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Sports associations (East Germany)

Sports Associations (German: Sportvereinigung (SV), German pronunciation: [ˈspɔʁtˌfɛɐ̯ˈʔaɪ̯nɪɡʊŋ]) in East Germany were nation-wide sports agencies for certain economic branches of the whole society, which were members of the Deutscher Turn- und Sportbund (DTSB) Members of biggest social employers had their own branch sports clubs or the Sportvereinigung.

Mass performance as old German tradition with athletes at the Central Stadium (Leipzig, GDR)

Central sports associations were set up in East Germany based on the Soviet model as a result of a decision by the German Sport Committee (German: Deutscher Sportausschuss) (DS) on 3 April 1950. The decision envisaged the formation of central sports associations based on the union structure in East Germany, where each sports association represented a trade union area. A total of 18 sports associations were set up after 1950. 14 of 18 sports association were dissolved as independent organizations after the founding of the DTSB in 1957.[1][2] Only the sports associations SV Dynamo, ASV Vorwärts, SV Lokomotive and SV Wismut survived the reorganization. They continued as district organizations within the DTSB.[3] The sports associations SV Dynamo and ASV Vortwärts received a special position within the DTSB and were allowed to retain their statutes.[4][5] SV Lokomotive and SV Wismut held their status district organizations of the DTSB until 1978 when the two sports associations were dissolved.[6]

After 1954 they separated amateur sport from professional sport, and from 1961, most Trade Sports-Associations of sports societies in the GDR had been closed but existed under single clubs with the name Betriebssportgemeinschaft or BSG ("Enterprise Sports Community"). In 1966, the football sections were separated and they used the name football club (FC). They had to conform to the rules of the East German Sports Association. The sections of the associations were called Sports Clubs (SCs) for only the professional athletes.

List of Sports association (SV) edit

The best were the Sportvereinigung Dynamo and the Sportvereinigung Vorwärts, while the worst were the SV Traktor and SV Aufbau.

Logo Name Trade Founded Examples
  Aktivist Mining May 1950 BSG Aktivist Zwickau
BSG Aktivist Schwarze Pumpe
SC Aktivist Brieske-Senftenberg
Anker Shipyards 1 September 1950[7] BSG Anker Wismar
  Aufbau Construction and wood industry 15/16 September 1951 in Magdeburg[8] SC Aufbau Magdeburg
BSG Aufbau Krumhermersdorf
BSG Aufbau Boizenburg
  Chemie Chemical industry, glass and ceramics August 1950 Hallescher FC Chemie
BSG Chemie Premnitz
BSG Chemie Böhlen
  Deutsche Volkspolizei Volkspolizei 20 June 1950 (became part of SV Dynamo on 27 March 1953) SV Deutsche Volkspolizei Potsdam
SV Deutsche Volkspolizei Dresden
SV Deutsche Volkspolizei Berlin
  Dynamo Interior ministry (Stasi,
Customs, Volkspolizei)
27 March 1953 SC Dynamo Berlin
SC Dynamo Klingenthal
SC Dynamo Hoppegarten
BFC Dynamo
SG Dynamo Dresden
SG Dynamo Fürstenwalde
SG Dynamo Hohenschönhausen
SG Dynamo Schwerin
SG Dynamo Weißwasser
  Einheit Administrations, banks and insurances May/June 1950 SC Einheit Dresden
BSG Einheit Greifswald
BSG Einheit Wernigerode
  Empor Trade 31 October 1950, foundation until March 1951[9] SC Empor Rostock
BSG Empor Lauter
BSG Empor Löbau
  Fortschritt Textile industry February 1951 in Neugersdorf[10] BSG Fortschritt Weißenfels
BSG Fortschritt Bischofswerda
BSG Fortschritt Cottbus
  Lokomotive Railroad 1. FC Lokomotive Leipzig
BSG Lokomotive Magdeburg
BSG Lokomotive Stendal
  Mechanik Metalworking (predecessor of SV Motor) BSG Mechanik Arnstadt
  Medizin Health system December 1951 in Erfurt[11] BSG Medizin Markkleeberg
BSG Medizin Luckau
BSG Medizin Berolina Berlin
  Motor Automotive industry and machines May/June 1950 SC Motor Jena
BSG Motor Zwickau
BSG Motor Altenburg
  Post Post and communications 30 September 1951 in Halle[12] BSG Post Neubrandenburg
BSG Post Schwerin
BSG Post Jena
  Rotation Paper and publishing July 1950 in Berlin[13] SG Rotation Leipzig
BSG Rotation Berlin
BSG Rotation Babelsberg
  Stahl Metallurgy 4 November 1951 in Leipzig[14] BSG Stahl Riesa
BSG Stahl Brandenburg
BSG Stahl Eisenhüttenstadt
  Traktor Forestry and agriculture June 1950[15] SC Traktor Schwerin
SC Traktor Oberwiesenthal
BSG Traktor Teuchern
  Turbine Electricity stations SC Turbine Erfurt
BSG Turbine Halle
BSG Turbine Potsdam
  Vorwärts Military (Kasernierte Volkspolizei,
National People's Army)
1 October 1956 ASG Vorwärts Leipzig
FC Vorwärts Berlin
ASK Vorwärts Frankfurt
ASK Vorwärts Oberhof
ASG Vorwärts Dessau
  Wismut Uranium mining BSG Wismut Aue
BSG Wismut Gera
SC Wismut Karl-Marx-Stadt
  Wissenschaft Universities and Hochschulen 15 July 1951 in Leipzig[16] HSG Wissenschaft Halle
SC Wissenschaft DHfK Leipzig
HSG Wissenschaft TH Dresden

