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    The Deaflympics (previously called World Games for the Deaf, and International Games for the Deaf) are an IOC-sanctioned event at which Deaf athletes compete at an elite level.
    The Deaflympics are held every 4 years, and are the longest running multi-sport event excluding the Olympics themselves. The first games, held in Paris in 1924, were also the first ever international sporting event for athletes with a disability. The event has been held every four years since, apart from a break for World War Two, and an additional event, the Deaflympic Winter Games, was added in 1949. At the first Games in Paris, 145 athletes from nine European nations took part. In 2005 the 20th Games were held in Melbourne, Australia, and according to the Deaflympics website, "more than 3,000 deaf athletes and officials from 75 nations" participated.

    To qualify for the games, athletes must have a hearing loss of at least 55 db in their "better ear". Hearing aids, cochlear implants and the like are not allowed to be used in competition, to place all athletes on the same level. Other examples of ways the games vary from hearing competitions are the manner in which they are officiated. The football referees wave a flag instead of blowing a whistle. On the track, races are started by using a light flash, instead of a starter pistol.

    The games have been organised by the Comité International des Sports des Sourds (CISS, "The International Committee of Sports for the Deaf") since the first event.


        Deaflympics
            Names of the Games
            Future Games
                Summer Games
                Winter Games

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    Names of the Games
    Officially, the games were originally called the "International Games for the Deaf" from 1924 to 1965, but were sometimes referred to as the "International Silent Games". From 1966 to 1999 they were called the "World Games for the Deaf", and occasionally referred to as the "World Silent Games". From 2000, the games have been known by their Current Name "Deaflympics" (often mistakenly called the "Deaf Olympics").

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    Future Games
    16th Winter Games, 2007 - Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

    21st Summer Games, 2009 - Taipei, Chinese Taipei

    17th Winter Games, 2011 - High Tatras, Slovakia


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    Summer Games
    1st Summer Games, 1924 - Paris, France

    2nd Summer Games, 1928 - Amsterdam, Netherlands

    3rd Summer Games, 1931 - Nuremberg, West Germany

    4th Summer Games, 1935 - London, England

    5th Summer Games, 1939 - Stockholm, Sweden

      No games were held between 1940-1948 due to WWII
    6th Summer Games, 1949 - Copenhagen, Denmark

    7th Summer Games, 1953 - Brussels, Belgium

    8th Summer Games, 1957 - Milan, Italy

    9th Summer Games, 1961 - Helsinki, Finland

    10th Summer Games, 1965 - Washington, USA

    11th Summer Games, 1969 - Belgrade, Yugoslavia

    12th Summer Games, 1973 - Malmö, Sweden

    13th Summer Games, 1977 - Bucharest, Romania

    14th Summer Games, 1981 - Cologne, West Germany

    15th Summer Games, 1985 - Los Angeles, USA

    16th Summer Games, 1989 - Christchurch, New Zealand

    17th Summer Games, 1993 - Sofia, Bulgaria

    18th Summer Games, 1997 - Copenhagen, Denmark

    19th Summer Games, 2001 - Rome, Italy

    20th Summer Games, 2005 - Melbourne, Australia

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    Winter Games
    1st Winter Games, 1949 - Seefeld, Austria

    2nd Winter Games, 1953 - Oslo, Norway

    3rd Winter Games, 1955 - Oberammergau, West Germany

    4th Winter Games, 1959 - Montana-Vermala, Switzerland

    5th Winter Games, 1963 - Are, Sweden

    6th Winter Games, 1967 - Berchtesgaden, Germany

    7th Winter Games, 1971 - Adelboden, Switzerland

    8th Winter Games, 1975 - Lake Placid, New York, USA

    9th Winter Games, 1979 - Meribel, France

    10th Winter Games, 1983 - Madonna di Campiglio, Italy

    11th Winter Games, 1987 - Oslo, Norway

    12th Winter Games, 1991 - Banff, Canada

    13th Winter Games, 1995 - Ylläs, Finland

    14th Winter Games, 1999 - Davos, Switzerland

    15th Winter Games, 2003 - Sundsvall, Sweden

     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Deaflympics". link