McCormick (1914)
Matt Wells (1914-1915)
Mike Glover (1915)
Jack Britton (1915)
Ted "Kid" Lewis (1915-1916)
Jack Britton (1916-1917)
Ted "Kid" Lewis (1917-1919)
Jack Britton (1919-1922)
Mickey Walker (1922-1926)
Pete Latzo (1926-1927)
Joe Dundee (1927-1929)
Jackie Fields (1929-1930)
Jack Thompson (1930)
Tommy Freeman (1930-1931)
Jack Thompson (1931)
Lou Brouillard (1931-1932)
Jackie Fields (1932-1933)
Young Corbett III (1933)
Jimmy McLarnin (1933-1934)
Barney Ross (1934)
Jimmy McLarnin (1934-1935)
Barney Ross (1935-1938)
Henry Armstrong (1938-1940)
Fritzie Zivic (1940-1941)
Freddie "Red" Cochrane (1941-1946)
Marty Servo (1946; vacated title)
Sugar Ray Robinson (1946; vacated crown in 1950)
Kid Gavilan (1951-1954)
Johnny Saxton (1954-1955)
Tony DeMarco (1955)
Carmen Basilio (1955-1956)
Johnny Saxton (1956)
Carmen Basilio (1956-1957; relinquished crown)
Virgil Akins (1958)
Don Jordan (1958-1960)
Benny Paret (1960-1961)
Emile Griffith (1961)
Benny Paret (1961-1962)
Emile Griffith (1962-1963)
Luis Manuel Rodriguez (1963)
Emile Griffith (1963-1966; Vacated title)
Curtis Cokes (1966-1969)
Jose Napoles (1969-1970)
Billy Backus (1970-1971)
Jose Napoles (1971-1975)
John H. Stracey (1975-1976)
Carlos Palomino (1976-1979)
Wilfred Benítez (1979)
Sugar Ray Leonard (1979-1980)
Roberto Durán (1980)
Sugar Ray Leonard (1980-1982; Vacated title)
Donald Curry (1985-1986)
Lloyd Honeyghan (1986-1987)
Jorge Vaca (1987-1988)
Lloyd Honeyghan (1988-1989)
Marlon Starling (1989-1990)
Maurice Blocker (1990-1991)
Simon Brown (1991)
James "Buddy" McGirt (1991-1993)
Pernell Whitaker (1993-1997)
Oscar De La Hoya (1997-1999)
Félix Trinidad (1999-2000; vacated title)
Shane Mosley (2000-2002)
Vernon Forrest (2002-2003)
Ricardo Mayorga (2003)
Cory Spinks (2003-2005)
Zab Judah (2005-2006)
Carlos Baldomir (2006)
Floyd Mayweather Jr. (2006-2008; retired from weight class)
Shane Mosley (2009-2010)
Floyd Mayweather Jr. (2010-2015; retired)
Manny Pacquiao (2016–present)
Light welterweight

Pinky Mitchell was the first champion in the light welterweight division

Carlos Ortiz is considered among the best Puerto Rican boxers of all time
Myron "Pinky" Mitchell (1922-1926)
Mushy Callahan (1926-1930)
Jackie "Kid" Berg (1930-1931)
Tony Canzoneri (1931-1932)
Johnny Jadick (1932-1933)
Battling Shaw (1933)
Tony Canzoneri (1933)
Barney Ross (1933-1935; Vacated)
Tippy Larkin (1946; Vacated; Division lapsed until 1959)
Carlos Ortiz (1959-1960)
Duilio Loi (1960-1962)
Eddie Perkins (1962)
Duilio Loi (1962-1963; Retired)
Eddie Perkins (1963-1965)
Carlos Hernández (1965-1966)
Sandro Lopopolo (1966-1967)
Paul Fuji (1967-1968)
Nicolino Locche (1968-1972)
Alfonso "Peppermint" Frazer (1972)
Antonio Cervantes (1972-1976)
Wilfredo Benitez (1976-1979; Vacated)
Aaron Pryor (1983-1986; Vacated)
Julio Cesar Chavez (1990-1994)
Frankie Randall (1994)
Julio Cesar Chavez (1994-1996)
Oscar De La Hoya (1996-1997; Vacated)
Kostya Tszyu (2001-2005)
Ricky Hatton (2005-2009)
Manny Pacquiao (2009-2010; Vacated)
Danny Garcia (2013-2015; Vacated)
Terence Crawford (2016–present)
Lightweight

