SEA Games: Difference between revisions
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| leader_title = President |
| leader_title = President |
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| leader_name = Charouck Arirachakaran |
| leader_name = Charouck Arirachakaran |
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| website = |
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| website = {{URL|https://seagfoffice.org/index.php|SEAGFoffice.org}} |
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|remake = |
|remake = |
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|image2=THE SEA GAMES FLAG.jpg|caption2=The South East Asian Games Federation Flag |
|image2=THE SEA GAMES FLAG.jpg|caption2=The South East Asian Games Federation Flag |
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}} |
}} |
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'''SEA Games''', officially known as the '''South East Asian Games |
'''SEA Games''', officially known as the '''South East Asian Games''', is a biennial [[multi-sport event]] involving participants from the current 11 countries of [[Southeast Asia]]. The games are under the regulation of the [[Southeast Asian Games Federation]] with supervision by the [[International Olympic Committee]] (IOC) and the [[Olympic Council of Asia]] (OCA). The SEA Games is one of the five subregional Games of the [[Olympic Council of Asia]] (OCA).<ref>[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GamesL1.aspx?GPCode=4 Games page] of the website of the [[Olympic Council of Asia]]; {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101211194136/http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GamesL1.aspx?GPCode=4|date=2010-12-11}}; retrieved 2010-07-09.</ref> |
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The SEA Games is one of the five subregional Games of the [[Olympic Council of Asia]] (OCA).<ref>[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GamesL1.aspx?GPCode=4 Games page] of the website of the [[Olympic Council of Asia]]; {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101211194136/http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GamesL1.aspx?GPCode=4|date=2010-12-11}}; retrieved 2010-07-09.</ref> |
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==History== |
==History== |
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Line 68: | Line 66: | ||
{{Notelist}} |
{{Notelist}} |
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==List of |
==List of SEA Games== |
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{{main|List of |
{{main|List of SEA Games host cities}} |
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{{:List of |
{{:List of SEA Games host cities}} |
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{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size: 85%; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto;" |
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size: 85%; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto;" |
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|+List of |
|+List of SEA Games |
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! rowspan="1" |Games |
! rowspan="1" |Games |
||
! rowspan="1" |Year |
! rowspan="1" |Year |
||
! rowspan="1" |Host cities |
! rowspan="1" |Host cities |
||
! rowspan="1" |Opened by{{efn|name=NonHeadsOfState|Names & offices in ''italics'' reflect an opener who was ''not'' head of state when opening the Games. If the office is partially italicized, the non-italicized portion is the office & name of the head of state being represented.}} |
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⚫ | |||
! rowspan="1" |Date |
! rowspan="1" |Date |
||
! rowspan="1" |Sports |
! rowspan="1" |Sports |
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Line 85: | Line 83: | ||
! rowspan="1" |Ref |
! rowspan="1" |Ref |
||
|- |
|- |
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! colspan="11" style="text-align:center;" |''' |
! colspan="11" style="text-align:center;" |'''SEAP Games''' |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1959 |
| align="center" |[[1959 SEAP Games|1]] |
||
| align="center" |1959 |
| align="center" |1959 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Thailand]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Thailand]] |
||
Line 99: | Line 97: | ||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=vB6K5E3bTbSbaay2ZaIQp8hO7n0RmiRDOzxXMCFxrjge0YmtFRmezwEKMMcZW2SZMAGqUbftyeLzRyo5cI+Eeg==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=vB6K5E3bTbSbaay2ZaIQp8hO7n0RmiRDOzxXMCFxrjge0YmtFRmezwEKMMcZW2SZMAGqUbftyeLzRyo5cI+Eeg==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1961 |
| align="center" |[[1961 SEAP Games|2]] |
||
| align="center" |1961 |
| align="center" |1961 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Burma|1948}} [[Yangon]], [[Burma]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Burma|1948}} [[Yangon]], [[Burma]] |
||
Line 111: | Line 109: | ||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=vB6K5E3bTbSbaay2ZaIQp13yXhzvdgDCmTi1DEp04eh0PClMx0bcl6O2Y1PXkYe4QvQJ2estcU2eCBSb94Y2IA==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=vB6K5E3bTbSbaay2ZaIQp13yXhzvdgDCmTi1DEp04eh0PClMx0bcl6O2Y1PXkYe4QvQJ2estcU2eCBSb94Y2IA==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| align="center" |[[1965 SEAP Games|3]] |
||
| colspan="9" align="center" |''Awarded to [[Cambodia]], cancelled due to [[Cambodia (1953–1970)#Domestic developments|domestic political situation]]'' |
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|- |
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| align="center" |[[1965 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games|3]] |
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| align="center" |1965 |
| align="center" |1965 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
||
Line 123: | Line 118: | ||
| align="center" |7 |
| align="center" |7 |
||
| align="center" |963 |
| align="center" |963 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA| |
| rowspan="2" align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA|Southeast Asian Peninsular Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFscVG8BWx29pF4p9I39blYhgmp9N8LGL4zzJq2wWAfesdIRJJZycWY9NdPLhmTsG8g==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFscVG8BWx29pF4p9I39blYhgmp9N8LGL4zzJq2wWAfesdIRJJZycWY9NdPLhmTsG8g==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1967 |
| align="center" |[[1967 SEAP Games|4]] |
||
| align="center" |1967 |
| align="center" |1967 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Thailand]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Thailand]] |
||
Line 133: | Line 128: | ||
| align="center" |16 |
| align="center" |16 |
||
| align="center" |144 |
| align="center" |144 |
||
| align="center" |6 |
| rowspan="2" align="center" |6 |
||
| align="center" |984 |
| align="center" |984 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA|1967 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFt04avxVZtrVcrmtU2ceoPML0viPEooEZfXPsbXea2Ziir+nysAA+WRbdM0bkn7Qug==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFt04avxVZtrVcrmtU2ceoPML0viPEooEZfXPsbXea2Ziir+nysAA+WRbdM0bkn7Qug==] |
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|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1969 |
| align="center" |[[1969 SEAP Games|5]] |
||
| align="center" |1969 |
| align="center" |1969 |
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| align="left" |{{flagicon|Burma|1948}} [[Yangon]], [[Burma]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Burma|1948}} [[Yangon]], [[Burma]] |
||
Line 145: | Line 139: | ||
| align="center" |15 |
| align="center" |15 |
||
| align="center" |145 |
| align="center" |145 |
||
| align="center" |6 |
|||
| align="center" |920 |
| align="center" |920 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|BIR|1969 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games}} |
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|BIR|1969 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFqUMuKGGQ5+f0dQs7Yi/UXa/aAhES4nffu0h8ELhylqKFH+0eGleWftnuoHUcmnYwQ==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFqUMuKGGQ5+f0dQs7Yi/UXa/aAhES4nffu0h8ELhylqKFH+0eGleWftnuoHUcmnYwQ==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1971 |
| align="center" |[[1971 SEAP Games|6]] |
||
| align="center" |1971 |
| align="center" |1971 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
||
Line 157: | Line 150: | ||
| align="center" |15 |
| align="center" |15 |
||
| align="center" |156 |
| align="center" |156 |
||
| align="center" |7 |
| rowspan="2" align="center" |7 |
||
| align="center" |957 |
| align="center" |957 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA|1971 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games}} |
| rowspan="3" align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA|1971 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFi1DqK8mV+i7d1x3lEY4ykH9M8uninqCq4Zc2iqrbLoIlfhs0Cb7BxlTLi1u8S7UTw==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFi1DqK8mV+i7d1x3lEY4ykH9M8uninqCq4Zc2iqrbLoIlfhs0Cb7BxlTLi1u8S7UTw==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1973 |
| align="center" |[[1973 SEAP Games|7]] |
||
| align="center" |1973 |
| align="center" |1973 |
||
| align="left" | {{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]] |
| align="left" | {{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]] |
||
Line 169: | Line 162: | ||
| align="center" |16 |
| align="center" |16 |
||
| align="center" |161 |
| align="center" |161 |
||
| align="center" |7 |
|||
| align="center" |1632 |