The sub-unit: Enterprise Sports Community (BSG) edit

After World War II, the Allied Control Commission had dissolved all existing sports structures, including the dissolution of all existing sports clubs on the basis of directive 23, dated 17 December 1945. This directive only allowed the establishment of sports organizations on a local level.[17] In consequence, sport competitions were only permitted on a local level with loosely organized Sportgemeinschaften (sport collectives) in cities and on Landkreis level. Only in the fall of 1946 were football resumed on Land level. The competition was organized by the youth organization Free German Youth (FDJ).

 
Member of the BSG Wissenschaft during a competition

After the first football championship in the Soviet occupation zone had been held in the summer of 1948, it became clear that the loose organization would not be sufficient to organize league play. On an initiative of the Freier Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund (FDGB, the central labor union of East Germany) and FDJ, the Deutscher Sportausschuß (DS) was created as an umbrella organization for sports in the Soviet zone. Among its first tasks was the re-structuring of the sports organizations that was tackled with the credo "rearrangement based on production". With participation of the FDGB the existing Sportgemeinschaften were replaced by newly created Betriebssportgemeinschaft (BSG) (German pronunciation: [bəˈtri:psˌˈspɔʁtˌˈɡɛmɛiːnʃaft]) in production and trade companies. The so-called Trägerbetriebe (supporting companies) would take over tasks of financing and logistics for their respective BSGs, with the union chapter responsible for the day-to-day management. The BSG would be tasked with organizing a large spectrum of sports activities and usually would offer a range of different sports. Each BSG had its own administrative board with a chairman and heads for the different sports sections. Financial means were provided by the Trägerbetrieb. and often the infrastructure would be built by the companies as well.

To further optimize the system, the DS reorganized the BSGs again in April 1950. Central sports associations were created according to the union structure and all BSGs within such a central association were given a standard name (e.g. BSG Rotation Dresden with its Trägerbetrieb VEB Sachsenverlag, a publishing company). These central associations were tasked with promoting the BSGs in their field. This was done by organizing internal competitions within the central associations and through influencing athletes who move between individual BSGs. The following 16 sports associations were founded:

With the ongoing centralization of East German sports through the DTSB, founded in 1957, the central sports associations lost their importance and were hardly noticed by the public. Among the largest and most powerful BSGs was Wismut Aue, Stahl Riesa, Chemie Leipzig and Motor/Sachsenring Zwickau. Chemie Leipzig were the only BSG to win the East German football championship after the creation of the sports clubs in 1957.

