SV Silesia Freiburg
SV Silesia Freiburg | |||
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Full name | Sports club Silesia Freiburg e. V. | ||
place | Freiburg in Silesia | ||
Founded | 1911 | ||
Dissolved | 1945 | ||
Club colors | Yellow white | ||
Stadion | |||
Top league | Gauliga Lower Silesia / District class mountain country | ||
successes | 1 × Bergland Champion | ||
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The SV Silesia Freiburg (officially: Sportverein Silesia Freiburg e.V. ) was a German sports club from the Silesian city of Freiburg (today Świebodzice, Poland).
history
The club was founded in 1911 as SV Silesia Freiburg and belonged to the Southeast German Football Association . In 1929 the association became Bergland-Meister . For unknown reasons, SV Silesia Freiburg decided not to take part in the Southeast German Championship . For him the runner-up from Bergland SV Preußen Glatz moved up.
In 1933 the SV Silesia Freiburg missed the qualification for the newly introduced Gauliga Schlesien and played in the 1933/34 season in the second-rate district league Middle Silesia, in which the club only reached the penultimate place and thus relegated to the Waldenburg district class. In 1934/35 and 1936/37 Freiberg took part as the winner of the district class in the promotion games to the district league of Middle Silesia, but could not prevail.
After the Sportgau Silesia was divided into Lower and Upper Silesia in 1941, this also had an impact on the lower leagues, so that Freiburg was allowed to compete in the second-class 1st class Lower Silesia from the 1941/42 season . Since this was dissolved after the 1942/43 season due to the war , and all teams still capable of playing were taken over into the Gauliga Lower Silesia, Silesia Freiburg also rose and reached third place in the table in the Bergland group in their last season. A game operation in the 1944/45 season is not recorded.
After the end of the Second World War, the city of Freiburg became Polish and the SV Silesia Freiburg association was dissolved.
successes
- 1 × Bergland Champion : 1929
literature
- Hardy Greens : Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 7: Club Lexicon . AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 2001, ISBN 3-89784-147-9 .
- Hardy Greens: Encyclopedia of German League Football. Volume 1: From the Crown Prince to the Bundesliga. 1890 to 1963. German championship, Gauliga, Oberliga. Numbers, pictures, stories. AGON-Sportverlag, Kassel 1996, ISBN 3-928562-85-1 .