| align="center" |1632 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA|1973 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFuE6eUFFaG/6yHbBRDy31tzlqbUukyMis7n69b6kOKijKzRGyRUWuppZocC09j22Kw==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFuE6eUFFaG/6yHbBRDy31tzlqbUukyMis7n69b6kOKijKzRGyRUWuppZocC09j22Kw==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1975 |
| align="center" |[[1975 SEAP Games|8]] |
||
| align="center" |1975 |
| align="center" |1975 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Thailand]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Thailand]] |
||
Line 183: | Line 174: | ||
| align="center" |4 |
| align="center" |4 |
||
| align="center" |1142 |
| align="center" |1142 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA|1975 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFiXp9c3JevuT5+xDmH869zpdLov8g39B+wWLyE2PdVPuqAgcAxq8CnJsXTtoX5L15Q==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFiXp9c3JevuT5+xDmH869zpdLov8g39B+wWLyE2PdVPuqAgcAxq8CnJsXTtoX5L15Q==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! colspan="11" style="text-align:center;" |''' |
! colspan="11" style="text-align:center;" |'''SEA Games''' |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1977 |
| align="center" |[[1977 SEA Games|9]] |
||
| align="center" |1977 |
| align="center" |1977 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
||
Line 195: | Line 185: | ||
| align="center" |18 |
| align="center" |18 |
||
| align="center" |188 |
| align="center" |188 |
||
| align="center" |7 |
| rowspan="3" align="center" |7 |
||
| align="center" |N/A |
| align="center" |N/A |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|INA| |
| rowspan=4 align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|INA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFuT29EBOSoldZVC1AVzvM4Lu94I1SeM8cdBJfz9zwsckuxfbj5Nc/SL5zq/cuE+OTg==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFuT29EBOSoldZVC1AVzvM4Lu94I1SeM8cdBJfz9zwsckuxfbj5Nc/SL5zq/cuE+OTg==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1979 |
| align="center" |[[1979 SEA Games|10]] |
||
| align="center" |1979 |
| align="center" |1979 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]] |
||
|[[President of Indonesia|President]] [[ |
|[[President of Indonesia|President]] [[Soeharto]] |
||
| align="center" |21–30 September 1979 |
| align="center" |21–30 September 1979 |
||
| align="center" |18 |
| align="center" |18 |
||
| align="center" |226 |
| align="center" |226 |
||
| align="center" |7 |
|||
| align="center" |N/A |
| align="center" |N/A |
||
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|INA|1979 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFhmfcVFL+1HCC1TNslkrHriv/o3vx33yOl5EWhYQ7sjUQmQgKh711ZloSOoVNnzkmw==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFhmfcVFL+1HCC1TNslkrHriv/o3vx33yOl5EWhYQ7sjUQmQgKh711ZloSOoVNnzkmw==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1981 |
| align="center" |[[1981 SEA Games|11]] |
||
| align="center" |1981 |
| align="center" |1981 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Philippines|variant=1936}} [[Manila]], [[Philippines]] |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Philippines|variant=1936}} [[Manila]], [[Philippines]] |
||
Line 219: | Line 207: | ||
| align="center" |18 |
| align="center" |18 |
||
| align="center" |245 |
| align="center" |245 |
||
| align="center" |7 |
|||
| align="center" |≈1800 |
| align="center" |≈1800 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|INA|1981 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
|[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFqF1abEccmysuNLHz9BbkWY6V1Je1iigvlSYYnOmxSKxI+srg0aF6pcyBMDOV73FTw==] |
|[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFqF1abEccmysuNLHz9BbkWY6V1Je1iigvlSYYnOmxSKxI+srg0aF6pcyBMDOV73FTw==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1983 |
| align="center" |[[1983 SEA Games|12]] |
||
| align="center" |1983 |
| align="center" |1983 |
||
| align="left"|{{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]] |
| align="left"|{{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]] |
||
Line 231: | Line 217: | ||
| align="center" |18 |
| align="center" |18 |
||
| align="center" |233 |
| align="center" |233 |
||
| align="center" |8 |
| rowspan="3" align="center" |8 |
||
| align="center" |N/A |
| align="center" |N/A |
||
| align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|INA|1983 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFjH0G1TcWtwKEvv4Dfcz2LxKcuBmxJ4VgAZF+WV/++SxRemdPU39sz61PUI0k7NSKQ==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=XHreq1g4oYTZIf3o6y9FFjH0G1TcWtwKEvv4Dfcz2LxKcuBmxJ4VgAZF+WV/++SxRemdPU39sz61PUI0k7NSKQ==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1985 |
| align="center" |[[1985 SEA Games|13]] |
||
| align="center" |1985 |
| align="center" |1985 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Thailand]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Thailand]] |
||
Line 243: | Line 228: | ||
| align="center" |18 |
| align="center" |18 |
||
| align="center" |251 |
| align="center" |251 |
||
| align="center" |8 |
|||
| align="center" |N/A |
| align="center" |N/A |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|THA| |
|{{flagIOC2team|THA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sD08HdI2hdZJRQFXjlIxUUQrt3UVqsoNkInCFsy/iRO3acEbGs7rm7ntms76jdCdfig==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sD08HdI2hdZJRQFXjlIxUUQrt3UVqsoNkInCFsy/iRO3acEbGs7rm7ntms76jdCdfig==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1987 |
| align="center" |[[1987 SEA Games|14]] |
||
| align="center" |1987 |
| align="center" |1987 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]] |
||
|[[President of Indonesia|President]] [[ |
|[[President of Indonesia|President]] [[Soeharto]] |
||
| align="center" |9–20 September 1987 |
| align="center" |9–20 September 1987 |
||
| align="center" |26 |
| align="center" |26 |
||
| align="center" |372 |
| align="center" |372 |
||
| align="center" |8 |
|||
| align="center" |N/A |
| align="center" |N/A |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|INA| |
| rowspan=4 align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|INA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sD04nmW/Mftv7EI9ujmxlPwMRD2+c6cFcUNZ83IkkyGoT8pmSJG/ecQAfn1COaq4v+g==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sD04nmW/Mftv7EI9ujmxlPwMRD2+c6cFcUNZ83IkkyGoT8pmSJG/ecQAfn1COaq4v+g==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1989 |
| align="center" |[[1989 SEA Games|15]] |
||
| align="center" |1989 |
| align="center" |1989 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
||
Line 267: | Line 250: | ||
| align="center" |24 |
| align="center" |24 |
||
| align="center" |302 |
| align="center" |302 |
||
| align="center" |9 |
| rowspan="3" align="center" |9 |
||
| align="center" |≈2800 |
| align="center" |≈2800 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|INA|1989 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sD6OxemWyMke9nGNuvnlnej/PaybmQzl2JQVEXc2bUx5lYzMen+hA4Mw7Mo78CRU/8Q==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sD6OxemWyMke9nGNuvnlnej/PaybmQzl2JQVEXc2bUx5lYzMen+hA4Mw7Mo78CRU/8Q==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1991 |
| align="center" |[[1991 SEA Games|16]] |
||
| align="center" |1991 |
| align="center" |1991 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Philippines|variant=1936}} [[Manila]], [[Philippines]] |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Philippines|variant=1936}} [[Manila]], [[Philippines]] |
||
Line 279: | Line 261: | ||
| align="center" |28 |
| align="center" |28 |
||
| align="center" |327 |
| align="center" |327 |
||
| align="center" |9 |
|||
| align="center" |N/A |
| align="center" |N/A |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|INA|1991 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sD9gEFSizHE1jVoAuWOj9KCu0OwdNi7cmsCKbobU7DDSMr2cxNSo/E4/sgom6MhC2bg==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sD9gEFSizHE1jVoAuWOj9KCu0OwdNi7cmsCKbobU7DDSMr2cxNSo/E4/sgom6MhC2bg==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1993 |
| align="center" |[[1993 SEA Games|17]] |
||
| align="center" |1993 |
| align="center" |1993 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]] |
||
Line 291: | Line 271: | ||
| align="center" |29 |
| align="center" |29 |
||
| align="center" |318 |
| align="center" |318 |
||
| align="center" |9 |
|||
| align="center" |≈3000 |
| align="center" |≈3000 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|INA|1993 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sDx/NqDzXGf93kYcQiT0RmvPQlyP8bFGPMJBGtLjMEaQArVw0ILUwiFRz2W5YSQK5UQ==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=Ye9/ZdtgZovn3J/OQ0+sDx/NqDzXGf93kYcQiT0RmvPQlyP8bFGPMJBGtLjMEaQArVw0ILUwiFRz2W5YSQK5UQ==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1995 |
| align="center" |[[1995 SEA Games|18]] |
||
| align="center" |1995 |
| align="center" |1995 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Chiang Mai]], [[Thailand]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Chiang Mai]], [[Thailand]] |
||
|[[Crown Prince of Thailand|Crown Prince]] [[Vajiralongkorn]] |
|''[[Crown Prince of Thailand|Crown Prince]]'' ''[[Vajiralongkorn]]'' {{efn|name=1995 ThailandKing|Representing his father, [[Bhumibol Adulyadej]], [[Monarchy of Thailand|King of Thailand]].}} |
||
| align="center" |9–17 December 1995 |
| align="center" |9–17 December 1995 |
||
| align="center" |28 |
| align="center" |28 |
||
| align="center" |335 |
| align="center" |335 |
||
| align="center" |10 |
| rowspan="4" align="center" |10 |
||
| align="center" |3262 |
| align="center" |3262 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|THA| |
