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・ Germany at the 2014 UCI Road World Championships
・ Germany at the 2014 Winter Olympics
・ Germany at the 2014 Winter Paralympics
・ Germany at the 2015 European Games
・ Germany at the 2015 Summer Universiade
・ Germany at the 2015 UCI Road World Championships
・ Germany at the 2015 UCI Track Cycling World Championships
・ Germany at the 2015 World Aquatics Championships
・ Germany at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics
・ Germany at the 2015 World Speed Skating Championships
・ Germany at the 2016 Summer Olympics
・ Germany at the 2016 Summer Paralympics
・ Germany at the 2017 World Games
・ Germany at the FIFA World Cup
・ Germany at the Hopman Cup
Germany at the Olympics
・ Germany at the Paralympics
・ Germany at the Summer Olympics
・ Germany at the UCI Road World Championships
・ Germany at the UEFA European Football Championship
・ Germany at the Winter Olympics
・ Germany Calling
・ Germany Davis Cup team
・ Germany Fed Cup team
・ Germany Foundation
・ Germany Guard Service
・ Germany in Autumn
・ Germany in the early modern period
・ Germany in the Eurovision Dance Contest
・ Germany in the Eurovision Song Contest


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Germany at the Olympics : ウィキペディア英語版
Germany at the Olympics

Athletes from Germany have taken part in most of the Olympic Games since the first modern Games in 1896. Germany has hosted three Olympic Games, in 1936 both the Winter and Summer Games, and the 1972 Summer Olympics. In addition, Germany had been selected to host the 1916 Summer Olympics as well as the 1940 Winter Olympics, both of which had to be cancelled due to World Wars. After these wars, Germans were banned from participating in 1920, 1924 and 1948. While the country was divided, each of the two German states boycotted the Summer Games: in 1980 West Germany was one of 65 nations which did not go to Moscow in protest at the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and in 1984 East Germany joined the Soviet Union (and several others) in the boycott of the Summer Games in Los Angeles.
Including the Winter Games of 2014, German athletes have won 1681 medals: 547 gold, 567 silver and 567 bronze. The IOC currently splits these results among four codes, even though only the East German Democratic Republic (GDR) from 1968 to 1988 had sent a separate team to compete against the team of the German NOC that represented Germany (GER) since 1896.
==German post-WW2 division until 1990==
After German organisations had been dissolved by the Allies in 1947, in 1950 the IOC recognized the reorganized Nationales Olympisches Komitee für Deutschland for all of Germany, based in (West) Germany.
Due to the Cold War, an East German state (German Democratic Republic) was created in October 1949, and a separate National Olympic Committee (NOC) for East Germany was established in 1951. It was not immediately recognized by the IOC, which until 1965 required that athletes of the NOC of East Germany join the German team represented by the West Germany based NOC of Germany. This team, which competed together from 1956 to 1964, is nowadays called the United Team of Germany (''EUA'', "Equipe Unifiée Allemande"), but was Germany (''GER'') then. As a result of the Germany being divided, from 1968 to 1990 two independent teams competed in each of the Games; the original designations were ''GER'' for the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and ''GDR'' for the German Democratic Republic (East Germany). In 1980 the West German code was changed to ''FRG'' (which is currently also applied by the IOC in retrospect). After the GDR ceased to exist in 1990 and its states joined the Federal Republic of Germany, Germany once again was represented by a single team, designated ''GER''.
Additionally, in the early 1950s the French-occupied Saar had its own NOC and competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics before joining the German Olympic team in 1956 and the (West) German state by 1957.

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