1939 International University Games (Vienna)

Multi-sport event in Vienna, Austria From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An International University Games (German: Studenten-Weltspiele[1]) was an international multi-sport event held between 20 and 27 August 1939 in Vienna, German Reich (now Vienna, Austria),[1][2] which had originally been scheduled as the official 1939 staging of the Summer International University Games awarded to Vienna by the Confédération Internationale des Étudiants (CIE) in January 1938, prior to Austria's absorption into Nazi Germany by the Anschluss.[3][4] The National Socialist German Students' League (NSDStB) withdrew from the CIE in May 1939,[3] and the CIE at short notice moved its version of the 1939 International University Games to Monte Carlo.

Poster

The formal opening was by Bernhard Rust, the Reich Minister of Science, Education and Culture, on 20 August at Prater Stadium, the main venue of the games.[5][6] The International Institute of Intellectual Cooperation stated in 1940 that "the results of the Monaco Games were much superior to those of the Vienna Games."[7]

Participating nations

The NSDStB invited many nations to the Vienna games, but most entrants were nations affiliated with the Axis powers.[3][8] The following countries were reported to have participated in the games:[9]

Athletics

Men's events

More information Event, Gold ...
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 Metres  József Sir (HUN)10.7  Amelio Monacci (ITA)10.8  Matsuo Taniguchi (JPN)10.9
200 Metres  Tullio Gonnelli (ITA)21.8  József Sir (HUN)21.9  Ernesto Bianchi (ITA)22.0
400 Metres  Ottavio Missoni (ITA)48.0  Hans Helm (GER)48.3  Karl Rinck (GER)48.5
800 Metres  Wolfgang Dessecker (GER)1:53.9  Gioacchino Dorascenzi (ITA)1:54.4  János Aradi (HUN)1:55.3
1500 Metres  Wolfgang Dessecker (GER)3:57.2  Sándor Rátonyi (HUN)3:58.4  Gusztáv Harsányi (HUN)3:59.6
5000 Metres  Rolf Fellersmann (GER)15:10.6  András Csaplár (HUN)15:10.8  Ã…ke Lindstedt (SWE)15:28.6
110 Metres Hurdles  Lennart Lundberg (SWE)15.1  Giorgio Oberweger (ITA)15.3  Akira Kawamura (JPN)15.4
400 Metres Hurdles  Max Meyr (GER)54.0  Walter Darr (GER)54.5  Jenõ Polgár (HUN)56.0
4 x 100 Metres Relay GermanyGermany "A"
Fritz Müller
Harald Mellerowicz
Siegfried Schmitt
Günter Köster
41.8 ItalyItaly "A"
Tullio Gonnelli
Amelio Monacci
Gianvittorio Schulteschi
Ernesto Bianchi
42.1 HungaryHungary
József Sir
Ferenc Szigetvári
László Ember
József Góby
42.6
4 x 400 Metres Relay GermanyGermany "A"
Karl Rinck
Hans Helm
Cuno Wieland
Gerhard Rose
3:15.8 ItalyItaly "A"
Gioacchino Dorascenzi
Ottavio Missoni
Aldo Ferassutti
Angelo Lualdi
3:17.2 HungaryHungary
József Vadas
János Görkói
György Sándor
Jenõ Polgár
3:17.4
10 x 200 Metres Relay GermanyGermany3:38.3 ItalyItaly
Ottavio Missoni
Tullio Gonnelli
Leo Craighero
Amelio Monacci
Gianvittorio Schulteschi
Ernesto Bianchi
Aldo Ferassutti
Bruno Mainardi
Giovanni Scolari
Adriano Ambrosioni
3:39.2 HungaryHungary
György Sándor
László Ember
Ferenc Szigetvári
József Sir
Jenõ Polgár
József Vadas
Vilmos Vermes
József Góby
László Gábor
János Görkói
3:43.2
High Jump  Assar Persson (SWE)1.90  Gustav Weinkötz (GER)1.85  Renato Dotti (ITA)1.85
Pole Vault  Rudolf Glötzner (GER)4.10  Gian Battista Boscutti (ITA)3.90  Bo Ljungberg (SWE)3.90
Long Jump  Guido Bologna (ITA)7.09  István Gyuricza (HUN)7.03  Lennart Eliaeson (SWE)7.01
Triple Jump  Kim Won-Kwon (JPN)[fn 1]15.37  Jaakko Vakkuri (FIN)14.73  Vittorio Turco (ITA)14.72
Shot  Gerhard Stöck (GER)16.33  Aleksander Kreek (EST)16.26  Kurt Gross-Fengels (GER)14.79
Discus  Giorgio Oberweger (ITA)48.21  Walter Buschey (GER)47.45  Gerhard Hilbrecht (GER)46.11
Hammer  Walter Beyer (GER)53.54  Kurt Jancke (GER)49.21  Michele Venanzetti (ITA)48.85
Javelin  József Várszegi (HUN)67.37  Karl-Heinrich Berg (GER)67.29  Friedrich Issak (EST)66.79
Pentathlon  Fritz Müller (GER)3867  Fritz Lüttge (GER)3273  Friedel Heintz (GER)3225
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Women's events

More information Event, Gold ...
Event Gold Silver Bronze
100 Metres  Ritagret Wendel (GER)12.4  Siegfriede Dempe (GER)12.6  Langerbeck (GER)[fn 2]13.0
200 Metres  Ritagret Wendel (GER)25.4  Ergbuth (GER)[fn 2]26.6  Lilo Stubbe (GER)26.6
80 Metres Hurdles  Siegfriede Dempe (GER)11.7  Annemarie Westphal (GER)12.0  Erika Biess (GER)12.1
4 x 100 Metres Relay GermanyGermany "A"
Siegfriede Dempe
Ritagret Wendel
Langerbeck
Erika Biess
49.0 GermanyGermany "B"50.5 UnknownUnknown
High Jump  Luise Lockemann (GER)1.50[fn 3]  Wanda Nowak (GER)[fn 4]1.50[fn 3]  Editha Evers (GER)1.50
Long Jump  Luise Lockemann (GER)5.21  Brenner (GER)[fn 2]5.19  Ergbuth (GER)[fn 2]4.90
Shot  Annemarie Westphal (GER)12.44  Gisela Schulte (GER)12.43 UnknownUnknown
Discus  Ruth Schönfeld (GER)37.43  Hermine Wittmann (GER)36.51  Gisela Schulte (GER)35.07
Javelin  Anneliese Kahle (GER)41.15  Ursula Klotz (GER)38.52  Gerda Goldmann (GER)37.60
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Medal table

More information Rank, Nation ...
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Germany (GER)18151043
2 Italy (ITA)46414
3 Hungary (HUN)24511
4 Sweden (SWE)2035
5 Japan (JPN)1023
6 Estonia (EST)0112
7 Finland (FIN)0101
Totals (7 entries)27272579
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Other sports

Military sports were held at the games, reflecting the militarism of Nazi and fascist states.[10] Other sports included tennis, boxing, field hockey (Germany beat two Italian teams[11]), basketball, swimming, handball, association football, rugby, rowing, fencing, gliding, and water polo (won by Hungary[12]).[1]

Footnotes

  1. Kim Won-Kwon represented Japan but was from Korea. The Japanese gave his name as Genken Kim
  2. The source for these results gives no first name for this athlete
  3. There is uncertainty about this time per the source data
  4. Wanda Nowak represented Germany but was from Austria

References

Further reading

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