|{{flagIOC2team|THA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=v6wVopT8epAuVqcT3nvcVFJ+1HUC+Snff1yIGxMtGRWS0o22vBVCMNh52lXXsE3+a/VN26qQT9yEPYZseB8P2Q==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=v6wVopT8epAuVqcT3nvcVFJ+1HUC+Snff1yIGxMtGRWS0o22vBVCMNh52lXXsE3+a/VN26qQT9yEPYZseB8P2Q==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1997 |
| align="center" |[[1997 SEA Games|19]] |
||
| align="center" |1997 |
| align="center" |1997 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Jakarta]], [[Indonesia]] |
||
|[[President of Indonesia|President]] [[ |
|[[President of Indonesia|President]] [[Soeharto]] |
||
| align="center" |11–19 October 1997 |
| align="center" |11–19 October 1997 |
||
| align="center" |36 |
| align="center" |36 |
||
| align="center" |490 |
| align="center" |490 |
||
| align="center" |10 |
|||
| align="center" |5179 |
| align="center" |5179 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|INA| |
|{{flagIOC2team|INA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=v6wVopT8epAuVqcT3nvcVJ9eFUzSekTnonpVK2vA8aqidAQOUPX/K0rCTl19/yQ1jVlPP3lm4NeKa9LDEVb5og==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=v6wVopT8epAuVqcT3nvcVJ9eFUzSekTnonpVK2vA8aqidAQOUPX/K0rCTl19/yQ1jVlPP3lm4NeKa9LDEVb5og==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[1999 |
| align="center" |[[1999 SEA Games|20]] |
||
| align="center" |1999 |
| align="center" |1999 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Brunei}} [[Bandar Seri Begawan]], [[Brunei]] |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Brunei}} [[Bandar Seri Begawan]], [[Brunei]] |
||
Line 327: | Line 304: | ||
| align="center" |21 |
| align="center" |21 |
||
| align="center" |233 |
| align="center" |233 |
||
| align="center" |10 |
|||
| align="center" |2365 |
| align="center" |2365 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|THA| |
|{{flagIOC2team|THA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=v6wVopT8epAuVqcT3nvcVPrexFXIIhQtx4LsLJa/EX0VpGNLqeVE9t6ZP4mhlBiZdIRfJk12VsI+sJYXIb1EkA==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=v6wVopT8epAuVqcT3nvcVPrexFXIIhQtx4LsLJa/EX0VpGNLqeVE9t6ZP4mhlBiZdIRfJk12VsI+sJYXIb1EkA==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2001 |
| align="center" |[[2001 SEA Games|21]] |
||
| align="center" |2001 |
| align="center" |2001 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
||
Line 339: | Line 315: | ||
| align="center" |32 |
| align="center" |32 |
||
| align="center" |391 |
| align="center" |391 |
||
| align="center" |10 |
|||
| align="center" |4165 |
| align="center" |4165 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|MAS| |
|{{flagIOC2team|MAS|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/TfnGoKcuIKSrNirX/Lr8ngsrmH6JDmytG1NiVz1AAQ8FJAMsjFfQW96Uu57SPnMuz6A==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/TfnGoKcuIKSrNirX/Lr8ngsrmH6JDmytG1NiVz1AAQ8FJAMsjFfQW96Uu57SPnMuz6A==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2003 |
| align="center" |[[2003 SEA Games|22]] |
||
| align="center" |2003 |
| align="center" |2003 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Vietnam}} [[Hanoi]] and [[Ho Chi Minh City]], [[Vietnam]] |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Vietnam}} [[Hanoi]] and [[Ho Chi Minh City]], [[Vietnam]] |
||
|[[Prime Minister of Vietnam|Prime Minister]] [[Phan Văn Khải]] |
|''[[Prime Minister of Vietnam|Prime Minister]]'' ''[[Phan Văn Khải]]'' {{efn|name=2003 VietnamPresident|Representing [[Trần Đức Lương]], [[President of Vietnam]].}} |
||
| align="center" |5–13 December 2003 |
| align="center" |5–13 December 2003 |
||
| align="center" |32 |
| align="center" |32 |
||
| align="center" |442 |
| align="center" |442 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
| rowspan="11" align="center" |11 |
||
| align="center" |≈5000 |
| align="center" |≈5000 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|VIE| |
|{{flagIOC2team|VIE|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/Tfi7+Gv5j4b2uhF0LQfTyM030tp+7yYqqJ4mURIgSWa5aORYHKfZCuxUJxyoIjdvx4A==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/Tfi7+Gv5j4b2uhF0LQfTyM030tp+7yYqqJ4mURIgSWa5aORYHKfZCuxUJxyoIjdvx4A==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2005 |
| align="center" |[[2005 SEA Games|23]] |
||
| align="center" |2005 |
| align="center" |2005 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Philippines}} [[Manila]], [[Philippines]] |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Philippines}} [[Manila]], [[Philippines]] |
||
Line 363: | Line 338: | ||
| align="center" |40 |
| align="center" |40 |
||
| align="center" |443 |
| align="center" |443 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |5336 |
| align="center" |5336 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|PHI| |
|{{flagIOC2team|PHI|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/TfuWI4EAn0ZTQg4yomYPPhXQ4ZrXDkHAi1Xvh0tn9sflRHwSd40hazI34mXJ5IrBTyw==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/TfuWI4EAn0ZTQg4yomYPPhXQ4ZrXDkHAi1Xvh0tn9sflRHwSd40hazI34mXJ5IrBTyw==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2007 |
| align="center" |[[2007 SEA Games|24]] |
||
| align="center" |2007 |
| align="center" |2007 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Nakhon Ratchasima]], [[Thailand]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Nakhon Ratchasima]], [[Thailand]] |
||
|[[Crown Prince of Thailand|Crown Prince]] [[Vajiralongkorn]] |
|''[[Crown Prince of Thailand|Crown Prince]]'' ''[[Vajiralongkorn]]'' {{efn|name=1995 ThailandKing|Representing his father, [[Bhumibol Adulyadej]], [[Monarchy of Thailand|King of Thailand]].}} |
||
| align="center" |6–15 December 2007 |
| align="center" |6–15 December 2007 |
||
| align="center" |43 |
| align="center" |43 |
||
| align="center" |475 |
| align="center" |475 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |5282 |
| align="center" |5282 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|THA| |
| rowspan=2 align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnESz3ZS3E1Fhw4DZ0xIvBh52DiUOaefGVlYmI7dh7YK60xTw+XWC5WaDC+D1/ts1MqVg==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnESz3ZS3E1Fhw4DZ0xIvBh52DiUOaefGVlYmI7dh7YK60xTw+XWC5WaDC+D1/ts1MqVg==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2009 |
| align="center" |[[2009 SEA Games|25]] |
||
| align="center" |2009 |
| align="center" |2009 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Laos}} [[Vientiane]], [[Laos]] |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Laos}} [[Vientiane]], [[Laos]] |
||
Line 387: | Line 360: | ||
| align="center" |29 |
| align="center" |29 |
||
| align="center" |372 |
| align="center" |372 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |3100 |
| align="center" |3100 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|THA|2009 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/TftbJ9vB//UPlW85B2RFQ7ozs9w6rjAWz8IRD3Awjev+kgYgLZjSRjaYi7SEYLODfSw==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/TftbJ9vB//UPlW85B2RFQ7ozs9w6rjAWz8IRD3Awjev+kgYgLZjSRjaYi7SEYLODfSw==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2011 |
| align="center" |[[2011 SEA Games|26]] |
||
| align="center" |2011 |
| align="center" |2011 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Jakarta]] and [[Palembang]], [[Indonesia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Indonesia}} [[Jakarta]] and [[Palembang]], [[Indonesia]] |
||
Line 399: | Line 370: | ||
| align="center" |44 |
| align="center" |44 |
||
| align="center" |545 |
| align="center" |545 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |5965 |
| align="center" |5965 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|INA| |
|{{flagIOC2team|INA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/TfmR8mAYCqZTznAoKUwwqPqG84ZnVCLSuSx02FVwp4e0Q0arA5Gi00+MuwzT1SYNwVA==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=J1dbR2Z5Zhju9k3qSk/TfmR8mAYCqZTznAoKUwwqPqG84ZnVCLSuSx02FVwp4e0Q0arA5Gi00+MuwzT1SYNwVA==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2013 |
| align="center" |[[2013 SEA Games|27]] |
||
| align="center" |2013 |
| align="center" |2013 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Myanmar}} [[Naypyidaw]], [[Myanmar]] |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Myanmar}} [[Naypyidaw]], [[Myanmar]] |
||
|[[Vice President of Myanmar|Vice President]] [[Nyan Tun]] |
|''[[Vice President of Myanmar|Vice President]]'' ''[[Nyan Tun]]'' {{efn|name=2013 MyanmarPresident|Representing [[Thein Sein]], [[President of Myanmar]].}} |
||
| align="center" |11–22 December 2013 |
| align="center" |11–22 December 2013 |
||
| align="center" |37 |
| align="center" |37 |
||
| align="center" |460 |
| align="center" |460 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |4730 |
| align="center" |4730 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|THA| |
| rowspan=2 align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|THA|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnES1hsYtfwQdSXNn+lURXo/TCdQBDEwMREp6r3XxfOFPBh0Vc8vxMMxmdm6qrTCA1RDQ==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnES1hsYtfwQdSXNn+lURXo/TCdQBDEwMREp6r3XxfOFPBh0Vc8vxMMxmdm6qrTCA1RDQ==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2015 |
| align="center" |[[2015 SEA Games|28]] |
||
| align="center" |2015 |
| align="center" |2015 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]] |
||
Line 423: | Line 392: | ||
| align="center" |36 |
| align="center" |36 |
||
| align="center" |402 |
| align="center" |402 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |4370 |