The nationwide sports associations Vorwärts and Dynamo were outside the BSG system. They were sports organizations of the National People's Army and the Ministry of Interior of the GDR, respectively. The local Armeesportgemeinschaften (ASG) "Vorwärts" and the Sportgemeinschaften "Dynamo" were their subunits.

After German reunification and the collapse of many Volkseigener Betrieb companies the organizational and financial basis of most BSGs vanished. Only some were transformed directly to an Eingetragener Verein.[18] Most Betriebssportgemeinschaften were dissolved and replaced by newly founded sports clubs.

Miscellaneous edit

 
SV Dynamo

A sports association is often being held in the wrong idea, as soon as peoples from noncommunist states learned about this matter. They were confused by something: A sports association in the GDR is the main organization the Deutscher Turn- und Sportbund (East German Sports Association). It does imply other kinds of sports associations for rowing, soccer, tennis, track and field, etc. The communist states had in addition a trade sport- association for sports societies and meant that every trade union had its own sports association besides the sports association of the state itself. The reason was the pressure to send the employees besides the job to the training or competitions. They hoped for a higher output on the working places and better performance for the society ("...always punctual, motivated, healthy, have good ideas, being good friends, taking no drugs, not being anti-social...").

The next problem was, although used over decades: The word "Sportvereinigung" can still not being found in German dictionaries and cannot be translated into English outright.[19]

See also edit

Sources edit

  1. ^ Reichelt, Frank (1995). Das System des Leistungssports in der DDR: Darstellung der Struktur und des Aufbaus anhand ausgewählter Beispiele (1st ed.). Hamburg: Diplomica Verlag GmbH. p. 31. ISBN 9783832429607.
  2. ^ Fechner, Carmen (25 August 2011). "Die Frühgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo. Hegemoniebestrebungen, Dominanzverhalten nd das Rivalitätsverhältnis zur Armeesportvereinigung "Vorwärts"" (PDF) (in German). Berlin: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin: 32, 36, 137. doi:10.18452/16499. Retrieved 6 December 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ Mike, Dennis; Grix, Jonathan (2012). Sport under Communism – Behind the East German 'Miracle' (1st ed.). Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan (Macmillan Publishers Limited). p. 39. ISBN 978-0-230-22784-2.
  4. ^ Braun, Jutta (13 January 2013). (PDF) (in German). Potsdam: Zentrum deutsche Sportgeschichte Berlin-Brandenburg (ZdS): 9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 December 2021. Retrieved 6 December 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ Zink, Falko (December 2009). Written at Kaiserslautern. "Der Sport und seine Institutionen im Spannungsfeld von Staat und Politik: Eine zeitgeschichtliche Untersuchung zur Anpassungsfähigkeit der Institutionen des Sports" (in German). Saarbrucken: Saarland University: 126–127. Retrieved 6 December 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Fechner, Carmen (25 August 2011). "Die Frühgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo. Hegemoniebestrebungen, Dominanzverhalten nd das Rivalitätsverhältnis zur Armeesportvereinigung "Vorwärts"" (PDF) (in German). Berlin: Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin: 116. doi:10.18452/16499. Retrieved 6 December 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. ^ Berliner Zeitung, 19 April 1951, p. 4
  8. ^ Neues Deutschland, 14 September 1951, p. 8
  9. ^ ND, 12 November 1950, p. 8
  10. ^ ND, 8 February 1951, p. 6.
  11. ^ Neue Zeit, 5 December 1951, p. 2
  12. ^ ND, 30 September 1950, p. 8
  13. ^ ND, 29 July 1950, p. 6.
  14. ^ ND, 4 November 1950, p. 6.
  15. ^ BZ, 7 June 1950, p. 4
  16. ^ ND, 17 July 1951, p. 6
  17. ^ "Enactments and Approved Papers of the Control Council and Coordinating Committee" (PDF). Legal Division of the Office of the U.S. Military Government for Germany. pp. 140–141. Retrieved 2009-05-01.
  18. ^ Andreas Luh: Betriebssport zwischen Arbeitgeberinteressen und Arbeitnehmerbedürfnissen. Eine historische Analyse vom Kaiserreich bis zur Gegenwart, Aachen 1998, S. 429-441.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-10-27. Retrieved 2014-10-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

