Raimey: that is Roger de Barbarin of France who won the Clay trap shooting (Ball-trap) Tir au Fusil de Chasse demonstration at the 1900 Paris Olympics
From left: Roger de Barbarin, France, Gold; René Guyot, Belgium, Silver; and Count Clary Justinien, France, Bronze.
The three tied at 17x20. How the shoot-off was conducted is unknown.
There were 2 Live Bird events:
A preliminary miss and out “Grand Prix de Centenaire”, Tir aux pigeons
1. MacKintosh, Donald (Australia) 22/22 pigeons
2. Villaviciosa, Pedro Marquis de (Spain) 21/22 pigeons
3. Murphy, Edgar (USA) 19/20 pigeons
Edgar Murphy, U.S., Bronze; Donald Mackintosh, Australia, Gold; Pedro José Pidal, Spain, Silver.
Pedro Pidal y Bernaldo de Quirós, the first Marquis de Villaviciosa de Asturias, was a well-known European shooter of that period. He won at least five Spanish championships. Several months prior to the 1900 Olympics, using the pseudonym “Count O’Brien”, Pidal
won the Grand Prix de Monte Carlo against Donald MacKintosh (AUS) and Crittenden Robinson (USA) among others in the field of 98 shooters
Grand Prix de l’Exposition Universelle de 1900 Tir aux pigeons
This appears to have been the more important event and was likely the one considered to be of “Olympic standards.” In addition, most of the “Olympic” events carried the title of an event “…de l’Exposition.”
1. Lunden, Léon de (Belgium) 21 pigeons of 21
2. Faure’, Maurice (France) 20 pigeons of 21
3. MacKintosh, Donald (Australia) 18 pigeons of 19
Grand Prix de l’Exposition au Tir aux Pigeons, Cercle du Bois de Boulogne
Maurice Faure’, Léon de Lunden, Donald Mackintosh (with a Greener hammer gun)
More here about 1/3 way down
https://docs.google.com/document/d/185YOyQl7GIB9OYLs9Hr3tnMLHqs4rjEdR4j_E9l4HLw/edit