| align="center" |4370 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|THA|2015 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnES8krNZGon0IZI+akTNiOLzlTcKOX18LmyvsDkaTeUD5tG66v3zXc86SsGLuXNAa5iQ==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnES8krNZGon0IZI+akTNiOLzlTcKOX18LmyvsDkaTeUD5tG66v3zXc86SsGLuXNAa5iQ==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2017 |
| align="center" |[[2017 SEA Games|29]] |
||
| align="center" |2017 |
| align="center" |2017 |
||
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
| align="left" |{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]] |
||
Line 435: | Line 402: | ||
| align="center" |38 |
| align="center" |38 |
||
| align="center" |404 |
| align="center" |404 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |4709 |
| align="center" |4709 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|MAS| |
|{{flagIOC2team|MAS|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnES4nydFBw5FkrpDl4zAO+NhKhaEW+uFfjqp3LnotWVBJFLARn242TQe6pDIJdGfbi0g==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnES4nydFBw5FkrpDl4zAO+NhKhaEW+uFfjqp3LnotWVBJFLARn242TQe6pDIJdGfbi0g==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2019 |
| align="center" |[[2019 SEA Games|30]] |
||
| align="center" |2019 |
| align="center" |2019 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Philippines}} [[Philippines]]{{efn|The 2019 Southeast Asian Games was officially decentralized. Events were held in various cities around the Philippines, mostly in the [[Clark Freeport and Special Economic Zone|Clark City]], the [[Metro Manila]] region, and the [[Subic Bay]] areas, however there was no single designated host city. The games were known as "Philippines 2019".}} |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Philippines}} [[Philippines]]{{efn|The 2019 Southeast Asian Games was officially decentralized. Events were held in various cities around the Philippines, mostly in the [[Clark Freeport and Special Economic Zone|Clark City]], the [[Metro Manila]] region, and the [[Subic Bay]] areas, however there was no single designated host city. The games were known as "Philippines 2019".}} |
||
|[[President of the Philippines|President]] [[Rodrigo Duterte]] |
|[[President of the Philippines|President]] [[Rodrigo Duterte]] |
||
| align="center" |30 November – 11 December 2019 |
| align="center" |30 November – 11 December 2019 |
||
| align="center" |56 |
| align="center" |'''56''' |
||
| align="center" |530 |
| align="center" |530 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |5630 |
| align="center" |5630 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|PHI| |
|{{flagIOC2team|PHI|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnES6Hu2rKNoep1wiQPWHLIZPpcQURNk2GfMVLfUe2HxIbgBIMTBdo6hoL+jQCwdH6NRA==] |
| align="center" |[http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GHAFDetails?q=NtpwTOliipDwo6ShqBnES6Hu2rKNoep1wiQPWHLIZPpcQURNk2GfMVLfUe2HxIbgBIMTBdo6hoL+jQCwdH6NRA==] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2021 |
| align="center" |[[2021 SEA Games|31]] |
||
| align="center" |2021 |
| align="center" |2021 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Vietnam}} [[Hanoi]], [[Vietnam]]{{efn|Many events were held in various cities over the country to give support to the Hanoi, who was the main host of the event. Due the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], the games were delayed to May 2022.}} |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Vietnam}} [[Hanoi]], [[Vietnam]]{{efn|Many events were held in various cities over the country to give support to the Hanoi, who was the main host of the event. Due to the [[COVID-19 pandemic]], the games were delayed to May 2022.}} |
||
|[[President of Vietnam|President]] [[Nguyễn Xuân Phúc]] |
|[[President of Vietnam|President]] [[Nguyễn Xuân Phúc]] |
||
| align="center" |12–23 May 2022 |
| align="center" |12–23 May 2022 |
||
| align="center" |40 |
| align="center" |40 |
||
| align="center" | |
| align="center" |523 |
||
| align="center" |11 |
|||
| align="center" |5467 |
| align="center" |5467 |
||
|{{flagIOC2team|VIE| |
| rowspan=2 align="left" |{{flagIOC2team|VIE|Southeast Asian Games}} |
||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |[[2023 |
| align="center" |[[2023 SEA Games|32]] |
||
| align="center" |2023 |
| align="center" |2023 |
||
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Cambodia}} [[Phnom Penh]], [[Cambodia]] |
| align="left" |{{Flagicon|Cambodia}} [[Phnom Penh]], [[Cambodia]] |
||
|[[Prime Minister of Cambodia|Prime Minister]] [[Hun Sen]] |
|''[[Prime Minister of Cambodia|Prime Minister]]'' ''[[Hun Sen]]'' {{efn|name=2023 CambodiaKing|Representing [[Norodom Sihamoni]], [[Monarchy of Cambodia|King of Cambodia]].}} |
||
| align="center" |5–17 May 2023 |
| align="center" |5–17 May 2023 |
||
| align="center" |37 |
| align="center" |37 |
||
| align="center" |584 |
| align="center" |'''584''' |
||
| align="center" | |
| align="center" |'''6210''' |
||
| align="center" |6210 |
|||
|{{flagIOC2team|VIE|2023 Southeast Asian Games}} |
|||
| |
| |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |''[[2025 |
| align="center" |''[[2025 SEA Games|33]]'' |
||
| align="center" |''2025'' |
| align="center" |''2025'' |
||
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Chonburi province|Chonburi]], and [[Songkhla province|Songkhla]], [[Thailand]]'' |
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Thailand}} [[Bangkok]], [[Chonburi province|Chonburi]], and [[Songkhla province|Songkhla]], [[Thailand]]'' |
||
| align="left" |''[[King of Thailand|King]] [[Vajiralongkorn]] (expected)'' |
| align="left" |''[[King of Thailand|King]] [[Vajiralongkorn]] (expected)'' |
||
| align="center" |''9–20 December 2025'' |
| align="center" |''9–20 December 2025'' |
||
| colspan=" |
| align="center" |''43'' |
||
| colspan="5" align="center" |''Future event'' |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |''34'' |
| align="center" |''34'' |
||
| align="center" |''2027'' |
| align="center" |''2027'' |
||
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Malaysia]]''<ref>{{cite web |title=Malaysia to host 2027 SEA Games |url=https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2022/05/12/malaysia-to-host-2027-sea-games |publisher=The Star |access-date=12 May 2022}}</ref> |
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Malaysia}} [[Johor Bahru]] or [[Sarawak]], [[Malaysia]]''<ref>{{cite web |title=Malaysia to host 2027 SEA Games |url=https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2022/05/12/malaysia-to-host-2027-sea-games |publisher=The Star |access-date=12 May 2022}}</ref> |
||
| align="left" |''[[Yang di-Pertuan Agong]] [[Ibrahim Iskandar of Johor|Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar]] (expected)'' |
|||
| colspan="8" align="center" |''Future event'' |
| colspan="8" align="center" |''Future event'' |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |35 |
| align="center" |''35'' |
||
| align="center" |2029 |
| align="center" |''2029'' |
||
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]]''<ref>{{cite web|title=Singapore to host 2029 SEA Games|url=https://www.channelnewsasia.com/sport/singapore-host-2029-sea-games-2680376|access-date=12 May 2022}}</ref> |
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Singapore}} [[Singapore]]''<ref>{{cite web|title=Singapore to host 2029 SEA Games|url=https://www.channelnewsasia.com/sport/singapore-host-2029-sea-games-2680376|access-date=12 May 2022}}</ref> |
||
| colspan="8" align="center" |''Future event'' |
| colspan="8" align="center" |''Future event'' |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |36 |
| align="center" |''36'' |
||
| align="center" |2031 |
| align="center" |''2031'' |
||
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Laos}} [[Laos]]''<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Cua |first=Aric John Sy |date=2022-07-13 |title=PH to host SEA Games in 2033 |url=https://www.manilatimes.net/2022/07/13/latest-stories/ph-to-host-sea-games-in-2033/1850805 |access-date=2022-07-13 |website=The Manila Times |language=en}}</ref> |
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Laos}} TBA, [[Laos]]''<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Cua |first=Aric John Sy |date=2022-07-13 |title=PH to host SEA Games in 2033 |url=https://www.manilatimes.net/2022/07/13/latest-stories/ph-to-host-sea-games-in-2033/1850805 |access-date=2022-07-13 |website=The Manila Times |language=en}}</ref> |
||
| colspan="8" align="center" |''Future event'' |
| colspan="8" align="center" |''Future event'' |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| align="center" |37 |
| align="center" |''37'' |
||
| align="center" |2033 |
| align="center" |''2033'' |
||
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Philippines}} [[Philippines]]''<ref name=":0" /> |
| align="left" |''{{flagicon|Philippines}} TBA, [[Philippines]]''<ref name=":0" /> |
||
| colspan="8" align="center" |''Future event'' |
| colspan="8" align="center" |''Future event'' |
||
|} |
|} |
||
{{notelist}} |
{{notelist}} |
||
The 1963 |
The 1963 SEAP Games were cancelled. As the designated host, [[Cambodia]] was unable to host the event due to instability in the country, along with a disagreement with the [[International Amateur Athletic Federation]]. The 3rd SEAP Games then passed to [[Laos]] as hosts, but they begged off the 1965 event citing financial difficulties.<ref>{{cite web|title=History of the SEA Games |url=http://www.olympic.org.my/web/gamesrecords/sea/sea_history.htm |work=www.olympic.org.my |access-date=26 February 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041217101809/http://www.olympic.org.my/web/gamesrecords/sea/sea_history.htm |archive-date=17 December 2004 }}</ref> |
||