sports, associations, east, germany, sports, associations, german, sportvereinigung, german, pronunciation, ˈspɔʁtˌfɛɐ, ˈʔaɪ, nɪɡʊŋ, east, germany, were, nation, wide, sports, agencies, certain, economic, branches, whole, society, which, were, members, deutsch. Sports Associations German Sportvereinigung SV German pronunciation ˈspɔʁtˌfɛɐ ˈʔaɪ nɪɡʊŋ in East Germany were nation wide sports agencies for certain economic branches of the whole society which were members of the Deutscher Turn und Sportbund DTSB Members of biggest social employers had their own branch sports clubs or the Sportvereinigung Mass performance as old German tradition with athletes at the Central Stadium Leipzig GDR Central sports associations were set up in East Germany based on the Soviet model as a result of a decision by the German Sport Committee German Deutscher Sportausschuss DS on 3 April 1950 The decision envisaged the formation of central sports associations based on the union structure in East Germany where each sports association represented a trade union area A total of 18 sports associations were set up after 1950 14 of 18 sports association were dissolved as independent organizations after the founding of the DTSB in 1957 1 2 Only the sports associations SV Dynamo ASV Vorwarts SV Lokomotive and SV Wismut survived the reorganization They continued as district organizations within the DTSB 3 The sports associations SV Dynamo and ASV Vortwarts received a special position within the DTSB and were allowed to retain their statutes 4 5 SV Lokomotive and SV Wismut held their status district organizations of the DTSB until 1978 when the two sports associations were dissolved 6 After 1954 they separated amateur sport from professional sport and from 1961 most Trade Sports Associations of sports societies in the GDR had been closed but existed under single clubs with the name Betriebssportgemeinschaft or BSG Enterprise Sports Community In 1966 the football sections were separated and they used the name football club FC They had to conform to the rules of the East German Sports Association The sections of the associations were called Sports Clubs SCs for only the professional athletes Contents 1 List of Sports association SV 2 The sub unit Enterprise Sports Community BSG 3 Miscellaneous 4 See also 5 SourcesList of Sports association SV editThe best were the Sportvereinigung Dynamo and the Sportvereinigung Vorwarts while the worst were the SV Traktor and SV Aufbau Logo Name Trade Founded Examples nbsp Aktivist Mining May 1950 BSG Aktivist ZwickauBSG Aktivist Schwarze PumpeSC Aktivist Brieske SenftenbergAnker Shipyards 1 September 1950 7 BSG Anker Wismar nbsp Aufbau Construction and wood industry 15 16 September 1951 in Magdeburg 8 SC Aufbau MagdeburgBSG Aufbau KrumhermersdorfBSG Aufbau Boizenburg nbsp Chemie Chemical industry glass and ceramics August 1950 Hallescher FC ChemieBSG Chemie PremnitzBSG Chemie Bohlen nbsp Deutsche Volkspolizei Volkspolizei 20 June 1950 became part of SV Dynamo on 27 March 1953 SV Deutsche Volkspolizei PotsdamSV Deutsche Volkspolizei DresdenSV Deutsche Volkspolizei Berlin nbsp Dynamo Interior ministry Stasi Customs Volkspolizei 27 March 1953 SC Dynamo Berlin SC Dynamo KlingenthalSC Dynamo HoppegartenBFC Dynamo SG Dynamo Dresden SG Dynamo FurstenwaldeSG Dynamo Hohenschonhausen SG Dynamo Schwerin SG Dynamo Weisswasser nbsp Einheit Administrations banks and insurances May June 1950 SC Einheit DresdenBSG Einheit GreifswaldBSG Einheit Wernigerode nbsp Empor Trade 31 October 1950 foundation until March 1951 9 SC Empor RostockBSG Empor LauterBSG Empor Lobau nbsp Fortschritt Textile industry February 1951 in Neugersdorf 10 BSG Fortschritt WeissenfelsBSG Fortschritt BischofswerdaBSG Fortschritt Cottbus nbsp Lokomotive Railroad 1 FC Lokomotive LeipzigBSG Lokomotive MagdeburgBSG Lokomotive Stendal nbsp Mechanik Metalworking predecessor of SV Motor BSG Mechanik Arnstadt nbsp Medizin Health system December 1951 in Erfurt 11 BSG Medizin MarkkleebergBSG Medizin LuckauBSG Medizin Berolina Berlin nbsp Motor Automotive industry and machines May June 1950 SC Motor JenaBSG Motor ZwickauBSG Motor Altenburg nbsp Post Post and communications 30 September 1951 in Halle 12 BSG Post NeubrandenburgBSG