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SV Dynamo

52°31′1.17″N 13°24′54.37″E / 52.5169917°N 13.4151028°E / 52.5169917; 13.4151028

SV Dynamo
Founded27 March 1953; 70 years ago (1953-03-27); dissolved: 1990; 34 years ago (1990)
LeagueOlympics, World cup, European Championship Nat. League
Team history"I am willing to win!/ Ich bin gewillt zu siegen!" (motto)[1]
Based inEast Berlin,  East Germany
ArenaPalast der Republik, Dynamo-Sportforum, Altenberg bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton track, Dynamo Sports Hotel
StadiumDynamo-Stadion (Dresden), Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark, Heinz-Steyer-Stadion and others
ColorsClaret and white/Claret and silver
OwnerMinistry of the Interior of the GDR: Volkspolizei, Zollverwaltung, Ministry for State Security, Feuerwehr
PresidentErich Mielke[2]
Championships2.187 nat.; approx. 182 European cup medals approx. 324 World cup medals; approx. 215 Olympic medals[3]

The Sportvereinigung Dynamo (German: Sportvereinigung Dynamo) (Dynamo Sports Association) was the sport association of the security agencies (Volkspolizei, Ministry for State Security, fire department and customs) of former East Germany.

The association was founded on 27 March 1953 and was headquartered in Hohenschönhausen in East Berlin. From the date of its inception, the permanent president of SV Dynamo was the Minister of State Security Erich Mielke.[4] The Minister of State Security served as First chairman of the association, while the Ministry of the Interior provided the Second chairman of the association.[5] The Head of the Volkspolizei Karl Maron was elected as the first Second Chairman at the founding conference.[6] The financial and material resources of the SV Dynamo were almost exclusively provided by the Ministry of State Security.[5] Erich Mielke was dismissed as First chairman in December 1989.[7] His position was not replaced.[7] SV Dynamo was dissolved in 1990.[5]

Dynamo was set up following the multi-sports club model developed in the Soviet Union and adopted throughout Eastern Europe. From the beginning it had an overtly political as well as sporting agenda and its many successes were always portrayed as a triumph of the German Democratic Republic (GDR). SV Dynamo was dissolved during the Peaceful Revolution. The association had a membership of over 280,000 members at its height.[8] Athletes of the association enjoyed considerable success both in national and international competitions, winning for example more than 200 Olympic medals. After German reunification in 1990 the systematic doping of Dynamo athletes from 1971 until 1989 was revealed by the German media. Doping was done under the supervision of the Stasi and with full backing of the government.[9]

Organization edit

 
Acrobatics- show in 1982

The SV Dynamo was divided into fifteen regional units, corresponding to the fifteen regional districts of the East Germany. Within each regional unit individual sports communities (SG) and sports clubs (SC) existed, with each sports community or club specializing in different disciplines. 290 sections were included in the association, such as SG Dynamo Dresden (football), SC Dynamo Hoppegarten (judo, shooting sports, parachuting), the SC Dynamo Klingenthal (Nordic skiing), SG Dynamo Luckenwalde (wrestling), SG Dynamo Potsdam (rowing and canoe sprint), SG Dynamo Weißwasser (ice hockey) and the SG Dynamo Zinnwald in Altenberg (biathlon, bobsleigh, luge, skeleton).

The most famous sports club of the SV Dynamo was probably the SC Dynamo Berlin, which offered most Olympic disciplines. The sports system was not designed for transfers, but on schedule. The athletes had to be viewed in their own country. Administrators and coaches from Dynamo Berlin were often sent to support their development. The district organizations, which bore the names of the districts they served, always wore the initials SV Dynamo. [10] For small children, there was even a Dynamo-Kindergarten. Henceforth the larger children trained every day before and after classes.

For the training, there existed a basic plan. If the children themselves are not good at school, they were excluded from the training. The emphasis has been respected that the athletes had to pursue themselves the sporting ideology, because otherwise no success would have been guaranteed. Each year, the best Dynamo-athlete were voted. Few could win 50,- M when they themselves were those who chose the sportswoman/ sportsman of the year. Dynamo employed a planning cycle that set out the club's objectives for the upcoming four-year period.

Politics edit

The sports association was anti-fascist and communist in nature. Among its founders were former concentration camps prisoners and communist leaders in the fight against National socialists and Social Democrats during the era of the Weimar Republic.

Visits to the Soviet War Memorial in Treptower Park and the Sachsenhausen concentration camp, among other places, were common among the youth athletes of its teams. The names of murdered and deceased communists were given as honorary titles for the constituent clubs under the sports society, for example: SG Dynamo "Feliks E. Dzierzynski" Dresden or SG Dynamo "Dr. Richard Sorge" Erfurt.

There were also many hymns and odes written for SV Dynamo. Gerhard Kube, Helmut Baierl and Kurt Barthel wrote many poets about the society and its role as a builder of national sports.

The Central Management Office (German: Büro der Zentralen Leitung) (BdZL) of SV Dynamo had 1,400 members in 1989. A large majority of 1,000 were members of the Ministry of the Interior (MdI) and a smaller portion of 180 were members of the Ministry of State Security (MfS).[11] Stasi Major General Heinz Pommer was the head of the BdZL from 1982 to 1989.[12][13] The association was dissolved in early 1990.[5]

SV Dynamo districts edit

 
Flag example

The organization of the society was along district lines as follows:

  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Rostock
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Neubrandenburg
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Schwerin
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Magdeburg
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Potsdam
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Frankfurt Oder
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation East Berlin
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Cottbus,
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Halle
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Leipzig
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Erfurt
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Gera
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Suhl
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Dresden
  • Sportvereinigung Dynamo District - Organisation Karl-Marx-Stadt

The measure of the flags of the district clubs is 2.8 × 1.5 m, with, of course, the emblem of the SV with the name of the club in white and at the canton the DTSB arms.

Members edit

Key to East German sporting success was a pyramid system with schoolchildren being assessed for athletic potential and the best (typically the top 2.5%) in each school-year being offered specialised coaching. A small fraction of those would go on to become the top adult athletes of the next generation. This model was initially derided in the West as a "sausage machine" but it has since been adopted in modified form by Australia, France, Spain and others with thousands of children being educated at specialised (often residential) sports schools rather than going through the normal high school system. Overall, 3,7 million[clarification needed] athletes were in the GDR at the German Sports federation (DTSB) registered in many other successful clubs in 1989.