==Sports== |
==Sports== |
||
Line 533: | Line 497: | ||
|[[Diving at the Southeast Asian Games|Diving]] <br>{{small|Since 1965}} |
|[[Diving at the Southeast Asian Games|Diving]] <br>{{small|Since 1965}} |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Badminton at the Southeast Asian Games|Badminton]] |
| colspan="2" |[[Badminton at the Southeast Asian Games|Badminton]] |
||
|[[ |
|[[Bowling at the Southeast Asian Games|Bowling]] <br>{{small|1977–1979, 1983–2001, 2005–2007, 2011, 2015–2021}} |
||
|[[Kun Bokator at the Southeast Asian Games|Bokator]] <br>{{small|2023}} |
|[[Kun Bokator at the Southeast Asian Games|Bokator]] <br>{{small|2023}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Bodybuilding at the Southeast Asian Games|Bodybuilding]] <br>{{small|1987–1993, 1997, 2003–2007, 2013, 2021}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Synchronized swimming at the Southeast Asian Games|Synchronized swimming]] <br>{{small|2001, 2011, 2015–2017}} |
|[[Synchronized swimming at the Southeast Asian Games|Synchronized swimming]] <br>{{small|2001, 2011, 2015–2017}} |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Baseball at the Southeast Asian Games|Baseball]] <br>{{small|2005–2007, 2011, 2019}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Baseball at the Southeast Asian Games|Baseball]] <br>{{small|2005–2007, 2011, 2019}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Chess at the Southeast Asian Games|Chess]] <br>{{small|2003–2005, 2011–2013, since 2019}} |
||
|[[Chinlone at the Southeast Asian Games|Chinlone]] <br>{{small|2013}} |
|[[Chinlone at the Southeast Asian Games|Chinlone]] <br>{{small|2013}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Beach handball at the Southeast Asian Games|Beach handball]] <br>{{small|2019–2021}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Swimming at the Southeast Asian Games|Swimming]] |
|[[Swimming at the Southeast Asian Games|Swimming]] |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Basketball at the Southeast Asian Games|Basketball]] <br>{{small|1979–2003, 2007, since 2011}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Basketball at the Southeast Asian Games|Basketball]] <br>{{small|1979–2003, 2007, since 2011}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Cricket at the Southeast Asian Games|Cricket]] <br>{{small|2017, 2023}} |
||
|[[Muay Thai at the Southeast Asian Games|Muay Thai]] <br>{{small|2005–2009, 2013, 2019–2021}} |
|[[Muay Thai at the Southeast Asian Games|Muay Thai]] <br>{{small|2005–2009, 2013, 2019–2021}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Bridge at the Southeast Asian Games|Contract bridge]] <br>{{small|2011}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[Water polo at the Southeast Asian Games|Water polo]] <br>{{small|1965–2019, 2023}} |
|[[Water polo at the Southeast Asian Games|Water polo]] <br>{{small|1965–2019, 2023}} |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Boxing at the Southeast Asian Games|Boxing]] |
| colspan="2" |[[Boxing at the Southeast Asian Games|Boxing]] |
||
|[[ |
|[[Dancesport at the Southeast Asian Games|Dancesport]]<br>{{small|2005–2009, since 2019}} |
||
|[[Traditional boat race at the Southeast Asian Games|Traditional boat race]] <br>{{small|1993, 1997–1999, 2003–2007, 2011–2015, 2023}} |
|[[Traditional boat race at the Southeast Asian Games|Traditional boat race]] <br>{{small|1993, 1997–1999, 2003–2007, 2011–2015, 2023}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Duathlon at the Southeast Asian Games|Duathlon]] <br>{{small|Since 2019}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="30" | |
| rowspan="30" | |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Canoeing at the Southeast Asian Games|Canoeing]]<br>{{small|1985, 1995, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2015, 2019–2021}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Canoeing at the Southeast Asian Games|Canoeing]]<br>{{small|1985, 1995, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2015, 2019–2021}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Esports at the Southeast Asian Games|Esports]]<br>{{small|Since 2019}} |
||
|[[Kenpō at the Southeast Asian Games|Kenpō]]<br>{{small|2011–2013}} |
|[[Kenpō at the Southeast Asian Games|Kenpō]]<br>{{small|2011–2013}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Floorball at the Southeast Asian Games|Floorball]]<br>{{small|2015, 2019, 2023}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Cycling at the Southeast Asian Games|Cycling]]<br>{{small|1959–1979, since 1983}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Cycling at the Southeast Asian Games|Cycling]]<br>{{small|1959–1979, since 1983}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Finswimming at the Southeast Asian Games|Finswimming]]<br>{{small|2003, 2009–2011, since 2021}} |
||
|[[Kun Khmer at the Southeast Asian Games|Kun Khmer]]<br>{{small|2023}} |
|[[Kun Khmer at the Southeast Asian Games|Kun Khmer]]<br>{{small|2023}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Lawn bowls at the Southeast Asian Games|Lawn bowls]] <br>{{small|1999, 2001, 2005, 2007, 2017–2019}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Equestrian at the Southeast Asian Games|Equestrian]]<br>{{small|1983, 1995, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2017}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Equestrian at the Southeast Asian Games|Equestrian]]<br>{{small|1983, 1995, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2017}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Futsal at the Southeast Asian Games|Futsal]]<br>{{small|2007, 2011–2013, 2017, 2021}} |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
|[[ |
|[[Obstacle racing at the Southeast Asian Games|Obstacle racing]]<br>{{small|2019, 2023}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Fencing at the Southeast Asian Games|Fencing]]<br>{{small|2003–2007, 2011, since 2015}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Fencing at the Southeast Asian Games|Fencing]]<br>{{small|2003–2007, 2011, since 2015}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Indoor hockey at the Southeast Asian Games|Indoor hockey]]<br>{{small|2017–2019, 2023}} |
||
| rowspan="27" | |
| rowspan="27" | |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Field hockey at the Southeast Asian Games|Field hockey]]<br>{{small|1971–1979, 1983, 1987–1989, 1993–2001, 2007, 2013–2017, 2023}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Field hockey at the Southeast Asian Games|Field hockey]]<br>{{small|1971–1979, 1983, 1987–1989, 1993–2001, 2007, 2013–2017, 2023}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Ju-jitsu at the Southeast Asian Games|Ju-jitsu]]<br>{{small|Since 2019}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Football at the Southeast Asian Games|Football]] |
| colspan="2" |[[Football at the Southeast Asian Games|Football]] |
||
|[[ |
|[[Kickboxing at the Southeast Asian Games|Kickboxing]]<br>{{small|Since 2019}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Golf at the Southeast Asian Games|Golf]]<br>{{small|1985–1997, 2001, since 2005}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Golf at the Southeast Asian Games|Golf]]<br>{{small|1985–1997, 2001, since 2005}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Kurash at the Southeast Asian Games|Kurash]]<br>{{small|2019–2021}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Gymnastics at the Southeast Asian Games|Gymnastics]]<br>{{small|1979–1981, 1985–1997, 2001–2007, 2011, since 2015}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Gymnastics at the Southeast Asian Games|Gymnastics]]<br>{{small|1979–1981, 1985–1997, 2001–2007, 2011, since 2015}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Netball at the Southeast Asian Games|Netball]]<br>{{small|2001, 2015–2019}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Handball at the Southeast Asian Games|Handball]]<br>{{small|2005–2007, 2021}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Handball at the Southeast Asian Games|Handball]]<br>{{small|2005–2007, 2021}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Pencak silat at the Southeast Asian Games|Pencak silat]]<br>{{small|1987–1989, 1993–1997, since 2001}} |
||
|[[Waterskiing at the Southeast Asian Games|Waterskiing]]<br>{{small|1987, 1997, 2011, 2015–2019}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Judo at the Southeast Asian Games|Judo]]<br>{{small|1967–1997, since 2001}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Judo at the Southeast Asian Games|Judo]]<br>{{small|1967–1997, since 2001}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Roller sports at the Southeast Asian Games|Roller sports]]<br>{{small|2011}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Karate at the Southeast Asian Games|Karate]]<br>{{small|1985–1991, 1995–1997, 2001–2013, since 2017}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Karate at the Southeast Asian Games|Karate]]<br>{{small|1985–1991, 1995–1997, 2001–2013, since 2017}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Rugby union at the Southeast Asian Games|Rugby union]]<br>{{small|1969, 1977–1979, 1995, 2007}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Modern pentathlon at the Southeast Asian Games|Modern pentathlon]]<br>{{small|2019}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Modern pentathlon at the Southeast Asian Games|Modern pentathlon]]<br>{{small|2019}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Sambo at the Southeast Asian Games|Sambo]]<br>{{small|2019}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Rowing at the Southeast Asian Games|Rowing]]<br>{{small|1989–1991, 1997, 2001–2007, 2011–2015, since 2019}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Rowing at the Southeast Asian Games|Rowing]]<br>{{small|1989–1991, 1997, 2001–2007, 2011–2015, since 2019}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Sepak takraw at the Southeast Asian Games|Sepak takraw]]<br>{{small|1967–1969, since 1973}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Rugby sevens at the Southeast Asian Games|Rugby sevens]]<br>{{small|2015–2019}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Rugby sevens at the Southeast Asian Games|Rugby sevens]]<br>{{small|2015–2019}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Squash at the Southeast Asian Games|Squash]]<br>{{small|1991–2001, 2005–2007, 2015–2019}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Sailing at the Southeast Asian Games|Sailing]]<br>{{small|1961, 1967–1971, 1975–1977, 1983–1997, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2019, 2023}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Sailing at the Southeast Asian Games|Sailing]]<br>{{small|1961, 1967–1971, 1975–1977, 1983–1997, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2019, 2023}} |
