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NWA World Women's Championship

Women's professional wrestling world championship


Women's professional wrestling world championship

FieldValue
nameNWA World Women's Championship
imageFile:Nwa-womens-2019.jpg
captionThe center plate of the championship, introduced September 30, 2019. Pictured in the center is former champion Allysin Kay; the photo gets updated with every champion.
currentholderNatalia Markova
wonAugust 16, 2025
airedNovember 11, 2025
created1950
promotionNational Wrestling Alliance
firstchampMildred Burke
mostreignsThe Fabulous Moolah
(4 times)
longestreignThe Fabulous Moolah
(3rd reign, 3,841 days)
shortestreignEvelyn Stevens and Malia Hosaka
(1 day)
oldestThe Fabulous Moolah
youngestKenzie Paige
heaviest
lightest
pastnames*NWA Women's Championship
(1950–2016)

(4 times) (3rd reign, 3,841 days) (1 day)

(1950–2016)

  • NWA World Women's Championship (2016–present) The NWA World Women's Championship is a women's professional wrestling world championship created and promoted by the American professional wrestling promotion National Wrestling Alliance (NWA). The title was first held by Mildred Burke in 1950, who was recognized as champion due to her February 11, 1937, defeat of Women's World Champion Clara Mortensen.

History

Mildred Burke was recognized as the inaugural champion in 1950. After her Two out of three falls match against June Byers in 1954 ended in a no contest, Byers was recognized as the NWA World Women's Champion, and Burke created the WWWA World Championship and was recognized as its first champion. Upon June Byers's retirement in 1964, it was held primarily (and operated) by Lillian Ellison (under the ring name of The Fabulous Moolah), who first won a disputed version of the championship in a battle royal on September 18, 1956, although she was recognized only in the Northeastern United States (the home territory of what was then the Capitol Wrestling Corporation, later the World Wrestling Federation and now WWE) and was not universally recognized as champion until after Byers' retirement due to most other NWA promoters continuing to recognize Byers.

In 1983, the physical belt was sold by Ellison to the WWF, where it became the WWF Women's Championship. The World Wrestling Federation recognized Moolah as the reigning champion but did not recognize any of the title changes that had occurred since Moolah was first awarded the title in 1956. The NWA Women's title continued its lineage after Moolah's belt was purchased and renamed by the WWF.

The Fabulous Moolah has held the title more times than any other wrestler, with a total of four reigns. She also has the longest reign of 3,651 days, and is the oldest champion after winning the title at 55 years old. Evelyn Stevens and Malia Hosaka have the shortest reign at 1 day each. La Reina de Corazones is the youngest champion after winning the title at 21 years of age. Overall, the title has been held by 25 different women for a total of 35 reigns.

Via various partnerships, the NWA World Women's Championship has also been defended in other promotions.

Belt design

1950 - 1954: Mildred Burke defeated Clara Mortensen on February 11, 1937, to win the original version of the Women's World Championship. Due to her victory, Burke was recognized as the inaugural NWA Woman's Champion in 1950. The original title belt last appeared in an NWA ring on August 20, 1954. In 2021, The main plate of the original belt was given to NWA President, Billy Corgan.

1954 - 1986: Sometime after August 1954, a new design was presented. In 1983, During The Fabulous Moolah's reign as champion, the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) withdrew from the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), and The Fabulous Moolah sold the championship to the WWF.

1986 - 2002, 2016 - 2019: In February 1986, a new title was introduced. It featured 3 plates on a black strap. The main plate is circular with the NWA Logo at the top. There are two black banners at the top and bottom, the top reading "WOMANS" and the bottom reading "CHAMPION", both in gold letters. The center of the main plate has a silver oval with a globe on the inside. The side plate are oval shaped. They feature the NWA Logo on both side plates. This design lasted until August 2002. In September 2016, the NWA returned to using this design. The title was then renamed to the NWA Woman's World Championship. This title was mostly used by Jazz during this time. This design lasted until 2019.