Kid Lavigne was boxing's first widely recognized World Lightweight Champion

Battling Nelson

Welsh vs Rivers, St Patricks Day 1914 in Vernon, California

Walcott vs. Joe Gans
Jack McAuliffe (1886-1893; Retired undefeated)
George "Kid" Lavigne (1896-1899)
Frank Erne (1899-1902)
Joe Gans (1902-1904; Vacated title)
Jimmy Britt (1904-1905)
Battling Nelson (1905-1906)
Joe Gans (1906-1908)
Battling Nelson (1908-1910)
Ad Wolgast (1910-1912)
Willie Ritchie (1912-1914)
Freddie Welsh (1914-1917)
Benny Leonard (1917 to 1/15/1925; Retired)
Jimmy Goodrich (1925)
Rocky Kansas (1925-1926)
Sammy Mandell (1926-1930)
Al Singer (1930)
Tony Canzoneri (1930-1933)
Barney Ross (1933; Relinquished title)
Tony Canzoneri (1935-1936)
Lou Ambers (1936-1938)
Henry Armstrong (1938-1939)
Lou Ambers (1939-1940)
Lew Jenkins (1940-1941)
Sammy Angott (1941-1942; Vacated title November 13)
Ike Williams (1947-1951)
Jimmy Carter (1951-1952)
Lauro Salas (1952)
Jimmy Carter (1952-1954)
Paddy DeMarco (1954)
Jimmy Carter (1954-1955)
Wallace "Bud" Smith (1955-1956)
Joe Brown (1956-1962)
Carlos Ortiz (1962-1965)
Ismael Laguna (1965)
Carlos Ortiz (1965-1968)
Carlos Teo Cruz (1968-1969)
Mando Ramos (1969-1970)
Ismael Laguna (1970)
Ken Buchanan (1970-1972)
Roberto Duran (1972-1979; Vacated)
Alexis Arguello (1981-1982)
Julio Cesar Chavez (1987-1989; Vacated)
Pernell Whitaker (1990-1992; Vacated)
Floyd Mayweather Jr. (2002-2004; From first Castillo win)
Jose Luis Castillo (2004-2005; From Lazcano when they were clearly #1 and #2 in class)
Diego Corrales (2005–06)
Joel Casamayor (2006–08)
Juan Manuel Marquez (2008–12; Vacated)
Terence Crawford (2014-2015; Vacated)
Super featherweight

Jack Bernstein

Joseph "Sandy" Saddler
Johnny Dundee, the Scotch Wop (1921-1923)
Jack Bernstein (1923)
Johnny Dundee, the Scotch Wop (1923-1924)
Steve (Kid) Sullivan (1924-1925)
Mike Ballerino (1925)
Tod Morgan (1925-1929)
Benny Bass (1929-1931)
Kid Chocolate, the Cuban Bon Bon (1931-1933)
Frankie Klick (1933, Klick moved up to Junior welter in 1934, title fell vacant)
Sandy Saddler (1949-1957)
Gabriel "Flash" Elorde (1960-1967)
Yoshiaki Numata (1967)
Hiroshi Kobayashi (1967-1971)
Alfredo Marcano (1971-1972)
Ben Villaflor (1972-1973)
Kuniaki Shibata (1973)
Ben Villaflor (1973-1976)
Samuel Serrano (1976–1980)
Yasutsune Uehara (1980-1981)
Samuel Serrano (1981-1983)
Roger Mayweather (1983-1984)
Rocky Lockridge (1984-1985)
Wilfredo "Bazooka" Gomez (1985-1986)
Alfredo Layne (1986)
Brian Mitchell (1986-1991, retired)
Azumah Nelson {gained recognition by Cyber Boxing Zone, 1996}
Genaro Hernandez (1997-1998)
Floyd Mayweather, Jr. (1998-2001, moved to Lightweight)
Manny Pacquiao (2008, defeated Juan Manuel Marquez as clear #1 vs #2; vacated title)
Featherweight

George Dixon, c. 1894. He was the first black world boxing champion in any weight class