||
|[[ |
|[[Wushu at the Southeast Asian Games|Wushu]]<br>{{small|1991–1993, 1997, since 2001}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Shooting at the Southeast Asian Games|Shooting]]<br>{{small|1959–2021}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Shooting at the Southeast Asian Games|Shooting]]<br>{{small|1959–2021}} |
||
| |
|Xiangqi<br>{{small|Since 2021}} |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Skateboarding at the Southeast Asian Games|Skateboarding]]<br>{{small|2019}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Skateboarding at the Southeast Asian Games|Skateboarding]]<br>{{small|2019}} |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Softball at the Southeast Asian Games|Softball]]<br>{{small|1981–1983, 1989, 2003–2005, <br />2011, 2015, 2019}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Softball at the Southeast Asian Games|Softball]]<br>{{small|1981–1983, 1989, 2003–2005, <br />2011, 2015, 2019}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[ |
| colspan="2" |[[Competition climbing at the Southeast Asian Games|Competition climbing]]<br>{{small|[[Competition climbing at the 2011 SEA Games|2011]]}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Surfing at the Southeast Asian Games|Surfing]]<br>{{small|2019}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Surfing at the Southeast Asian Games|Surfing]]<br>{{small|2019}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Table tennis at the Southeast Asian Games|Table tennis]] |
| colspan="2" |[[Table tennis at the Southeast Asian Games|Table tennis]] |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Taekwondo at the Southeast Asian Games|Taekwondo]]<br>{{small|Since 1985}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Taekwondo at the Southeast Asian Games|Taekwondo]]<br>{{small|Since 1985}} |
||
⚫ | |||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Tennis at the Southeast Asian Games|Tennis]]<br>{{small|1959–2011, since 2015}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Tennis at the Southeast Asian Games|Tennis]]<br>{{small|1959–2011, since 2015}} |
||
|Xiangqi<br>{{small|Since 2021}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Triathlon at the Southeast Asian Games|Triathlon]]<br>{{small|2005–2007, since 2015}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Triathlon at the Southeast Asian Games|Triathlon]]<br>{{small|2005–2007, since 2015}} |
||
| rowspan="7" | |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" |[[Volleyball at the Southeast Asian Games|Volleyball]]<br>{{small|1959–1997, since 2001}} |
| colspan="2" |[[Volleyball at the Southeast Asian Games|Volleyball]]<br>{{small|1959–1997, since 2001}} |
||
Line 717: | Line 681: | ||
{{commons category}} |
{{commons category}} |
||
* [http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GamesL1.aspx?GPCode=8 Olympic Council of Asia Regional Hosting List] |
* [http://www.ocasia.org/Game/GamesL1.aspx?GPCode=8 Olympic Council of Asia Regional Hosting List] |
||
* [http://www.seagfoffice.org/ SEA Games Federation] |
* {{usurped|[https://web.archive.org/web/20230227112328/http://www.seagfoffice.org/ SEA Games Federation]}} |
||
* [https://web.archive.org/web/19980111005738/http://seagames.wasantara.net.id/medali59-95/medals.htm Medal Tally 1959–1995] (archived 11 January 1998) |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/19980111005738/http://seagames.wasantara.net.id/medali59-95/medals.htm Medal Tally 1959–1995] (archived 11 January 1998) |
||
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20081011071000/http://www.newsviews.info/sport09.html#sources Medal Tally] (archived 11 October 2008) |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20081011071000/http://www.newsviews.info/sport09.html#sources Medal Tally] (archived 11 October 2008) |
||
Line 737: | Line 701: | ||
[[Category:Recurring sporting events established in 1959]] |
[[Category:Recurring sporting events established in 1959]] |
||
[[Category:Multi-sport events in Asia]] |
[[Category:Multi-sport events in Asia]] |
||
[[Category:1959 establishments in Asia]] |
Revision as of 01:27, 23 April 2024
Abbreviation | SEAG |
---|---|
First event | 1959 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games in Bangkok, Thailand |
Occur every | 2 years (every odd year) |
Next event | 2025 Southeast Asian Games in Bangkok, Chonburi, and Songkhla, Thailand |
Purpose | Multi sport event for nations on the Southeast Asian subcontinent |
Headquarters | Bangkok, Thailand |
President | Charouck Arirachakaran |
SEA Games, officially known as the South East Asian Games, is a biennial multi-sport event involving participants from the current 11 countries of Southeast Asia. The games are under the regulation of the Southeast Asian Games Federation with supervision by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA). The SEA Games is one of the five subregional Games of the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA).[1]
History
The SEA Games owes its origins to the South East Asian Peninsular Games or SEAP Games (abbreviated as SEAPG). On 22 May 1958, delegates from the countries in Southeast Asian Peninsula attending the Asian Games in Tokyo, Japan had a meeting and agreed to establish a sports organization. The SEAP Games was conceptualized by Luang Sukhum Nayapradit, then vice-president of the Thailand Olympic Committee. The proposed rationale was that a regional sports event will help promote co-operation, understanding, and relations among countries in the Southeast Asian region.
Six countries, Burma (now Myanmar), Cambodia, Laos, Malaya (now Malaysia), Thailand and the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) were the founding members. These countries agreed to hold the Games biennially in June 1959 and the SEAP Games Federation Committee was formed thereafter.[2]
The first SEAP Games were held in Bangkok from 12 to 17 December 1959, with more than 527 athletes and officials from 6 countries; Burma (now Myanmar), Laos, Malaya, Singapore, South Vietnam and Thailand participated in 12 sports.
At the 8th SEAP Games in 1975, the SEAP Federation considered the inclusion of Brunei, Indonesia, and the Philippines. These countries were formally admitted in 1977, the same year when SEAP Federation changed their name to the Southeast Asian Games Federation (SEAGF), and the games were known as the Southeast Asian Games. Despite its location closer to the Pacific archipelago than the Asian continent and not being a member of ASEAN, East Timor was admitted at the 22nd SEA Games in 2003 Hanoi–Ho Chi Minh City.
The 2009 SEA Games was the first time Laos has ever hosted a SEA Games (Laos had previously declined to host the 1965 SEAP Games citing financial difficulties). Running from 9–18 December, it has also commemorated the 50 years of the SEA Games, held in Vientiane, Laos. The 2023 SEA Games, held from 5–17 May, was the first time Cambodia has ever hosted a SEA Games (Cambodia was awarded the 1963 SEAP Games, which was cancelled due to domestic political situation).
Symbol
The Southeast Asian Games symbol was introduced during the 1959 SEAP Games in Bangkok, depicting six rings that represent the six founding members and was used until the 1997 edition in Jakarta. The number of rings increased to 10 during the 1999 edition in Brunei to reflect the inclusion of Singapore, which was admitted into the Southeast Asian Games Federation in 1961, and Brunei, Indonesia, and the Philippines, which joined the organization in 1977. The number of rings was again increased to 11 during the 2011 Games in Indonesia to reflect the federation's newest member, East Timor, which was admitted in 2003.
Participating NOCs
NOC Names | Debuted | IOC code | Other codes used |
---|---|---|---|
Brunei | 1977 | BRU | BRN (ISO) |
Cambodia | 1961 | CAM | KHM (1972–1976, ISO) |
Indonesia | 1977 | INA | IHO (1952), IDN (FIFA, ISO) |
Laos | 1959 | LAO | |
Malaysia | 1959 | MAS | MAL (1952−1988), MYS (ISO) |
Myanmar | 1959 | MYA | BIR (1948–1988), MMR (ISO) |
Philippines | 1977 | PHI | PHL (ISO) |
Singapore | 1959 | SGP | SIN (1959–2016) |
Thailand | 1959 | THA | |
East Timor | 2003 | TLS | IOA (2000) |
Vietnam | 1959[a] | VIE | VET (1964), VNM (1968–1976, ISO) |
- ^ While South Vietnam competed from 1959–1973, North Vietnam never competed. Unified Vietnam has competed since 1989.
List of SEA Games
Since the SEA Games began in 1959, it has been held in 15 cities across all Southeast Asian countries except East Timor.