2002 - 2010: In August 2002, a new design was created. This design features 5 plates on a black strap. The main plate is gold. The plate features a black oval in the center with the NWA logo on it. The top of the belt reads "World Womans" at the top and has a black banner at the bottom which reads "Champion". Below the black banner, it also has a red crown. Over time, the black oval was changed to red. There are 4 side rectangular side plates that feature the flags of some countries. Those being Switzerland, Japan, America, Italy, Mexico, Germany, Russia, and United Kingdom.

2010 - 2014: In 2010, a large new belt was introduced. This belt, like the previous version, has 5 plates on a black strap, all in gold. The main plate is large. It features the red NWA logo in the center. There are 3 black banners, 1 on the top and 2 at the bottom. The top one reads "Womans". The second banner located at the bottom reads "World". Below that is another black banner that reads "Wrestling Champion". The side plates, like the previous version, are rectangular with the flags of some countries, those being United Kingdom, Australia, America, Italy, Canada, Japan, Mexico, and Brazil. This design lasted until January 2014.

2014 - 2016: In January 2014, another design was introduced. Unlike the previous version, this design is much smaller. The belt has 5 hexagonal plates on a black leather strap. This design was replaced with the '86 - '02 championship in 2016.

2019–present: On September 30, 2019, NWA President, Billy Corgan presented a new NWA World Womans Championship. The belt was made by Belts By Dan. The design pays homage to the original design of the championship. The belt has 3 plates on a white strap. The plates are silver. The main plate pays homage to the original version of the championship. It features an angel at the top of the plate. There are 2 black banners on the top and bottom. The top banner reads "National Wrestling Alliance" and the bottem reading "Women's World Champion", just like the original design. The center of the plate features a picture frame that has a picture of the wrestler that holds the championship, which changes with each champion, also from the original design. Above the picture frame has the year 1948, which was the year the NWA was founded. Surrounding the picture frame and the 1948 are branches with leaves on them. On the left and right of the belt, there are shields with wrestlers engraved on them. The main plate also features 12 red gems all over the belt. The side plates are oval shaped and feature the NWA logo on it.

Reigns

As of , , there have been 43 reigns, between 33 wrestlers and eight vacancies. Mildred Burke was the inaugural champion. The Fabulous Moolah holds the record for most recognized reigns at four. Moolah is the oldest champion at 55 years old, while La Reina de Corazones is the youngest at 21 years old. Moolah's third reign is the longest at 3,841 days, while Evelyn Stevens and Malia Hosaka's reigns are the shortest at one day each.

Natalia Markova is the current champion, in her first reign. She won the title by defeating Kenzie Paige at NWA 77th Anniversary Show on August 16, 2025, in Huntington, New York.

Names

NameYear
NWA Women's Championship1950 – 2016
NWA World Women's ChampionshipSeptember 16, 2016 – present

Combined reigns

N/AThe exact length of a title reign is too uncertain to calculate.
RankWrestlerNo. of
ReignsCombined
Days123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233
4(5)9,925¤
23,461¤
{{sortnameJazzdab=wrestler}}1948
{{sortnameMsChifMsChif}}2916
{{sortnameKamilledab=wrestler}}1812
1760¤
3735
1720
1476
1465
1462
1378
1358
1318
1314
1277
1273
1272
1222
1+
1168
{{sortnameMadisonnolink=1}}2160
150
141
135
123
118–47¤
116
11
11
{{sortnameBambiSelina Majors}}2N/A
1
1