Members by year[14]
Year Adults Children Total
1953 23,162 none 23,162
1955 55,991 10,874 66,856
1958 90,160 18,846 109,006
1961 105,530 42,822 148,352
1966 118,651 54,691 173,306
1970 131,752 74,266 206,018
1972 139,013 85,295 224,308
1974 144,356 93,071 237,427
1975 146,127 96,666 242,793
1976 148,054 99,337 247,391
1983 170,000 110,000 280,000

Trainers edit

Most coaches were also teachers or had other specific occupations. They were all in principle to ease members' fears before starting competitions. To overcome any problems developing, they could deal with them early (at the source) in order to eradicate this. At the same time, they were also the guardians of morality.

Trainers by year[15]
Year Level 1 Level 2 Level 3/4 Total
1964 none none none 9989
1965 none none none 9673
1966 6785 2466 1362 10613
1967 6717 2476 1489 10682
1968 7078 2731 1712 11521
1969 7536 3009 1915 12460
1970 7321 3211 2058 12590
1971 7215 3412 2119 12746
1972 7334 3598 2580 13512
1973 7394 3791 3016 14201
1974 11358 3906 3098 18362
1975 11812 3949 3407 19168
1976 12369 4219 3524 20112

Doping controversies edit

 
Birgit Meineke with coach Rolf Gläser
 
Rosemarie Gabriel with coach Rolf Gläser

SV Dynamo[16] was especially singled out as a center for doping in the former East Germany.[17] Many former club officials and some athletes found themselves charged after the dissolution of the country. A special page on the internet was created by doping victims trying to gain justice and compensation, listing people involved in doping at the club, the so-called Dynamo Liste.[18]

State-endorsed doping began with the Cold War when every eastern bloc gold was an ideological victory. From 1974, Manfred Ewald, the head of the GDR's sports federation, imposed blanket doping. At the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, the country of 17 million collected nine gold medals. Four years later the total was 20 and in 1976 it doubled again to 40.[19] Ewald was quoted as having told coaches, "They're still so young and don't have to know everything." He was given a 22-month suspended sentence, to the outrage of his victims.[20]

Often, doping was carried out without the knowledge of the athletes, some of them as young as ten years of age. It is estimated that around 10,000 former athletes bear the physical and mental scars of years of drug abuse,[21] one of them is Rica Reinisch, a triple Olympic champion and world record-setter at the Moscow Games in 1980, has since suffered numerous miscarriages and recurring ovarian cysts. Athletes like Renate Vogel, silver medalist at the 1972 Olympics in the swimming competitions, were told the injections were vitamins but failed to believe the explanation and quit her sport.[22]

Two former SC Dynamo Berlin club doctors, Dieter Binus, chief of the national women's team from 1976 to 80, and Bernd Pansold, in charge of the sports medicine center in East-Berlin, were committed for trial for allegedly supplying 19 teenagers with illegal substances.[23] Binus was sentenced in August,[24] Pansold in December 1998 after both being found guilty of administering hormones to underage female athletes from 1975 to 1984.[25]

Virtually no East German athlete ever failed an official drug test, though Stasi files show that many did, indeed, produced positive tests at Kreischa, the Saxon laboratory (German:Zentrale Dopingkontroll-Labor des Sportmedizinischen Dienstes) that was at the time approved by the International Olympic Committee,[26] now called the Institute of Doping Analysis and Sports Biochemistry (IDAS).[27]

The manufacturer of the drugs in former East Germany, Jenapharm, still found itself involved in numerous lawsuits from doping victims, being sued by almost 200 former athletes, as of 2005, fifteen years after the end of East Germany.[28] Many of the substances handed out were, even under East German law, illegal.[29]

Former athletes of SC Dynamo Berlin who publicly admitted to doping, accusing their coaches:[30]

Former athletes of SC Dynamo Berlin disqualified for doping:

  • Ilona Slupianek[31] (Ilona Slupianek tested positive along with three Finnish athletes at the 1977 European Cup, becoming the only East German athlete ever to be convicted of doping[32]). Based on the self-admission by Pollack, the United States Olympic Committee asked for the redistribution of gold medals won in the 1976 Olympics.[33] Despite court rulings in Germany that substantiate claims of systematic doping by some East German swimmers, the IOC executive board announced that it has no intention of revising the Olympic record books. This is an understandable decision as it could otherwise trigger a flood of such claims involving former eastern bloc athletes. In rejecting the American petition on behalf of its women's medley relay team in Montreal and a similar petition from the British Olympic Association on behalf of Sharron Davies, the IOC made it clear that it wanted to discourage any such appeals in the future.[34]

Achievements edit

Olympics edit

Athletes of SV Dynamo won approximately 215 Olympic medals in a 37 years period.[35] A review by SV Dynamo leaders after the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich found that athletes of SV Dynamo won so many medals for East Germany that the sports association would have been placed on a ninth to tenth place on the unofficial list if the sports association had been a national team.[36]

World championships edit

Athletes of SV Dynamo won approximately 324 World Cup medals in a 37 years period. The SV Dynamo won more World champion titles than hundreds of other nations (2008). The rowers won the most titles.[37]

European championships edit

Athletes of SV Dynamo won approximately 182 European titles.[3]

Championships edit

Athletes of SV Dynamo won altogether 2,187 titles in 35 sport-sections over a 37-year period.[38] With 280,000 members, it is not surprising that the SV Dynamo multi-sport club has won many championships in East Germany, so that a separate category should be needed. [39][40][41][42]

Award items and badges edit

 
 
The highest award was a banner of Felix Dzerzhinsky

The SV Dynamo sports association awarded various signs, badges, medals and lapel pins to its members. The highest award was the title of Dzerzhinsky-Athlete (German: Dzierzynskisportler).[43]

Various edit

The pin of the SG Dynamo Adlershof edit

The pin of the SG Dynamo Adlershof (German: Abzeichen der SG Dynamo Adlershof) was awarded by the SG Dynamo Adlershof. It was a joint badge with the SG Dynamo Adlerhof service focus in sports shooting. The badge (which also existed in embroidered form for track suits) shows the logo of the Sports Club Dynamoys on a burgundy granular base with a white "D". The words "SG Dynamo Adlershof" are written on a triangular tape surrounding the log. [44]

The Badge of the 30th Conference of the leaders of the sports organizations in the protection and security institutions in the socialist countries edit