Post SchwerinBSG Post Jena nbsp Rotation Paper and publishing July 1950 in Berlin 13 SG Rotation LeipzigBSG Rotation BerlinBSG Rotation Babelsberg nbsp Stahl Metallurgy 4 November 1951 in Leipzig 14 BSG Stahl RiesaBSG Stahl BrandenburgBSG Stahl Eisenhuttenstadt nbsp Traktor Forestry and agriculture June 1950 15 SC Traktor SchwerinSC Traktor OberwiesenthalBSG Traktor Teuchern nbsp Turbine Electricity stations SC Turbine ErfurtBSG Turbine HalleBSG Turbine Potsdam nbsp Vorwarts Military Kasernierte Volkspolizei National People s Army 1 October 1956 ASG Vorwarts LeipzigFC Vorwarts BerlinASK Vorwarts FrankfurtASK Vorwarts OberhofASG Vorwarts Dessau nbsp Wismut Uranium mining BSG Wismut AueBSG Wismut GeraSC Wismut Karl Marx Stadt nbsp Wissenschaft Universities and Hochschulen 15 July 1951 in Leipzig 16 HSG Wissenschaft HalleSC Wissenschaft DHfK LeipzigHSG Wissenschaft TH DresdenThe sub unit Enterprise Sports Community BSG editAfter World War II the Allied Control Commission had dissolved all existing sports structures including the dissolution of all existing sports clubs on the basis of directive 23 dated 17 December 1945 This directive only allowed the establishment of sports organizations on a local level 17 In consequence sport competitions were only permitted on a local level with loosely organized Sportgemeinschaften sport collectives in cities and on Landkreis level Only in the fall of 1946 were football resumed on Land level The competition was organized by the youth organization Free German Youth FDJ nbsp Member of the BSG Wissenschaft during a competitionAfter the first football championship in the Soviet occupation zone had been held in the summer of 1948 it became clear that the loose organization would not be sufficient to organize league play On an initiative of the Freier Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund FDGB the central labor union of East Germany and FDJ the Deutscher Sportausschuss DS was created as an umbrella organization for sports in the Soviet zone Among its first tasks was the re structuring of the sports organizations that was tackled with the credo rearrangement based on production With participation of the FDGB the existing Sportgemeinschaften were replaced by newly created Betriebssportgemeinschaft BSG German pronunciation beˈtri psˌˈspɔʁtˌˈɡɛmɛiːnʃaft in production and trade companies The so called Tragerbetriebe supporting companies would take over tasks of financing and logistics for their respective BSGs with the union chapter responsible for the day to day management The BSG would be tasked with organizing a large spectrum of sports activities and usually would offer a range of different sports Each BSG had its own administrative board with a chairman and heads for the different sports sections Financial means were provided by the Tragerbetrieb and often the infrastructure would be built by the companies as well To further optimize the system the DS reorganized the BSGs again in April 1950 Central sports associations were created according to the union structure and all BSGs within such a central association were given a standard name e g BSG Rotation Dresden with its Tragerbetrieb VEB Sachsenverlag a publishing company These central associations were tasked with promoting the BSGs in their field This was done by organizing internal competitions within the central associations and through influencing athletes who move between individual BSGs The following 16 sports associations were founded With the ongoing centralization of East German sports through the DTSB founded in 1957 the central sports associations lost their importance and were hardly noticed by the public Among the largest and most powerful BSGs was Wismut Aue Stahl Riesa Chemie Leipzig and Motor Sachsenring Zwickau Chemie Leipzig were the only BSG to win the East German football championship after the creation of the sports clubs in 1957 The nationwide sports associations Vorwarts and Dynamo were outside the BSG system They were sports organizations of the National People s Army and the Ministry of Interior of the GDR respectively The local Armeesportgemeinschaften ASG Vorwarts and the Sportgemeinschaften Dynamo were their subunits After German reunification