Notes

References

;General

;Specific

References

  1. Malnoske, Andrew. "Mildred Burke". [[Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum]].
  2. "The Fabulous Moolah's first reign". [[World Wrestling Entertainment]].
  3. Royal Duncan & Gary Will. (2006). "Wrestling Title Histories". Archeus Communications.
  4. "411MANIA".
  5. (July 27, 2017). "NWA World Women's Championship – NWA Ringside".
  6. Ellison, Lillian. ''First Goddess of the Squared Circle'', p.97.
  7. Hoops, Brian. (August 20, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history (August 20): June Byers wins NWA Women's belt, Michael Shane wins TNA X-Division title". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online.
  8. Steve Slagle. "The Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame: Fabulous Moolah". The Ring Chronicle.
  9. Slagle, Steve. "Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame: Fabulous Moolah". Ring Chronicle.
  10. Javier Osjt. (October 2, 2019). "The Fabulous Moolah – Her Career and Controversial Legacy". ProWrestlingStories.com.
  11. Chris Schramm. (October 5, 1998). "Moolah: Twenty-eight years was the reign". SLAM! Wrestling.
  12. Burke, Tom. "The Fabulous Moolah". [[Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum]].
  13. Ellison, Lillian. ''First Goddess of the Squared Circle'', p.104.
  14. "NWA World Women's Championship". [[Extreme Canadian Championship Wrestling]].
  15. Solomon, Brian. (2006). "WWE Legends". Simon and Schuster.
  16. "Bambi". Online World of Wrestling.
  17. "Peggy Lee Leathers". Online World of Wrestling.
  18. Gerweck, Steve. (July 25, 2010). "New NWA World Women's Champion". WrestleView.
  19. (October 2, 2010). "Card Results - NWA-OK - Altus, OK - 10/2/2010". oklafan.com.
  20. Meltzer, Dave. (November 8, 2010). "Mon. update: Ross announcing, Dreamer injury notes, Why people don't watch TNA, Mania tickets". [[Dave Meltzer#Wrestling Observer Newsletter.
  21. Oliver, Lekisha. (November 5, 2011). "New NWA World Women's Champion crowned". RingBellesOnline.
  22. Gerweck, Steve. (December 27, 2011). "New NWA World Women's Champion". WrestleView.
  23. (October 20, 2012). "Kacee Carlisle wins the NWA World Women's Championship over Tasha Simone in Lebanon TN". Unlimited Radio 24/7.
  24. Caldwell, James. (January 26, 2014). "NWA News: New champions determined this weekend, including new NWA Women's Champion". Pro Wrestling Torch.
  25. Caldwell, James. (February 7, 2015). "NWA news: Former TNA KO captures World Women's Title, Jax captures Nat'l Title, Conway defends NWA World Title, two big title matches at NJPW's "New Beginning" next week". Pro Wrestling Torch.
  26. Caldwell, James. (December 18, 2015). "New NWA Women's Champ ends Santana's lengthy reign". Pro Wrestling Torch.
  27. (September 17, 2016). "Jazz defeated @amberoneal1 earlier tonight @NWA_Texoma in #ShermanTX!".
  28. "JAZZ VACATES NWA WOMEN'S CHAMPIONSHIP | PWInsider.com".
  29. (April 22, 2019). "Due to medical and personal issues in...".
  30. (April 27, 2019). "NWA Crockett Cup 2019 results: Powell's live review of Nick Aldis vs. Marty Scurll for the NWA Championship, the eight-team Crockett Cup tag team tournament to crown the new NWA Tag Team Champions, Allysin Kay vs. Santana Garrett for the vacant NWA Women's Championship". Pro Wrestling Dot Net.
  31. Ravens, Andrew. (January 24, 2020). "NWA Hard Times PPV Results". sescoops.com.
  32. Johnson, Mike. (October 27, 2020). "NEW NWA WOMEN'S CHAMPION CROWNED". pwinsider.com.
  33. (June 6, 2021). "NWA When Our Shadows Fall results: Powell's live review of Nick Aldis vs. Trevor Murdoch for the NWA Championship, Serena Deeb vs. Kamille for the NWA Women's Title, Aron Stevens and Kratos vs. Thom Latimer and Chris Adonis vs. Crimson and Jax Dane for the NWA Tag Titles". Pro Wrestling Dot Net.
  34. Tessier, Colin. (August 27, 2023). "NWA 75 Night Two Results (8/27): Tyrus vs. EC3, More".
  35. Mitchell, Scott. (August 17, 2025). "National Wrestling Alliance NWA 77 Results (8/16/2025)". Turnbuckletimes.com.
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