(German: Abzeichen der 30. Konferenz der Leitungen der Sportorganisationen der Schutz- und Sicherheitsorgane der sozialistischen Länder) The silver badge, which was designed with a pad printing, has a height of 34.6 mm and a width of 30 mm, shield-shaped superficial and shows the City Hall (German:Rotes Rathhaus) of East Berlin.[44]

Brooch for Championships of the SG Dynamo Hohenschönhausen edit

(German: Brosche/ Meisternadel der SG Dynamo Berlin Hohenschönhausen) was awarded by the SG Dynamo Hohenschönhausen, an award from the Sports Club. The brooch of the championship in 1968 in medal form has a diameter of 34.6 mm and shows on their obverse four sports. These include volleyball, gymnastics, athletics, climbing on a military pentathlon by a soldier. Among these motifs, the inscription SG DYNAMO BERLIN-HOHENSCHÖNHAUSEN is readable. The reverse of the coin shows the centrally raised embossed inscription 15 years SV Dynamo which has an inscription from one to the upper right curved laurel wreath penetrated. At the top of the medal is an eyelet to which a 40.2 mm wide x 22.5 mm high clip, which should be placed on granular basic black, red and gold enamel. Center is the national emblem of the GDR imprinted on the logo of the Dynamo sports association, the winding "D" is seen. Above the upper band is a curved black field with the ribbon "MEISTER 1968". The needle is like Master of the medal shows of the year 1969, but on her lapel is a change in the inscription, which is readable "20 YEARS GDR" (German: 20 JAHRE DDR).[44]

SC Dynamo Berlin emblem edit

The SC Dynamo Berlin emblem was a joining badge of the SC Dynamo Berlin. The badge of the SC Dynamo Berlin indicates a service focus on football, basketball, boxing, ice hockey, figure skating, speed skating, parachuting, handball, judo, athletics, equestrian, cycling, rowing, shooting, swimming, diving and gymnastics. The badges show the familiar logo of the Sports Club Dynamo on a burgundy background with the white convoluted "D". This is flanked both sides by a laurel wreath. At the bottom tip of the badge is on a black background of the logo to readable: Sportclub.[44]

Award of 20 years Sports Club Dynamo edit

(German: Auszeichnung 20 Jahre Sportvereinigung Dynamo) was awarded by the SV Dynamo, an award of the Sports Club. The back of the badge is flat and displays a soldered horizontal stitched needle. This badge is round like a coin, and has a diameter of 39 mm. The logo of the SV Dynamo is in the lower right, a logo of the Soviet Union is in the top left, which is nearly identical to the German pedant. In the upper right side of the coin the inscription "50 JAHRE 20" is readable, the 50 is the anniversary of the "Soviet Union- Dynamo" and the 20 for the German. Next to two logos is shown an upward laurel wreath. The appearance of the lapels is unknown. Growth was the medal on a rectangular 28 mm wide and 11.5 mm high burgundy smooth and glossy protection, the left is the symbol of the hammer and sickle of the Soviet Union and the right to locate the state emblem of the GDR.[44]

SG Dynamo Berlin Hohenschönhausen medal of the 15th anniversary of the SV Dynamo edit

The (German: Abzeichen der SG Dynamo Berlin Hohenschönhausen zum 15. Jahrestag der SV Dynamo) was awarded by the SG Dynamo Hohenschönhausen, an award of the Sports Club. The back of the badge is flat and displays a soldered horizontal stitched needle. The badge is shaped like a medal with a diameter of 39 mm and is made of enamel and is awarded according to the levels gold, silver or bronze. It shows on their obverse center, the symbolic representation of four sports, volleyball, gymnastics, athletics, climbing a Eskaladierwand with a soldier. Enclosed is the symbolism of a transcription SG DYNAMO BERLIN HOHENSCHÖNHAUSEN that determines the lower half of the coin, and the subsequent laurel branches on both sides. The reverse shows a laurel wreath on the other hand within the logos of the SV Dynamo (bottom right) and top left of the DTSB. Growth was the medal in a trapezoid-shaped plastic clip, the 32.5 mm wide and 9.7 mm in height at the front left side of the mortgaged. It shows the central symbol of the SV Dynamo flanked by laurel wreath and the words 1953 (left) and 1968 (right).[44]

Insignia of the International shooting competitions edit

(German: Abzeichen der Internationalen Schießwettkämpfe) The Insignia of the International shooting competitions was awarded by the SV Dynamo. On the occasion of the 2nd International shooting, badges were donated. The badge has a shape similar to a gold coin, with dimensions spanning 28.6 mm high and 24.4 mm wide. The front of the badge shows a laurel wreath target, with two diagonally crossed rifles overlaid above it. At the bottom of the coin is the year in which the competition took place. At the top is the 'SV Dynamo' logo, which extends beyond the edge of the coin. The logo serves simultaneously as it braces for the suspension fixed in banner form, which was 10.6 mm high and 28.8 mm wide. It has an inscription reading III. / INT. SCHIESSWETTKÄMPFE / LEIPZIG.[44]

Gallery edit

Photos edit

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Hormonal doping and androgenization of athletes: a secret program of the German Democratic Republic government, by: Werner W. Franke (Hölderlin High School, Heidelberg, Germany) and Brigitte Berendonk, publisher: American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Literature edit

  • Gläser, Andreas (1976). SV Dynamo Ein Almanach (in German). ASIN B0027432ZC.
  • SV Dynamo Mut und Kraft (in German). Offizin Andersen Nexö Leipzig. 1984. ASIN none.

