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・ Luxembourg at the 2012 Winter Youth Olympics
・ Luxembourg at the 2013 UCI Road World Championships
・ Luxembourg at the 2013 World Aquatics Championships
・ Luxembourg at the 2013 World Championships in Athletics
・ Luxembourg at the 2014 European Athletics Championships
・ Luxembourg at the 2014 FEI World Equestrian Games
・ Luxembourg at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics
・ Luxembourg at the 2014 UCI Road World Championships
・ Luxembourg at the 2014 Winter Olympics
・ Luxembourg at the 2015 European Games
・ Luxembourg at the 2015 Games of the Small States of Europe
・ Luxembourg at the 2015 UCI Road World Championships
・ Luxembourg at the 2015 World Aquatics Championships
・ Luxembourg at the 2015 World Championships in Athletics
・ Luxembourg at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Luxembourg at the Olympics
・ Luxembourg at the Paralympics
・ Luxembourg Athletics Federation
・ Luxembourg Boy Scouts Association
・ Luxembourg Brazilian
・ Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine
・ Luxembourg Championship (ice hockey)
・ Luxembourg City
・ Luxembourg City Hall
・ Luxembourg City History Museum
・ Luxembourg Commercial Internet eXchange (LU-CIX)
・ Luxembourg Commission
・ Luxembourg communal council
・ Luxembourg communal election, 2005
・ Luxembourg communal election, 2011


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

Athletes from Luxembourg have competed at 28 editions of the modern Olympic Games. Luxembourg's National Olympic Committee, the Comité Olympique et Sportif Luxembourgeois, was founded in 1912 and sent its first team to the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm.
Only two athletes won medals competing for Luxembourg in the Summer Olympics: weightlifter Joseph Alzin, silver in 1920, and runner Josy Barthel, gold in 1952. In the late 20th-century, it was discovered that runner Michel Théato was actually Luxembourgish. Théato competed for France at the 1900 Summer Olympics, where he won the gold medal in the men's marathon. The medal is still credited to France by the IOC.〔(60th anniversary for only Luxembourg Olympic gold medal win )〕
Luxembourg first competed at the Winter Olympic Games in 1928, and has taken part in a total of seven Winter Games. Thus, despite having been one of the earliest countries to take part, Luxembourg has competed in relatively few of the Games. In the seven Games, Luxembourg has won a total of two medals: both silver, and won by Marc Girardelli in 1992.
After Luxembourg's first appearance, in St. Moritz, and the country's second appearance, at the 1936 Games in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Luxembourg did not compete at the Olympics for another five decades. As a low-lying country, whose highest peak (the Kneiff) lies only 560 metres (1,837 ft) above sea level, Luxembourg had little pedigree in most Winter Olympic sports.
However, the naturalisation of Marc Girardelli, an Austrian-born alpine skier, saw Luxembourg return to the Games in 1988. In the following Winter Olympics, in 1992 in Albertville, Girardelli won Luxembourg's first two Winter Olympic medals, scooping silver in both the Giant Slalom and Super G.
Neither Girardelli, nor Luxembourg, has won another Winter medal since 1992, but the country's return to the Winter world stage has been maintained by the appearance of two ice skaters in subsequent Games: Patrick Schmit in 1998 and Fleur Maxwell in 2006.
Luxembourg qualified for the 2010 Winter Olympics two athletes but did not participate because one did not reach the criteria set by the NOC and the other was injured before the Games.
== Medal tables by Games ==


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