National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation of Denmark

The National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation of Denmark (Danish: Danmarks Idrætsforbund, DIF) is the National Olympic Committee representing Denmark.

National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation of Denmark
National Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation of Denmark logo
Country/Region Denmark
CodeDEN
Created1896
Recognized1905
Continental
Association
EOC
HeadquartersBrøndby, Denmark
PresidentHans Natorp
Secretary GeneralMorten Mølholm Hansen
Websitewww.dif.dk Edit this at Wikidata

The organization as it exists today was formed in 1993 by the merger of the Dansk Idræts-Forbund (Danish Sports Confederation) and Danmarks Olympiske Komité (Danish Olympic Committee).[1]

History

edit

Danish Sports Confederation

edit

The confederation was founded on 14 February 1896 as Dansk Idræts-Forbund. At the time it was founded, it represented 18 associations across ten different sports with 2,180 individual members.[2][3] After the Danish Gymnastics Federation (Dansk Gymnastik Forbund) and the Danish Football Association became members in 1904, the confederation began to expand dramatically. By 1918, it represented more than 400 associations with approximately 60,000 members. Initially the confederation was not recognized by the state. It first received state-funding in 1903, when it was awarded an annual grant of 3,000 DKK.[3]

DIF's headquarters at Idrættens Hus.

The confederation's headquarters were initially located on Ingemannsvej in Frederiksberg. Its location changed many times in the following years until it moved to Østerbro in 1925. In 1957 the confederation purchased its own building from a carpet wholesaler—a location which it occupied until 1973. In 1970, plans to construct a purpose-built headquarters for the confederation were drawn up. The building was designed by architects Tarquini Mårtensson and Mikael Tarp Jensen and completed in Brøndby in 1974. The building has become known as Idrættens Hus (lit. House of Sports) and remains the organization's headquarters to this day. A number of related organizations are housed within the building as well, including Team Danmark and Anti-Doping Denmark.[4]

Denmarks Olympic Committee

edit

Denmark's Olympic Committee was established in 1905. In 1912, it took over the confederation's organisational responsibilities for the Olympic games. In 1993 the two independent organizations were again merged. As a result of the merger, the combined organization became known as Danmarks Idrætsforbund.[3]

List of presidents

edit

The following is a list of presidents since its creation in 1896.[5]

PresidentTerm
Victor Hansen1896–1897
Holger Forchhammer1897–1899
Niels V. Holbek1899–1901
Fritz Hansen1901–1909
Johan L. Nathansen1909–1922
Holten F. Castenschiold1922–1941
Herbert Sander1941–1947
Leo Frederiksen1947–1962
Gudmund Schack1962–1969
Kurt Møller1969–1978
Svend O. Hansen1978–1983
Kai Holm1983–2007
Niels Nygaard2007–2021
Hans Natorp2021–present

Member federations

edit

The Danish National Federations are the organizations that coordinate all aspects of their individual sports. They are responsible for training, competition and development of their sports. There are currently 32 Olympic Summer and 4 Winter Sport Federations in Denmark.[6]

National FederationSummer or WinterHeadquarters
Danish Archery AssociationSummerBrøndby
Danish Athletics FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Badminton FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Basketball FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Boxing AssociationSummerBrøndby
Danish Canoe FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Curling FederationWinterBrøndby
Danish Cycling FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Sports Diving FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Equestrian FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Fencing FederationSummerCopenhagen
Danish Football AssociationSummerBrøndby
Danish Golf UnionSummerBrøndby
Danish Gymnastics FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Handball FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Hockey FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Ice Hockey UnionWinterBrøndby
Danish Judo and Ju-jitsu FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Karate FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Modern Pentathlon AssociationSummerNexø
Danish Rollerskating UnionSummerBrøndby
Danish Rowing FederationSummerBagsværd
Danish Rugby FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Sailing AssociationSummerBrøndby
Danish Shooting UnionSummerBrøndby
Danish Skating FederationWinterBrøndby
Danish Ski FederationWinterCopenhagen
Danish Softball FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Swimming FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Table Tennis AssociationSummerBrøndby
Danish Taekwondo FederationSummerHøjbjerg
Danish Tennis FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Triathlon FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Volleyball FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Weightlifting FederationSummerBrøndby
Danish Wrestling FederationSummerBrøndby

See also

edit

Further reading

edit
  • Jørgensen, Per (2003). "Dansk idræt og den olympiske bevægelse 1894–1932". Idrætshistorisk Årbog (in Danish). Vol. 19. University Press of Southern Denmark. doi:10.7146/ffi.v19i1.31717. ISBN 8778388880.

References

edit
  1. ^ Jørgensen, Per. "Danmarks Idrætsforbund". lex.dk (in Danish). Den Store Danske. Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  2. ^ Nathansen, J. L. (1916). "Dansk Idræts-Forbund". In Blangstrup, Christian (ed.). Salmonsens Konversations Leksikon (in Danish). Vol. V: Cikorie–Demersale (2nd ed.). Copenhagen: Schultz. p. 784.
  3. ^ a b c "DIF's Udvikling". Danmarks Idrætsforbund (in Danish). Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  4. ^ "DIF's Domiciler". Danmarks Idrætsforbund (in Danish). Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  5. ^ "Formænd for Danmark Idrætsforbund". Danmark Idrætsforbund (in Danish). Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  6. ^ "Forbund". Danmarks Idrætsforbund (in Danish). Archived from the original on 2017-11-11. Retrieved 2017-11-10.
edit