References edit

  1. ^ Sportschau der SV Dynamo auf dem VIII. Turn- und Sportfest in Leipzig 1987 at 5min and 47sec
  2. ^ . bilder4.n-tv.de. Archived from the original on 8 November 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ a b Data bank for the Magazine Dynamo sport/ Please insert Dynamosport for searching (attention:German language) It is for proving the medals; extra beside the linked athletes here. 29 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Kurzbiographie von Erich Mielke". stasi-unterlagen-archiv.de (in German). Berlin: Stasi Records Agency. n.d. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d "'Botschafter im Trainingsanzug': Die Sportvereinigung "Dynamo" in der DDR". stasi-unterlagen-archiv.de (in German). Berlin: Stasi Records Agency. n.d. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  6. ^ Fechner, Carmen (25 August 2011). Die Frühgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo. Hegemoniebestrebungen, Dominanzverhalten nd das Rivalitätsverhältnis zur Armeesportvereinigung "Vorwärts" (PDF) (doctoralThesis) (in German). Berlin: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. p. 86. doi:10.18452/16499.
  7. ^ a b Fechner, Carmen (25 August 2011). Die Frühgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo. Hegemoniebestrebungen, Dominanzverhalten nd das Rivalitätsverhältnis zur Armeesportvereinigung "Vorwärts" (PDF) (doctoralThesis) (in German). Berlin: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. pp. 226–228. doi:10.18452/16499.
  8. ^ Michael, Barsuhn; Jutta Braun; Hans Joachim Teichler. (PDF). Deutscher Sportbund. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 October 2011. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  9. ^ "Sports Doping Statistics Reach Plateau in Germany". Deutsche Welle. 26 February 2003. Retrieved 4 August 2007.
  10. ^ "Gymn Forum: Maxi Gnauck Biography". gymn-forum.net. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  11. ^ Pleil, Ingolf (2001). Mielke, Macht und Meisterschaft: die "Bearbeitung" der Sportgemeinschaft Dynamo Dresden durch das MfS 1978-1989 (in German) (1st ed.). Berlin: Christopher Links Verlag GmbH. p. 263. ISBN 9783861532354.
  12. ^ "Pommer, Heinz". stasi-unterlagen-archiv.de (in German). Berlin: Stasi Records Agency. n.d. Retrieved 9 July 2021.
  13. ^ Braun, Jutta (2015). Münkel, Daniela (ed.). State Security: A reader on the GDR secret police (PDF). Berlin: Stasi Records Agency. p. 200. ISBN 978-3-942130-97-4.
  14. ^ SV Dynamo Almanach 1977
  15. ^ SV Dynamo Almanach
  16. ^ Pain And Injury in Sport: Social And Ethical Analysis, Section III, Chapter 7, Page 111, by Sigmund Loland, Berit Skirstad, Ivan Waddington, Published by Routledge in 2006, ASIN: B000OI0HZG
  17. ^ (in German). doping_opfer@yahoo.com. September 2002. Archived from the original on 20 April 2004. Retrieved 10 March 2008.
  18. ^ (in German). doping_opfer@yahoo.com. September 2002. Archived from the original on 24 January 2008. Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  19. ^ "Jenapharm says drugs were legal". ESPN. 28 April 2005. Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  20. ^ . The Independent. 25 October 2002. Archived from the original on 21 September 2008. Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  21. ^ "GDR athletes sue over steroid damage". BBC News Europe. 13 March 2005. Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  22. ^ "Doping im DDR-Sport: "Wir waren Versuchskaninchen"" (in German). 3sat.online. 3 February 2005. Retrieved 13 March 2008.
  23. ^ "New doping charges against East German doctors". BBC News. 25 November 1997. Retrieved 7 March 2008.
  24. ^ "East German coaches fined over doping". BBC News. 31 August 1998. Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  25. ^ (in German). Schwimmverein Limmat Zürich. 23 March 2000. Archived from the original on 26 February 2008. Retrieved 10 March 2008.
  26. ^ "Drug claim could be a bitter pill". Times Online. 2 March 2005. Retrieved 13 March 2008.
  27. ^ . World Anti-Doping Agency. January 2004. Archived from the original on 28 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-13.
  28. ^ Harding, Luke (1 November 2005). "Forgotten victims of East German doping take their battle to court". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  29. ^ "Eine gewisse Geheimniskrämerei" (in German). Times Online, Grit Hartmann. 28 July 2005. Retrieved 14 March 2008.
  30. ^ . Sports Publications. July 1998. Archived from the original on 21 September 2008. Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  31. ^ "1977: Here comes Mr. Doping". European Cup - Milan 2007. 2007. Retrieved 11 March 2008.
  32. ^ Michael Janofsky (4 July 1988). "Article on Sports in East Germany". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 March 2008.
  33. ^ Longman, Jere (25 October 1998). "OLYMPICS; U.S. Seeks Redress for 1976 Doping In Olympics". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 March 2008.
  34. ^ . International Herald Tribune. 16 December 1998. Archived from the original on 26 October 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2008.
  35. ^ . Sportmuseum-leipzig.de. Archived from the original on 24 February 2013. Retrieved 31 December 2012.
  36. ^ Mike, Dennis; Grix, Jonathan (2012). Sport under Communism – Behind the East German 'Miracle' (1st ed.). Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan (Macmillan Publishers Limited). p. 50. ISBN 978-0-230-22784-2.
  37. ^ Data bank for the Magazine Dynamo sport/ Please insert Dynamosport for searching (attention:German language) It is for proofing the medals; extra beside the linked athletes here. 29 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ "Sport-Komplett". sport-komplett.de. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  39. ^ "Sportarten". sport-komplett.de. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  40. ^ "Athletes - Famous Olympic Athletes, Medalists, Sports Heroes". International Olympic Committee. 13 December 2018. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 February 2013. Retrieved 31 December 2013. (all about the facts and figures at the archives)
  42. ^ "All Competitions". allcompetitions.com. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  43. ^ "Dynamo". 20 September 2009.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g Klaus H. Feder, Uta Feder: Auszeichnungen in Ministerium für Staatssicherheit der DDR: 1950 - 1990. 1. Edition; "Feder Verlag", Rosenheim 1997, ISBN 3-9805114-0-5, Page No. 100

External links edit

  • Dynamo Show at the Zentralstadion in Leipzig
  • (in German)
  • (in German)
  • Citizens Committee of Leipzig, the custodian of the “Runde Ecke” Memorial Museum and the Stasi Museum
  • Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives – Pictures (in German)
  • Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives: The Dynamo-State-System of the communist East Germany (in German)
  • Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives: Structures and Missions at the SVD (in German)
  • Movies from the Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives (in German)
  • Mielke Macht und Meisterschaft: Supervision of Dynamo-Club sections in the light of the representative part Dynamo Dresden (in German)