and the collapse of many Volkseigener Betrieb companies the organizational and financial basis of most BSGs vanished Only some were transformed directly to an Eingetragener Verein 18 Most Betriebssportgemeinschaften were dissolved and replaced by newly founded sports clubs Miscellaneous edit nbsp SV DynamoA sports association is often being held in the wrong idea as soon as peoples from noncommunist states learned about this matter They were confused by something A sports association in the GDR is the main organization the Deutscher Turn und Sportbund East German Sports Association It does imply other kinds of sports associations for rowing soccer tennis track and field etc The communist states had in addition a trade sport association for sports societies and meant that every trade union had its own sports association besides the sports association of the state itself The reason was the pressure to send the employees besides the job to the training or competitions They hoped for a higher output on the working places and better performance for the society always punctual motivated healthy have good ideas being good friends taking no drugs not being anti social The next problem was although used over decades The word Sportvereinigung can still not being found in German dictionaries and cannot be translated into English outright 19 See also editSports association Deutscher Turn und Sportbund Gesellschaft fur Sport und TechnikSources edit Reichelt Frank 1995 Das System des Leistungssports in der DDR Darstellung der Struktur und des Aufbaus anhand ausgewahlter Beispiele 1st ed Hamburg Diplomica Verlag GmbH p 31 ISBN 9783832429607 Fechner Carmen 25 August 2011 Die Fruhgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo Hegemoniebestrebungen Dominanzverhalten nd das Rivalitatsverhaltnis zur Armeesportvereinigung Vorwarts PDF in German Berlin Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin 32 36 137 doi 10 18452 16499 Retrieved 6 December 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Mike Dennis Grix Jonathan 2012 Sport under Communism Behind the East German Miracle 1st ed Hampshire Palgrave Macmillan Macmillan Publishers Limited p 39 ISBN 978 0 230 22784 2 Braun Jutta 13 January 2013 Gutachten zum Themenfeld Sport fur die Enquete Kommission 5 1 Aufarbeitung der Geschichte und Bewaltigung von Folgen der SED Diktatur und des Ubergangs in einen demokratischen Rechtsstaat im Land Brandenburg PDF in German Potsdam Zentrum deutsche Sportgeschichte Berlin Brandenburg ZdS 9 Archived from the original PDF on 6 December 2021 Retrieved 6 December 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Zink Falko December 2009 Written at Kaiserslautern Der Sport und seine Institutionen im Spannungsfeld von Staat und Politik Eine zeitgeschichtliche Untersuchung zur Anpassungsfahigkeit der Institutionen des Sports in German Saarbrucken Saarland University 126 127 Retrieved 6 December 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Fechner Carmen 25 August 2011 Die Fruhgeschichte der Sportvereinigung Dynamo Hegemoniebestrebungen Dominanzverhalten nd das Rivalitatsverhaltnis zur Armeesportvereinigung Vorwarts PDF in German Berlin Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin 116 doi 10 18452 16499 Retrieved 6 December 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Berliner Zeitung 19 April 1951 p 4 Neues Deutschland 14 September 1951 p 8 ND 12 November 1950 p 8 ND 8 February 1951 p 6 Neue Zeit 5 December 1951 p 2 ND 30 September 1950 p 8 ND 29 July 1950 p 6 ND 4 November 1950 p 6 BZ 7 June 1950 p 4 ND 17 July 1951 p 6 Enactments and Approved Papers of the Control Council and Coordinating Committee PDF Legal Division of the Office of the U S Military Government for Germany pp 140 141 Retrieved 2009 05 01 Andreas Luh Betriebssport zwischen Arbeitgeberinteressen und Arbeitnehmerbedurfnissen Eine historische Analyse vom Kaiserreich bis zur Gegenwart Aachen 1998 S 429 441 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2014 10 27 Retrieved 2014 10 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sports associations East Germany amp oldid 1164445189, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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