Gabriel "Flash" Elorde

Terry McGovern
Torpedo Billy Murphy (1890-1891)
Young Griffo (1891 moves up in weight)
George Dixon (1891-1897)
Solly Smith (1897-1898)
Dave Sullivan (1898)
George Dixon (1898-1900)
Terry McGovern (1900-1901)
Young Corbett II (1901-1902, vacates title)
Abe Attell(1903-1912)
Johnny Kilbane(1912-1923)
Eugene Criqui (1923)
Johnny Dundee (1923 through August 1924, gave up title)
Louis "Kid" Kaplan (1925, resigned title Jul 1926)
Tony Canzoneri (1928)
Andre Routis (1928-1929)
Bat Battalino (1929- Mar. 1932, relinquishes title)
Henry Armstrong (1937-1938, vacates title)
Joey Archibald (1939-1940)
Harry Jeffra (1940-1941)
Joey Archibald (1941)
Albert "Chalky" Wright (1941-1942)
Willie Pep (1942-1948)
Sandy Saddler (1948-1949)
Willie Pep (1949-1950)
Joseph Saddler (1950-1957, retires 1/21/57)
Hogan Bassey (1957-1959)
Davey Moore(1959-1963)
Ultiminio "Sugar" Ramos (1963-1964)
Vicente Saldivar (1964 retires October 14, 1967)
Johnny Famechon (1969-1970)
Vicente Saldivar (1970)
Kuniaki Shibata (1970-1972)
Clemente Sanchez (1972)
Jose Legra (1972-1973)
Eder Jofre [1973-1974, fizzles out]
Alexis Arguello (1975-1977, moves up to Junior Lightweight)
Danny "Little Red" Lopez (1979-1980)
Salvador Sanchez (1980-1982, killed in car accident)
Eusebio Pedroza (1983-1986)
Barry McGuigan (1986)
Stevie Cruz (1986-1987)
Antonio Esparragoza (1987-1991)
Yong-Kyun Park (1991-1993)
Eloy Rojas (1993-1996)
Wilfredo Vazquez (1996-1998)
Naseem Hamed (1998 - 2001)
Marco Antonio Barrera (2001-2003)
Manny Pacquiao (2003-2005)
Super bantamweight

Dong-Kyun Yum in 1976 when he was crowned the WBC super bantamweight champion
Jack "Kid" Wolfe (1922-1923)
Carl Duane (1923, abandons claim)
- Title becomes defunct
Rigoberto Riasco (1976)
Kazuo "Royal" Kobayashi (1976)
Dong-Kyun Yum (1976-1977)
Wilfredo Gomez (1977-1981, vacates title)
Israel Vazquez (2005-2007)
Rafael Marquez (2007)
Israel Vazquez (2007-2009, retires)
Nonito Donaire (2012-2013)
Guillermo Rigondeaux (2013–Present)
Bantamweight

Barry held the World Bantamweight Championship from 1894 to 1899 and retired undefeated

Panama Al Brown, was a bantamweight boxer from Panama who made history by becoming boxing's first Hispanic world champion

Mario D'Agata was the first, and so far only, deaf world champion in boxing
Jimmy Barry (1894-1899, retires undefeated in career)
Terry McGovern (1899, relinquishes title)
Harry Harris (1901, never defends)
Harry Forbes (1901-1903)
Frankie Neil (1903-1904)
Joe Bowker (1904-1905, vacated title)
Jimmy Walsh (1905-1909)
"Fighting" Jimmy Reagan (1909)
Monte Attell(1909-1911—lineage?)
Johnny Coulon (1911-1914)
Kid Williams (1914-1917)
Pete "Kid" Herman (1917–20)
Joe Lynch (1920–21)
Pete "Kid" Herman (1921)
Johnny Buff (1921-1922)
Joe Lynch (1922-1924)
Abe Goldstein (1924)
Eddie "Cannonball" Martin (1924-1925)
Charley Phil Rosenberg (1925-1927, Rosenberg unable to make weight, suspended)
Panamá Al Brown (1929-1935)
Baltasar Sangchili (1935-1936)
Tony Marino (1936)
Sixto Escobar (1936-1937)
Harry Jeffra (1937-1938)
Sixto Escobar (1938-1939, vacates title)
Lou Salica (1940-1942)
Manuel Ortiz (1942-1947)
Harold Dade (1947)
Manuel Ortiz (1947-1950)
Vic Toweel (1950-1952)
Jimmy Carruthers (1952-1954, retires undefeated)
Robert Cohen (1954-1956)
Mario D'Agata (1956-1957)
Alphonse Halimi (1957-1959)
Jose Becerra (1959-1960, retires)
Eder Jofre (1962-1965)
Masahiko "Fighting" Harada (1965-1968)
Lionel Rose (1968-1969)
Ruben Olivares (1969-1970)
Jesus "Chucho" Castillo (1970-1971)
Ruben Olivares (1971-1972)
Rafael Herrera (1972)
Enrique Pinder (1972-1973)
Romeo Anaya (1973)
Arnold Taylor (1973-1974)
Soo-Hwan Hong (1974-1975)
Alfonso Zamora (1975-1977)
Jorge Luján (1977-1980)
Julian Solis (1980)
Jeff Chandler (1980-1984)
Richie Sandoval (1984-1986)
Jose "Gaby" Canizales (1986)
Bernardo Piñango (1986-1987, relinquishes title)
Super flyweight