dynamo, 5169917, 4151028, 5169917, 4151028founded27, march, 1953, years, 1953, dissolved, 1990, years, 1990, leagueolympics, world, european, championship, leagueteam, history, willing, gewillt, siegen, motto, based, ineast, berlin, east, germanyarenapalast, r. 52 31 1 17 N 13 24 54 37 E 52 5169917 N 13 4151028 E 52 5169917 13 4151028SV DynamoFounded27 March 1953 70 years ago 1953 03 27 dissolved 1990 34 years ago 1990 LeagueOlympics World cup European Championship Nat LeagueTeam history I am willing to win Ich bin gewillt zu siegen motto 1 Based inEast Berlin East GermanyArenaPalast der Republik Dynamo Sportforum Altenberg bobsleigh luge and skeleton track Dynamo Sports HotelStadiumDynamo Stadion Dresden Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Sportpark Heinz Steyer Stadion and othersColorsClaret and white Claret and silverOwnerMinistry of the Interior of the GDR Volkspolizei Zollverwaltung Ministry for State Security FeuerwehrPresidentErich Mielke 2 Championships2 187 nat approx 182 European cup medals approx 324 World cup medals approx 215 Olympic medals 3 The Sportvereinigung Dynamo German Sportvereinigung Dynamo Dynamo Sports Association was the sport association of the security agencies Volkspolizei Ministry for State Security fire department and customs of former East Germany The association was founded on 27 March 1953 and was headquartered in Hohenschonhausen in East Berlin From the date of its inception the permanent president of SV Dynamo was the Minister of State Security Erich Mielke 4 The Minister of State Security served as First chairman of the association while the Ministry of the Interior provided the Second chairman of the association 5 The Head of the Volkspolizei Karl Maron was elected as the first Second Chairman at the founding conference 6 The financial and material resources of the SV Dynamo were almost exclusively provided by the Ministry of State Security 5 Erich Mielke was dismissed as First chairman in December 1989 7 His position was not replaced 7 SV Dynamo was dissolved in 1990 5 Dynamo was set up following the multi sports club model developed in the Soviet Union and adopted throughout Eastern Europe From the beginning it had an overtly political as well as sporting agenda and its many successes were always portrayed as a triumph of the German Democratic Republic GDR SV Dynamo was dissolved during the Peaceful Revolution The association had a membership of over 280 000 members at its height 8 Athletes of the association enjoyed considerable success both in national and international competitions winning for example more than 200 Olympic medals After German reunification in 1990 the systematic doping of Dynamo athletes from 1971 until 1989 was revealed by the German media Doping was done under the supervision of the Stasi and with full backing of the government 9 Contents 1 Organization 1 1 Politics 1 2 SV Dynamo districts 2 Members 3 Trainers 4 Doping controversies 5 Achievements 5 1 Olympics 5 2 World championships 5 3 European championships 5 4 Championships 6 Award items and badges 6 1 Various 6 2 The pin of the SG Dynamo Adlershof 6 3 The Badge of the 30th Conference of the leaders of the sports organizations in the protection and security institutions in the socialist countries 6 4 Brooch for Championships of the SG Dynamo Hohenschonhausen 6 5 SC Dynamo Berlin emblem 6 6 Award of 20 years Sports Club Dynamo 6 7 SG Dynamo Berlin Hohenschonhausen medal of the 15th anniversary of the SV Dynamo 6 8 Insignia of the International shooting competitions 7 Gallery 7 1 Photos 8 See also 9 Further reading 10 Literature 11 References 12 External linksOrganization edit nbsp Acrobatics show in 1982The SV Dynamo was divided into fifteen regional units corresponding to the fifteen regional districts of the East Germany Within each regional unit individual sports communities SG and sports clubs SC existed with each sports community or club specializing in different disciplines 290 sections were included in the association such as SG Dynamo Dresden football SC Dynamo Hoppegarten judo shooting sports parachuting the SC Dynamo Klingenthal Nordic skiing SG Dynamo Luckenwalde wrestling SG Dynamo Potsdam rowing and canoe sprint SG Dynamo Weisswasser ice hockey and the SG Dynamo Zinnwald in Altenberg biathlon bobsleigh luge skeleton The most famous sports club of the SV Dynamo was probably the SC Dynamo Berlin which offered most Olympic disciplines The sports system was not designed for transfers but on schedule The athletes had to be viewed in their own country Administrators and coaches from Dynamo Berlin were often sent to support their development The district organizations which bore the names of the districts they served always wore the initials SV Dynamo 10 For small children there was even a Dynamo Kindergarten Henceforth the larger children trained every day before and after classes For the training there existed a basic plan If the children themselves are not good at school they were excluded from the training The emphasis has been respected that the athletes had to pursue themselves the sporting ideology because otherwise no success would have been guaranteed Each year the best Dynamo athlete were voted Few could win 50 M when they themselves were those who chose the sportswoman sportsman of the year Dynamo employed a planning cycle that set out the club s objectives for the upcoming four year period Politics edit The sports association was anti fascist and communist in nature Among its founders were former concentration camps prisoners and communist leaders in the fight against National socialists and Social Democrats during the era of the Weimar Republic Visits to the Soviet War Memorial in Treptower Park and the Sachsenhausen concentration camp among other places were common among the youth athletes of its teams The names of murdered and deceased communists were given as honorary titles for the constituent clubs under the sports society for example SG Dynamo Feliks E Dzierzynski Dresden or SG Dynamo Dr Richard Sorge Erfurt There were also many hymns and odes written for SV Dynamo Gerhard Kube Helmut Baierl and Kurt Barthel wrote many poets about the society and its role as a builder of national sports The Central Management Office German Buro der Zentralen Leitung BdZL of SV Dynamo had 1 400 members in 1989 A large majority of 1 000 were members of the Ministry of the Interior MdI and a smaller portion of 180 were members of the Ministry of State Security MfS 11 Stasi Major General Heinz Pommer was the head of the BdZL from 1982 to 1989 12 13 The association was dissolved in early 1990 5 SV Dynamo districts edit nbsp Flag exampleThe organization of the society was along district lines as follows Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Rostock Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Neubrandenburg Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Schwerin Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Magdeburg Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Potsdam Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Frankfurt Oder Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation East