48th (USA) Contemporary History Auction

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Studentenweltspiele 1939 - 1.Platz Medaille Ursula Pollack

Studentenweltspiele 1939 - 1.Platz Medaille Ursula Pollack

LOS US1-106
VERKAUFT
Auktion beendet        1. Mai 2022   |  15:10
ERGEBNIS
$ 340,00
EXKL. AUFGELD: 22,50 %
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BESCHREIBUNG & FOTOS
Beobachten
Epoche 1918 — 1945
Land Deutsches Reich 1918 - 1945
Material
Maße 11.5 cm
Hersteller
Gewicht 119.3 g
US Los US1-106
EAN 3000000001479
US Los US1-106
Epoche 1918 — 1945
Land Deutsches Reich 1918 - 1945
EAN 3000000001479
Material
Maße 11.5 cm
Hersteller
Gewicht 119.3 g
Epoche 1918 — 1945
Land Deutsches Reich 1918 - 1945
US Los US1-106
Material
Maße 11.5 cm
EAN 3000000001479
Hersteller
Gewicht 119.3 g
Artikel aus dem selben Nachlass



Deutsches Reich 1918 - 1945
Studentenweltspiele 1939 - 1.Platz Medaille Ursula Pollack


Beschreibung

Ursula Pollack (born October 27, 1919) is a German freestyle swimmer who competed in the 1936 Summer Olympics. She was born in Berlin. In 1936 she was a member of the German relay team that won the silver medal in the 4 × 100 meter freestyle relay event. Pollack swam in the semi-final and helped the team to qualify for the final. She did not compete in the final, and was not therefore awarded a medal.

Here her price and world champion medal. Amber with inscription in cameo effect. In original case of issue. Mint condition and exceedingly rare.

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

The formal opening was by Bernhard Rust, the Reich Minister of Science, Education and Culture, on 20 August in the Prater Stadium, the main venue of the games. The NSDStB invited many nations to the Vienna games, but most entrants were nations affiliated with the Axis powers. The following countries were reported to have participated in the games: Kingdom of Bulgaria, Estonia, Finland, German Reich, Kingdom of Hungary, Kingdom of Italy, Empire of Japan, Peru, Slovak Republic, Spanish State, Union of South Africa, Sweden, and Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The International Institute of Intellectual Cooperation stated in 1940, "The results of the Monaco Games were much superior to those of the Vienna Games."


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