Games | Year | Host cities | Opened by[a] | Date | Sports | Events | Nations | Competitors | Top-ranked team | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SEAP Games | |||||||||||
1 | 1959 | Bangkok, Thailand | King Bhumibol Adulyadej | 12–17 December 1959 | 12 | 67 | 6 | 518 | Thailand (THA) | [1] | |
2 | 1961 | Yangon, Burma | President Win Maung | 11–16 December 1961 | 13 | 86 | 7 | 623 | Burma (BIR) | [2] | |
3 | 1965 | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Yang di-Pertuan Agong Ismail Nasiruddin | 14–21 December 1965 | 14 | 134 | 7 | 963 | Thailand (THA) | [3] | |
4 | 1967 | Bangkok, Thailand | King Bhumibol Adulyadej | 9–16 December 1967 | 16 | 144 | 6 | 984 | [4] | ||
5 | 1969 | Yangon, Burma | Prime Minister Ne Win | 6–13 December 1969 | 15 | 145 | 920 | Burma (BIR) | [5] | ||
6 | 1971 | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Yang di-Pertuan Agong Abdul Halim | 6–13 December 1971 | 15 | 156 | 7 | 957 | Thailand (THA) | [6] | |
7 | 1973 | Singapore | President Benjamin Sheares | 1–8 September 1973 | 16 | 161 | 1632 | [7] | |||
8 | 1975 | Bangkok, Thailand | King Bhumibol Adulyadej | 9–16 December 1975 | 18 | 172 | 4 | 1142 | [8] | ||
SEA Games | |||||||||||
9 | 1977 | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Yang di-Pertuan Agong Yahya Petra | 19–26 November 1977 | 18 | 188 | 7 | N/A | Indonesia (INA) | [9] | |
10 | 1979 | Jakarta, Indonesia | President Soeharto | 21–30 September 1979 | 18 | 226 | N/A | [10] | |||
11 | 1981 | Manila, Philippines | President Ferdinand Marcos | 6–15 December 1981 | 18 | 245 | ≈1800 | [11] | |||
12 | 1983 | Singapore | President Devan Nair | 28 May – 6 June 1983 | 18 | 233 | 8 | N/A | [12] | ||
13 | 1985 | Bangkok, Thailand | King Bhumibol Adulyadej | 8–17 December 1985 | 18 | 251 | N/A | Thailand (THA) | [13] | ||
14 | 1987 | Jakarta, Indonesia | President Soeharto | 9–20 September 1987 | 26 | 372 | N/A | Indonesia (INA) | [14] | ||
15 | 1989 | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Yang di-Pertuan Agong Azlan Shah | 20–31 August 1989 | 24 | 302 | 9 | ≈2800 | [15] | ||
16 | 1991 | Manila, Philippines | President Corazon Aquino | 24 November – 3 December 1991 | 28 | 327 | N/A | [16] | |||
17 | 1993 | Singapore | President Wee Kim Wee | 12–20 June 1993 | 29 | 318 | ≈3000 | [17] | |||
18 | 1995 | Chiang Mai, Thailand | Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn [b] | 9–17 December 1995 | 28 | 335 | 10 | 3262 | Thailand (THA) | [18] | |
19 | 1997 | Jakarta, Indonesia | President Soeharto | 11–19 October 1997 | 36 | 490 | 5179 | Indonesia (INA) | [19] | ||
20 | 1999 | Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei | Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah | 7–15 August 1999 | 21 | 233 | 2365 | Thailand (THA) | [20] | ||
21 | 2001 | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Yang di-Pertuan Agong Salahuddin | 8–17 September 2001 | 32 | 391 | 4165 | Malaysia (MAS) | [21] | ||
22 | 2003 | Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam | Prime Minister Phan Văn Khải [c] | 5–13 December 2003 | 32 | 442 | 11 | ≈5000 | Vietnam (VIE) | [22] | |
23 | 2005 | Manila, Philippines | President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo | 27 November – 5 December 2005 | 40 | 443 | 5336 | Philippines (PHI) | [23] | ||
24 | 2007 | Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand | Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn [b] | 6–15 December 2007 | 43 | 475 | 5282 | Thailand (THA) | [24] | ||
25 | 2009 | Vientiane, Laos | President Choummaly Sayasone | 9–18 December 2009 | 29 | 372 | 3100 | [25] | |||
26 | 2011 | Jakarta and Palembang, Indonesia | President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono | 11–22 November 2011 | 44 | 545 | 5965 | Indonesia (INA) | [26] | ||
27 | 2013 | Naypyidaw, Myanmar | Vice President Nyan Tun [d] | 11–22 December 2013 | 37 | 460 | 4730 | Thailand (THA) | [27] | ||
28 | 2015 | Singapore | President Tony Tan | 5–16 June 2015 | 36 | 402 | 4370 | [28] | |||
29 | 2017 | Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Yang di-Pertuan Agong Muhammad V | 19–30 August 2017 | 38 | 404 | 4709 | Malaysia (MAS) | [29] | ||
30 | 2019 | Philippines[e] | President Rodrigo Duterte | 30 November – 11 December 2019 | 56 | 530 | 5630 | Philippines (PHI) | [30] | ||
31 | 2021 | Hanoi, Vietnam[f] | President Nguyễn Xuân Phúc | 12–23 May 2022 | 40 | 523 | 5467 | Vietnam (VIE) | |||
32 | 2023 | Phnom Penh, Cambodia | Prime Minister Hun Sen [g] | 5–17 May 2023 | 37 | 584 | 6210 | ||||
33 | 2025 | Bangkok, Chonburi, and Songkhla, Thailand | King Vajiralongkorn (expected) | 9–20 December 2025 | 43 | Future event | |||||
34 | 2027 | Johor Bahru or Sarawak, Malaysia[3] | Yang di-Pertuan Agong Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar (expected) | Future event | |||||||
35 | 2029 | Singapore[4] | Future event | ||||||||
36 | 2031 | TBA, Laos[5] | Future event | ||||||||
37 | 2033 | TBA, Philippines[5] | Future event |
- ^ Names & offices in italics reflect an opener who was not head of state when opening the Games. If the office is partially italicized, the non-italicized portion is the office & name of the head of state being represented.
- ^ a b Representing his father, Bhumibol Adulyadej, King of Thailand.
- ^ Representing Trần Đức Lương, President of Vietnam.
- ^ Representing Thein Sein, President of Myanmar.
- ^ The 2019 Southeast Asian Games was officially decentralized. Events were held in various cities around the Philippines, mostly in the Clark City, the Metro Manila region, and the Subic Bay areas, however there was no single designated host city. The games were known as "Philippines 2019".
- ^ Many events were held in various cities over the country to give support to the Hanoi, who was the main host of the event. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the games were delayed to May 2022.
- ^ Representing Norodom Sihamoni, King of Cambodia.