Berlin Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Cottbus Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Halle Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Leipzig Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Erfurt Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Gera Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Suhl Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Dresden Sportvereinigung Dynamo District Organisation Karl Marx StadtThe measure of the flags of the district clubs is 2 8 1 5 m with of course the emblem of the SV with the name of the club in white and at the canton the DTSB arms Members editMain article List of international winning SV Dynamo sports club athletes Key to East German sporting success was a pyramid system with schoolchildren being assessed for athletic potential and the best typically the top 2 5 in each school year being offered specialised coaching A small fraction of those would go on to become the top adult athletes of the next generation This model was initially derided in the West as a sausage machine but it has since been adopted in modified form by Australia France Spain and others with thousands of children being educated at specialised often residential sports schools rather than going through the normal high school system Overall 3 7 million clarification needed athletes were in the GDR at the German Sports federation DTSB registered in many other successful clubs in 1989 Members by year 14 Year Adults Children Total1953 23 162 none 23 1621955 55 991 10 874 66 8561958 90 160 18 846 109 0061961 105 530 42 822 148 3521966 118 651 54 691 173 3061970 131 752 74 266 206 0181972 139 013 85 295 224 3081974 144 356 93 071 237 4271975 146 127 96 666 242 7931976 148 054 99 337 247 3911983 170 000 110 000 280 000Trainers editMost coaches were also teachers or had other specific occupations They were all in principle to ease members fears before starting competitions To overcome any problems developing they could deal with them early at the source in order to eradicate this At the same time they were also the guardians of morality Trainers by year 15 Year Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 4 Total1964 none none none 99891965 none none none 96731966 6785 2466 1362 106131967 6717 2476 1489 106821968 7078 2731 1712 115211969 7536 3009 1915 124601970 7321 3211 2058 125901971 7215 3412 2119 127461972 7334 3598 2580 135121973 7394 3791 3016 142011974 11358 3906 3098 183621975 11812 3949 3407 191681976 12369 4219 3524 20112Doping controversies edit nbsp Birgit Meineke with coach Rolf Glaser nbsp Rosemarie Gabriel with coach Rolf GlaserSV Dynamo 16 was especially singled out as a center for doping in the former East Germany 17 Many former club officials and some athletes found themselves charged after the dissolution of the country A special page on the internet was created by doping victims trying to gain justice and compensation listing people involved in doping at the club the so called Dynamo Liste 18 State endorsed doping began with the Cold War when every eastern bloc gold was an ideological victory From 1974 Manfred Ewald the head of the GDR s sports federation imposed blanket doping At the 1968 Mexico City Olympics the country of 17 million collected nine gold medals Four years later the total was 20 and in 1976 it doubled again to 40 19 Ewald was quoted as having told coaches They re still so young and don t have to know everything He was given a 22 month suspended sentence to the outrage of his victims 20 Often doping was carried out without the knowledge of the athletes some of them as young as ten years of age It is estimated that around 10 000 former athletes bear the physical and mental scars of years of drug abuse 21 one of them is Rica Reinisch a triple Olympic champion and world record setter at the Moscow Games in 1980 has since suffered numerous miscarriages and recurring ovarian cysts Athletes like Renate Vogel silver medalist at the 1972 Olympics in the swimming competitions were told the injections were vitamins but failed to believe the explanation and quit her sport 22 Two former SC Dynamo Berlin club doctors Dieter Binus chief of the national women s team from 1976 to 80 and Bernd Pansold in charge of the sports medicine center in East Berlin were committed for trial for allegedly supplying 19 teenagers with illegal substances 23 Binus was sentenced in August 24 Pansold in December 1998 after both being found guilty of administering hormones to underage female athletes from 1975 to 1984 25 Virtually no East German athlete ever failed an official drug test though Stasi files show that many did indeed produced positive tests at Kreischa the Saxon laboratory German Zentrale Dopingkontroll Labor des Sportmedizinischen Dienstes that was at the time approved by the International Olympic Committee 26 now called the Institute of Doping Analysis and Sports Biochemistry IDAS 27 The manufacturer of the drugs in former East Germany Jenapharm still found itself involved in numerous lawsuits from doping victims being sued by almost 200 former athletes as of 2005 fifteen years after the end of East Germany 28 Many of the substances handed out were even under East German law illegal 29 Former athletes of SC Dynamo Berlin who publicly admitted to doping accusing their coaches 30 Daniela Hunger Andrea Pollack Katharina Bullin Andreas KriegerFormer athletes of SC Dynamo Berlin disqualified for doping Ilona Slupianek 31 Ilona Slupianek tested positive along with three Finnish athletes at the 1977 European Cup becoming the only East German athlete ever to be convicted of doping 32 Based on the self admission by Pollack the United States Olympic Committee asked for the redistribution of gold medals won in the 1976 Olympics 33 Despite court rulings in Germany that substantiate claims of systematic doping by some East German swimmers the IOC executive board announced that it has no intention of revising the Olympic record books This is an understandable decision as it could otherwise trigger a flood of such claims involving former eastern bloc athletes In rejecting the American petition on behalf of its women s medley relay team in Montreal and a similar petition from the British Olympic Association on behalf of Sharron Davies the IOC made it clear that it wanted to discourage any such appeals in the future 34 Achievements editOlympics edit Athletes of SV Dynamo won approximately 215 Olympic medals in a 37 years period 35 A review by SV Dynamo leaders after the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich found that athletes of SV Dynamo won so many medals for East Germany that the sports association would have been placed on a ninth to tenth place on the unofficial list if the sports association had been a national team 36 World championships edit Athletes of SV Dynamo won approximately 324 World Cup medals in a 37 years period The SV Dynamo won more World champion titles than hundreds of other nations 2008 The rowers won the most titles 37 European championships edit Athletes of SV Dynamo won approximately 182 European titles 3 See also List of international winning SV Dynamo sports club athletes Championships edit Main article List of the national championships of the SV Dynamo Athletes of SV Dynamo won altogether 2 187 titles in 35 sport sections over a 37 year period 38 With 280 000 members it is not surprising that the SV Dynamo multi sport club has won many championships in East Germany so that a separate category