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History
The first Games for athletes with a disability were
held in 1948 in Stoke Mandeville, England. On the
day of the Opening Ceremony of the 1948 Olympic Games
in London, the Stoke Mandeville Games were launched
and the first competition for wheelchair athletes was
organised. Four years later, athletes from the
Netherlands joined the Games; thus the international
movement, now known as the Paralympic Movement, was
born.
Olympic style Games for athletes with a disability
were organised for the first time in Rome in 1960,
immediately after the Olympic Games. They are considered
the first Paralympic Games. About 400 athletes from
23 countries competed in 8 sports, 6 of which are still
included in the Paralympic Competition Programme (Archery,
Swimming, Fencing, Basketball, Table tennis and Athletics).
Since then Paralympic Games have been organised every
four years. The Paralympic Games have always been held
in the same year as the Olympic Games.
Other disability groups were added in Toronto in
1976 and the idea was conceived of merging together
different disability groups for international sport
competitions. In the same year, the first Paralympic
Winter Games took place in Sweden.
In 1988, the Seoul Paralympic Games marked a significant
change, as both Olympic and Paralympic Games
were held at the same venues. Since then the
Paralympic Games have always taken place at the same
venues as the Olympic Games.
The 11th Paralympic Summer Games were held very successfully
in 2000 in Sydney, Australia, and the 8th Paralympic
Winter Games were held in March 2002, in Salt Lake City,
U.S.A.
The Paralympic Games have evolved into a major sports
event, second only to the Olympic Games.
Paralympic sports in Greece started to develop in
the seventies and the first Greek athlete participated
in the Paralympic Games in 1976.
.:: © 2004 OTE S.A. All
rights reserved ::.
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