The 1963 SEAP Games were cancelled. As the designated host, Cambodia was unable to host the event due to instability in the country, along with a disagreement with the International Amateur Athletic Federation. The 3rd SEAP Games then passed to Laos as hosts, but they begged off the 1965 event citing financial difficulties.[6]
Sports
According to the SEAGF Charter and Rules, a host nation must stage a minimum of 22 sports: the two compulsory sports from Category 1 (athletics and aquatics), in addition to a minimum of 14 sports from Category 2 (Olympics and Asian Games mandatory sports), and a maximum of 8 sports from Category 3. Each sport shall not offer more than 5% of the total medal tally, except for athletics, aquatics and shooting (the shot was elevated for this category in 2013). For each sport and event to be included, a minimum of four countries must participate in it. Sports competed in the Olympic Games and Asian Games must be given priority.[2][7]
In 2023, the charter was modified, bringing the number of minimum sports a host must stage up to 36. The compulsory Category 1 now comprises two subcategories: 1A, which consists of aquatics and athletics, and 1B, a minimum of 10 Olympic sports from the Summer Olympic Games. Under Category 2, the host must include a minimum of 10 other sports from the Olympic Games (summer/winter), Asian Games, and Asian Indoor & Martial Arts Games. Category 3 is now capped at a maximum of four sports.[8][9] The first games with the new charter in effect will be held in 2025.[10]
Category 1 | Category 2 | Category 3 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1A | 1B | Olympic sports | Asian Games / AIMAG sports | Traditional[a] | Other[b] |
Athletics | Archery 1977–1997, 2001–2021 |
Billiards and snooker Since 1987 |
Arnis 1991, 2005, 2019, 2023 |
Aquathlon 2023 | |
Diving Since 1965 |
Badminton | Bowling 1977–1979, 1983–2001, 2005–2007, 2011, 2015–2021 |
Bokator 2023 |
Bodybuilding 1987–1993, 1997, 2003–2007, 2013, 2021 | |
Synchronized swimming 2001, 2011, 2015–2017 |
Baseball 2005–2007, 2011, 2019 |
Chess 2003–2005, 2011–2013, since 2019 |
Chinlone 2013 |
Beach handball 2019–2021 | |
Swimming | Basketball 1979–2003, 2007, since 2011 |
Cricket 2017, 2023 |
Muay Thai 2005–2009, 2013, 2019–2021 |
Contract bridge 2011 | |
Water polo 1965–2019, 2023 |
Boxing | Dancesport 2005–2009, since 2019 |
Traditional boat race 1993, 1997–1999, 2003–2007, 2011–2015, 2023 |
Duathlon Since 2019 | |
Canoeing 1985, 1995, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2015, 2019–2021 |
Esports Since 2019 |
Kenpō 2011–2013 |
Floorball 2015, 2019, 2023 | ||
Cycling 1959–1979, since 1983 |
Finswimming 2003, 2009–2011, since 2021 |
Kun Khmer 2023 |
Lawn bowls 1999, 2001, 2005, 2007, 2017–2019 | ||
Equestrian 1983, 1995, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2017 |
Futsal 2007, 2011–2013, 2017, 2021 |
Vovinam 2011–2013, since 2021 |
Obstacle racing 2019, 2023 | ||
Fencing 2003–2007, 2011, since 2015 |
Indoor hockey 2017–2019, 2023 |
Paragliding 2011 | |||
Field hockey 1971–1979, 1983, 1987–1989, 1993–2001, 2007, 2013–2017, 2023 |
Ju-jitsu Since 2019 |
Pétanque Since 2001 | |||
Football | Kickboxing Since 2019 |
Polo 2007, 2017–2019 | |||
Golf 1985–1997, 2001, since 2005 |
Kurash 2019–2021 |
Shuttle cock 2007–2009 | |||
Gymnastics 1979–1981, 1985–1997, 2001–2007, 2011, since 2015 |
Netball 2001, 2015–2019 |
Soft tennis 2011, 2019, 2023 | |||
Handball 2005–2007, 2021 |
Pencak silat 1987–1989, 1993–1997, since 2001 |
Waterskiing 1987, 1997, 2011, 2015–2019 | |||
Judo 1967–1997, since 2001 |
Roller sports 2011 |
||||
Karate 1985–1991, 1995–1997, 2001–2013, since 2017 |
Rugby union 1969, 1977–1979, 1995, 2007 | ||||
Modern pentathlon 2019 |
Sambo 2019 | ||||
Rowing 1989–1991, 1997, 2001–2007, 2011–2015, since 2019 |
Sepak takraw 1967–1969, since 1973 | ||||
Rugby sevens 2015–2019 |
Squash 1991–2001, 2005–2007, 2015–2019 | ||||
Sailing 1961, 1967–1971, 1975–1977, 1983–1997, 2001, 2005–2007, 2011–2019, 2023 |
Wushu 1991–1993, 1997, since 2001 | ||||
Shooting 1959–2021 |
Xiangqi Since 2021 | ||||
Skateboarding 2019 |
|||||
Softball 1981–1983, 1989, 2003–2005, 2011, 2015, 2019 | |||||
Competition climbing 2011 | |||||
Surfing 2019 | |||||
Table tennis | |||||
Taekwondo Since 1985 | |||||
Tennis 1959–2011, since 2015 | |||||
Triathlon 2005–2007, since 2015 | |||||
Volleyball 1959–1997, since 2001 | |||||
Weightlifting 1959–1997, 2001–2013, since 2017 | |||||
Wrestling 1987, 1997, 2003–2013, since 2019 | |||||
Figure skating 2017–2019 | |||||
Ice hockey 2017–2019 | |||||
Short track speed skating 2017–2019 |
All-time medal table
Corrected after balancing the data of the Olympic Council of Asia and other archived sites which had kept the previous Southeast Asian Games medal tables. Some information from the aforementioned sites are missing, incorrect and or not updated.[11][12][13][14][15][16][17]
Rank | NOC | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Thailand (THA) | 2453 | 2127 | 2204 | 6784 |
2 | Indonesia (INA) | 1980 | 1876 | 1970 | 5826 |
3 | Malaysia (MAS)[1] | 1376 | 1363 | 1872 | 4611 |
4 | Vietnam (VIE)[2] | 1269 | 1097 | 1221 | 3587 |
5 | Philippines (PHI) | 1180 | 1346 | 1702 | 4228 |
6 | Singapore (SGP) | 1045 | 1090 | 1500 | 3635 |
7 | Myanmar (MYA)[3] | 594 | 784 | 1095 | 2473 |
8 | Cambodia (CAM)[4] | 159 | 202 | 425 | 786 |
9 | Laos (LAO) | 77 | 122 | 412 | 611 |
10 | Brunei (BRU) | 17 | 57 | 170 | 244 |
11 | East Timor (TLS) | 3 | 9 | 39 | 51 |
Totals (11 entries) | 10153 | 10073 | 12610 | 32836 |
- ^[1] Competed as Malaya in the inaugural games until 1961.
- ^[2] The Republic of Vietnam was dissolved in July 1976 when it merged with the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam) to become the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, also known as Vietnam. In the 1989 edition, a unified Vietnam rejoined the games with a new name and flag. Medals won by South Vietnam until 1975 and by Vietnam after 1989 are combined here.
- ^[3] Competed as Burma until 1987.
- ^[4] Competed as Kampuchea, and Khmer Republic.
List of multiple Southeast Asian Games medalists
Various individuals have won multiple medals at the Games, including the preceding Southeast Asian Peninsular Games.
As of 2019, Singaporean swimmer Joscelin Yeo has won the most Southeast Asian Games medals with 55 (40 gold, 12 silver, 3 bronze). She reached this milestone during the 2005 Games, overtaking the previous record of 39 gold medals set by another Singaporean swimmer Patricia Chan.
Criticism
One unique characteristic of the event is that there are no official limits to the number of sports and events to be contested, and the range can be decided by the organizing host pending approval by the Southeast Asian Games Federation. Aside from mandatory sports, the host is free to drop or introduce other sports or events (See SEA Games sports).[18] This leeway has resulted in hosts maximizing their medal hauls by dropping sports disadvantageous to themselves relative to their peers and the introduction of obscure sports, often at short notice, thus preventing most other nations from building credible opponents.[19][20][21] Several nations have called for amending the charter of the games to address the issue.[22][23] In 2023, the SEA Games charter was modified in an effort to make the number of sports in each edition more standardized, reducing the host's leeway to remove several sports, maximize medal hauls by introducing obscure local sports, and tamper with the competition's rules.[8][24]
See also
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References
- ^ Games page of the website of the Olympic Council of Asia; Archived 2010-12-11 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved 2010-07-09.
- ^ a b "South East Asian Games Federation: Charter and Rules" (PDF). SEAGF. 30 May 2010. Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
- ^ "Malaysia to host 2027 SEA Games". The Star. Retrieved 12 May 2022.
- ^ "Singapore to host 2029 SEA Games". Retrieved 12 May 2022.
- ^ a b Cua, Aric John Sy (13 July 2022). "PH to host SEA Games in 2033". The Manila Times. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
- ^ "History of the SEA Games". www.olympic.org.my. Archived from the original on 17 December 2004. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
- ^ Ian De Cotta (5 June 2015). "A cool addition to the SEA Games". Today Online. Archived from the original on 20 June 2015. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
- ^ a b Lee, David (17 May 2023). "SEA Games sports programme to be standardised from 2025 to 2029". The Straits Times. ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- ^ "ยกเครื่องซีเกมส์! เลิกเน้นกีฬาพื้นบ้าน-เริ่มที่ไทยหนหน้า" [Overhaul the SEA Games! Stop focusing on local sports – start in Thailand next]. Naewna (in Thai). 5 May 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- ^ Navarro, June (17 May 2023). "Bambol assurance: Drastic reduction of indigenous games in next SEA Games calendar". INQUIRER.net. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- ^ "South East Asian Games Medal Count". Archived from the original on 3 September 2017. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
- ^ SEAP Games Federation Archived 13 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Medal Tally 1959-1995
- ^ Medal Tally
- ^ History of the SEA Games
- ^ SEA Games previous medal table
- ^ SEA Games members
- ^ Pattharapong Rattanasevee (21 July 2017). "Southeast Asian Games yet to win gold for sporting spirit". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 4 August 2017.
- ^ Mariadass, Tony (24 November 2019). "Sea Games morphing into a monster-cum-circus". New Straits Times. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- ^ Mariadass, Tony. "Sea Games reduced to a carnival". Free Malaysia Today. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- ^ "The SEA Games Contain the Seeds of Their Own Irrelevance". thediplomat.com. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- ^ "Indonesian NOC calls for amendment to Southeast Asian Games Federation Charter on sports programme". Inside the Games. 20 September 2022. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
- ^ ""พลตรีจารึก" เตรียมเสนอปรับธรรมนูญสหพันธ์กีฬาซีเกมส์". Thai PBS (in Thai). 13 March 2013. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- ^ Henson, Joaquin. "Bambol reveals new SEA Games order". Philstar.com. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
External links
- Olympic Council of Asia Regional Hosting List
- SEA Games Federation[usurped]
- Medal Tally 1959–1995 (archived 11 January 1998)
- Medal Tally (archived 11 October 2008)
- History of the SEA Games (archived 17 December 2004)
- SEA Games previous medal table (archived 4 December 2009)
- SEA Games members (archived 7 December 2001)