should be needed 39 40 41 42 Award items and badges edit nbsp nbsp The highest award was a banner of Felix Dzerzhinsky The SV Dynamo sports association awarded various signs badges medals and lapel pins to its members The highest award was the title of Dzerzhinsky Athlete German Dzierzynskisportler 43 nbsp Needle of honor for adults nbsp Needle of honor for children nbsp Honorary title nbsp Needle for very good work 1st version nbsp Needle for very good work 2nd version nbsp Badge for g s b niveau of militant combat sport nbsp G s b needle for the best sports results cops nbsp Champion s needle 1st version nbsp Champion s needle 2nd version nbsp Provincial victory walking deco banner best club Various edit The pin of the SG Dynamo Adlershof edit The pin of the SG Dynamo Adlershof German Abzeichen der SG Dynamo Adlershof was awarded by the SG Dynamo Adlershof It was a joint badge with the SG Dynamo Adlerhof service focus in sports shooting The badge which also existed in embroidered form for track suits shows the logo of the Sports Club Dynamoys on a burgundy granular base with a white D The words SG Dynamo Adlershof are written on a triangular tape surrounding the log 44 The Badge of the 30th Conference of the leaders of the sports organizations in the protection and security institutions in the socialist countries edit German Abzeichen der 30 Konferenz der Leitungen der Sportorganisationen der Schutz und Sicherheitsorgane der sozialistischen Lander The silver badge which was designed with a pad printing has a height of 34 6 mm and a width of 30 mm shield shaped superficial and shows the City Hall German Rotes Rathhaus of East Berlin 44 Brooch for Championships of the SG Dynamo Hohenschonhausen edit German Brosche Meisternadel der SG Dynamo Berlin Hohenschonhausen was awarded by the SG Dynamo Hohenschonhausen an award from the Sports Club The brooch of the championship in 1968 in medal form has a diameter of 34 6 mm and shows on their obverse four sports These include volleyball gymnastics athletics climbing on a military pentathlon by a soldier Among these motifs the inscription SG DYNAMO BERLIN HOHENSCHONHAUSEN is readable The reverse of the coin shows the centrally raised embossed inscription 15 years SV Dynamo which has an inscription from one to the upper right curved laurel wreath penetrated At the top of the medal is an eyelet to which a 40 2 mm wide x 22 5 mm high clip which should be placed on granular basic black red and gold enamel Center is the national emblem of the GDR imprinted on the logo of the Dynamo sports association the winding D is seen Above the upper band is a curved black field with the ribbon MEISTER 1968 The needle is like Master of the medal shows of the year 1969 but on her lapel is a change in the inscription which is readable 20 YEARS GDR German 20 JAHRE DDR 44 SC Dynamo Berlin emblem edit The SC Dynamo Berlin emblem was a joining badge of the SC Dynamo Berlin The badge of the SC Dynamo Berlin indicates a service focus on football basketball boxing ice hockey figure skating speed skating parachuting handball judo athletics equestrian cycling rowing shooting swimming diving and gymnastics The badges show the familiar logo of the Sports Club Dynamo on a burgundy background with the white convoluted D This is flanked both sides by a laurel wreath At the bottom tip of the badge is on a black background of the logo to readable Sportclub 44 Award of 20 years Sports Club Dynamo edit German Auszeichnung 20 Jahre Sportvereinigung Dynamo was awarded by the SV Dynamo an award of the Sports Club The back of the badge is flat and displays a soldered horizontal stitched needle This badge is round like a coin and has a diameter of 39 mm The logo of the SV Dynamo is in the lower right a logo of the Soviet Union is in the top left which is nearly identical to the German pedant In the upper right side of the coin the inscription 50 JAHRE 20 is readable the 50 is the anniversary of the Soviet Union Dynamo and the 20 for the German Next to two logos is shown an upward laurel wreath The appearance of the lapels is unknown Growth was the medal on a rectangular 28 mm wide and 11 5 mm high burgundy smooth and glossy protection the left is the symbol of the hammer and sickle of the Soviet Union and the right to locate the state emblem of the GDR 44 SG Dynamo Berlin Hohenschonhausen medal of the 15th anniversary of the SV Dynamo edit The German Abzeichen der SG Dynamo Berlin Hohenschonhausen zum 15 Jahrestag der SV Dynamo was awarded by the SG Dynamo Hohenschonhausen an award of the Sports Club The back of the badge is flat and displays a soldered horizontal stitched needle The badge is shaped like a medal with a diameter of 39 mm and is made of enamel and is awarded according to the levels gold silver or bronze It shows on their obverse center the symbolic representation of four sports volleyball gymnastics athletics climbing a Eskaladierwand with a soldier Enclosed is the symbolism of a transcription SG DYNAMO BERLIN HOHENSCHONHAUSEN that determines the lower half of the coin and the subsequent laurel branches on both sides The reverse shows a laurel wreath on the other hand within the logos of the SV Dynamo bottom right and top left of the DTSB Growth was the medal in a trapezoid shaped plastic clip the 32 5 mm wide and 9 7 mm in height at the front left side of the mortgaged It shows the central symbol of the SV Dynamo flanked by laurel wreath and the words 1953 left and 1968 right 44 Insignia of the International shooting competitions edit German Abzeichen der Internationalen Schiesswettkampfe The Insignia of the International shooting competitions was awarded by the SV Dynamo On the occasion of the 2nd International shooting badges were donated The badge has a shape similar to a gold coin with dimensions spanning 28 6 mm high and 24 4 mm wide The front of the badge shows a laurel wreath target with two diagonally crossed rifles overlaid above it At the bottom of the coin is the year in which the competition took place At the top is the SV Dynamo logo which extends beyond the edge of the coin The logo serves simultaneously as it braces for the suspension fixed in banner form which was 10 6 mm high and 28 8 mm wide It has an inscription reading III INT SCHIESSWETTKAMPFE LEIPZIG 44 Gallery editPhotos edit nbsp The multi use hall in Schwerin nbsp The Dynamo Stadium and bath in Dresden nbsp Sailing in Warnemunde nbsp Swimmer nbsp The Friedrich Ludwig Jahn Stadion in East Berlin nbsp Indoor swimming pool at the Dynamo Sportforum in East Berlin nbsp Gymnastics nbsp 1973 Munich nbsp Cross country running nbsp Rowing nbsp Indoor swimming pool Rostock nbsp Dresden Steyer StadiumSee also editUse of performance enhancing drugs in sport Doping in East Germany Dynamosport nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to SV Dynamo Further reading editHormonal doping and androgenization of athletes a secret program of the German Democratic Republic government by Werner W Franke Holderlin High School Heidelberg Germany and Brigitte Berendonk publisher American Association for Clinical ChemistryLiterature editGlaser Andreas 1976 SV Dynamo Ein Almanach in German ASIN B0027432ZC SV Dynamo Mut und Kraft in German Offizin Andersen Nexo Leipzig 1984 ASIN none Pickard Ralph 2012 STASI Decorations and Memorabilia Volume II Frontline Historical