Jimmy Wilde
Jiro Watanabe (1984-1986)
Gilberto Roman (1986-1987)
Santos Laciar (1987)
Bejis "Sugar Baby" Rojas (1987-1988)
Gilberto Roman (1988-1989)
Nana Konadu (1989-1990)
Sung-Kil Moon (1990-1993)
Jose Luis Bueno (1993-1994)
Hiroshi Kawashima (1994-1997)
Gerry Penalosa (1997-1998)
In-Joo Cho (1998-2000)
Masamori Tokuyama (2000-2004)
Katsushige Kawashima (2004-2005)
Masamori Tokuyama (2005-2006, retires)
Vic Darchinyan (2009-2011); moved up, not returning to weight class
Flyweight

Pancho Villa was the first Filipino/Asian world champion

Jimmy Wilde And Pancho Villa in the ring before their match, on June 18, 1923

Pascual Perez was Argentina's first world boxing champion
Miguel Canto vs Shoji Oguma, 1974. Fukushima, Japan
Jimmy Wilde (1916-1923)
Pancho Villa (1923; Died of blood poisoning, July 14, 1925)
Fidel La Barba (1927; Vacated title 8/23,1927 to enter college)
Benny Lynch (1937-1938; Forfeited title 6/29/1938)
Peter Kane (1938-1939; Vacated title)
Jackie Paterson (1943-1948)
Rinty Monaghan (1948-1950; Retired 4/25/1950)
Terry Allen (1950)
Dado Marino (1950-1952)
Yoshio Shirai (1952-1954)
Pascual Perez (1954-1960)
Pone Kingpetch (1960-1962)
Masahiko "Fighting" Harada (1962-1963)
Pone Kingpetch (1963)
Hiroyuki Ebihara (1963-1964)
Pone Kingpetch (1964-1965)
Salvatore Burruni (1965-1966)
Walter McGowan (1966)
Chartchai Chionoi (1966-1969)
Efren Torres (1969-1970)
Chartchai Chionoi (1970)
Erbito Salavarria (1970-1973)
Venice Borkhorsor (1973; Relinquished title)
Miguel Canto (1975 -1979)
Chan-Hee Park (1979-1980)
Shoji Oguma (1980-1981)
Antonio Avelar (1981-1982)
Prudencio Cardona (1982)
Freddy Castillo (1982)
Eleoncio Mercedes (1982-1983)
Charlie Magri (1983)
Frank Cedeno (1983-1984)
Koji Kobayashi (1984)
Gabriel Bernal (1984)
Sot Chitalada (1984-1988)
Yong Kang Kim (1988-1989)
Sot Chitalada (1989-1991)
Muangchai Kittikasem (1991-1992)
Yuri Arbachakov (1992-1997)
Chatchai Sasakul (1997-1998)
Manny Pacquiao (1998-1999)
Medgoen 3K-Battery (1999-2000)
Malcolm Tunacao (2000-2001)
Pongsaklek Wonjongkam (2001-2008)
Daisuke Naito (2008-2009)
Koki Kameda (2009-2010)
Pongsaklek Wonjongkam (2010-2012)
Sonny Boy Jaro (2012)
Toshiyuki Igarashi (2012-2013)
Akira Yaegashi (2013-2014)
Román González (2014–2016; moved up)
Light flyweight
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Yoshio Shirai was crowned Japan's first world champion, 1952.
Michael Carbajal (1993-1994)
Humberto "Chiquita" Gonzalez (1994-1995)
Saman Sorjaturong (1995-1999)
Yo-Sam Choi (1999-2002)
Jorge Arce (2002-2005, moved up to Flyweight)
Hugo Cazares (2006-2007)
Ivan Calderon (2007-2010)
Giovani Segura (2010-2011; Vacated)
Minimumweight

Yo-Sam Choi
Kyung-Yun Lee (1987-1988, first boxer to hold a strawweight title)
Hiroki Ioka (because he beat Lee while Lee was still the "champion") (1988)
Napa Kiatwanchai (1988-1989)
Jum Hwan Choi (1989-1990)
Hideyuki Ohashi (1990)
Ricardo Lopez (1990-1999, vacates)
See also
- List of current world boxing champions
- List of WBA world champions
- List of WBC world champions
- List of IBF world champions
- List of WBO world champions
References
- ↑ DeLisa, Mike (August 2004). "What the CBZ Means When it Refers to "Lineal Championships"". The CBZ Journal. cyberboxingzone. Retrieved 12 August 2013.
- ↑ Rold, Cliff (July 2007). "Boxing's Lineal Mathematics: Champion Versus Champion II". Wail!. CBZ. Retrieved 2016-05-20.
- ↑ Paul Gibson (September 9, 2011). "Boxing loses credibility with every new champion. Can the sport be saved?". The Guardian. Retrieved May 19, 2016.
- ↑ Raskin, Eric (2013-04-02). "TBRB: A viable alphabet alternative?". ESPN.
- ↑ "Filling the void when championship becomes vacant". Lineal Champs.
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