Publishing ISBN 978 0 9797199 2 9 English Contains a 32 page Chapter on the Stasi and Dynamo Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin Dissertation Die Fruhgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo Hegemoniebestrebungen Dominanzverhalten und das Rivalitatsverhaltnis zur Armeesportvereinigung Vorwarts Dissertation zur Erlangung des akademischen Grads Dr phil Philosophische Fakultat IV Carmen Fechner 2012 in German language References edit Sportschau der SV Dynamo auf dem VIII Turn und Sportfest in Leipzig 1987 at 5min and 47sec Archived copy bilder4 n tv de Archived from the original on 8 November 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Data bank for the Magazine Dynamo sport Please insert Dynamosport for searching attention German language It is for proving the medals extra beside the linked athletes here Archived 29 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Kurzbiographie von Erich Mielke stasi unterlagen archiv de in German Berlin Stasi Records Agency n d Retrieved 9 July 2021 a b c d Botschafter im Trainingsanzug Die Sportvereinigung Dynamo in der DDR stasi unterlagen archiv de in German Berlin Stasi Records Agency n d Retrieved 9 July 2021 Fechner Carmen 25 August 2011 Die Fruhgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo Hegemoniebestrebungen Dominanzverhalten nd das Rivalitatsverhaltnis zur Armeesportvereinigung Vorwarts PDF doctoralThesis in German Berlin Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin p 86 doi 10 18452 16499 a b Fechner Carmen 25 August 2011 Die Fruhgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo Hegemoniebestrebungen Dominanzverhalten nd das Rivalitatsverhaltnis zur Armeesportvereinigung Vorwarts PDF doctoralThesis in German Berlin Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin pp 226 228 doi 10 18452 16499 Michael Barsuhn Jutta Braun Hans Joachim Teichler Chronik der Sporteinheit vom Mauerfall bis zur Aufnahme der funf neuen Landessportbunde am 15 Dezember 1990 in den Deutschen Sportbund PDF Deutscher Sportbund Archived from the original PDF on 1 October 2011 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Sports Doping Statistics Reach Plateau in Germany Deutsche Welle 26 February 2003 Retrieved 4 August 2007 Gymn Forum Maxi Gnauck Biography gymn forum net Retrieved 30 March 2019 Pleil Ingolf 2001 Mielke Macht und Meisterschaft die Bearbeitung der Sportgemeinschaft Dynamo Dresden durch das MfS 1978 1989 in German 1st ed Berlin Christopher Links Verlag GmbH p 263 ISBN 9783861532354 Pommer Heinz stasi unterlagen archiv de in German Berlin Stasi Records Agency n d Retrieved 9 July 2021 Braun Jutta 2015 Munkel Daniela ed State Security A reader on the GDR secret police PDF Berlin Stasi Records Agency p 200 ISBN 978 3 942130 97 4 SV Dynamo Almanach 1977 SV Dynamo Almanach Pain And Injury in Sport Social And Ethical Analysis Section III Chapter 7 Page 111 by Sigmund Loland Berit Skirstad Ivan Waddington Published by Routledge in 2006 ASIN B000OI0HZG Dynamo Liste in German doping opfer yahoo com September 2002 Archived from the original on 20 April 2004 Retrieved 10 March 2008 Dynamo Liste Die Tater in German doping opfer yahoo com September 2002 Archived from the original on 24 January 2008 Retrieved 11 March 2008 Jenapharm says drugs were legal ESPN 28 April 2005 Retrieved 11 March 2008 Obituary Manfred Ewald The Independent 25 October 2002 Archived from the original on 21 September 2008 Retrieved 11 March 2008 GDR athletes sue over steroid damage BBC News Europe 13 March 2005 Retrieved 11 March 2008 Doping im DDR Sport Wir waren Versuchskaninchen in German 3sat online 3 February 2005 Retrieved 13 March 2008 New doping charges against East German doctors BBC News 25 November 1997 Retrieved 7 March 2008 East German coaches fined over doping BBC News 31 August 1998 Retrieved 11 March 2008 Doping of underage athletes in the former GDR in German Schwimmverein Limmat Zurich 23 March 2000 Archived from the original on 26 February 2008 Retrieved 10 March 2008 Drug claim could be a bitter pill Times Online 2 March 2005 Retrieved 13 March 2008 Accredited Laboratories World Anti Doping Agency January 2004 Archived from the original on 28 February 2008 Retrieved 2008 03 13 Harding Luke 1 November 2005 Forgotten victims of East German doping take their battle to court The Guardian London Retrieved 11 March 2008 Eine gewisse Geheimniskramerei in German Times Online Grit Hartmann 28 July 2005 Retrieved 14 March 2008 Drugs update Sports Publications July 1998 Archived from the original on 21 September 2008 Retrieved 11 March 2008 1977 Here comes Mr Doping European Cup Milan 2007 2007 Retrieved 11 March 2008 Michael Janofsky 4 July 1988 Article on Sports in East Germany The New York Times Retrieved 13 March 2008 Longman Jere 25 October 1998 OLYMPICS U S Seeks Redress for 1976 Doping In Olympics The New York Times Retrieved 12 March 2008 Despite Doping Olympic Medals Stand International Herald Tribune 16 December 1998 Archived from the original on 26 October 2008 Retrieved 12 March 2008 Sportmuseum Sportmuseum leipzig de Archived from the original on 24 February 2013 Retrieved 31 December 2012 Mike Dennis Grix Jonathan 2012 Sport under Communism Behind the East German Miracle 1st ed Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan Macmillan Publishers Limited p 50 ISBN 978 0 230 22784 2 Data bank for the Magazine Dynamo sport Please insert Dynamosport for searching attention German language It is for proofing the medals extra beside the linked athletes here Archived 29 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Sport Komplett sport komplett de Retrieved 30 March 2019 Sportarten sport komplett de Retrieved 30 March 2019 Athletes Famous Olympic Athletes Medalists Sports Heroes International Olympic Committee 13 December 2018 Retrieved 30 March 2019 Sportmuseum Archived from the original on 24 February 2013 Retrieved 31 December 2013 all about the facts and figures at the archives All Competitions allcompetitions com Retrieved 30 March 2019 Dynamo 20 September 2009 a b c d e f g Klaus H Feder Uta Feder Auszeichnungen in Ministerium fur Staatssicherheit der DDR 1950 1990 1 Edition Feder Verlag Rosenheim 1997 ISBN 3 9805114 0 5 Page No 100External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to SV Dynamo nbsp Look up Dynamo in Wiktionary the free dictionary Dynamo Show at the Zentralstadion in Leipzig Declaration by the Stasi itself to their Dynamo Sports Society s past in German Botschafter im Trainingsanzug Die Sportvereinigung Dynamo in der DDR in German Citizens Committee of Leipzig the custodian of the Runde Ecke Memorial Museum and the Stasi Museum Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives Pictures in German Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives The Dynamo State System of the communist East Germany in German Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives Structures and Missions at the SVD in German Movies from the Federal Commissioner for the Stasi Archives in German Mielke Macht und Meisterschaft Supervision of Dynamo Club sections in the light of the representative part Dynamo Dresden in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SV Dynamo amp oldid 1194158157, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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